It was “quiet girl!” in an aggressive fashion. So basically, yes.
It was “quiet girl!” in an aggressive fashion. So basically, yes.
Maybe, I think so. But I’d still click on an interview with her.
Alyssa Milano, probably?
It also helps that the characters regularly acknowledge that they liked him more before he lost all the weight.
I mean, sure. But it is part of the character and certain groups of fans seem to think that it isn’t.
I mean...he’s kind of right though. Plenty of nerdy fans treat Spider-Man like a self-insert character and get mad when the character deviates from that, they feel entitled to it...even though their perception of the character as this super awkward, homely nerd isn’t actually true to the character.
I really hate this take. Maguire was a terrible Peter.
Well, it makes a little more sense in the comics because he intentionally went to go see a science experiment when he got his powers. His presence to begin with was a sign of his interest in science.
I’m enjoying this run...but I really liked what Coates was doing and I wish it had lasted longer.
This is pretty much dead on. Peter was a kid who was bad at social interactions, got some confidence from being Spider-Man, and started being liked by almost everyone around him.
Here’s the thing though: he wasn’t bullied because of his looks or something, it was because he was so awkward around people. I was (not to toot my own horn or anything) a good looking guy in high school. But I was also kind of the socially outcast nerd because I was just awkward and I didn’t have much in common with…
Sort of...it is more of a coming of age story. And that is a big part of my problem with the Raimi films.
Also I don’t really see what is so comforting about “quiet girl” as he drags a crying child...
Yeah, it’s just...it isn’t bad, it’s just a slightly worse version of the song. There’s just no reason I would ever listen to this version over the original
A burger is a sandwich. It’s a type of sandwich, but it is definitely a sandwich.
I don’t see how that first question matters. I could order a club or a reuben or a grilled cheese and I wouldn’t generally add “sandwich” to the name.
Nahhhh. The originals suggested that Luke and Leia were both strong in the force because of their heritage, but nothing really indicated that it was limited to a few people. Luke was able to use the force because he tried to use the force, basically...it isn’t like the films ever said that Han, Chewbacca, or Lando…
It certainly felt forced to her, I’m sure.
Dude, no. That isn’t going to happen. You’ve got the completely wrong take here.
A panini isn’t a sandwich?