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http://blacknerdproblems.com/black-science-33-review/

writer: Rick Remender / artist: Matteo Scalera / Image Comics

I’m not sure how it’s possible, but somehow, shit just gets worse and worse for our heroes? I guess we can call Grant and the gang heroes as we very clearly have a villain confirmed. After the confession of Kadir at the close of issue #32, we now know that your boy been dimension hopping causing all kinds of ruckus. I mean, there’s stalking and then there’s stalking infinite dimensions until you finally cuff another dude’s wife. If that wasn’t bad enough, his fix to inter-dimensional beings taking over the world isn’t ideal.

Whose Dimension is This. The Dimension is Yours…

As you might imagine, the issue picks up directly after Kadir’s bombshell and McKay boys come to crash the party. As is the usual with this book, things always have another layer to them. If you expected it to be a simple Grant kicks Kadir’s ass, goodnight and good luck, then you’re not thinking big picture. This is a strength of the book, as no single event past or present is enough to undo all the damage.

Scalera makes you feel the weight of all these events as well. The action is always moving froward with an organized chaos. There is no short supply of peril on display as well, with Dimensionauts trying to hold off invaders. In addition their plight for survival, watching the McKays fight against Kadir and Chandra is a worthy spectacle. The consequences of Kadir’s solution and watching how everyone deals with it is a physical treat. Some of the most ambitious panels that Scalera has pulled off.

Black Science keeps barreling ahead, even after big bombshells that would serve as a climax. The story keeps upping the stakes. There are few stories that have me on the edge of my seat for the next issue, but Black Science seems to do this every issue.

9.1 Sliding Doors References

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The post Black Science #33 Review appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.

November 13, 2017

Black Science #33 Review

http://blacknerdproblems.com/black-science-33-review/

writer: Rick Remender / artist: Matteo Scalera / Image Comics

I’m not sure how it’s possible, but somehow, shit just gets worse and worse for our heroes? I guess we can call Grant and the gang heroes as we very clearly have a villain confirmed. After the confession of Kadir at the close of issue #32, we now know that your boy been dimension hopping causing all kinds of ruckus. I mean, there’s stalking and then there’s stalking infinite dimensions until you finally cuff another dude’s wife. If that wasn’t bad enough, his fix to inter-dimensional beings taking over the world isn’t ideal.

Whose Dimension is This. The Dimension is Yours…

As you might imagine, the issue picks up directly after Kadir’s bombshell and McKay boys come to crash the party. As is the usual with this book, things always have another layer to them. If you expected it to be a simple Grant kicks Kadir’s ass, goodnight and good luck, then you’re not thinking big picture. This is a strength of the book, as no single event past or present is enough to undo all the damage.

Scalera makes you feel the weight of all these events as well. The action is always moving froward with an organized chaos. There is no short supply of peril on display as well, with Dimensionauts trying to hold off invaders. In addition their plight for survival, watching the McKays fight against Kadir and Chandra is a worthy spectacle. The consequences of Kadir’s solution and watching how everyone deals with it is a physical treat. Some of the most ambitious panels that Scalera has pulled off.

Black Science keeps barreling ahead, even after big bombshells that would serve as a climax. The story keeps upping the stakes. There are few stories that have me on the edge of my seat for the next issue, but Black Science seems to do this every issue.

9.1 Sliding Doors References

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The post Black Science #33 Review appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


November 13, 2017

Ben Affleck Says There Is “Sexual Tension” Between Wonder Woman and Batman in Justice League and I Just Punched a Wall

https://www.themarysue.com/wonder-woman-batman-tension/

Apparently, this is all Joss Whedon’s fault.

The “WonderBats” pairing in the DC Universe isn’t new: it has precedent in the comics—though Bruce Wayne and Diana Prince ultimately decided not to try a relationship, preferring to preserve their friendship—it’s shown up in animated series, and the two most recent movie outings tried to jam the potential for this superheroic hook-up into our brains.

Because, I guess, previous canon that must be adhered to even if many other aspects are remade or entirely new in the DC movie verse?

The whole framing premise that prompted Diana’s flashback in Wonder Woman came about because Bruce had dug up the old photo of her during WWI alongside Steve Trevor and friends, and sent it to her in France (rather dramatically, in an armored car and guard). It was implied that Bruce cared enough to want to know more about her and to use his resources to track down this hidden piece of her past, and hoped that one day she’d share her secrets with him. Cool, cool, cool. Friends can do that too! But the inclusion of those scenes made me think we were also being primed for a possible future Bruce/Diana set-up, and it seems like we may be seeing more of that much faster than I imagined.

Comicbook.com reports that Ben Affleck, a.k.a Batfleck, mentioned that Joss Whedon’s extensive reshoots after he stepped in for director Zack Snyder added an enhanced Bruce/Diana interplay:

According to star Ben Affleck, the reshoots made by Joss Whedon added some heat between the Dark Knight and the Princess of Themyscira.

During a conversation with Entertainment Weekly about the new changes, Affleck revealed that Whedon’s scenes allowed Batman to “play the dynamics, the sexual tension with Wonder Woman,” among other contributions.

I truly don’t intend to offend any fans of the Bruce/Diana pairing (I ship enough things as it is and support all ships), but I just can’t keep from feeling that, even if the DCEU goes full-scale Bruce/Diana someday, it was not needed right here, right now. It’s not that I dislike the pairing—I’ve rather enjoyed it elsewhere—but the timing troubles me.

