If Captain Marvel (MCU) were to have a child with a human male, would the child be human or Kree?












16















If Captain Marvel (MCU) were to have a child with a human male, would the child be human or Kree?




She was born human but was changed over to Kree and currently has Kree blood and Kree DNA.











share|improve this question




















  • 3





    If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

    – FernandoRibeiro
    Mar 20 at 16:37






  • 24





    Whatever the plot requires.

    – Carl Kevinson
    Mar 20 at 17:48






  • 3





    Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

    – Möoz
    Mar 20 at 21:43











  • what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

    – Dhon Joe
    Mar 25 at 10:55
















16















If Captain Marvel (MCU) were to have a child with a human male, would the child be human or Kree?




She was born human but was changed over to Kree and currently has Kree blood and Kree DNA.











share|improve this question




















  • 3





    If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

    – FernandoRibeiro
    Mar 20 at 16:37






  • 24





    Whatever the plot requires.

    – Carl Kevinson
    Mar 20 at 17:48






  • 3





    Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

    – Möoz
    Mar 20 at 21:43











  • what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

    – Dhon Joe
    Mar 25 at 10:55














16












16








16


1






If Captain Marvel (MCU) were to have a child with a human male, would the child be human or Kree?




She was born human but was changed over to Kree and currently has Kree blood and Kree DNA.











share|improve this question
















If Captain Marvel (MCU) were to have a child with a human male, would the child be human or Kree?




She was born human but was changed over to Kree and currently has Kree blood and Kree DNA.








marvel marvel-cinematic-universe captain-marvel-2019 captain-marvel






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 20 at 17:39









T.J.L.

4,11131843




4,11131843










asked Mar 20 at 12:57









HRIATEXPHRIATEXP

32619




32619








  • 3





    If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

    – FernandoRibeiro
    Mar 20 at 16:37






  • 24





    Whatever the plot requires.

    – Carl Kevinson
    Mar 20 at 17:48






  • 3





    Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

    – Möoz
    Mar 20 at 21:43











  • what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

    – Dhon Joe
    Mar 25 at 10:55














  • 3





    If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

    – FernandoRibeiro
    Mar 20 at 16:37






  • 24





    Whatever the plot requires.

    – Carl Kevinson
    Mar 20 at 17:48






  • 3





    Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

    – Möoz
    Mar 20 at 21:43











  • what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

    – Dhon Joe
    Mar 25 at 10:55








3




3





If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

– FernandoRibeiro
Mar 20 at 16:37





If Carol had her human DNA mixed with Kree DNA (and this is different from receiving Kree blood during a transfusion), then she's likely sterile. An individual that resulted from the mixing of the DNA of two different species is often sterile due to different chromossome counts between these two species.

– FernandoRibeiro
Mar 20 at 16:37




24




24





Whatever the plot requires.

– Carl Kevinson
Mar 20 at 17:48





Whatever the plot requires.

– Carl Kevinson
Mar 20 at 17:48




3




3





Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

– Möoz
Mar 20 at 21:43





Bold of you to assume she'd want to make a child with a male!

– Möoz
Mar 20 at 21:43













what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

– Dhon Joe
Mar 25 at 10:55





what if she had a shild with Thor... oups...

– Dhon Joe
Mar 25 at 10:55










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















39














Whilst the official answer of the MCU is technically "unknown" I would posit that she would have human children.



She may not actually be Kree



In the trailer and film Yon-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence tell her that she is part Kree. However, there isn't really much evidence for this. The main evidence is that she has blue blood but this only came from the initial transfusion by Yon-Rogg to save her. Her actual blood may not be blue but they could have been telling her she needed regular transfusions to keep her healthy and thus keep her blood blue.



Of course if she didn't have blue blood, as mentioned by @gowenfawr she would soon find out through her period anyway.



