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So has Wonder Woman, but they rarely stick. I think eventually they'll find one that works.

On Earth-366 or whatever they might.

I'm not rationalizing anything; that's the explanation at least one version of the origin story gave. There might be others. Dumb as it might be, I didn't make it up.

It's been explained that her costume is based on the flag they found in Steve Trevor's plane when it crash-landed on Themyscira. It's a sign of diplomacy and an insistence that they mean no harm by sending Diana as an emissary.

Upon my viewing of the film, I thought Supes' solution of getting rid of the Kryptonians - and destroying the Codex or whatever it was called - amounted to genocide. So before he even snapped Zod's neck, I thought this was the new Superman: someone not anymore above killing than James Bond or Jack Bauer to save the

I felt the same way. I certainly liked the visuals and this article made me appreciate them more, but on the whole I didn't think it had more to say about class warfare that hasn't already been said before in movies with premises that don't make you go, "Wait, what, they all live in a train? And the train never stops?"

Pancakes, Divorce, Pancakes deserves an Emmy.

Are you kidding? It started with like the second comment.

I get that she had to act. Totally get that. But it just seems like that improvisation had so much potential to go wrong. And they killed Audrey off anyway. If she'd been killed by the sniper, I think that would've added more tension.

As long as that's what the public wants to do, fine.

That's the public's decision.

I admit it's far from the most unrealistic thing the show has ever done. But it's something I'd be more willing to forgive in the middle of the season. The situation itself is pretty tense and dramatic. Maybe if Kate's team had a sniper and they just shot him after he reveals his location, I could buy it. But just

I had problems with this season. I wasn't really all that happy with the ending. And I thought everything from Kate's plan to rescue Audrey (push her out of the way and then shoot at a sniper with a handgun!) to her death (being shot but no one noticing until the threat is over) was dumb and cliched. But damn if

I dunno, I actually saw Milhiser in several sketches. Brooks I saw maybe three or four times, one time with only one line. I don't know how they get paid, but I wouldn't keep on a cast member I barely use.

He also suggested that the show would have to run 20 years before they'd consider making so much as a reference. And as someone who hasn't read Hellblazer I certainly defer to those who have on how his sexuality was portrayed. Maybe there was no way to answer the question (which isn't included in the article, just

They can always hand it over to Yahoo Screen later.

At the same time, to announce before the show has even officially premiered that you will definitely not be seeing that seems stupid to me. They could do ten seasons, never address it, and if they're ever asked about it, just say, "We didn't know."

I was too harsh with the "milking it" accusation. People clearly like this movie. And I hope I don't seem like I'm putting the original movies on a pedestal, because clearly they had their flaws. It just feels, to me, like this series is headed in a "Walking Dead with apes instead of zombies" direction. Dawn felt that

With all due respect, Rise was pretty gratuitous with its callbacks and nods to the original Planet of the Apes (including news footage of the original spacecraft blasting off), and Dawn, which admittedly has much less of it, is a direct sequel to it. Whether it ends with Chuck Heston landing on the planet is kind of

I think it might be an unfortunate result of the "realistic" and "gritty" tone that they couldn't have more colorful personalities, which goes a long way. This movie really needed a Dr. Zaius.