Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.I completely forgot about Adam West's kills.
Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.I completely forgot about Adam West's kills.
It wasn't that scene though. It was when Penguin re-hydrated his goons in the Batcave with heavy water. Two disintegrated when punched.Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb.
I'm sorry, but I find it weird that fans cannot accept Superman or Batman killing a villain, but have yet to express a complaint about Wonder Woman, Captain America, Aquaman or any other comic book hero/heroine doing the same. Why Superman and Batman? Why are those two not allow to kill a bad guy, regardless of the situation? I never understood that. In a way, I'm glad that Snyder had written that particular scenario for "Man of Steel". I've always felt that a person takes up the mantle of a vigilante, he or she might end up in a situation in which killing the bad guy is necessary. There is always a chance that situation might pop up.
The thing is, few wanted to see a return to the Salkind's version of Superman, either, which is one of the many reasons Superman Returns was viewed as a major disappointment, turning off anyone wanting to see the character again. The Salkind's versions were so hard-wired to a semi-campy interpretation, which had long lost whatever appeal it had before the turn of the century.
Of course, that belief ignores the reality of the character being a part of the same universe with other DC heroes and villains
Not sure what your point is, but LDS is part of the same universe as other Star Trek.And Lower Decks is part of the same universe as other Star Trek.
That's right. He didn't know.Part of the definition of being a deadbeat dad is you know you have a kid.
Not sure what your point is, but LDS is part of the same universe as other Star Trek.
Ah, yes, quite so. Riker and Troi are realized as cartoons with over-the-top delivery in LDS and as live action in PIC with... somewhat less than over-the-top delivery.That is my point. Just because two things take place in the same world doesn’t mean they have to be of a piece tonally, or that they need to follow the same narrative rules.
He’s kind of failed in that respect having let Joker get away so often.Batman is obsessed with preventing death. That's his thing. Even if not killing someone is not particularly rational, he should not be written as being capable of doing it.
In addition to what others have said about Superman, I would just say that I don't think Batman should ever kill because it is an essential part of his psychology. Batman's entire fixation is on the idea of preventing anyone else from ever dying as his parents died. To that end, he will do just about anything and break any rule... except killing. It's not a question of what I think is appropriate for a Batman story (since I do think Batman stories can get darker than Superman stories yet still be appropriate to the character), bur rather a question of what I think the central facet of his psychology is. Batman is obsessed with preventing death. That's his thing. Even if not killing someone is not particularly rational, he should not be written as being capable of doing it.
The problem with Superman Returns was not that people had some sort of dislike of the Reeve movies. The problems with Superman Returns were that 1) it was tonally dissonant from the Reeve movies (you don't market your movie as a continuation of the Christopher Reeve version of the story and then give us a sad depressed emo Superman who's also a deadbeat dad who's lost the love of his life to another man), and 2) it also just wasn't very good.
Of course, in retrospect the fact that Superman Returns was directed by one sexual predator and co-stars another sexual predator as Lex Luthor doesn't help it any.
Ah, yes, quite so. Riker and Troi are realized as cartoons with over-the-top delivery in LDS and as live action in PIC with... somewhat less than over-the-top delivery.
There's going to be pretty solid evidence soon that, in fact, it does coexist. SPOILER (article at Variety.com):Just because the rest of Star Trek takes place in the Lower Decks universe, does not mean that Lower Decks takes place in the Star Trek universe.
Ah, yes, quite so. Riker and Troi are realized as cartoons with over-the-top delivery in LDS and as live action in PIC with... somewhat less than over-the-top delivery.
He’s kind of failed in that respect having let Joker get away so often.
Let that be a lesson for you in tampering with the laws of nature.It wasn't that scene though. It was when Penguin re-hydrated his goons in the Batcave with heavy water. Two disintegrated when punched.
Personally, I think we can blame those two deaths on the Penguin, not Batman and Robin.
I understand where you are coming from, and I agree. I started reading in the 70s and, even then, the fifties and sixties version of the character had been left behind. Schwartz, Bates, and Swan were the names at the time--but I don't still hold to Curt Swan's Superman is the only valid version because that was the one from MY childhood.
I enjoyed Superman Returns for what it was--but back then we still had to take what was offered because content was sparse.
And Lower Decks is part of the same universe as other Star Trek.
That may be the case, but it does not mean it will work, or was the right decision, since LD is a send-up, which ST--as a concept--is not
Worse, SR was practically a word-for-word remake of the 78 Superman movie at various points. That drove me nuts!Superman Returns--or rather Singer--learned nothing from those changes, instead, thinking the world wanted to pick up where Superman II left off, and despite the more "mature" themes in the film, it was still inhaling the fumes and approach of something that felt out of place less than a decade
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