In Spider-Man: Far From Home's post-credits scene (spoilers, obviously), it was revealed that Hill was actually Soren the Skrull (Sharon Blynn), and Nick Fury (Samuel L. Jackson) was really Talos (Ben Mendelsohn), both of whom were previously introduced in Captain Marvel earlier this year.
Nick Fury also cameoed in Avengers: Endgame, but only during Tony Stark's funeral. He was nowhere to be seen in the final battle that had the recently-returned dusted and those who's survived The Decimation battling Thanos and his forces.
There's no direct tie between Thanos and the Skrulls, but both are the result of genetic experimentation by the Celestials. The Skrulls were also originally separated into Eternal and Deviant classes, though in their case the Deviants became the dominant race.
In the comics, Fury lost his eye after complications from a Nazi grenade blast and in an explosion during the Gulf War. A third Fury, his secret son in the comics with the same name, had his eye cut out.
The heroes reencounter Hank Pym at the beginning of the Kree-Skrull War, and once again as the Ant-Man persona and has a series of solo adventures. After aiding fellow superhero team known as the Defenders as Yellowjacket, Pym returns to the Avengers.
Presumably at some point, Stark gave Lawson the Tesseract. Lawson had hidden the Tesseract in a cloaked ship; after the big showdown of the film, her cat/Flerken Goose swallows the cube. He coughs it back up in the movie's second post-credits sequence when Fury's office is still decked out in clunky 90s technology.
Skrulls can be good, bad, or in the middle. The ones we see in Captain Marvel and Spider-Man: Far From Home are on the side of good. However that doesn't mean that there aren't other Skrulls out there that are just as evil as the Kree describe them to be.
Do you think we will ever see his wife is she the MCU version of Monica Chang. I was curious about Fury's wife when he mentioned her.
Surprise, he's actually a Skrull! As it's revealed during the final closing credits scene of the movie, the Fury we've seen the entire movie is not Fury, but rather Talos, the Skrull who was introduced in Captain Marvel (played by Ben Mendelsohn).
Maria Hill called Fury "Nick" three times before she dusted. as he claims even his mum calls him Fury and that if he ever has kids, they will address him as Fury as well. The cue that one of his colleagues was a Skrull was not simply calling him 'Nick' but Nicholas - a name we've only ever heard the man himself utter.
More specifically, Nick Fury was impersonated by Talos (Ben Mendelsohn), reprising his villainous role from Captain Marvel earlier this year. When Fury shuts off the illusion, he gets up and orders the Skrulls around him to go “back to work.”
Talos was initially believed to be an evil general plotting to infiltrate and conquer Earth, but later it was revealed that he's a survivor trying to protect his people from the Supreme Intelligence who had deceived Captain Marvelinto wrongfully hunting the Skrull refugees.
Talos and Fury maintained a friendship over the years, to the point that Fury allowed Talos to impersonate him in order to investigate the Elementals and track down Spider-Man.
Maria Hill was not herself in 'Spider-Man: Far From Home'In the last coda after the end credits, it is revealed that Maria Hill and Nick Fury were Skrulls in disguise. Nick Fury was on vacation on the Skrull spaceship, but we never found out where the real Maria Hill was. Neither did Smulders.
Nick Fury seemed a little off for most of the movie — mainly because he fell for the deception of Mysterio for so long. It turns out the real Fury was in space with a colony of Skrulls, receiving updates from Talos on what was happening with Tony Stark's heir apparent, Peter Parker/Spider-Man.
A shocking moment came in Captain America: Winter Soldier when Nick Fury is assassinated by Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan). Later in the movie, it was revealed that Fury never died at all. He faked his death and allowed the world to believe that the director of S.H.I.E.L.D. was dead.
The original Nick Fury, i.e. the one from the main Marvel Comics universe, Earth 616, is a white man, but in the Ultimate universe continuity, which launched in 2000, he's a black man who looks just like Samuel L. Jackson.
Fury plays off the cat scratch like it was no big deal afterwards — and usually cat scratches aren't. The only problem is that Goose isn't actually a cat! Coulson says that he heard that Fury lost his eye in an attack by the Kree while he'd been protecting the Tesseract.
Skrull Avengers:
- Black Panther (Skrull)
- Captain America (Skrull) II.
- Hawkeye (Skrull)
- Hulk (Skrull)
- Iron Man (Skrull)
- Thor (Skrull)
- Wasp (Skrull)
Fury: Don't invoke her name. The "don't invoke her name" is probably a reverential nod to the insane, otherworldly, God-like power that Carol Danvers has, but for the extreme existential threat that Mysterio claims the Elementals are to Earth, it makes perfect sense to call in Captain Marvel for this task.
Goose is a Flerken and the former pet of Mar-Vell. After saving survived Skrull refugees and protecting the Tesseract from Starforce and Kree soldiers, Goose was responsible for permanently blinding Fury's left eye with her claws. Despite what happened, Fury opted to take care of Goose after Danvers left Earth.
Though they've had peaceful periods in their history and not all members of their race are evil, the Kree-Skrull War storyline shows them as deceptive killers.
In Far From Home, Happy Hogan has a coded conversation with Nick Fury: “Apparently, Mr. Stark was going through his belongings and there was a surfboard you left behind.” Fury responds, “The surfboard isn't mine. Don't ever call this number again.”
During the final fight, Happy Hogan calls Nick Fury to warn him about Mysterio's real plan. Later when they meet up, Happy says "Did you get my coded message?" and that it translates to 'Looks can be deceiving'.