Yeah, He was a bright spot in Ang Lee's Hulk.Sam Elliott might be available.![]()
Yeah, He was a bright spot in Ang Lee's Hulk.Sam Elliott might be available.![]()
I probably wouldn't have caught it if I hadn't seen a story on the subject a day or two before.How did I completely miss the amazing easter egg/reference that is Bruce talking to Jen about Blonsky and saying that their fight was so long ago, he's a different man now, literally. Jen actually looks into the camera and goes 'hah'.
I feel so dumb now.
I like the Ruffalo really seems to enjoy playing Hulk/Banner and seeing where the character can go.I hadn't seen a story
It is, the line's got levels. Or is it layers?I was so dense I thought it was referring to Hulk's current hybrid state. I haven't watched those Hulk movies in a long time.
I was so dense I thought it was referring to Hulk's current hybrid state. I haven't watched those Hulk movies in a long time.
It is, the line's got levels. Or is it layers?
It is, the line's got levels. Or is it layers?
This sort of humor works best when there's a double-meaning, one in-universe and the other on our side of the fourth wall. I think this was such an instance.It could be seen as a comment on his hybrid state, except that the fourth wall break afterwards to me says a reference to the Norton Banner.
Given that her new boss was totally oblivious that was talking to us, I'm guessing they aren't, unless it would be really funny if they were. I think Scrubs or 30 Rock (or probably both) did a joke where we saw a cutaway from the outside and the character was just staring off into space for a moment in the middle a conversation so we saw what it looked like when someone imagined or remembered something on the show.I am it yet unclear on if other people in Jen’s proximity are aware she’s talking to the audience/ thin air or if they are completely oblivious to her fourth wall breaking.
Given that her new boss was totally oblivious that was talking to us, I'm guessing they aren't, unless it would be really funny if they were. I think Scrubs or 30 Rock (or probably both) did a joke where we saw a cutaway from the outside and the character was just staring off into space for a moment in the middle a conversation so we saw what it looked like when someone imagined or remembered something on the show.
I got the meta implication of what Bruce was saying, but totally missed Jen looking right down the barrel. That's a fun detail.How did I completely miss the amazing easter egg/reference that is Bruce talking to Jen about Blonsky and saying that their fight was so long ago, he's a different man now, literally. Jen actually looks into the camera and goes 'hah'.
I feel so dumb now.
I don't know about that. Bruce seemed to notice in the first episode, and that boss seems like just the sort to be utterly oblivious to anything anyone says that isn't a direct response to anything he says, and even then it's 50/50 what he actually hears and what he wants to hear.Given that her new boss was totally oblivious that was talking to us, I'm guessing they aren't, unless it would be really funny if they were. I think Scrubs or 30 Rock (or probably both) did a joke where we saw a cutaway from the outside and the character was just staring off into space for a moment in the middle a conversation so we saw what it looked like when someone imagined or remembered something on the show.
Like I said, worse than just being an escaped POW.Spys are shot.
The lose definition of a spy back then is being out of uniform.
If Hogan was caught blowing up a bridge, it's conceivable that every man in Stallag 13 might have been executed, which is why a responsible Allied Officer would inform on Hogan to the Germans, unless specifically ordered not to, to save the other 200 blokes in the camp who had no idea what was going on, from being hung.
I'm thinking this show maybe drawing on some parallels from the real world, specifically the fact that police departments/law enforcement agencies haven't exactly had great publicity in recent years. Maybe within the MCU, after the rather public disgrace that DODC made of themselves in Ms. Marvel, the public backlash from which has led to some leniency is being shown to those with superpowers, specifically the right to a trial and due process.I'm reading the page about Sokovia Accords and they explicitely said that an enhanced individual who breaks the law can be detained indefinitely without trial. They are still valid?!?!
She-Hulk takes place before Ms Marvel.I'm thinking this show maybe drawing on some parallels from the real world, specifically the fact that police departments/law enforcement agencies haven't exactly had great publicity in recent years. Maybe within the MCU, after the rather public disgrace that DODC made of themselves in Ms. Marvel, the public backlash from which has led to some leniency is being shown to those with superpowers, specifically the right to a trial and due process.
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