If I remember rightly the only time we see the blue blood is during the fake flashback when Yon-Rogg is replaced by a Skrull. The Kree have obviously manipulated this image so it is likely that they changed the blood colour. As mentioned by @Anthony Grist later on in the film when she recovers her memory of the events here her blood is red again.



Her DNA is almost certainly still human



The only part of her that is Kree, if anything, is her blood. The Kree changed no other part of her per my understanding. Her powers, that the Kree claimed to have given her, actually came from the Space Stone and not the Kree at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    @ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:31






  • 7





    @HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

    – Anthony Grist
    Mar 20 at 13:55






  • 3





    From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

    – Kai
    Mar 20 at 13:59








  • 8





    I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

    – Kitkat
    Mar 20 at 15:22






  • 4





    @only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:25



















11














Her children would likely be human.



The Kree do say that she is only part Kree, having been given Kree blood transfusions, just like Coulson and Daisy in the Agents of SHIELD universe.



This does not convert them to become a Kree. Her base body and DNA are still pretty much human.






share|improve this answer


























  • Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:33






  • 2





    @HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Stark07
    Mar 20 at 13:40











  • @Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

    – only_pro
    Mar 20 at 14:27






  • 1





    @only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:28



















8














We do see her bleed blue during the film. It happens during her memory flashback AND during her captivity with the Skrulls. The Kree may lie to her about giving her the cosmic powers (that she gets from the Tesseract), but they are not lying to her regarding what they have done with her physiology in order to




  1. save her life after the accident (she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance).

  2. cover up for their grand lie of her being Kree from birth.


Given that she bleeds blue, they had to alter her DNA in order for the blood supply to start replenishing itself as Kree and not human. Carol Danvers, by the end of the film, is no longer fully human. This can also be witnessed by the fact that Carol without her cosmic powers can still put up with Kree soldiers because her classic Captain America type powers (endurance, strength, healing factor, longevity, disease resistance, etc.) come from the Kree and thanks to Yon-Rogg.



That is her backstory in the comics, and in an altered way that is her backstory here (instead of DNA mixing you get blood transfusion, and instead of Mar-Vell you get Yon-Rogg).



Most likely, she either would have human-Kree hybrid children (in some respects), or no children at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    “she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 16:38






  • 1





    @ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

    – Nargen Flure
    Mar 20 at 16:54











  • @NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 19:14






  • 2





    Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:20






  • 1





    she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

    – Juha Untinen
    Mar 21 at 11:47














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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









39














Whilst the official answer of the MCU is technically "unknown" I would posit that she would have human children.



She may not actually be Kree



In the trailer and film Yon-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence tell her that she is part Kree. However, there isn't really much evidence for this. The main evidence is that she has blue blood but this only came from the initial transfusion by Yon-Rogg to save her. Her actual blood may not be blue but they could have been telling her she needed regular transfusions to keep her healthy and thus keep her blood blue.



Of course if she didn't have blue blood, as mentioned by @gowenfawr she would soon find out through her period anyway.



If I remember rightly the only time we see the blue blood is during the fake flashback when Yon-Rogg is replaced by a Skrull. The Kree have obviously manipulated this image so it is likely that they changed the blood colour. As mentioned by @Anthony Grist later on in the film when she recovers her memory of the events here her blood is red again.



Her DNA is almost certainly still human



The only part of her that is Kree, if anything, is her blood. The Kree changed no other part of her per my understanding. Her powers, that the Kree claimed to have given her, actually came from the Space Stone and not the Kree at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    @ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:31






  • 7





    @HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

    – Anthony Grist
    Mar 20 at 13:55






  • 3





    From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

    – Kai
    Mar 20 at 13:59








  • 8





    I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

    – Kitkat
    Mar 20 at 15:22






  • 4





    @only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:25
















39














Whilst the official answer of the MCU is technically "unknown" I would posit that she would have human children.



She may not actually be Kree



In the trailer and film Yon-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence tell her that she is part Kree. However, there isn't really much evidence for this. The main evidence is that she has blue blood but this only came from the initial transfusion by Yon-Rogg to save her. Her actual blood may not be blue but they could have been telling her she needed regular transfusions to keep her healthy and thus keep her blood blue.



