In the situation in question, it wasn't a fight, but the fact that Canary was gravely injured and they were in a liferaft in the middle of the ocean. Calling for Clark wasn't a "bring in the cavalry" thing, so much as "calling for an ambulance".
In the situation in question, it wasn't a fight, but the fact that Canary was gravely injured and they were in a liferaft in the middle of the ocean. Calling for Clark wasn't a "bring in the cavalry" thing, so much as "calling for an ambulance".
With superhero movies becoming increasingly ho-hum as they answer the question “Where do we go next?” with “BIGGER,” one can’t help but despair that the better answer will never be considered: “Smaller.”
Which would be fine. I was half expecting something like that in Age of Ultron, but I guess that would have been Too Much.
Thing I loved in the hospital scene— the janitor with headphones on his going about his business, mildly confused why everyone is acting so oddly.
I'm happy we don't live in a world with glass prisons and no toilet
The events of the first Avengers movie are clearly part of this show's history, but there was no sense that the second movie had happened yet.
And maybe they're being cagey with the crossovers at the moment because aside from anything else they'd have the "Superman problem" - i.e. why doesn't Superman help out other DC heroes more often ?
As much as I would have liked a Daredevil cameo, it would have undercut Jessica to have him show up to help out in the finale.
"Dude, you lost a coat. Move on."
I thought this one stuck the finale slightly better.
Frankly, if they don't integrate the various Netflix/ABC characters into the Infinity War stuff somehow, I'll be slightly annoyed.
Paul Rudd is also the kind of actor who, if his schedule is open, he'll come over and do it.
Which was foreshadowed by the fact that the guy Kilgrave told to face the fence "forever" was still standing there.
See, I thought it would be funny if, in saying, "Shut up, wankers," there'd be, like, those two people in the crowd who never masturbate, and they kept talking.
"No, don't take the super-pill that would help you beat me! It's, like, totally bad for YOU to take."
I've quite accidentally put holes in walls more than once. Never in a door.
Well, it's true that she tends to get cut and scraped up, but not so much broken. I mean, she had broken ribs this time around, but that took being hit by a truck going full speed.
Yes. That felt like wheel-spinning more about putting those chess pieces on the board, rather than a vital part of this story.
Yeah, that was a big thing that actually worked for me: Jessica has superhuman strength, but that's all she's got in a fight. She doesn't know how to use that to the best advantage, and while she heals quickly, she still gets hurt pretty easily. It's a good demonstration of how having powers doesn't automatically…
11 felt like wheel-spinning, and more about place setting for future seasons/series than anything that moved the plot action in a necessary way.