It's like it went right out of your head.
It's like it went right out of your head.
"Savage killed the ol' ball and chain. And my rugrats."
Is that really Mass Effect's greatest unanswered question?
Orange socks?
The guy following Waller's orders was Edward Fyers, an awesome character in the comic books, here in name only.
And Iris' best quality, that she's a burgeoning investigative reporter, was used as set up for Barry saving her from jumping out a window.
He's basically Alfred.
On Earth Two, her husband is the Arrow. Following Flashpoint logic, she'd be the Trickster or something.
Ok now I want to see her teamed up with Mark Hamill.
Goddamit.
There was some promise when Legends killed off Hawkman, like she could develop her own identity. But nope, here's romantic subplot. It's straight out of the Caitlin Snow playbook.
I just need the show to acknowledge it more often. Maybe when things get stressful she can say "I need a latte".
Canary/Cold: World's Snarkiest
Pretty sure he shows up in Barry's house in the middle of the night for a reason…
Well I want them to develop it, but I fear what the writers would do to it.
I'd like them to develop the Sara/Leonard spark, but only in such a way that it doesn't straightwash Sara the character or Wentworth the actor. They've got great chemistry.
Her pirouette spin attack thing last week was the best.
The only explanation I could come up with for Huntress pushing Sara out a window was because she brought the crazy. You can't fight crazy, just ask Batman.
Yeah Sara captured was only good for the "this isn't over" look she gave him upon release.
And removing the child left no change on the timeline, so why would it matter what they did with him? In fact, returning him was actively worse.
I think the current direction of the show inhibits good character interaction. I really need them to slow down for season two for some real downtime with the characters. I'd even be good with ditching the time travel bit and having the majority of the team in 2016 doing I-Can't-Believe-it's-Not-the-Justice-League type…
I'm glad no women were "fridged" as the article points out, but I'm pretty sure that's because this trilogy is a stealth love story between Peter and Harry.