A touching story about Captain America trying to adapt to the modern world. Taking place between 1945, and his awakening 50 years after his inn-animate sleep, Mark Waid explores the impact that being revived in a different time might have on one of the biggest icons of a specific time period. Giving the “fish out of the water” take on the character of Cap, while also placing the story in between the original Avengers’ issues after he was unfrozen in #4, there is plenty of comedic value to this mini-series, but also, sufficient heartfelt emotional resonance and strength for out protagonist, having him suffer the struggle of needing to return to his proper time in order to save Bucky, but also facing the reality that the present– while surreal in its futuristic advance– still needs him, and what he represents, specially after the appearance of the deadly Kang The Conqueror. Waid is an ideal option for the “revitalization” treatment for any story, and while Captain America proved to be one of the best titles of the 2000s by the hand of Ed Brubaker, and Steve Epting, Waid’s take on the mythical Star spangled man goes back to a simpler, rather innocent but more humane depiction of the series. Cap’s struggle of being from a different time, in such chaotic and advance present, is a truly attractive idea for a character like him, mostly after setting the series during the original Avengers series from 1963, even if this comic seems to retcon the years in which that series took place, going from the 60s to the late 2000s. Now, regarding Jorge Molina’s artwork, it’s alright, more serviceable than outstanding or memorable. Is the kind of art that is meant for simpler, more mundane stories, but for something like this I expected the same guy who made the covers could’ve done the interiors, which is Bryan Hitch, and being honest, if that would’ve been the case the series could’ve been way better in terms of mixing the quality of the writing with the artistic one. Again, nothing against Molina, he is fine, and it was nice seeing how he adapted the original Avengers’ designs with his style, but this should’ve been illustrated by someone better, other than that, the story was engaging, heartwarming, and on point with the message of “respect the past, embrace the future” which sort of mixed well with the long anticipated comeback of the original Cap after his death at the end of Civil War.