Loving what I've seen of The Flash so far...
Glad someone does. I think Gustin's gonna wind up being the better Flash overall, though.
Also, am I the only one who saw what might be glimpses of Supergirl?
Loving what I've seen of The Flash so far...
Also, am I the only one who saw what might be glimpses of Supergirl?
Bleh.
Sorry, DC, you don't get to have it both ways! In the last movie, the world was supposedly terrified of Superman and Batman was actively trying to kill him on the off-chance he would go mad and destroy the world. Now, all of a sudden people are mourning his death, WORLD WITHOUT HOPE headlines are running, and Batman is spouting off about how Superman made people see the best in themselves?!
No. None of that was set up in prior movies. Playing on people's expectations and knowledge of characters outside what you've established in-world does not make for a good movie.
Yeah when I heard all that loving talk about Supes, my immediate reaction was "you hated him to the point of deciding to KILL him, until 1 hour before his death, and now you mourn him like a lost best friend/hero?"
Weird.
Nope, I saw it, 1:41 mark in the trailer posted above. Definitely Supergirl.
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Red cape, bare legs, red boots. Unless its from Superman's "experimental"phase, I'm going Supergirl.
Would be weird if it wasn't the whole point of Batman's redemption/reformation arc in BvS.
"I failed him in life. I won't fail him in death." Bruce Wayne seems to give more respect to what was happening in story than most of the audience. Who seem to be incredibly resistant to empathetic/thoughtful viewing.
Confirmed Iron Man in JL.
My problem with Brucefleck saying that is that "failing" someone means you've fallen short of a promise/duty. B and S had no relationship where this could have been true. Sounds nice but makes no sense.Would be weird if it wasn't the whole point of Batman's redemption/reformation arc in BvS.
"I failed him in life. I won't fail him in death." Bruce Wayne seems to give more respect to what was happening in story than most of the audience. Who seem to be incredibly resistant to empathetic/thoughtful viewing.