avclub-33db3a48eacdf0044da49eead8e14f68--disqus
Dillon
avclub-33db3a48eacdf0044da49eead8e14f68--disqus

Those were real??? WOOOOOOOOWWWW!!!

Jeez, a long ass review for a D grade.

I watched Girl Most Likely. That movie should have been about the brother with the hermit crab suit.

Not "us" just you. Goddamn white devil!

Whoa, whoa whoa, Japan still has an imperial family?

Why would you want an informed public?

KITH was great, but let's not erode the definition of "legendary" OK?

That was a hangout comedy with Batman and the villains eating pot brownies. Hilarity ensues, then tragedy.

Denzel Washington, the token black actor. *Sniff sniff* after all the hard work we've made, still to be marginalized like that…

That show was fucking awesome! You shut up! You shut up and you go to hell and you die!

I would have preferred a show where Bruce Wayne goes to college and his roommate is the guy that would become the Joker.

I hope the TV show has a musical episode.

I meant Bruce Wayne doesn't have super powers. Or used to not. Apparently his consciousness has been time traveling?

"I'll definitely do it if I get to sing a mournful song to Shadowcat," Jackman added.

Not to get too cynical, but the reason in the comics Batman doesn't kill is because the writers don't want to kill off the Joker. Except for Ra's Al Gul, Batman is a pretty reality based title, unlike Superman or Green Lantern.

It's very common for trauma to replay itself. Bruce Wayne is psychologically scarred. You don't think he'd kill bad guys because he's trying to "fix" the murder of his parents? It's called misplaced rage.

What is the reveal? Why doesn't this review have a spoiler space? I don't want to have to listen to Penelope Cruz's stupid accent.

"But while Burton and Keaton’s version of Batman sometimes places less
emphasis on the character’s traditional mix of detective work and
heroism under a strict code (plenty of bad guys appear to die in Batman Returns, though most of them are scary clowns)…"

"Throughout the most book"? Not proofreading great.

Sounds like a poor man's John Le Carre story.