Natasha has had a few romantic relationships with her fellow heroes, which all play important roles in her development and mean very much to her. Some notable ex-lovers include Clint Barton (Hawkeye), Matt Murdock (Daredevil), Bucky Barnes (the Winter Soldier), and Alexei Shostakov.
She looked up to Natasha and, like a little sister, hated anything she did like her big sister. But that love between both Nat and Yelena is clear throughout the movie, even if they don't want to admit it to each other.
Black Widow Loved Hawkeye
While never explicitly stated in the films leading up to Avengers: Endgame, Natasha Romanoff and Clint Barton have a romantic connection in their relationship, though they couldn't consummate it for various reasons.
Arte Com Personagens. Tony Stark and Natasha Romanoff DID have a love affair in the comics.
Yelena Belova (Russian: Елена Белова) is the adoptive sister of Natasha Romanoff and a Red Room operative who worked for General Dreykov as a Black Widow.
During the War, the young Natasha served in the Russian army where she fell in love with another young soldier named Nikolai. Despite their initial happiness, their union did not end blissfully. Nikolai was killed in the war and the baby girl they conceived did not survive birth.
Captain America: The Winter Soldier established that Romanoff was born in 1984 and Black Widow's prologue introduced young Natasha (Ever Anderson) in 1995 when she was 11 years old. Meanwhile, young Yelena (Violet McGraw) was 6 years old in Black Widow's prologue, so she was born in 1989.
Jane Foster is a longtime fixture of the Thor comics. A creation of Stan Lee, Larry Lieber, and Jack Kirby, she debuted in 1962's Journey Into Mystery #84. Originally Lee and Lieber wrote her as a nurse, though she eventually was made a doctor. She first wielded Thor's hammer in 1978 in a What If?
Nat is overly flirtatious for no reason in "Iron Man 2."
When Tony asks what Nat would do if it were her last birthday, she oddly tells him, "I'd do whatever I wanted to do with whoever I wanted to do it with."
According to Avengers: Endgame writers Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, the man she married was the Captain America from the main MCU timeline who went back in time at the end of the film.
The relationship between Bucky Barnes and Natasha Romanoff dates all the way back to the Cold War in the Soviet Union where Bucky was one of Natasha's trainers at the Red Room Academy. It was here that their relationship blossomed into a romantic one.
It's only seconds later that this is reaffirmed as Natasha whispers a tearfully permitted "let me go" before kicking free of Clint's grasp; the loss of contact replaced by a feeling of unbalance.
She had acquired the information S.H.I.E.L.D. needed from a mark and now needed to get out of the situation without burning her bridges. To that end, Clint stalked into the party, walked up and kissed her.
Yelenat is the femslash ship between Natasha Romanoff and Yelena Belova from the Marvel fandom and a family ship from the Marvel Cinematic Universe fandom.
After the release of Natasha Romanoff's (Scarlett Johansson) Black Widow, Marvel president Kevin Feige has notably said that Yelena will not become the next Black Widow. Rather, Feige explained that Yelena will be carrying on her sister Natasha's legacy – but in her own way, as her own character.
I'd say Yelena has an edge because she's known for her skills as an assassin while Natasha is moreso known for her skills as a spy from what I know. I'd reason that Yelena would have more skill in hand-to-hand combat since she'd end up in those situations more often.
Scarlett Johansson is finally getting a standalone movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe after 11 years with the upcoming release of “Black Widow.” The Oscar nominee made her MCU debut in “Iron Man 2,” and she told reporters during a set visit roundtable (via HelloBeautiful and Collider) that Black Widow was “so ...
Black Widow made her MCU debut in Iron Man 2 as an undercover spy posing as Tony Stark's assistant under the name Natalie Rushman.
“Fallaces sunt rerum species.”
This Latin phrase roughly translates to 'appearances can be deceiving' in English. Natasha says this to Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) after he insults her, calling her duplicitous and questioning her ability to speak the dead language she had listed on her resume.
By the end of the film, Love is resurrected thanks to the cosmic being Eternity and is raised by Thor. Thor has adopted Love and is now raising her as a new father figure, something made sweeter by the fact that the pair are played by a real-life father and daughter.
Gorr's Daughter Love is Chris Hemsworth's Real-Life Daughter
Jane Foster promises Gorr with her own dying breath that Thor will take care of the child, and Thor, now heartbroken and alone, chooses to adopt the child. But in real life, the actor that plays Love is actually Chris Hemsworth's real daughter.
Life as a warrior. Sif and Thor are separated when his father Odin banishes Thor from Asgard and Thor begins a life as a superhero on Earth. Many years later Thor becomes romantically involved with Jane Foster. Thor brings Jane to Asgard to be wed and she is granted immortality but fails a final test.
Yelena Belova (Asexual)
The most popular comic book version of Black Widow is Natasha Romanoff. While she isn't necessarily the strongest Black Widow, she has shown the ability to match the prowess of superpowered characters due to her training, experience, and discipline as a fighter.
Black Widow is a 1954 American DeLuxe Color mystery film in CinemaScope, with elements of film noir, written, produced, and directed by Nunnally Johnson, based on the 1952 novel of the same name by Patrick Quentin. The film stars Ginger Rogers, Van Heflin, Gene Tierney, and George Raft.