darsim--disqus
Darsim
darsim--disqus

I get the feeling any product they come up with will end up like Real-Apps, horribly thought out AND executed.

It kind of was though. Bruce Wayne was supposed to be the Batman that works internationally and with the Justice League, and Dick Grayson was supposed to be the one who watched over Gotham City.

When you wrote this, I wasn't sure if was a reference to Green Arrow, Flash or Batman. DC sure doesn't seem to like former sidekicks succeeding their mentors for some reason, and seems to prefer prefer the status quo.

It may be the younger brother of the original.

Does the villain make sense in why he was included? Yes, he is the Black Mask, a major villain in Gotham.
Did his methodology in the show make sense? No, usually he is portrayed as a smart mobster who hid who he actually was by wearing a mask (that eventually gets fused to his face), and while he is bloodthirsty and

Why do they feel a need to burn through and introduce major Batman characters as quickly as possible on this show. This week gave us Black Mask (the Sionis version) and Hush. They could have split those characters up, had Sionis become Black Mask permanently like he's supposed to (i.e. the mask gets burned onto his

Most versions of Alfred have a military/spy background. Some have OSS, some have SAS backgrounds. I'd lean more towards the latter, he's probably ex SAS from the Gulf War going by this shows timeline (although we don't actually have a year for the setting).

Yeah, in the comics, she's generally portrayed as an intelligent and street smart cop, who is one of the few cops in Gotham who wasn't under the mob, and is one of Gordon's closest allies. I was annoyed by her initial portrayal in the show, just like I was annoyed when they portrayed her in the Dark Knight as helping

Personally, I thought it showed that Wendy and Dipper might be a good match, t's just their ages right now are prohibitive to that kind of relationship. If they had met in College, when dipper is 18 or 19 and Wendy is 21 or 22, they might have actually gone out, but as it is right now they can only really be friends.

Especially if the series goes on long enough, because she becomes the Question when the previous one dies, and it would be hard to see her as heroic if she continued on that path.

Take two points off that score, no Salmon Ladder.

I think they finally made Montoya seem competent this week. I'm kinda hoping the next little while will be Gordon starting to get his allies within the GCPD, and them starting to weed out the corruption.

I don't think it was that they were implicated in the less legal activities rampant in Gotham, it's just they respected Falcone for his restraint. Falcone himself said he respected the Waynes because of the work they do and their pragmatism, even though they had did not work together, and that they would be missed by

I dunno, the phone call thing also seems a bit unrealistic. He only seems to hand out cards to those who've had first hand experiences with the supernatural, so it would just be a lot of people he already helped phoning him (in which case, there shouldn't be a general disbelief in the supernatural from the populace,

My point is that we have to know a bit more about the mythology of the show before damning the writers. You seem to be assigning evil to "black magic", which is not necessarily he case. Black Magic is generally magic used for offensive purposes, whereas White Magic is generally used for defensive or healing purposes.

I think it actually was the same house, because the last episode ended with them setting up in the house (kind of), and this episode started with them in the seemingly same house. But that will probably be confirmed or disproved in the next couple of episodes.

To be fair we have to actually know the mythology of the show to know if it was racist or not. It seems like it is drawing from all traditions of magic, like the Eye Of Horus (Egyptian mythology) being used in the first episode, and what seemed to be Hoodoo/Voodoo or another African based magic being used to see the

When did they lose the house? I'm pretty sure the first scene was in it, he just left to deal with the thing in Pennsylvania. To be honest it kind of seems like NBC is trying to do Supernatural with a British guy and a chick instead of two brothers.

It looks like they're going to do Black Canary (Laurel Lance) and Wildcat (Ted Grant) as a duo (Yay!). They'll be punching crime and sexin' in no time. (It rhymes so it must be true.)

Years, bruh.