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Sben
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I'm not excited about Tessa Thompson as Valkyrie mainly because her character and performance were utterly terrible on Westworld, and that's my only exposure to her.

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We knew Wells was untrustworthy from the start, but he only revealed the suit in his room in "The Man In The Yellow Suit."

This "unknown villain identity" shit has gotten beyond ridiculous. It's the sixteenth episode out of 23, with next week reserved for a musical crossover of all things, and the show is still holding off on unmasking Savitar. And according to Gustin and Panabaker, the audience is still going to be in the dark for a

I couldn't care less about the race of the main character. Frankly, it's a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't situation: imagine all of the thinkpieces and hot takes that would inevitably follow if the first Asian lead protagonist in these shows happened to be the guy whose power is being really good at kung-fu.

Yes, using the verbatim argument everyone involved made promoting BVS and Suicide Squad corresponds to… Marvel, somehow.

I honestly enjoyed the first season of The Following (yes, classic Poe, get it out of your systems) as a pulpy, campy, tongue-in-cheek thriller, and I still have a huge soft spot for the much-derided main villain in all of his over-the-top, scenery-devouring British smarm.

I started reading Cracked less and less when they started pulling shit like this (in addition to constantly threatening to get rid of comments altogether). I no longer read Cracked at all.

Does anyone remember when Barry was that ridiculously lovable, charming, fairly smart guy we first glimpsed in Arrow Season 2, and when Season 1 of this show was the best shit ever?

Gotham as a show is basically just every Dorne scene stretched out to three seasons with worse acting and direction, so he'll be right at home.

… Aw. I was really hoping for it to be Tommy, because that would have firmly solidified this story arc as the best since the Deathstroke rivalry. The Chase reveal was a good misdirect and very well-handled, but it's going to take a lot of great acting and writing to even come close to what might've been possible if it

Emma Stone and Scarlett Johansson, of course.

I don't have a snarky comment to make; that's just really, really sweet. In today's world, any evidence of the goodness of mankind is extremely comforting.

God forbid an M-rated franchise about a guy whose only defining trait is brutally murdering people around the world be given an R rating. That just wouldn't make sense.

*backs away slowly*

This is ostensibly a nerdy pop culture site, yet this comment section is about 5% Rick & Morty discussion and 95% Marmite v. Vegemite: Dawn of Justice.

It slowly rises in quality from the pilot, hits its peak around the fifth episode, and then never drops from that peak for the remainder of either season. It's also radically different from anything else on Adult Swim, and most animated adult comedies, for that matter.

It is incredible. The absence of it during the hiatus made 2016 even worse than it already was.

It's drawn in faded chalk and buried somewhere slimy and cold in a dark, incomprehensible eldritch void, but it's a line nonetheless.

I will not be fully satisfied until no media outlet is willing to give him a voice, his entire life collapses around him, and he fades into a distant memory as he desperately pleas for people to notice him.