Following the events of Age of Ultron, the collective governments of the world pass an act designed to regulate all superhuman activity. This polarizes opinion amongst the Avengers, causing two factions to side with Iron Man or Captain America, which causes an epic battle between former allies.
This movie contains 41 potentially triggering events.
A police dog identifies the truck used to bomb the Sokovia Accords meeting just before the truck explodes. It is unlikely the dog lives as the blast radius is incredibly large and the dog is standing right next to the bomb.
Zemo tortures a guy by restraining him upside down, his head inside of a filling sink. The water eventually reaches his mouth and nose and we briefly see him struggle to breathe before he dies offscreen.
a non-human arm is blasted off and the character continues to have an arm that looks like it has been amputated for the rest of the movie, this is at the very end though
A main character breaks his back and another breaks his arm. The scenes in which the injuries occur are not graphic or long. We mainly see their recovery.
There is a character that is an amputee played by an actor who isn't, and a character who is paralyzed played by an actor who isn't. Both these characters have technology that allows them to function as if they didn't have the disability, but both characters also have moments where the disability does affect their lives.
T'Challa's father T'Chaka dies in a bombing, passing along the mantle of Black Panther. It is shown on screen, with no gore other than smoke and ambiguous blood.
Short answer; no. But at the beginning, Tony Stark introduces a CGI hologram project system, which he refers to as B.A.R.F, but it is not actually barf. I hope this helped
It is not in a LGBTQ context, but a character is referred to by their given name and not their preferred nickname. The character corrects the other party and the other party from then on refers to the character by the preferred nickname.
Like in Captain America: The Winter Soilder, Electro-Therapy is used on the Winter Soldier to scramble his memories. The Winter Soldier is shown screaming in pain
I found Tony Stark’s treatment of Peter Parker to be reminiscent of how adults mistreat kids with autism (manipulating them, making fun of them and their clothing choices, telling them they’re behaving socially awkwardly)
When there are police involved in chase/fight scenes there are blue flashing lights. While in government compounds there are blue flashing lights. There are emergency flashing lights in various buildings. When in the Iron Man suit sometimes Tony's screen flashes.
1:46 (minute 106) a dead body is shown in a tub in a hotel room (almost immediately after the airport battle). 1:49 his body is shown graphically on screen while Tony is in a helicopter. 1:59 people are shown shot in the fourhead. Tony's parents are graphically shown dying after a car crash. They are bloodied. At the end of their last fight Captain America, Bucky, and Iron Man are shown bloodied