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Shakes_McQueen
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Never thought of that, but it's possible. They haven't done much with Summer Glau's character yet, though.

On Batman: TAS, there was an episode where Barbara is about to tell Gordon her secret, but he stops her and says she doesn't need to, and heavily implies he already knows.

In S1, she tells Merlyn she already knew Robert's boat was sabotaged. However, in the season finale, she lists Robert among the people Malcolm was directly responsible for murdering.

She's unlikely to be a long term character on the show, so it doesn't really matter.

He hasn't seen Diggle work with the Arrow - only Felicity. I assume you're referencing the Dollmaker episode, but you'll notice that Diggle is sitting in a car when Lance walks by him, seemingly unaware during the stakeout. And Diggle comes to Felicity's aid only AFTER Lance has run by in pursuit of the Dollmaker.

There was an episode in S1 that clearly portrayed Thea as still having suspicions and questions about her brother - I believe it's the one where he gets arrested for being the vigilante, and she doesn't buy his story about the arrowhead thing being from the "airport gift shop".

I think I like Fitzsimmons now. They need to make Melinda May and Agent Laboeuf more interesting characters - they are starting to get there with Laboeuf a bit.

Yes, Coulson's scar is from Loki's stabbing him on the Helicarrier. The entire mystery around his character, surrounds how he's alive after seemingly dying from that wound.

I think this kind of "synergy" between a TV show and the film that shares the same universe with it, is kind of awesome, personally. And two weeks is a reasonable length of time to give people to see it. One week would be ridiculous.

I don't mind if the show's plot never directly involves superheroes on screen, but I would like to see more evidence in the show, that these people inhabit a world populated with superheroes.

It's kind of odd how aggressively shitty he is to Ollie every time they meet, though if this army he's building is for some sort of class war, it would make sense that he inherently dislikes Ollie at first.

I mean, she HAS been through some pretty rotten shit: her boyfriend died, and a week ago she was seconds from being killed by a serial killer. The problem, as always, is that there's no establishment of the change in her personality. She becomes completely bi-polar every couple of episodes.

Another terrible episode for Laurel Lance. Seriously, I think at this point her problems are a) she's given lame things to do in the script, and b) she's kind of poorly acted.

Really enjoyed a few of the moments Lance and Ollie had during this episode. Ollie's grin when Lance was remarking at how good Felicity is with computers, like he was proud of her; Lance offering up the personal information about his daughter's death while they were staking out Mathis; his freakout when Ollie puts

Haha, I just made the same point, except worse.

It's a comic book-based TV series. Were you expecting an incredibly grounded show, in a universe where exposure to gamma radiation gave a guy the ability to turn into a giant green monster that can literally jump into low orbit, and where exposure to nuclear waste literally gave one guy the ability to see via "sonar"?

I've always liked AIM, because "Advanced Idea Mechanics" sounds like it could be the nondescript name of a real tech company.

I think calling it "magic explosion juice" is kind of unjustified, seeing as how the unregulated effects of Extremis have been portrayed consistently now in a major motion picture, and multiple episodes of this TV show (aside from the part where it apparently amplified his powers a bit).

Yeah, my interpretation has always been that "Centipede" is the name of whatever the Extremis project is. I hope they open up that can of worms a bit more soon, and zoom out to whoever the organization behind it is, because nondescript "villain of the week" just feels like treading water. And what's with the

It would take massive, brass balls for a prime time, network television show to introduce MODOK as a villain - assuming he's in any way like his comic book form. I could see adults all over the nation going "Seriously?" and then turning off their televisions in unison.