dnwilliams--disqus
dnwilliams
dnwilliams--disqus

He basically said he's not doing an Anthology movie and he doesn't see the appeal in the Skywalker Saga if he doesn't have complete control, which he no longer would, so I feel more like Star Wars is flirting with him, but he knows Star Wars flirts with all the pretty nerds, and he just isn't willing to start seeing St

If they had a mind to, they could 100% do a one-off episode revolving around that.

The idea is that the superhero doesn't want the person who they're maintaining their secret identity for to be a part of that side of their life in any capacity. Having that knowledge increases the innocent person's level of involvement and by extension the likelihood of their being imperilled.

Wait…are you suggesting…that storytelling IMPROVES when female characters aren't used as props? This changes everything.

Even a THEMATIC link would go a long way!

I figure they're gonna save Wells from Thawne, because with the core Flash supporting cast in fact featuring two villains and another superhero, if they keep going long enough, the dynamic they've setup is irreparably altered.

Kingpin beats out most Marvel movie villains, he's just straight up one of the best MCU villains.

My favourite thing about her figuring it out on her own was that she got to play that Vader/Kenobi style "a presence I've not felt since…" moment.

Candice Patton aced that opening scene with Barry lying to Iris.

The angle on that promo photo is all wrong.

Sympathy like because you set it up for @disqus_8pASCy43Wp:disqus to knock it down. You're a giver.

Delusional.

#FNSM

He's a social outcast, not a scenester. Unless he's bantering, preferably with his mask on, none of these things should define him more than his love of science and Aunt May's cooking.

I'd add a Killer DJ/Hypno-Hustler mini to my pull list.

If you made this shit up, I'd think you were trying too hard to be funny.

I think like with novels, there's a response to things that have critical acclaim that's quite different. Like, literary fiction versus popular fiction, you might dig the hell out of The Da Vinci code, but if you can't get into The Goldfinch or something you might make the effort because it promises to be more

I like his general premise, but dislike his example. It seems like it was picked to be contrarian, rather than as the best example of what he's trying to get across. Like, if a catchy Radiohead song hurts his ears, what does a random Animal Collective track do?

I have to try that two donuts on a mug thing.

Are you implying George Lucas doesn't have swag?