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Something Something Explosion
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I have not read any of Civil War II, as I have had no inclination to do so, but what I was so perplexed by watching from the sidelines is why it was that Carol Danvers was so dead-set on her objective, on exploiting this precog Inhuman's abilities, even when it was blatant that doing so led to nothing but disaster?

I'm planning on reading the original statement of this in full, solely to see if Rick & Morty's depiction of a multiverse holds any merit.

I've fallen out of Adventure Time, Regular Show and Steven Universe over the past year, having lost the free time to just binge all the latest episodes. Due to circulation around the web, I was able to catch "Islands" as well as Regular Show's recent finale, both of which have really had me want to begin rewatching

Well, he's not incorrect. No actor is actually disemboweled for the sake of realism…

You know the movie doesn't justify Crumb's/Horde's actions in narrative, right? Even one of his alters acknowledged it was morally wrong.

I wasn't talking about numerical ratings, which are mostly arbitrary on its own. I was mostly just bothered that you stated that this movie is just inherently bad, indirectly discrediting anyone who might have enjoyed it, instead of stating that it just didn't appeal to you and did not enjoy it yourself.

No gore? I think you're forgetting about the reveal of The Beast towards the end…

If you're worried about direct, immediate trauma, then I would be more concerned with the ongoing theme of hostage captivity, as well as the actual, visible gore and implied cannibalism toward the end.

Yes yes, that's some ground-breaking film criticism right there.

Very much implied, nothing too specific.

I was surprised how many tweens were in the theater when I saw it. One clearly pre-pubescent audience member audibly screamed "Oh my gawd!" at The Rings trailer, to the mass hysterics of the rest of us.

Hopefully this will appease all those who keep asking for Marvel to be put in Kingdom Hearts now.

I dare say that's even better that Patton Oswalt's pitch for a sequel. Dubbed "Unbreakables", it would depict Dunn going off of Price's scattered notes, finding others just like him.

Who himself has grown up to be a failed detective turned derelict paranormal investigator.

And that actually happened once. Sort of.

I have a theory on that. Allegedly, they filmed the final reaction of the kids years in advance, while the actors still looked like teenagers, meaning they intended to pair Ted with Robin by the end, even after that bait-and-switch series premiere. But here's the issue, in that after several years and seasons of

I hear you there. Was it season 5 that built up his whole thing with CJ? To me, that was wonderful, then for no reason they decided to throw all of it in the trash by the next season. That finale, where Mordecai upstages Muscle Man's wedding just to whine about his own woes, was some real self-important Ted Mosby

Upon finishing the first episode, to me NPH is playing Olaf as an egotist with a strong sense of bitter indignation upon the world, self-righteous in the world's refusal to recognize his talents, yet also far too up his own ass to realize what a clown he is. He simultaneously envies and resents the Baudelaires for

I remember in Book 3 when Poe lists off Olaf's crimes, he mutters "…and arson," but it doesn't register with Poe, as most things don't.

It would be a crime if there is a Twilight Zone reboot on the horizon and Warburton isn't hired as host.