"Here's your problem. Someone set this clown to 'EVIL'."
"Here's your problem. Someone set this clown to 'EVIL'."
I haven't seen episodes past this one, and this is just a guess, but I'm assuming the Great Northern Hotel doesn't use physical keys anymore, so when they receive an actual key through the mail they'll be the like "Where did this come from?" They'll check their records to see who was the last person with that room…
"Nobody discovers and casts young, attractive, basically-unknown actors — male and female — like David Lynch! … I remember seeing the Rolling Stone cover with Sherilyn Fenn, Mädchen Amick and Lara Flynn Boyle and thinking, where does he find these people?"
She also told me that you're adopted. Sorry.
Watch any Spider-Man movie. They always end up with his mask being torn up enough to reveal his face, or have him take his tattered mask off, so that the actor's actual face can be seen.
This is a world where Superman/girl can travel at supersonic speeds, where Maxwell Lord was able to create Bizarro Supergirl, etc. If you're going to complain about comic book science like this, you're not going to enjoy anything with super-heroes.
The heat vision being able to break the threads - the threads are Kryptonian, and so is his heat vision. Wait, no one on Krypton had heat vision, so where does it come from? Anyway, let's assume they are both equally strong and it's like breaking a rock with another rock of the same kind.
With Cyclops we were told in the comics that because of a head injury when his parents threw him and his brother out of a plane, he lost the ability to control his optic blasts. I don't think this was said in the original Lee run so it was probably a retcon, but it's perfectly acceptable.
She told me that I'm her favorite.
They may not still be best friends, but Twin Peaks is a small town and they both still live there. Mike would know if Bobby had a kid.
You need to find new co-workers.
I think you mean "fatist".
Some comic book writers have explained why Supergirl would be stronger than Superman. Their explanations make as much sense as "wearing eyeglasses means people don't recognize you".
I think in the comics the force field extended a bit off of his body, just enough for his clothes but not further than that. So if these adaptations are using the same theory, then all of her clothes would be similarly protected.
If this movie doesn't contain a scene like this, it's is a failure.
Some rules of Elevator Etiquette:
1) Face the doors. Do not face the sides or back.
2) If there is only one other person on the elevator, do not stand right next to them.
3) When the doors close, do not say "Bridge!"
Dougie should throw himself at the ground and miss.
I think someone forgot about The Fiendish Plot of Fu Manchu.
Does anyone respect his authoritay?