chaseter said:Can't wait to see this in the movie....![]()
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That is probably one of the corniest Wolverine pictures ever...
chaseter said:^ He is way to skinny and a wolf is behind him...corny. He just doesn't look fierce in that picture...unlike every other Wolverine poster. He looks like Christian Bale in the Machinist....creepy...not fierce/scary.
chaseter said:^ He is way to skinny and a wolf is behind him...corny. He just doesn't look fierce in that picture...unlike every other Wolverine poster. He looks like Christian Bale in the Machinist....creepy...not fierce/scary.
Your missing the point. You want movies like the comics. Here's a chance to make it that way and your still not pleased?chaseter said:Then why are you on here arguing for them???
When have I ever said I wanted a movie 100% like the comics...NEVER.Asteroid-Man said:Your missing the point. You want movies like the comics. Here's a chance to make it that way and your still not pleased?
Wolverine's bones and bone claws are super dense NOW.chaseter said:Quiet a few posters on here are saying his bone claws are so dense that they can cut through rocks, trees, and some metals. Yes I am on something...I am high on all this preachy bone junk going on in here...even the advocates for it cannot agree.
KillerBob said:Wolverine's bones and bone claws are super dense NOW.
Why? It is the nature of the healing factor. It slowly improves Wolverine's body, making him stronger faster, better. Along time ago Wolverine's bones would not be nearly as dense as they are now. In the 1960's (when Sabretooth breaks his bone claws in the movie) Wolverine's bones will not be anywhere near as dense as they are today (2000's).

Wolverine's healing factor can't do anything to the adamantium because it is technically his skeleton. The metal is not overlayed on top of his organic bone, it is bonded to the skeleton on a moleculear level. There is no way for the healing factor to push the adamantium out of him because to do this it would have to expell his entire skeleton (adamantium and organic bones) leaving Wolverine with no skeleton at all. He'd be a sack of meat and jelly if the Healing Factor did that. The adamantium is also now in a fixed physically solid state, making it impossible to affect it at all, since it is virtually indestructible.Logan876 said:Now this gets me wondering, don't get me wrong, I'm a big Wolvie fan. I didn't read much of the comics but I watched all the X-Men cartoons and X-Men movies.
Just curious, when his skeleton was laced with adamantium, how come his healing power did not heal his skeleton and it should have eliminated the adamantium, but it didn't. Maybe this was explained in the movies or in the cartoons that I missed or I can't remember, whatever.
I'm guessing his healing power heals only his flesh and not the bones, but then again, I read Deadpool can heal his broken bones so it's not far-fetched that Logan can do the same. OR maybe adamantium is so indestructible that it can't be eliminated by his healing power or...I just don't know. lol... What is it then?![]()
The comics go into way more detail than the movies or the cartoons. I grew up with the cartoons as well and have not read one comic...just researched them on here. I don't think the movies will go into that much detail as well. Back in the 60s they did not have as much technology as we do now. In X2 you could also see the equipment they used to lace his skeleton with adamantium. A simple needled(the one used to kill Lady D)was the only equipment used to put the adamantium on his bones. Now we all know adamantium is indestructible to both organic and inorganic materials...that is why his body wouldn't reject it. That is understandable. What I have been arguing in here is that many people are saying Stryker had to file down Wolverine's bone claws and then overlayed them with Adamantium. Now...his bones would naturally grow back since they were altered. They cannot break through the adamantium shell but would still grow none the less. I think this is a plot hole because his bones would either deform and cause Logan emmense pain. Or they would revert inward much like overgrown fingernails do. Whatever the case is I am still against bone claws. But his skeleton was never altered when the adamantium was put on there...that is why his body never rejected it.Logan876 said:Now this gets me wondering, don't get me wrong, I'm a big Wolvie fan. I didn't read much of the comics but I watched all the X-Men cartoons and X-Men movies.
Just curious, when his skeleton was laced with adamantium, how come his healing power did not heal his skeleton and it should have eliminated the adamantium, but it didn't. Maybe this was explained in the movies or in the cartoons that I missed or I can't remember, whatever.
I'm guessing his healing power heals only his flesh and not the bones, but then again, I read Deadpool can heal his broken bones so it's not far-fetched that Logan can do the same. OR maybe adamantium is so indestructible that it can't be eliminated by his healing power or...I just don't know. lol... What is it then?![]()
Are you realy that stupid? I don't want to be rude but I had said fan boys wernt pleased and you said who? and I said Fanboys. then you said what about and when I said "You" I was rewording terintino's words.. as in FANBOYS!!!!!!!! not you in general. Sheesh!chaseter said:When have I ever said I wanted a movie 100% like the comics...NEVER.
When you quote somebody on here...it usually means that you are talking back to them. When you quote someone in real life...it helps to actually reference the speaker because not everyone in here knows every Quinten Terintino quote. But now that you mention it...I remember reading that and see it helps. Not everyone knows or thinks they know exactly what you are thinking. Do not call me stupid or we will have it out on here.Asteroid-Man said:Are you realy that stupid? I don't want to be rude but I had said fan boys wernt pleased and you said who? and I said Fanboys. then you said what about and when I said "You" I was rewording terintino's words.. as in FANBOYS!!!!!!!! not you in general. Sheesh!

