Will a large amount of the show take place in prison, or is this a “prison” of the mind (and whose unstable mind would trapped in this prison?)?
Will a large amount of the show take place in prison, or is this a “prison” of the mind (and whose unstable mind would trapped in this prison?)?
Has the entire “HYDRA took over everything” storyline - both in the show and in the entire MCU - been completely taken care of/resolved now?
He did it!
Maybe Ridley Scott wanted to make this movie about “humanity,” and the Engineers, etc., and Studios - reluctant to fund up to 3 or 4 Ridley Scott movies that aren’t period pieces starring Russell Crowe - didn’t give the go ahead until Scott went, “uhhh...and they’re part of the “Alien” universe.”
What if he made a “Batman Returns” car?
I’m also curious what classes each of the 3 heroes found to be, either a B.S class, or too difficult, to end up dropping, in order to free up the free period that will serve as the setting for Study Hall Of Justice.
The strategy is a complete reversal of what you’d expect: using novels to get kids to read comics, rather than comics to get kids into novels (something like, a miniseries following Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, to encourage kids to read Mark Twain - wouldn’t be surprised if that’s been done, already). Guessing this began…
Thanks for the info - especially the fact that “Sith” was used in his screenplay, as well as merchandise, which both seem especially relevant.
I’d ask this over in the linked Deadline article, since that’s where the term’s used, but it wants a Facebook or Twitter log-in for comments: What is “linear/digital network” - which is where this show, amd another from Rosenberg, are said to be going?
Did they ever actually mention the word “Sith” in the the original trilogy? I’m not saying they didn’t, but I can’t think of a specific person ever saying it.
Not my favorite character on the show, but I’ might as well throw Ward in there as well - who started out like the 90’s animated X-Men’s Cyclops.
So, I guess you’re basically Dr. Crusher, after she gets caught in Wesley’s warp bubble experiment - which was a plot-device used to get Beverly in an alternate universe (and another reason to hate Wesley). I don’t remember if she heard intermittent voices of the crew in the episode (“Remember Me,” Season 4), but the…
GOOFY THING THAT LITERALLY JUST HAPPENED WHILE READING:
Do you think that having a parent (or both) who was “victim of the anti-D&D fear” make RPG’s more appealing to you (and anyone who this applies to)?
Huh...didn’t know that corn (or, “maize,” it insists) was a grain (after finding it oddly missing from the top 3).
It feels kind of weird that Riddler’s other personality is already this developed. Like, I don’t remember him hearing voices at all throughout last season; he’d shown tendencies, or the potential to lash out into a rage - particularly if it involved Ms. Kringle (thank for mentioning her, so I didn’t have to actually…
This is an insane coincidence. Two days ago, while I was searching for something unrelated, I came across my comics for the first time in a looonngg time, and ended up sitting there for at least an hour - mostly marveling at how all the front and back, full-page advertisements were for the original, or very early…
“ in a context of both Cold War paranoia...”
Who is the “The Dome,” anyway? I never watched the show, but I’ve noticed the recaps every once in a while for, what, like 2 years now - and always kind of wondered what that was about, or who was behind it (Esther?; Charlie Jane?).
She looks great. Certainly an improvement over Star Trek, “The Deadly Years” makeup crew’s extrapolation: