Lounge of Themyscira

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Oh they exist and they are still there in 2049, they were even shown in the new Blade Runner trailer.
 
This is how they will rebound and become popular again. [/TerminatorTimelineLogic]
 
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I honestly didn't even realize they still existed as a company. That's cool.

Really excited about the E.T. flagship relaunch game that's coming out with it. Rumor has it they are making extra ones because demand is going to be so high.
 
One of the alternate Earths in the DC universe should be one where Jonathon Kent is a Beet farmer in Pennsylvania and he works as a salesman at a paper company.
 
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In Superman 2 he reveals who he is to Lois and then they go to the Fortress of Solitude where Superman takes away his superpowers and he has sex with her. At the end of the movie Superman gives Lois a kiss that erased her memories. Superman Returns is supposed to be an alternate take on Superman 3. So Bryan Singer's interpretation of Superman 2 is that Superman impregnated Lois, made her forget that it happened, and then left Earth for five years.

Well then... Singer is a moron because Lois told him it was his son when he was in a coma at the end lol.
 
Booking tickets for Spider-Man Homecoming in an hour, not sure whether to book 1 or 2 :/
 
Try being suspended upside down to watch the movie, you won't hear munching that way.
 
Well then... Singer is a moron because Lois told him it was his son when he was in a coma at the end lol.

She did witness her son throwing a piano at one of Lex's guys. So it probably wasn't hard for her to figure out who the father is.
 
I enjoyed Hackman, Rosenbaum, and Spacey as Lex. But the only scene where I liked Eisenberg as Lex was the rooftop scene with Lois and Superman.
 
I'm re watching the Adam West Batman show and I'm still wondering why the Batcave needs a nuclear reactor.
 
I enjoyed Hackman, Rosenbaum, and Spacey as Lex. But the only scene where I liked Eisenberg as Lex was the rooftop scene with Lois and Superman.

I thought that was his worst scene, probably because it was also his longest scene in the film.
 
Rosenbaum is my favourite but he had the advantage of a long show to build up his character.
 
Just booked tickets for the first screening of Spider-Man Homecoming, anyone know how I can lower my heart-rate :0
 
Even though people have compared Eisenberg's Lex to the Riddler, I hope the way Lex is written in Justice League will be similar to the Riddler from Gotham. In seasons 1 and 2 of Gotham he was very aloof but after a stay in Arkham he came out a bit more serious and mature in season 3.
 
I still haven't seen a live-action version of Lex I really like. A less cheesy version of John Shea from Lois & Clark would be close - the handsome self-made genius billionaire who's a charmer with the ladies and beloved by everyone, who basically represents the pinnacle of man until Superman shows up. With Superman being one of the only people to suspect the monster within. I like the contradiction: Superman being the guy who normally sees the best in people, except this one guy who the rest of the world believes the best in.

Kevin Spacey did a great job playing his version. I'm just...not a fan of that version.
 
It would be great if Spacey got to play the corporate billionaire instead of a continuation of the real estate obsessed version.
 
The only time I think Jesse went too far was the tick tick tick tick stuff at the end of the prison scene. He was like a slobbering loon there at the end. It was such a stupid way to end an otherwise wonderful and forboding scene.

But I was fine with the rest of his scenes. Jesse made Lex into a young narcissistic sociopath that has way way too much time and money. Jeese's Lex is basically what could have happened to Bruce if circumstances had been just a bit different. He could have come unhinged at a young age and done horrible things with his resources if he had been left alone without Alfred. Alfred gave Bruce a somewhat decent structured childhood. Alfred was a supportive father figure that cared for him and taught him right and wrong. Alfred's basically a bulwark in Bruce's life. Jesse's Lex clearly didnt have a good father figure or a mother that could be there for him and he just went wrong. He's careless, cold, uses his tesources for personal pleasure, gain, and to harm others. I think it creates a nice dichotomy.

Whether that is what Snyder was trying to convey is anyone's guess, but its what I took away from it.
 
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