nivenus
Nivenus
nivenus

The same way The Avengers needed "Avengers, assemble!" or every Hulk movie needs "You wouldn't like me if I'm angry?"

"They didn't explicitly state the great power/responsibility thing, but it was quite apparent in the movie. "

He still invents the shooters. It's just that he buys the formula for the web from OsCorp.

I actually thought that tweaking with the Hulk's origin story and making it more complex was one of the few things that actually worked about Ang Lee's film (even if the resultant plotline involving Banner's father didn't).

The film definitely could have used a different editor/cut. I love it as it is, but damn if the film doesn't have the pacing of a San Andreas tremor.

"Too bad they also dropped the entire "Great power/great responsibility" plot point, along with any relevance Aunt May and Uncle Ben had on Peter"

He's in the same scene as Hank (on a news program in the background), though admittedly he's only referenced as "Dr. Shaw."

There's some other details it contradicts from the first two films, such as Hank looking human and a living Sebastian Shaw character running around in the background but they're easy to miss. More important perhaps is that Xavier clearly says Scott, Jean, and Ororo were his first students, but none of them show up in F

I think they were at some point but I'm not sure if they are anymore. During the Silver Age they were definitely one of the most popular titles, but they haven't really had a successful run outside of the comics in years.

I think Wonder Woman is somewhere between being an A-lister and a B-lister. She's better known now than either the Hulk or Iron Man were a few years ago before their films came out, but she hasn't seen a lot of use outside of the comics in decades. Like the Fantastic Four, I think she's an A-lister who's in danger of

It seems like this would only be common sense, but I can't count how often I've seen people yearning for B-listers or C-listers to get their own film. Don't misunderstand me, I sympathize and indeed, I hope the success Marvel's had in popularizing their less famous characters means that the fans will get their wish,

In all honesty, space travel is trivially expensive compared to solving the problems we've got on Earth. It's the will that's lacking, more than the resources.

In all honesty this makes a lot of sense to me. I like Steam, Origin, and GOG plenty but digital resale, while not a concept we're familiar with, is perfectly sound from a legal standpoint. Yeah, I'm sure it's in the EULA (or if it isn't, soon will be) but from a general perspective on whether you can resell digital

They appear in the Refuse ending, which you get if you shoot at the Catalyst or simply refuse to pick any of the three options (keep choosing that bottom dialogue bottom option in other words).

I'm pretty sure that's not actually an asari, though everyone seems to assume it is. The cutscene pretty firmly indicates that the current cycle was completely wiped out, which is why they show Liara's time capsule recording before the credits roll.

It's definitely one of the weirder ones. I'd label the thick atmosphere as the weirdest quality, since it's the only one that isn't shared by at least a few other moons past the frost line.

Geothermal heat or tidal heating from a gas giant are the most likely causes. The latter is also the main reason astronomers think Europa has a liquid ocean, despite being beyond the frost line.

The main problem with your interpretation is that it was fairly obvious from the start that the Stargazer was a human, so it's pretty clear the current cycle survived (and this is even more clear with the Extended Cut).

In all honesty the only thing surprising about this is that it's liquid water. Titan is after all, like most small bodies past the asteroid belt, largely composed of water ice. Water's one of those things that actually gets ridiculously common once you move far enough out from the Sun.

He gets credit in large part because he's one of the few movie reviewers who as often as not seems to like the same movies that audiences do while still having enough self-respect not to bend to popular opinion. In other words, he plays well with both film critics and regular moviegoers, so he's generally well-liked.