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batman the brave and the boid

drychlick

Captain
Captain
batman the brave and the bold

i love this show on the cartion network on friday night! this week show was about the blue beetle all of them. they use a lot for the dc comics. whe like this show too and watch it ? let me know please;)
 
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i love this show on the cartion network on friday night! this week show was about the blue beetie all of them. they use a lot for the dc comics. whe like this show too and watch it ? let me know please;)

do you mean the blue beetle?:confused:
 
I didn't really care for last night's episode mainly because it didn't have a "name" villain. I didn't even know Ted Kord had an evil uncle... Why couldn't that have been Max Lord? That would have been cool.
 
I think this show has been getting impressive. The last two episodes have shown that this is not the little kiddies' show people expected. Last week's Deadman show was rather gruesome and morbid, with lots of stuff about death and zombies and so forth that you could never get away with on Saturday morning on most networks. And this week's episode was a pretty strong character story with some fairly dark elements of its own. We've even got an arc developing across multiple episodes with Jaime Reyes as the Blue Beetle in training. There's definitely more to this show than most people expected.

I just noticed the thread title says "the brave and the boid." Does that mean Batman's going to team up with Tweety Pie next?
 
The couple shows I have been able to catch have been not only impressive, but a heck of a lot of fun.

Batman still is monotone and looks constipated, but the show has brought fond memories of a time when superheroes were heroes ; no dark, antihero crap.

You know who the heroes are; you know who the villains are.
 
Basically this show is doing on a lesser scale what All-Star Superman did in the comics -- telling Silver Age DC stories with a more modern, sophisticated storytelling sensibility. The sense of fun is present, it isn't dark and gritty and morally ambiguous, but the characterization is richer and the stories more emotionally engaging than you'd generally get in a Silver Age DC comic.
 
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