Of course if she didn't have blue blood, as mentioned by @gowenfawr she would soon find out through her period anyway.



If I remember rightly the only time we see the blue blood is during the fake flashback when Yon-Rogg is replaced by a Skrull. The Kree have obviously manipulated this image so it is likely that they changed the blood colour. As mentioned by @Anthony Grist later on in the film when she recovers her memory of the events here her blood is red again.



Her DNA is almost certainly still human



The only part of her that is Kree, if anything, is her blood. The Kree changed no other part of her per my understanding. Her powers, that the Kree claimed to have given her, actually came from the Space Stone and not the Kree at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    @ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:31






  • 7





    @HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

    – Anthony Grist
    Mar 20 at 13:55






  • 3





    From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

    – Kai
    Mar 20 at 13:59








  • 8





    I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

    – Kitkat
    Mar 20 at 15:22






  • 4





    @only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:25














39












39








39







Whilst the official answer of the MCU is technically "unknown" I would posit that she would have human children.



She may not actually be Kree



In the trailer and film Yon-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence tell her that she is part Kree. However, there isn't really much evidence for this. The main evidence is that she has blue blood but this only came from the initial transfusion by Yon-Rogg to save her. Her actual blood may not be blue but they could have been telling her she needed regular transfusions to keep her healthy and thus keep her blood blue.



Of course if she didn't have blue blood, as mentioned by @gowenfawr she would soon find out through her period anyway.



If I remember rightly the only time we see the blue blood is during the fake flashback when Yon-Rogg is replaced by a Skrull. The Kree have obviously manipulated this image so it is likely that they changed the blood colour. As mentioned by @Anthony Grist later on in the film when she recovers her memory of the events here her blood is red again.



Her DNA is almost certainly still human



The only part of her that is Kree, if anything, is her blood. The Kree changed no other part of her per my understanding. Her powers, that the Kree claimed to have given her, actually came from the Space Stone and not the Kree at all.






share|improve this answer















Whilst the official answer of the MCU is technically "unknown" I would posit that she would have human children.



She may not actually be Kree



In the trailer and film Yon-Rogg and the Supreme Intelligence tell her that she is part Kree. However, there isn't really much evidence for this. The main evidence is that she has blue blood but this only came from the initial transfusion by Yon-Rogg to save her. Her actual blood may not be blue but they could have been telling her she needed regular transfusions to keep her healthy and thus keep her blood blue.



Of course if she didn't have blue blood, as mentioned by @gowenfawr she would soon find out through her period anyway.



If I remember rightly the only time we see the blue blood is during the fake flashback when Yon-Rogg is replaced by a Skrull. The Kree have obviously manipulated this image so it is likely that they changed the blood colour. As mentioned by @Anthony Grist later on in the film when she recovers her memory of the events here her blood is red again.



Her DNA is almost certainly still human



The only part of her that is Kree, if anything, is her blood. The Kree changed no other part of her per my understanding. Her powers, that the Kree claimed to have given her, actually came from the Space Stone and not the Kree at all.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 20 at 14:07

























answered Mar 20 at 13:09









TheLethalCarrotTheLethalCarrot

49.2k20267311




49.2k20267311








  • 1





    @ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:31






  • 7





    @HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

    – Anthony Grist
    Mar 20 at 13:55






  • 3





    From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

    – Kai
    Mar 20 at 13:59








  • 8





    I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

    – Kitkat
    Mar 20 at 15:22






  • 4





    @only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:25














  • 1





    @ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:31






  • 7





    @HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

    – Anthony Grist
    Mar 20 at 13:55






  • 3





    From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

    – Kai
    Mar 20 at 13:59








  • 8





    I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

    – Kitkat
    Mar 20 at 15:22






  • 4





    @only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:25








1




1





@ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

– HRIATEXP
Mar 20 at 13:31





@ TheLethalCarrot, well, the only issue I have with that is the rest of her body would have to have been modified to use Kree blood and that probably would have been a DNA change to all the cells in her body. So I would think that she may look Human on the outside but internally all her cells are Kree.

