Ms. Marvel co-directors Billal Fallah and Adil El Arbi have an answer for whether or not Kamala Khan and her family were snapped by Thanos following Avengers: Infinity War.

"Well, I would assume that, seeing how the family dynamic is with them, I have a feeling that none of them got snapped," the directors said in an interview with The Direct. "But whenever we ask [Marvel Studios President and Cheif Creative Officer Kevin Feige] about, 'What about The Snap or The Blip? Do we reference it at all?' He would say, 'Don’t worry about it. Focus on the story, focus just on that, don't ask too many questions about other movies, other shows and all that.' That was sort of his mantra for Ms. Marvel."

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A similar question regarding Thanos' Snap and five years following it, known as The Blip, was raised for the Disney+ series, Moon Knight, starring Oscar Isaac. Like Ms. Marvel, the series did not address whether or not the main characters had been part of the 50% of life that disappeared following The Snap. However, Moon Knight head writer Jeremy Slater revealed that if Marc Spector had been blipped, it'd be something "you would have to address" in the series.

How the MCU Addresses the Snap

"It's something you would have to deal with, especially as a character who is trying to find his place in the world, and has a lot of questions about his past," Slater said. "To not touch on the Blip of it all, felt weird. So we all kind of collectively assumed that he was part of the 50 percent that survived."

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Co-created by editors Sana Amanat and Stephen Wacker, writer G. Willow Wilson and artists Adrian Alphona and Jamie McKelvie, Ms. Marvel/Kamala Khan made her Marvel Comics debut in 2012. Starring Vellani, the Disney+ series will, like the comics, follow the Pakistani-American teen as the titular hero, who was Marvel's first Muslim character to star in her own series and will be the MCU's first onscreen Muslim hero.

According to Amanat, who also served as an executive producer on the Disney+ series, Ms. Marvel was intended to be every bit as quirky and colorful as the original comics, intermixing animation and live-action as a way to give life to the fantasies of its protagonist, Kamala. "It was important to us that you come right into Kamala's world and see it through her eyes," said El Arbi about Ms. Marvel. "It really shows that her head is in the clouds and she's always fantasizing."

Season 1 of Ms. Marvel is available to stream in full on Disney+.

Source: The Direct