If Zoom decided to go on a killing spree, they have no way of stopping him. How heroic.
If Zoom decided to go on a killing spree, they have no way of stopping him. How heroic.
Oh right, I forgot, once the writers make up their minds, there's no convincing them otherwise…
The idea that Barry would willingly give up his speed to the mass murdering villain is completely asinine. And the fact that the other characters would willingly go along with this scenario instead of doing like they always do and THINK OF ANOTHER POSSIBLE SOLUTION is a perfect example of the writers eschewing logic…
The characters have settled into a weird complacency and acceptance of their current situation, and the show is completely stuck in a rut. They really aren't bothering to explore the premise of the "last people on earth" scenario that made this series so interesting in the first place. No one's really doing anything.
Gravity is my definitive 3D experience. The immersion that movie created in theatres was overwhelming because you legitimately get the sense of the vastness of space in ways nothing short of a theme park ride can provide.
No one is thinking of the children. No one.
"That's my secret, Cap. I'm always suspicious."
God I love that show. So damn funny and charming.
"And I'll begin the interview with this question."
It's as if the ending of First Class got wiped out of the timeline as well.
It was a combination of the two, yes. But keep in mind, she didn't have that much screentime being blue. The logistics of having She-Hulk being green for x number of episodes a season with a ton of screentime is the issue.
….That's not true. She hated doing the makeup for Days of Future Past, so they reduced her makeup screentime for Apocalypse. It's still makeup, though.
A CG protagonist on a TV show budget?
And the whole get painted green thing.
Forget #FirstWorldProblems.
This. So much this. Why can't we just have a really good Superman trilogy? A really good Wonder Woman trilogy? An epic space opera Green Lantern franchise? Instead of chasing the Avengers pipe dream, WB could've cut their own path and got to the same monetary destination.
Agreed, I think Rises is every bit as overstuffed and haphazard as Spider-Man 3, but it got a pass by a lot of people simply because it looked and felt important.
It's probably going to finish $500 million below Ultron worldwide when it's all said and done. And that was the lesser of the two Avengers movie. A half a billion dollar gulf is huge…
I don't want to get too into my big beef behind the "Nolan movies can't exist in a cinematic universe" issue. But long story short, I disagree with that thinking, because Man of Steel could've easily acted as an inciting incident that sets off a "world of wonders", a world that could've been as practical as Nolan's…
It's funny because Age of Ultron was considered a disappointment by some and that shit still made $1.4 billion.