Thank you! I was curious what number they’d give Smallville, since that debuted in 2001 and E-1 was pretty taken. 167 didn’t mean anything to me. My best guess was episode count, but that didn’t work out and I was out of ideas.
Thank you! I was curious what number they’d give Smallville, since that debuted in 2001 and E-1 was pretty taken. 167 didn’t mean anything to me. My best guess was episode count, but that didn’t work out and I was out of ideas.
If you want a head-canon answer for that, it’s worth noting that the anti-matter wave is spreading across dimensions, and will intersect with Earth-1 last, suggesting that it’s metaphysically either at one end, or the very center. The universe designations might actually be meaningful in some sort of “distance from…
The caption did not say Earth-1 and Earth-2. The captions said “Gen: Earth 1,” and “Jinn: Earth 2.” All 3 versions of the character in the between space were annihilated. All 3 Earths were destroyed, therefore none of them can be Flash and Arrow’s Earth-1.
I don’t disagree. But I think there was a conflict in the writers room between not wanting to confuse their exclusive viewers with a bunch of Arrowverse mythology and the fact that they’re already caught up in the shit. Apparently “if we put Gen on 16 and Jinn on 29, that’ll confuse people,” won.
I think BL made things needlessly confusing by tying in at the same time it was set up to be accessible to people who don’t watch any other Arrowverse at all. In the context of the story, I think “Earth 1 and Earth 2" were just supposed to represent the two alternate worlds on offer. They’re not the same places as…
AH! There’s the bonus Astra.
I think they meant Alura and Alura (pre and post recasting.) And I’d throw Smallville Lois in the mix.
Maybe J’onn dropped them off in his roadster.
and he looked confused at seeing Caity Loitz.
Forced maybe, but I think of the Monitor sitting in the crowd eating popcorn during last year’s Legends finale. Dude’s just a fanboy, and he totally knows the episode titles.
You’re thinking of sex fluid.
OTOH, then you’d have to go somewhere.
“Certified door expert James Cameron...”
Dark Fate was definitely the best of the three Terminator 3s. Not so good that you shouldn’t just rent and rewatch Terminator 2, though.
Seattle Public Libraries bought 3 copies of the audiobook (with a whopping 12 people on the waitlist, err 11 people, I forgot it was counting myself who only put a hold on to see how many holds there are) and no ebooks. Hardback is 21 holds on 5 copies.
Hm. I thought maybe they’d tweaked it in the subtitles, but on another review, Irish Jabba definitely says the “why did you fry poor Greedo” line. But I can’t think of any other explanation for the inclusion of “...who drop their [shipments/cargo] at the first sign of an Imperial [starship/cruiser]” “Even I get…
My understanding is that the Jabba scene was shot first, and once they realized there was simply no way to composite in the dummy at all without looking sub-Toho, they wrote in the Greedo scene to convey the same information. Including both scenes in the SE cut is just massively redundant.
And then got added to the cast of a main X-Men book before she was done being introduced in NYX because that book basically just stopped coming out. God, that launch was a train wreck.
Leaving Agrestic should have been the end. It never worked once they left the original premise behind.
The scene ends with them tossing Jug’s whoopie cap onto the bonfire and vowing never to speak of this again, so that doesn’t hold up very well.