avclub-c6e401dd5c1b984ece73703623f211af--disqus
raven wilder
avclub-c6e401dd5c1b984ece73703623f211af--disqus

Well, when "can't feel pain" is mixed with "can't be killed", it's a tad more useful.

Do you watch Legends of Tomorrow? 'Cause on that show, everyone seems to be under the impression "library" is pronounced "lie-berry".

That's definitely how they'd try to sell it to a new recruit like Oliver, certainly.

Calling someone "metal" is generally used as a compliment, though.

Laurel's Black Canary was part of rallying the Glades against Brick; I'd say that gets her some notoriety.

Hearing him try for a normal conversation while he had the creepy whispery voice was hilarious.

No, no, she'll say, "What's that rattle?"

I wonder if they're going to make use of the fact that being on a different Earth means you're not affected by another Earth's timeline changing. Like, they go on a trip to Earth-2 or Earth-3, and when they come back, they find that some evil time traveler has changed everything.

The really huge improvement is in Season 2, since they knew there was almost no way they were going to get a Season 3, so they piled five seasons worth of storylines into 13 episodes, turning the show into an incredibly fast-paced cerebral rollercoaster.

Is there any word more thrilling to the human soul?

I'm still pissed that never became an actual series.

I have the feeling that will become less of an issue over time thanks to ebooks, where one book can be tagged with multiple different genres, while with bookstores, a given copy of a book can only be stacked in one section of the store at a time.

My definition of horror is that it must be intended to scare you, but scare you in a way you're not used to being scared. Violent home invaders are a thing we know exist in real life, take precautions exist, and are sort of used to as a background threat, so using them to frighten the audience makes a movie fall into

I actually read that as "Powerpuff Girl costume" at first, which kinda makes the situation creepier.

Not God, Grodd.

Okay, so I wasn't the only one hearing "Liberry". Good to know.

We know Darhk couldn't have had his magic for any more than nine years, since the idol he drew his power from was sealed away on Lian Yu until Oliver got to it.

Putting the graveyard flashforward in the premiere without working out a plan for who would be in it was definitely a mistake.

I recently heard someone refer to this show as being like a modern version of the 1960's Batman series, and that really does explain its appeal better than almost anything I can think of.

He mentioned that he needed the help of a quantum physicist to discover the "subliminal" changes to history, so it seems that creating a new timeline doesn't entirely remove all traces of the old.