bashbash99
bashbash99
bashbash99

Honestly, I don’t buy that Disney was bending over Internet trolls. I think what happened with Finn’s and Rose’s characters was a result of the poor planning between the movies. Something that happens to all the characters, but hits them the hardest. To me it was clear that in TFA JJ was setting up Finn up as some

PLEASE tell me they had a bit where someone asked Cobra Commander why he sounded so much like Starscream.

What, no “Murder, She Wrote”/“Magnum P.I.”?

I think the toy helicopter was a drone that was flown in, and like you said was forced to conform to the reality Wanda’s making. 

I’m going to be sad if Wanda turns out to be the Big Bad here. I’m tired of abused & damaged women being turned into monsters (even sympathetic ones).

Well, no, they saw Mark of Zorro. Excalibur was opening a week later. If only they’d waited until Wednesday...

It’s also similar to another reality-warping Marvel show, Legion. 

I'm glad I'm not the only one getting Annihilation vibes. Very heavy at the end of this episode.

Agreed. I love going to the movies, love getting popcorn and beer at Alamo Drafthouse, but I love not getting a crippling respiratory disease more.

I think you’re right about Monica and I like your idea about the bee keeper suit. Parris was really good this ep, switching between Monica’s ‘70s sitcom persona and her real self. Plus it looks like she get to keep those awesome fish pants.

warner’s strategy is looking smarter and smarter, unfortunately.

Not to mention he’s an entrepreneur who runs a real-estate company with no employees and $0 reported revenue.

Like, who would possibly make such a bonkers claim about getting into the Olympics?

“Why is this movie so long? Doesn’t Peter Jackson know about elevenses? Luncheon? Tea? Dinner? Supper? Second tea? Midnight snack?”

You should change your name to coolhobbitguy if you can’t do without food for 3 hours.

Or, they could just write stories that are new-reader friendly and don’t rely on an intricate knowledge of continuity.

Yeah, the Ultimate line was pretty much a best case scenario. Good buzz, positive (professional) critical reception for most of the core books, some useful tweaks to the characters that eventually got incorporated into successful movies.

It took about three years for it to fall apart outside the Spider-Man book.

As DC found out, every line-wide jumping on point is also a pretty convenient jumping off point.  

The reason comic sales are in the toilet has very little to do with the decades of continuity. It has everything to do with the combination of the death of print media and the speculator boom/bust of the nineties severing the new reader pipeline. No hard reset is going to fix that.