Explore our other sites
  • kotaku
  • quartz
  • theroot
  • theinventory
    zzzfromav
    ZZZ
    zzzfromav

    It could be that Krypton didn’t explode in the Flash/Arrow universe, though it’s probably more likely that Kara and Kal just ended up somewhere else, possibly even a government lab somewhere on Earth, like in Flashpoint (the comics, not the TV version).

    She has exactly as many powers as Green Arrow does. Or, for that matter, Wild Dog, Mr. Terrific, Heatwave, Captain Cold, White Canary, or Supergirl’s sister Alex.

    Well, the after-credits sequence does have him returning home to discover Superintendent Battle waiting for him to talk about the And Then There Were None Initiative, but I wouldn’t read too much into it.

    I agree on both counts. And I thought the episodes that introduced them did a good job of making it seem like Rollins was going to stick around longer and Sarge was going to be an unfortunate casualty. I was fooled, at least.

    A fun episode. I wasn’t sure we’d ever see Citizen Z again.

    While that is a rare instance of honest-to-goodness irony being sighted in the wild, to be entirely fair, it’s basically a case of one article saying “I know they would have made less money if they hadn’t revealed it, but it would have been nice to not be spoiled” and the other saying “they probably would have made

    I think it had a few elements that made it a little more tolerable. Primarily the fact that they actually started out using the zombie guts camouflage, giving them points for using their heads as well as explaining how they got part way to safety before they ran into trouble, and providing at least a little wiggle

    (Spoilers for, like, the MCU)

    Nah, there have been people famous for being rich and hanging out with and/or being related to people who’ve actually done something significant for as long as civilization has had a level of communication high enough for the concept of “fame” to exist.

    This season so far has been doing something similar to that season, in that it’s basically showing a string events evolving over the course of a day with each episode either picking up right after the previous one and showing the next hour or so almost in real-time, or showing what a different group of characters were

    I assume he was just hanging in there to make it to the end of American Horror Story: Cult.

    Exactly. I could see why she wouldn’t be the writers’ first choice of someone to talk sense into teenage Kara and I’m sure they’re saving actually showing her on screen for some big moment down the line (and they especially wouldn’t want to show her for the first time in a scene where she’s supposed to be

    Assuming it doesn’t have to be something that could actually exist and be profitable: basically a one-player electronic tabletop RPG.

    I assume Supergirl’s universe has its own rough equivalent of the Legends of Tomorrow, so questions like that are way too difficult for younger students because the answers change from day to day.

    When she was doing the whole “you won’t listen to me, but maybe will listen to someone else...” thing, I thought the big reveal was going to be Superman, so when I instead saw Erica Durance - after the not-even-a-little-bit-subtle reference to Smallville earlier in the episode - I thought she was just playing Lois

    I’ve seen the trailers for this before every movie I’ve seen recently, and it left two impressions on me: 1) I don’t know how much of the movie’s plot the trailer actually gives away, but it certainly feels like it contains at least 80% of the movie’s plot beats, and (2) Denzel’s performance, at least as shown in the

    Between them not mentioning Murphy’s flesh addiction, only mentioning Warren’s quest at the very end, and mostly leaving Sarge out of the main action, I wonder if this wasn’t a rejected script from a previous season dusted off and quickly updated - maybe they changed Murphy’s speech from being about leaving the infant

    I saw the headline of this review before I watched the episode, and on the one hand, the fact that it refers to “a surprising death” kind of gave away that Murphy wasn’t going to die (because “a ... death” implies only one regular will die, and “...surprising...” implies it wasn’t the guy who was bitten by a zombie in

    The character was voiced by the movie’s director, and the line in the weapons scene about killing three vampires was an in-joke referring to his previous movie, What We Do in the Shadows, which was about three vampires living together.

    The long long ago?