More lame "The darkness in Oliver!" stuff and some throw away thing where Barry is embracing it for two seconds and might risk becoming dark! Oh no!
He's still broken inside. He learned how to control it, but he has no issues with killing when necessary.Right? I mean.... the entire point of season one of Arrow was him learning NOT to kill.
I just thought of something that doesn't honestly bother me at all, but it's sort of amusing.
When 90s Barry shows up, and everyone is like "Wow, Jay!" and Now Barry say "Dad!?" the only reason this happens is because he's played by the same actor. There's absolutely no in-universe reason whatsoever for them to look identical.
Anyway, just a random thought.
I just thought of something that doesn't honestly bother me at all, but it's sort of amusing.
When 90s Barry shows up, and everyone is like "Wow, Jay!" and Now Barry say "Dad!?" the only reason this happens is because he's played by the same actor. There's absolutely no in-universe reason whatsoever for them to look identical.
Anyway, just a random thought.
There's probably a few answers we could come up with ourselves, for sure. As I said, it's not a plot hole or damaging to the story or anything; it's just not explained.Unless that Earth's Henry Allen's parents decided to name him Barry.
Personally, I don't mind there being something like a "90s universe" or whatever. It's fine to me. That one particular instance just stuck out to me. That said, I'll mostly agree with you. They should all look like their original actors unless the universe is seriously divergent in some way.That's my one gripe with the Multiverse stuff in the Arrowverse... They break their rules too often for the different worlds. Barry Allen should look like Grant Gustin on every Earth. Just like how all the Wells' looks like Tom. I'm ok with them being different ages give or take a few years just due to random events which cause other events to happen sooner or later, but when a character is a completely different actor, that's weird.
The Flash episode is first, then Arrow, then Supergirl. They flipped Flash and Supergirl for the crossover only.Hey gang, this is one of those regularly scheduled yearly 'where does this fit' questions.
Which one's first, second third? Flash > Supergirl > Arrow? I understand Legends isn't part of it.
Gonna binge most of each of the seasons during the holiday, but probably going to skip to this first. Unless that's not advised? Worked out well last year.
Thanks!
If I'm being honest I've got to re-watch a lot of the previous seasons of all of these but yeah.
The Flash episode is first, then Arrow, then Supergirl. They flipped Flash and Supergirl for the crossover only.
No, the problem is WB doesn't like Batman legitimately on tvIf you've already got Superman and Flash in Arrowverse, can't they just add Batman and Wonder Woman? They shouldn't do Crisis without the JLA.
I guess I don't expect them to kill Supergirl either.
No, the problem is WB doesn't like Batman legitimately on tv
Wonder Woman on the other hand is actual rights issues that have to be negotiated around with.
Wonder Woman for example was completely blocked from Batman Beyond, a huge issue for Justice League and even had trouble getting her and WonderGirl in Young Justice.
Wonder Woman seems to be fine when it comes to rights. Both NBC and The CW tried to develop shows for it the last couple of years.No, the problem is WB doesn't like Batman legitimately on tv
Wonder Woman on the other hand is actual rights issues that have to be negotiated around with.
Wonder Woman for example was completely blocked from Batman Beyond, a huge issue for Justice League and even had trouble getting her and WonderGirl in Young Justice.
Wonder Woman seems to be fine when it comes to rights. Both NBC and The CW tried to develop shows for it the last couple of years.
In ususal CW style, Batwoman has a full team for.. reasons. *sigh*Teen Wolf alumna Meagan Tandy, Camrus Johnson(Luke Cage) and Nicole Kang (You) have been cast in lead roles opposite Ruby Rose in Batwoman, the CW's DC drama pilot from Greg Berlanti's Berlanti Productions and Warner Bros. Television.
Tandy will play Sophie Moore. After graduating from military academy, Sophie rose through the ranks to become a high-level private security agent and one of Gotham's staunchest protectors. Despite her bite and regimented outlook, Sophie has a soft side, illuminated by Kate Kane's return.
Johnson will portray Luke Fox. A Dark Knight loyalist and son of Wayne's R&D director Lucius Fox, Luke works to keep Wayne Tower secure in his boss's absence. While Luke considers himself the guardian of all things Batman — specifically his symbol — he also recognizes the city's need for a new hero.
Kang is Mary Hamilton. Excitable, talkative, and an influencer-in-the-making, Mary is Kate Kane's step-sister and polar opposite. But what Mary lacks in a filter, she makes up for with her compassion for Gotham's underserved communities, proving she has more in common with Kate than she thinks.
https://deadline.com/2019/01/batwom...e-kang-to-star-in-the-cw-pilot-dc-1202541983/