This is the first Justice League outing, and it annoys me to no end that the one female member simply must have “sexual tension” with someone, let alone with her teammate and friend when they have much bigger fish to fry. Just let them all bicker and bond and fight together and save the world, okay? Not every movie needs to have romantic feelings shoehorned in—look how well Thor: Ragnarok worked without that distraction—and I don’t think it needs to be here. At all.

This seems to have actually been the original plan for Justice League, but then Joss Whedon’s reshoots had to go and add in an increased attention to “sexual tension.” It was my understanding that Whedon was there to wrap things up and help lighten the story with humor, but I guess he couldn’t help himself. I’ll leave Whedon’s personal life out of this and simply say I have little faith in his romantic choices and instincts when it comes to superheroes.

The out-of-left-field, uncomfortable attempt Whedon undertook to match up Natasha Romanoff and Bruce Banner in Avengers: Age of Ultron still leaves a sour taste in my mouth. Among the MCU fans I know, it’s the most unpopular onscreen pairing yet. It had zero precedent or chemistry, it gave us a deeply troubling scene of Natasha Romanoff lamenting her lack of fertility that made me want to set the world on fire, and yet Whedon clearly thought it was a great idea. And let’s not forget that his original Wonder Woman script had scenes like Diana doing a seductive dance in order to distract the bad guys. You’ll excuse me if I don’t give a good damn about Joss Whedon’s emotions where Wonder Woman is concerned, except to eye them suspiciously.

It’s more difficult for me to leave Affleck’s personal life out of this equation, because while I know Batman is a character unto itself and Affleck is an actor (who may not even be around for all that long), we can’t always divorce these things in our minds, nor should we. Since the Weinstein scandal broke, multiple women have come forward to accuse Affleck of sexual harassment as well as complicity in others’ harassment, and it’s going to be really hard for me to stop thinking about that when I see him onscreen. This queasiness triples when I think about him having “sexually tense” scenes with Diana/Gal Gadot. And considering Gal’s recent heroic stance against harassers like director Brett Ratner, it makes me wonder how she’s feeling about it at the moment.

To quote our Marykate Jasper when she sent me the Comicbook.com link, “VOMFEST.”

I don’t believe that actors and other creators get to separate themselves from their real lives when it comes to their work. We often go to see movies starring stars that we love precisely because we love them, and their offscreen behavior does matter, especially when it is egregiously bad. This is why the cretinous Kevin Spacey is getting replaced on projects or having his projects totally shut down. This is why Mel Gibson fell from grace for a long while, though not nearly long enough. This is why no one should still be working with Woody Allen. And this is why I’m going to flinch even more every time I see any hint of flirtation or “tension” between Wonder Woman and Batman in Justice League, enacted by one actor I adore, Gal Gadot, and one that I wouldn’t mind seeing unemployed for a long while, Ben Affleck. 

Narratively, that sexual tension didn’t really need to be there this go-round, and due to recent revelations about Justice League‘s caped and cowled star, I wish, very much, that it was not there at all.

(via Comicbook.com, image: DC Comics/Warner Bros.)

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November 12, 2017

Rick and Morty Get Schwifty Bib

http://www.geekbabyclothes.com/rick-morty-get-schwifty-bib/

Your little one gets schwifty, but they aren’t doing a dance. Have you marathoned Rick and Morty while breastfeeding at 3:30 in the morning. That’s the kind of party lifestyle you live now, right? Thank god for Netflix and other streaming services. Don’t worry you’ll be able to show them Rick and Morty soon enough.

The post Rick and Morty Get Schwifty Bib appeared first on Geek Baby Clothes.


November 12, 2017

Star Wars #38 Review

http://blacknerdproblems.com/star-wars-38-review/

Writer: Kieron Gillen / Artist: Salvador Larroca / Marvel Comics

The flagship comic for Marvel’s new Star Wars extended universe has mostly run like a well-oiled engine on Jason Aaron’s watch. The book has consistently mined the spaces in between the films to unearth a plethora of world building and characters that fit right into this world as if they’d always been there. But now with Aaron passing the baton, can Kieron Gillen keep the momentum going?

As good as Aaron’s run was, his standalone vignettes didn’t exactly leave Gillen much to work with as far as establishing the story going in a new direction. Whereas Aaron worked within the in-betweens of New Hope and Empire, Gillen seems to be tying Team Skywalker to fallout from the events of Rogue One. This approach has both strengths and weaknesses. On one hand, sure, it’s great that the Extended Universe is going out of its way to make sure that Rogue One has deep roots in the mythology. It’s a little fanservice-y but something like Star Wars doesn’t get to last 40 years without its share of fan service. On the other hand, I was ready to scream if I had to read Saw Gerrara’s name one more time. So far, it’s effective but doesn’t start as explosive and kinetic as Aaron’s run.

Visually, I must admit I’m slowly being converted to one of the anti-Salvador Larroca people. I could deal with the photorealistic faces at first but now he’s outright lifting faces right out of screenshots from the movie and it is immensely distracting and off-putting. At one point, there’s a panel of Leia with a scarf over her mouth and it’s just these dead photorealistic eyes looking at you, following you like one of those creepy Boris Karloff haunted house movies. It’s getting bad, y’all.

Bottom Line: The attempts to add relevance to Rogue One (as if it needs any more) are appreciated but there’s nothing truly magnificent to look at so far in Gillen’s first issue. On top of that, Salvador Larroca is officially the element that’s keeping this book from true greatness. This would be a perfectly serviceable book with just a little less photorealism.

7.5 Unexpectedly Enjoyable Forest Whitaker Appearances out of 10

Reading Star Wars? Find BNP’s other reviews of the series here.

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The post Star Wars #38 Review appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


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