disqush6iy6ezf66--disqus
Jack Brooks
disqush6iy6ezf66--disqus

I agree; I should have said "violence" less specifically. Where there are no guns, people knife each other to death, or use other ways to express our innate violence.

It's really hard to stop gun violence with laws, when the human soul by nature is stupid and evil. Solomon, Ecclesiastes 9 verse 3.

Quesada, Bendis, and Brevoort are tapped out, the same way the Marvel people they replaced in the 1990s were tapped out. They have become the men they replaced back in the day. Marvel's creativity and quality could resusicitate, but only when those three are gone.

This was a special event that did not reward upon second viewing.

I've lost interest in Flash this year, because of the poor writing. Savitar is uninteresting. Three speedster big-bads in a row is tiresome, and the last two didn't match up the original interest level of Thawne. Barry's abrupt decision to go back and prevent his mother's death was stupid; then his decision to allow

Yecch.

Giving Danielle Panabaker some respect, it's hard to play a shy introvert without being cliched — especially on a show where she is surrounded by big, bold superhero characters.

Right. All of Alchemy's minions should be dead because of this, shot to pieces. Not to mention, Central City's SWAT teams should be equipped with special anti-meta equipment by now. EMP pulsers, gas grenades, sonic-blast attacks, and so on. It seems like S.T.A.R. Labs creates stuff only for itself.

That's true, all they needed Wally for was to get them to a specific building. Then they could have hustled him off, locked him up, and sedated him.

OK, that's plausible. I think I'm just getting eye-rolley about this trope of "slim female character beats up big guy." I noticed it in the new Hawaii 5-0 in its first season — stick-thin actress with arms like toothpicks knocked out a big surfer dude. Then I noticed it in the Rogue One trailers — shrimpy lead actress

I enjoy this show, but…

We have stopped watching Supergirl, because of its obnoxious turn to insulting political preaching.

Once Grant finds out that there's no such person as a woman "Captain Lance" working for the Union, there ought to start a legend about the mysterious "Angel in Blue." Nate's American history books should suddenly feature the legend.

They'll probably say that extracting billions of dollars out of some time period's economy at one time, or stealing a few pounds of dwarf-star alloy from a research facility, would mess up reality too much. The former issue I can see being true.

Or adjusting the character somehow, to make him less of a wet blanket.

Ray said that the suit cost billions of dollars to develop, and uses an alloy that is almost impossible to obtain. It isn't the Iron Man armor.

Sure. Because "Legends of Tomorrow" should be some sort of cross between Ingmar Bergman and Lena Dunham.

Jim Caviezel.

I chalk up 90% of everything bad about that movie to George Lucas, who has proven again and again that he is a photography technologist and marketer, but a truly awful writer with an almost Aspurgers-esque lack of insight into human feelings or relationships. The rest is on Shia LeBouf, who was absolutely miscast, in

Thank you for saying "homed", Esther Zuckerman. I get so tired of reading "honed"!