Superheroes have become massive. They are no longer the thing of four geeks who read comics, but of entire generations of adults and young people who enjoy the new audiovisual products from Marvel and DC. However, when a new hero from the role adapts to the screen, scriptwriters usually hide small references in pill form so that lifelong fans do not feel excluded from the new mass phenomenon. However, this time, it seems that with Hawkeye The wink has gotten a little out of hand. The series aired the last episode of its first season on December 22, and it has not been until now when a reference that was in the early chapters has been discovered of the series.
Nor Nicolas Cage in The search I would have found the Easter egg
Between chapters 2 and 3 of the first season of Hawk Eye there is a message encoded in the most complex and absurd way you can imagine. The complication reaches such a point that it has been the director himself from the series, Rhys Thomas, who ended up commenting on the wink in an interview for the Metro medium.
And no, it is not about any frame or anything especially palpable. You could watch the sequences many times and still not see what they are hiding from you. And there are no videos on the internet either, so if you want to watch it, you will have to open Disney Plus in your browser or on your mobile. We warn you before you start that you will need paper and pencil, because you need to take notes.
At the end of the second chapterHawkeye is completely surrounded by the chandaleros mafia (“The Tracksuit Mafia” if you watch the series in English). They ask him about Kate Bishop, and he is lazy not to answer. Approximately in the minute 44 of episode, she falls from the ceiling, and the chandaleros claim to have found her. At 44:15, the gangsters handcuff them and we can see in the background some circular lights that are shaped like a ring. Well, during the whole sequence, which is interrupted, one of the fluorescent lights seems to be damaged and blinks. It might seem like a simple mistake when recording the takes, but the truth is that the flickering was done on purpose. If we add the footage from this episode and a bit from the next, we will see the complete sequence. If we translate the blinks to dots and dashes, that is, to Morse code, we will be able decipher the hidden message they are telling us.
Now that you know where the information is, we encourage you to discover it yourself, both the text and the meaning of the reference. You have a Morse code translator here.
And if you don’t feel like it, don’t worry and keep reading.
What does the Morse code hidden in Hawkeye?
Morse code says a date, which refers to the date of the first appearance of Kate bishop in the comics. It’s still a wink where the curl has been curled up too much, but it’s fun if someone’s freaky enough to detect it was Morse and set out to solve the riddle.
In the same interview, Rhys Thomas acknowledges that it’s not the first time he’s winked like this, so now that we know, surely more than one begins to investigate his filmography in search of coded information.
The Hawkeye entry showed hidden morse code that no one noticed – this is what it said was first posted on The Output.