Speaking to Yahoo Movies, Infinity War writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely
revealed early versions of the script had Steve Rogers and Tony Stark sitting down to settle the rivalry that's held over from Captain America: Civil War.
It seems likely
an early version of the script supplanted Chicago with an East Coast port like New York, but since the climax involves the destruction of a tall tower, that might have seemed in poor taste.
Worse, there are entire lanes of humor that feel painfully dated, unfunny, and like leftovers from
an earlier version of the script from the early 2000s.
They revealed that
an earlier version of the script gave Black Tom much more to do, but thanks to a variety of reasons they cut his role down to what it is in the final edit.
Plus, seeing as how this is based on
an earlier version of the script, there's no scene of Bumblebee peeing oil on John Turturro.
The earlier version of the script, though, makes it explicitly unclear which Lena survives the fight in the lighthouse:
Speaking of bunnies, there was a «Watership Down» (pictured) subplot in
an early version of the script that was ultimately cut out, according to writer - director Richard Kelly.
The «Family Guy» cast sits around a giant table and reads through
an early version of the script.
One
early version of the script is said to have featured Wally travelling back through time to find his love interest Wilma.
Speaking to The Wrap, co-writer Evan Spiliotopoulos said
an early version of the script didn't kill Gaston.
An early version of the script suggests we're not meant to know - «there is no clear indication as to which LENA lived, and which LENA died» - and I wish the lighthouse scene in the movie was more ambiguous too.
The Walt Disney Studios film is currently without a director but the outlet says that Kelly Marcel is writing the script with Aline Brosh McKenna also working on
an early version of the script.
In
an earlier version of the script, Cannonball was Colossus» young X-Men partner.
Also the director, David MacKenzie, put
an early version of the script on Hugh MacLeod's blog (they were schoolboy friends in Edinburgh apparently).