Warning: Major spoilers for The Flash season 2 ahead, unmarked!
At the start of Season 4 of Arrow, we see a flash-forward teaser scene: Oliver Queen at the grave of a team member. The Flash shows up and apologizes for not being able to help out, and Oliver says he understands, because Flash was...
"yes, we had to be PC for the money. we're sorry."
> I'm asking about armor either initially designed for Tony but then regularly worn by someone else, or specifically designed for someone else. Someone wearing the Iron Man suit for five minutes one time would not count.
@phantom42 Will wasn't sent with knowledge of Hive. He was sent through as an unwilling sacrifice, along with the other two astronauts (who all believed they were on a discovery mission of some kind).
@JackBNimble It was meant to reduce the mass of an object, I think.
I realise I'm just stirring the pot now, but a new article on Birth.Movies.Death confirms that a denied scoop they ran last year (or maybe even earlier) about the opening of Star Wars: The Force Awakens was recently confirmed to be spot on by Mark Hamill himself.
it sounds like one of the way out ideas lucas had for the original movies - not necessarily bad, but so far removed from the final version that it was clear he was just spitballing ideas at the time
"I can tell you now that in the original opening shot of [Episode VII], the first thing that came into frame was a hand with a lightsaber, a severed hand that enters the atmosphere, and then the hand and bone burns away and goes sticking into the surface of Jakku, and this alien hand comes in - I don’t know if it was Maz but it was an alien hand who takes the lightsaber way - and then the movie proceeds as you see it."
Agents of Nothing: Chat about comic related movies and tv show websites.
yes, i read the story about hamill talking about it recently
a few sources are running it
my point is that if you read the early OT scripts/annotated scripts, there are a lot of things that were from such early concepts that they made zero sense if they were left in anything close to the final script.
what i havent read is hamill saying which version of the script this was from
because it sounds like something that had to have been from a very early script
@phantom42 Devin reported it in mid-2014, so I'd guess whatever version of the script was floating around then; certainly not a Lucas version. My point is more that a scoop from Devin that was widely denied and derided at the time has later turned out to be bang on the money.
@KutuluMike I really need to start watching the newest season, but my girlfriend and I just aren't that interested in it for some reason, despite loving the show until now.
But that isn't how Warging works. If the animal dies, you just go back to your original body, don't you? And when you are in Warg mode, you don't swap brains with the animal, your eyes just go white and you lose control of your body (to some degree).
I think the book is hinting that the Stark bloodline has a deep connection w/ the older inhabitants of the north
I'm pretty sure the books hinted that all of the Stark kids could have been wargs, but Sansa is too "civilized" and Rickon is too small to understand it
Bran just happened to be in the perfect situation to learn to control it, being young enough to believe in magic and old enough to understand it and stuck in bed unable to walk
or maybe they just have some kind of deep psychic connection with direwolves.
Well, it's not like there aren't superstitious characters in this world. Tyrion is called the Imp and the Dwarf, but I don't think that's a hint that he's secretly part-either.
This sounds more likely, given George RR Martin's obsession with heritage.
Hodor's real heritage comes from ... "Ser Duncan the Tall because of his height and because George R. R. Martin stated that his descendant would be in the book. There is also the vision of Bran's in the cave of the three-eyed crow of a knight as tall as Hodor kissing a young woman at Winterfell. The woman is thought to be Nan and the knight to be Ser Duncan the Tall, when he and Egg visited Winterfell in The She-Wolves of Winterfell."
@KutuluMike This is an issue. If the show isn't canon to the books, there are a lot of answers on this site that no longer make sense.
(I realise that the show hasn't matched the books for a little while now, but at least things like character names used to be consistent)
@DrRDizzle i didn't say it was/might have been from a lucas version. even abrams team had a lot of spitballed ideas that got axed early on. they spent months coming up with ideas and doing art of possible concepts that would ultimately be completely unused.
eriq la salle cast in wolverine 3. unconfirmed if he will be pimping soul glo.
"During Robert's Rebellion, Benjen was the Stark in Winterfell, but once his brother Eddard returned to Winterfell shortly after the end of the Rebellion, with an heir of his own, Benjen joined the Night's Watch, for reasons unknown."
@Himarm Even though she might not have needed saving. We've heard a lot of different interpretations from various sources over the course of the show/books.
i guess the whole sand snake thing will get dorn to declare war
but its rude to the poor prince to kill him off, he was just biding his time waiting for that kid targarian and the golden company/companions to show up
but that whole plot is non existant at the moment
dam near every news site is like winds of winter this may?
with 0 sources
ima find him and kill him myself, before he dies of a heart attack
I only recently realised that Dorne is the Southern part of Westeros, not part of Essos. Asking around my office proves this to be a common misconception.
i think her last appearance, the fbi was using her dad to try and set her up and laurel got caught in the crossfire and black canary came in to save the day or something?
so..new guy. in his interview, we asked "do you have any experience with any mvc style frameworks?" not a dealbreaker requirement, but very helpful. "yes, it's been a while, but i've worked with fusebox, cfwheels, and fw/1". you always assume that interviewees are always exaggerating at least a little bit, so i assume he's vaguely familiar with them, but not good with them. that's fine.
today: "i'm having trouble with this code because i've never seen anything like it..."
"... but this is exactly how all three major frameworks do things."