Oh yeah. Sure. "Not part of the Arrowverse". Like that makes even a bit of a difference when multiversal travel is a part of all the Berlanti shows now.
Oh yeah. Sure. "Not part of the Arrowverse". Like that makes even a bit of a difference when multiversal travel is a part of all the Berlanti shows now.
Wouldn't THAT be an ironic turn of events? Barry becomes a full-tilt mopey emo speedster, and Ollie becomes a cheerful purveyor of social justice. The crossover that year would be hilarious.
Well, I would be willing to settle for the Robin Hood cap and the big "G" belt buckle.
I may be alone in this regard, but I would love to see Ollie become more like his upbeat, socially-conscious, colorful, firebrand comic inspiration. I mean, it would take some doing, but what better way for Ollie to finally move past his trauma and personal demons than by fully embracing a new, brighter persona?
As both a Star Trek fan AND a comic book- and comic book movie fan… I hear ya', brother.
Yours… is the superior pedantry… (dies)
"The last TV series and the new movies are all prequels to TOS…"
That is still, by far, my favorite instance of lampshading in the history of fiction.
Hell yeah! (Plus a whole bunch of generic Inhumans, but eh— they couldn't all be winners.)
Man… is it just me, or has Wentworth Miller finally crossed that line into "too hammy" territory? I mean, I still love the guy, and he's a definite highlight of the episode, but… does anyone else remember how cool, restrained, and menacing he was back in season one? When he actually seemed to earn the nickname "Cold"?…
I'm hoping that Spider-Man Homecoming can at least make this a little more questionable of a statement… but for the moment, Dunst is 100% on point.
Hey, I guess the reduced budgets didn't really hurt Supergirl. So yeah, maybe if they move the show to Canada, S.H.I.E.L.D. will be just fine.
Ha! Yeah… People were really pushing for big names, weren't they? Probably because the most prominent Marvel character on the show at that point was Deathlok, and people had been hoping for a cavalcade of B-tier superhero guest stars when the show had first been announced— like what DC had done with Arrow.
Well, ONE thing that suggests that it might still be a dream is the fact that his children haven't aged a friggin' day since he's been gone. And the fact that the plan went off completely without a hitch, and Cobb was able to get back into the country with absolutely no fuss. The point was that the ending was almost…
I honestly hope not. I don't think giving her a two-hour movie would do justice to the character (unless they put a RIDICULOUS amount of work into the script). And given that Hydra is even deader in the films than it has been on TV, I don't think they could get much milage out of that part of her story, either.
Yeah, I remember that. I also remember really hating that idea, and I'm glad that wasn't what the writers went for. ('Course, back when that rumor was making the rounds, Skye was kind of insufferable… but even so, I think it'd be more fun to introduce Spider-Woman as a mysterious, nigh-unstoppable enemy FIRST, and…
IIIIIII wouldn't go THAT far.
Aw, nertz.
Yeah… honestly, I think people who are "confused" by the endings of any Chris Nolan movies must simply have the attention spans of goldfish.
What could possibly be waiting for them out there?! Kree? Skrulls? Some kind of WAR between the Kree and the Skrulls?