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A mask with fabric that only the wearer can see through isn't that hard to believe. Everybody cosplaying The Question or Rorschach relies on such a thing.

I may be wrong about this, but it always seemed like Justified was assured renewal in a way The Americans isn't/hasn't been. When great shows are on the bubble, their fans get more aggressive in their proselytizing.

Between Rogers and Banner, they certainly seem to have a PED problem.

Yes, in fact. I forget her name, but apparently she also frequently wears cardigans and skirts.

Harmon has talked about that on Harmontown. Apparently it was his idea, as a way to show her growing up and getting away from the "sexy schoolgirl" thing. A fan who runs a tumblr dedicated to Annie's wardrobe hates this change and apparently had some input on what kind of cardigan/skirt combo to put her in for the

*At Tuesdays, at 9 o'clock, when its only real competition is NCIS LA which it's very nearly tied with.

I Was There Too is great. I meant to sample the others, but haven't found the time.

Had the same exact thought. But I'm ultimately okay with it since it's more narratively satisfying if Mystique is the emotional lynchpin for the climax than Wolverine still being up in the mix making everything about him yet again.

I don't want them to seriously address the realistic mechanics of the apocalypse. I'm just fine not seeing decayed corpses on my sitcom, thanks. What I would like to see is an effort to do goofy comic story lines that actually use their situation. We had Carol's garden problems early on and the discovery of the cow,

Yikes.

Fictional?

I think it's a 15-minute presentation, so about ten of that will be Zack Snyder and DC Executron #47 talking about how excited they are about the project or whatever. But since this happened, maybe they'll add in a little extra footage for the poor souls who are going to a theater to see it, along the lines of Marvel

I know it makes more sense for superheroes with secret identities to disguise their voices as much as they can, but I hate listening to it. I much prefer the approach favored by Christopher Reeve, Kevin Conroy, Will Friedle and several other cartoon voice actors, where the characters are just doing a slight spin on

The all-white eyes are a non-literal "this is a drawing" thing, just like Bibbo Bibbowski's actual dots for eyes. They look fantastic on a page or animated. These little light-up jobbies just look terrible.

No, no, something nice.

I was pleasantly surprised with how elegantly the Cavalry story served so many masters - it gives her that nickname; it plausibly traumatizes her out of the field; it specifically deals with a child and human touch, so one can see why her marriage might suffer; it provides one more reason for some SHIELD agents to be

I believe what Leonard's referring to there is the difference between writing "Character X spoke in Y accent" and misspelling or abbreviatin' half their dialogue to represent that accent. Not really relevant to film & television.

The '80s action movie absurdity is the point of the thing. Complaining about plausibility in Sexcastle is like pointing out science errors in Crank.

If the lie turned you off that much, just watch the second episode. The first goes beat for beat exactly how you think it will.

And it assumes an accurate assessment of what exactly the monolithic "rating" of a thing is, which usually doesn't exist and who can know what that really is anyway?