– HRIATEXP
Mar 20 at 13:31




7




7





@HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

– Anthony Grist
Mar 20 at 13:55





@HRIATEXP Her body had already been substantially changed after absorbing power from the Lightspeed drive (powered by an Infinity Stone), before she (possibly) received any Kree blood. We also don't know that there would need to have been other changes to allow her to be given Kree blood; maybe the Kree are the intergalactic version of the "universal donor", and it just works.

– Anthony Grist
Mar 20 at 13:55




3




3





From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

– Kai
Mar 20 at 13:59







From marvelcinematicuniverse.fandom.com/wiki/Kree "Another noteworthy trait is their highly potent regenerative capabilities. Their healing factor is considered to be so profound that S.H.I.E.L.D. attempted to use the G.H.'s blood to perform transfusions with mortally wounded, dying, or dead humans in order to resurrect them or cure them of terminal illnesses. However, the process only works on beings with "simple" biological makeups like humans". The blood transfusion was to heal her, not to change her to be Kree. They just used it after the fact to pretend she was Kree.

– Kai
Mar 20 at 13:59






8




8





I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

– Kitkat
Mar 20 at 15:22





I watched the movie specifically looking for Carol's blood and I THINK we see some (blue) during her sparring with Yon-Rogg (from the nose) and while she's escaping from the Kree ship (from the lip). The lighting's a little dark though.

– Kitkat
Mar 20 at 15:22




4




4





@only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:25





@only_pro - Exactly. Humans don't keep the same blood their whole lives, and need to replace them via bone marrow. Who's to say Kree blood doesn't self-regenerate (i.e. blue blood cells make more blue blood cells, rather than bone making new cells). Given the nature of the Kree, I'd find it vastly more likely that the blue blood has self-replicating nanites in it that cover the regenerative abilities, or even that it self-replenishes naturally, than the idea that they changed all the DNA in a fully-grown human on-the-fly.

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:25













11














Her children would likely be human.



The Kree do say that she is only part Kree, having been given Kree blood transfusions, just like Coulson and Daisy in the Agents of SHIELD universe.



This does not convert them to become a Kree. Her base body and DNA are still pretty much human.






share|improve this answer


























  • Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:33






  • 2





    @HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Stark07
    Mar 20 at 13:40











  • @Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

    – only_pro
    Mar 20 at 14:27






  • 1





    @only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:28
















11














Her children would likely be human.



The Kree do say that she is only part Kree, having been given Kree blood transfusions, just like Coulson and Daisy in the Agents of SHIELD universe.



This does not convert them to become a Kree. Her base body and DNA are still pretty much human.






share|improve this answer


























  • Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:33






  • 2





    @HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Stark07
    Mar 20 at 13:40











  • @Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

    – only_pro
    Mar 20 at 14:27






  • 1





    @only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:28














11












11








11







Her children would likely be human.



The Kree do say that she is only part Kree, having been given Kree blood transfusions, just like Coulson and Daisy in the Agents of SHIELD universe.



This does not convert them to become a Kree. Her base body and DNA are still pretty much human.






share|improve this answer















Her children would likely be human.



The Kree do say that she is only part Kree, having been given Kree blood transfusions, just like Coulson and Daisy in the Agents of SHIELD universe.



This does not convert them to become a Kree. Her base body and DNA are still pretty much human.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 20 at 13:53









TheLethalCarrot

49.2k20267311




49.2k20267311










answered Mar 20 at 13:20









Stark07Stark07

10.3k74993




10.3k74993













  • Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:33






  • 2





    @HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Stark07
    Mar 20 at 13:40











  • @Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

    – only_pro
    Mar 20 at 14:27






  • 1





    @only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:28



















  • Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

    – HRIATEXP
    Mar 20 at 13:33






  • 2





    @HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Stark07
    Mar 20 at 13:40











  • @Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

    – only_pro
    Mar 20 at 14:27






  • 1





    @only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:28

















Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

– HRIATEXP
Mar 20 at 13:33





Please see the comment I made to user TheLethalCarrot.

