Immediate incarceration would be one bad side-effect. Loss of a civilian identity would be another. Having everyone you love be targeted would be a third.
Immediate incarceration would be one bad side-effect. Loss of a civilian identity would be another. Having everyone you love be targeted would be a third.
I'm entirely on Team Chilton now. I read him as someone who has gone from
Marvel isn't involved in any of those things…
No, it doesn't. Not in any manner of speaking. For that to be true a reviewer would have to have some mystical insight into a show's ultimate "potential quality", but that's impossible, because a show only ever has the quality that it actually demonstrates onscreen.
Yeah. I meant that I tuned in to Torrens' role in the new series, not the original where the character drops acid.
That was the character played by Torrens right? I've always like his dramatic stuff, and so I tuned in for that episode specifically, and holy shit did he do a good job.
One of the few episode's I've seen that balances how someone with brain damage both deserves sympathy while potentially being utterly terrifying…
I'm not sure that "moralistic" is the right term for Degrassi. To me, moralism means having defined positions on every issue. Degrassi is pretty much only "accepting others is good, violence is bad", and applies that ideal over and over to a series of different plots.
"Do you really believe this is almost the best we can and should hope for SHIELD to ever be? "
Is the latter an actual theory?
My buddy used to animate a popular kids program. Canadians can be poorly paid assembly line animators too!
Seriously.
An ongoing TV show had not permanently resolved it's protagonist's primary motivation? You don't say.
I bought a Marvel Unlimited subscription, so I'll basically just be reading a lot of Superhero comics.
He was never a mutant. He was either genetically manipulated or "magic", but there's been no continuity where he's a mutant.
Haha, no, they don't have six round magazines. Coulson was wondering why only five rounds were missing from a magazine when Blake switched clips (realizing it was so he could use tracking bullets), implying that the magazine limit is larger than that.
Heather probably. James is usually Guardian these days.
Arrow makes it work.
During their initial discussion, they posited that the Clairvoyant was actually a telepath or included telepathy.
I'm using the term "plausible" rather than "realistic" here because the plausibility defence isn't about defending something as high quality because the narrative as a whole is realistic. Rather, it's about people defending a plot point as plausible in our reality, regardless of whether that plot point clashes with…
That's the thing… The realism of The Wire was part of its brilliant narrative structure.
Terms of Use in computer software often follows the same line, for instance, if you have to press the "I Agree" button after you've paid money for the software. Your agreement isn't binding because you were literally given no other choice in the matter if you wanted to use the product that you paid money for.