in 1972, writer Steve Engleheart (a self-confessed fan of the character having trained writing romance comics) wrote Patsy into Amazing Adventures as a superhero
in 1972, writer Steve Engleheart (a self-confessed fan of the character having trained writing romance comics) wrote Patsy into Amazing Adventures as a superhero
I saw somebody mention he could be brought back paralyzed from the neck down. I like that idea actually, it’d twist him even further and would be a serious revenge motivation.
I hardly see them nowadays and that’s probably why I enjoy following ‘Payphones’ on Instragram after the recommendation on Gizmodo.
It only took 50 years for MIT to need to build something where the old one was. Regardless of where it gets reburied, odds are that somebody’s going to need to disturb it several times again over the next 942 years.
The only possibly suspects left are Pete and Hester. Everyone else on the main cast has been eliminated.
Oh I don't necessarily have an issue with her knowledge, so much as how they've written the character flaunting it, correcting him, basically turning him into an oversized child and reducing some of the mystique and therefore intrigue and fun of the character.
Yet more proof that Moffat is literally writing “Doctor Who” just to satisfy himself and with little respect to having play within the established universe.
I grant that one of the fun elements of “Who” is its ability to play a little wonky with continuity...but River Song is not a 13th Doctor character (sorry, he…
Remember that time Mythbusters used sterile chips, sterile dip, a sterile room, and a medical professional to eliminate the variables of double dipping? Turns out the bacterial difference from the saliva is almost nill.
I loved when she gave it back to him!
So what are the odds that, of all the people in New York, not only is Luke Cage’s wife Reva linked to Kilgrave’s origins, but that it’s Jessica Jones who kills her?
And I set you back from the future to make sure Skynet never exists!
Also love that they took an angle of rape and assault that gets into the realm of something other than violent rape— the area of manipulation, consent, etc. And frankly, more people need to understand this is a thing and not think of rape as solely the television-show-movie violent type.
I don’t think Jane is necessarily the mastermind. She could have “done this to” herself because she believed in some cause, and the plan was hatched by another mastermind. Whatever, it’s not that interesting of a mystery, and the revelation wasn’t a surprise, because we already knew that she entered into the…
I feel like a lot of people missed the fact that she’s following Luke because she’s obsessed with Reva’s death. It’s not coincidence at all.
Such an awesome show. Killgrave is just awesome and awful and amazing. Tennant deserves all of the kudos in the world. “JESSICA! GET BACK HERE JESSICA!” And every moment he has a random unnamed character left in place just to deliver a message for him, moved those moment.
The Reva connection made perfect sense to me. That's why Jessica has been investigating Luke for a year in the first place—she's extremely guilty over having murdered his wife. That wasn't an example of the universe being a small place so much as it was another example of Jessica's guilt and how it drives her so…
The population of New York City is over 8 million people. So what are the odds that, of all the people in New York, not only is Luke Cage’s wife Reva linked to Kilgrave’s origins, but that it’s Jessica Jones who kills her?
I disagree with the “crucial moment” bit.
We’ve seen how many reiterations of the standard Batman story? We don’t need it again. Embrace the lunacy of Gotham as an alternate universe or something. Something (like the magic knife throw) doesn’t make sense? Whatever; next scene. This show is so much fun, killjoy nerds aside.
Jesus, no. This show is quite possibly the most creative thing currently on television. You never know what they are going to pull next.