– HRIATEXP
Mar 20 at 13:33




2




2





@HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

– Stark07
Mar 20 at 13:40





@HRIATEXP we have no evidence to suggest that kree blood internally overwrites all living tissue and replaces it with kree tissue. Seems a bit unlikely.

– Stark07
Mar 20 at 13:40













@Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

– only_pro
Mar 20 at 14:27





@Stark07 Please see my comment on the other answer explaining why it would basically have to.

– only_pro
Mar 20 at 14:27




1




1





@only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:28





@only_pro It would basically have to iff Kree blood is analogous to a Human blood type. We have no reason to believe this, nor to assume the Kree have the same method for replacing lost or degraded blood cells.

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:28











8














We do see her bleed blue during the film. It happens during her memory flashback AND during her captivity with the Skrulls. The Kree may lie to her about giving her the cosmic powers (that she gets from the Tesseract), but they are not lying to her regarding what they have done with her physiology in order to




  1. save her life after the accident (she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance).

  2. cover up for their grand lie of her being Kree from birth.


Given that she bleeds blue, they had to alter her DNA in order for the blood supply to start replenishing itself as Kree and not human. Carol Danvers, by the end of the film, is no longer fully human. This can also be witnessed by the fact that Carol without her cosmic powers can still put up with Kree soldiers because her classic Captain America type powers (endurance, strength, healing factor, longevity, disease resistance, etc.) come from the Kree and thanks to Yon-Rogg.



That is her backstory in the comics, and in an altered way that is her backstory here (instead of DNA mixing you get blood transfusion, and instead of Mar-Vell you get Yon-Rogg).



Most likely, she either would have human-Kree hybrid children (in some respects), or no children at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    “she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 16:38






  • 1





    @ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

    – Nargen Flure
    Mar 20 at 16:54











  • @NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 19:14






  • 2





    Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:20






  • 1





    she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

    – Juha Untinen
    Mar 21 at 11:47


















8














We do see her bleed blue during the film. It happens during her memory flashback AND during her captivity with the Skrulls. The Kree may lie to her about giving her the cosmic powers (that she gets from the Tesseract), but they are not lying to her regarding what they have done with her physiology in order to




  1. save her life after the accident (she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance).

  2. cover up for their grand lie of her being Kree from birth.


Given that she bleeds blue, they had to alter her DNA in order for the blood supply to start replenishing itself as Kree and not human. Carol Danvers, by the end of the film, is no longer fully human. This can also be witnessed by the fact that Carol without her cosmic powers can still put up with Kree soldiers because her classic Captain America type powers (endurance, strength, healing factor, longevity, disease resistance, etc.) come from the Kree and thanks to Yon-Rogg.



That is her backstory in the comics, and in an altered way that is her backstory here (instead of DNA mixing you get blood transfusion, and instead of Mar-Vell you get Yon-Rogg).



Most likely, she either would have human-Kree hybrid children (in some respects), or no children at all.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    “she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 16:38






  • 1





    @ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

    – Nargen Flure
    Mar 20 at 16:54











  • @NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 19:14






  • 2





    Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:20






  • 1





    she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

    – Juha Untinen
    Mar 21 at 11:47
















8












8








8







We do see her bleed blue during the film. It happens during her memory flashback AND during her captivity with the Skrulls. The Kree may lie to her about giving her the cosmic powers (that she gets from the Tesseract), but they are not lying to her regarding what they have done with her physiology in order to




  1. save her life after the accident (she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance).

  2. cover up for their grand lie of her being Kree from birth.