Now who is going to take that when you said "you", that you were actually referring to Quenten Terintino???Asteroid-Man said:Your missing the point. You want movies like the comics. Here's a chance to make it that way and your still not pleased?

We have no idea if that big needle was what was used to put adamantium on Logan's bones. It seems extremely unlikely as a needle is totally unsuited for the job. For all you know that needle could simply be an adamantium feed tube that is inserted into the tank itself (old school bonding style) or some other tool.chaseter said:In X2 you could also see the equipment they used to lace his skeleton with adamantium. A simple needled(the one used to kill Lady D)was the only equipment used to put the adamantium on his bones..
So his bones would naturally grow back, even though it's virtually impossible for this to happen??? Perfect sense. I am still perplexed as to where exactly the bones are going to grow since they are trapped in an unalterable shape. And it makes no sense to think that Wolverine's healing factor would cause him pain, or cause further injury. The HF's purpose is the exact opposite of what you claim it would do. According to you the healing factor would cause deformities, despite the fact that it FIXES deformities. It doesn't cause damage, it repairs damage. Your reasoning makes no sense at all. Wolverine's healing factor is also highly adaptable. It allows him to evolve. This has been said many times. A more likely senario is that the healing factor attempts to allow the body to more easily conform to the new adamantium coating. Perhaps going so far as to make the bone tissue denser to be more like the extremely dense adamantium it is coated with. This would explain why Wolverine's organic bone was tougher after the adamantium than it was before.chaseter said:Now...his bones would naturally grow back since they were altered. They cannot break through the adamantium shell but would still grow none the less. I think this is a plot hole because his bones would either deform and cause Logan emmense pain. Or they would revert inward much like overgrown fingernails do.
i dont think so plus it would make an excellent shot for the movie storyboardThat is probably one of the corniest Wolverine pictures ever...
Ok, I did a search and couldnt believe that no one had posted something like this. Am I the only one who wants to see Logans bone claws in his spin off film?? We all know he can't remeber his past so seeing him with bone claws could be a real possibility!![]()
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We have no idea if that big needle was what was used to put adamantium on Logan's bones. It seems extremely unlikely as a needle is totally unsuited for the job. For all you know that needle could simply be an adamantium feed tube that is inserted into the tank itself (old school bonding style) or some other tool.
So his bones would naturally grow back, even though it's virtually impossible for this to happen??? Perfect sense. I am still perplexed as to where exactly the bones are going to grow since they are trapped in an unalterable shape. And it makes no sense to think that Wolverine's healing factor would cause him pain, or cause further injury. The HF's purpose is the exact opposite of what you claim it would do. According to you the healing factor would cause deformities, despite the fact that it FIXES deformities. It doesn't cause damage, it repairs damage. Your reasoning makes no sense at all. Wolverine's healing factor is also highly adaptable. It allows him to evolve. This has been said many times. A more likely senario is that the healing factor attempts to allow the body to more easily conform to the new adamantium coating. Perhaps going so far as to make the bone tissue denser to be more like the extremely dense adamantium it is coated with. This would explain why Wolverine's organic bone was tougher after the adamantium than it was before.
Some of you really need to check up on your comic facts.
All of you who complain that the bone claws are stupid because they are too fragile to be used as weapons are flat out wrong. Yes the claws have been broken, but in Wolverine's bio that Marvel used to insert on the first page of the comics it clearly states that Wolverine's claws are made of "super dense bone" which means that they are much, much stronger than normal human bones. The bones are super dense because Wolverine's healing factor makes his bones much stronger than a normal person, the same way it makes him much faster and stronger than humans.
If any of you read a Wolverine bio you would know that Marvel has stated that Wolverine's bone claws are naturally sharp and durable enough to cut through most natural substances, including rocks, trees, and most kinds of metal like solid steel.
Now for those of you in the "Stryker can't alter the shape of Wolverine's bones" Camp, you are wrong too. Every time Wolverine's bone claws were shattered or broken in the comics it would take several (days to weeks) issues for the claws to regrow to their natural length. In staying consistant with the comics then, it would be completely resonable for Stryker to shave down the claws to the Adamantium shape.
Movie Wolverine does not heal as fast as Comic Wolverine, therefor Stryker should have more than enough time to prepare the claws for the bonding process.

Actually, bone is one of the strongest materials ever.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone
Did none of you learn anything in PDHPE/Science??![]()

