Sony owns the rights to Spidey. Marvel has the animation rights. (Hmm. If Spidey is presented as all CGI, maybe they could get away with it.)
probably only if it's obvious CGI...

Sony owns the rights to Spidey. Marvel has the animation rights. (Hmm. If Spidey is presented as all CGI, maybe they could get away with it.)
I bailed on the Marvel Universe in the middle of Civil War (after having been a reader since the mid 60s), but this show is great.Ditto.I've now reached the point where I'm so uninvolved with both the plots and characters I'd have bailed if this wasn't part of the MCU.
No, wait... I have bailed.![]()
I'm assuming the Marvel Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. character rights are the same as for the films (so no use of mutants or Spider-Man on television).
I'm assuming the Marvel Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. character rights are the same as for the films (so no use of mutants or Spider-Man on television).
Well, last week's episode established that psi powers are believed to be impossible at this point in the MCU (though how they explain Loki's mind control is unclear), which seems to imply that they're keeping their distance from the X-Men characters, since those include a number of telepaths and telekinetics.
The scientific studies that they cited likely didn't include a lot of Asgardian subjects....Well, last week's episode established that psi powers are believed to be impossible at this point in the MCU (though how they explain Loki's mind control is unclear)
But it's silly for them to say psi powers are impossible in a world with Norse gods, portals with aliens flying through them, and devices with limitless energy the size of your fist.
Psi powers don't necessarily have to come from the X-Gene/mutants.
By the same token, being brainwashed by a tesseract-powered alien scepter isn't the same thing as humans having the ability to read minds.But it's silly for them to say psi powers are impossible in a world with Norse gods, portals with aliens flying through them, and devices with limitless energy the size of your fist.
That's not silly at all. After all, those are different types of phenomena. Just because a new discovery is made, that doesn't mean you assume everything is equally possible.
I'm assuming the Marvel Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. character rights are the same as for the films (so no use of mutants or Spider-Man on television).
Well, last week's episode established that psi powers are believed to be impossible at this point in the MCU (though how they explain Loki's mind control is unclear), which seems to imply that they're keeping their distance from the X-Men characters, since those include a number of telepaths and telekinetics.
But it's silly for them to say psi powers are impossible in a world with Norse gods, portals with aliens flying through them, and devices with limitless energy the size of your fist. Psi powers don't necessarily have to come from the X-Gene/mutants.
I never said they did. What I meant was that, if this were a world where Charles Xavier and Jean Grey and Emma Frost existed, then SHIELD would know that telepathy was real. But since they don't believe telepathy is real, that suggests that those characters don't exist in the MCU, at least not in the form seen in the X-Men movies. (And this idea didn't originate with me. It's from the Wired easter-egg article that was linked to yesterday in post #1002.)
I bailed on the Marvel Universe in the middle of Civil War (after having been a reader since the mid 60s), but this show is great.Ditto.I've now reached the point where I'm so uninvolved with both the plots and characters I'd have bailed if this wasn't part of the MCU.
No, wait... I have bailed.![]()
Half a page on Onomatopoeia?
Unfortunately, I haven't seen "The Consultant," since it's not legally available online. One of these days I should really buy the DVDs or Blu-Rays.
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