Given that she bleeds blue, they had to alter her DNA in order for the blood supply to start replenishing itself as Kree and not human. Carol Danvers, by the end of the film, is no longer fully human. This can also be witnessed by the fact that Carol without her cosmic powers can still put up with Kree soldiers because her classic Captain America type powers (endurance, strength, healing factor, longevity, disease resistance, etc.) come from the Kree and thanks to Yon-Rogg.



That is her backstory in the comics, and in an altered way that is her backstory here (instead of DNA mixing you get blood transfusion, and instead of Mar-Vell you get Yon-Rogg).



Most likely, she either would have human-Kree hybrid children (in some respects), or no children at all.






share|improve this answer















We do see her bleed blue during the film. It happens during her memory flashback AND during her captivity with the Skrulls. The Kree may lie to her about giving her the cosmic powers (that she gets from the Tesseract), but they are not lying to her regarding what they have done with her physiology in order to




  1. save her life after the accident (she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance).

  2. cover up for their grand lie of her being Kree from birth.


Given that she bleeds blue, they had to alter her DNA in order for the blood supply to start replenishing itself as Kree and not human. Carol Danvers, by the end of the film, is no longer fully human. This can also be witnessed by the fact that Carol without her cosmic powers can still put up with Kree soldiers because her classic Captain America type powers (endurance, strength, healing factor, longevity, disease resistance, etc.) come from the Kree and thanks to Yon-Rogg.



That is her backstory in the comics, and in an altered way that is her backstory here (instead of DNA mixing you get blood transfusion, and instead of Mar-Vell you get Yon-Rogg).



Most likely, she either would have human-Kree hybrid children (in some respects), or no children at all.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 20 at 16:30









TheLethalCarrot

49.2k20267311




49.2k20267311










answered Mar 20 at 15:55









Nargen FlureNargen Flure

892




892








  • 2





    “she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 16:38






  • 1





    @ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

    – Nargen Flure
    Mar 20 at 16:54











  • @NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 19:14






  • 2





    Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:20






  • 1





    she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

    – Juha Untinen
    Mar 21 at 11:47
















  • 2





    “she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 16:38






  • 1





    @ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

    – Nargen Flure
    Mar 20 at 16:54











  • @NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Mar 20 at 19:14






  • 2





    Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

    – Delioth
    Mar 20 at 21:20






  • 1





    she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

    – Juha Untinen
    Mar 21 at 11:47










2




2





“she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 20 at 16:38





“she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone, for instance” — are we sure about this? Tony Stark, Peter Parker and Stephen Strange survive fine on Titan without any apparent assistance from suits in Infinity War. I'm not sure real-world science can reliably be applied to MCU movies. to any great extent.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 20 at 16:38




1




1





@ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

– Nargen Flure
Mar 20 at 16:54





@ Paul D. Waite An educated guess, given that this has been made a point of in several comics. If we went by the rules of real-world science reliably then a blood transfusion shouldn't be possible and neither would be a survival after an energy blast from the jet engine. Where the line is drawn in regard to believability is up to personal preference, I reckon.

– Nargen Flure
Mar 20 at 16:54













@NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 20 at 19:14





@NargenFlure: I'm not sure the comics are particularly relevant, although I guess they might want to make Hala's suitability for humans a plot point in a future movie.

– Paul D. Waite
Mar 20 at 19:14




2




2





Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:20





Do we have an actual source on her needing to have altered DNA? Given that Kree have remarkable regenerative abilities and a biology obviously at least a little different from Humans, I don't think it's a given that she'd need DNA alterations to keep her blue blood - Kree blood could very well self-replicate or may not need replacement (i.e. exceptionally long-lived, only replaced after trauma).

– Delioth
Mar 20 at 21:20




1




1





she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

– Juha Untinen
Mar 21 at 11:47







she wouldn't survive on Hala without a suit due to environmental conditions alone but she survives outer space without a space suit?

– Juha Untinen
Mar 21 at 11:47




















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