KWSilk
KWSilk
KWSilk

It depends heavily on the person, but in general (and in addition to some other choice answers that others have put forward):

I'd take it a step further and say this entire series. You can lose yourself in it.

I actually enjoyed this movie too, but I wish they had named the character something else and changed the title. We now live in a world where studios have can bank on faithful adaptations of comic books, and there's simply no room in this new world for that franchise.

This is the right answer.

Rick Remender-era Uncanny X-Force. Don't be fooled by this image, it was a terrific series.

They're obviously restraining her raw deadliness/sexiness.

That's a good point. Originally she was just your average, purple haired, telepathic, British lady. She dressed in a pink 70s jumpsuit, like you would. As soon as her mind was transferred into an Asian person's body, she gained kick-ass martial arts skills and a lust for human blood, and decided to wear a bikini

How exactly does he stick out like a sore thumb? Kind of par for the coarse for a master of the universe.

Will the atrocities never stop?

I know, and I'm a big fan of the new design. However, overall I enjoyed Remender's run on Uncanny far more, but I can't reread it with without rolling my eyes at her absurd costume — a costume she has worn for years, and which is undoubtedly her most recognizable look.

The "it makes sense because she's a ninja," argument goes out the window when three of her team-mates are also ninjas and all wear pants.

Unless their prime comicbook reading years were between the 40s and 60s,then no, nobody remembers this. Modern comicbooks have always been designed to appeal to varying demographics. Yes, there have been and are still strong all-ages books, but since at least the 70s there have been excellent superhero comics aimed

Unless their prime comicbook reading years were between the 40s and 60s,then no, nobody remembers this. Modern comicbooks have always been designed to appeal to varying demographics. Yes, there have been and are still strong all-ages books, but since at least the 70s there have been excellent superhero comics aimed

Close enough for jazz.

Maybe I missed that, or maybe I wasn't paying attention and it subliminally influenced my suspicions. In either case, (re)learning about it now only reaffirms my theory.

Certainly possible, but I wouldn't necessarily say "more likely." Forgive my ignorance, but does the USS Roosevelt have any significance which could bear it specifically being referenced (over and over) in this trailer, or in a Captain America story? From a quick Google image search I have found that the USS

Fair, but I'm not alone in suspecting that Redford's character is villainous, hints of which can be found in this trailer ("sometimes means tearing the old one down, and that makes enemies") and from a villain's point of view an assassin working in the shadows may have had quite a hand in shaping the century.

Or tantalizingly so, depending on your point of view.

Wah Wahhhhhh.

Hey my fellow geeks, did anyone else take this as a thematic throwback to Prison 42? both (potentially) S.H.I.E.L.D. projects intended to quell threats to national security before they arise, both (potentially) opposed violently by Captain America.