pukunui
Legend
He's already tried and failed twice with her, so maybe the third time's the charm there?Pretty sure with Karen back that its out with Heather in with Karen
He's already tried and failed twice with her, so maybe the third time's the charm there?Pretty sure with Karen back that its out with Heather in with Karen
I'm not failing to see that. I know that as a fact in the real world. But this is comics, and he has the ability to feel the strokes. But, it's not that big a deal for me, so let's just drop it there.No.
You literally are failing to understand the basic fact that shapes are shapes, and no amount of sensitive touch will let you see an image in oil paint when the shape of the paint is very different to the actual image. It's simply not possible. You cannot argue that it is.
It's fine to not be bothered by it, but it's a goof.
I'm happy to drop it but my problem is precisely that this isn't "the comics", but rather a TV series which for three seasons, attempted of a kind of quasi-realism despite superhuman powers, ninjas, etc. It doesn't fit to pretend to realism in the way this series has continued to and then have pure comic book stuff in there. Maybe this is another remnant of when it was more of an MCU series?But this is comics, and he has the ability to feel the strokes. But, it's not that big a deal for me, so let's just drop it there.
That's true for your senses and mine. Likely to not be true with someone gifted with a superhuman sense of touch. For instance, the brushstrokes creating say, a nose, or an apple, or a cloud, are applied at different points in time to the rest of what's happening on the canvas. If your sense of touch was sensitive enough, it's not that hard to imagine that you could extrapolate the contours of various figures on the canvas, because of differences in the amount of paint on the brush, the directions of the strokes, maybe different brushes (which might differ in size, bristle material, etc.) are used to create certain parts of the painting.No.
You literally are failing to understand the basic fact that shapes are shapes, and no amount of sensitive touch will let you see an image in oil paint when the shape of the paint is very different to the actual image. It's simply not possible. You cannot argue that it is.
It's fine to not be bothered by it, but it's a goof.
Sorry, no. If you pretend to realism, as this show has, and you pretend powers work in specific ways, you, the writer of the show, have to engage your brain before casually using wacky comics stuff. There's tons and tons of stuff from the comics that MCU and indeed the Netflix shows knew was far too silly or just plain dimwitted to bring into a TV series or movie which wasn't pure vague fantasy.My basic attitude with ay sort of fantasy or sci-fi or supers is this: if they show a character do a thing unironically, then just accept it as the way stuff works in that universe. It absolutely does no good and adds no pleasure to argue with the premise.
Yes it is.That's true for your senses and mine. Likely to not be true with someone gifted with a superhuman sense of touch.
No. That wouldn't work. That's not how paintings work, I know, I've done enough of them! The image is not the texture. It doesn't matter if you can figure all that out, not with a thick-ass oil painting like that (what was particularly silly here was that they seemingly intentionally used an extremely lumpy painting where the texture was visually obviously completely distinct from the image).If your sense of touch was sensitive enough, it's not that hard to imagine that you could extrapolate the contours of various figures on the canvas, because of differences in the amount of paint on the brush, the directions of the strokes, maybe different brushes (which might differ in size, bristle material, etc.) are used to create certain parts of the painting.
We're going to have to agree to disagree on this one! The context neither you nor I have here is knowing what information a sense of touch that sensitive gives you. We can guess... but we don't know.Yes it is.
No. That wouldn't work. That's not how paintings work, I know, I've done enough of them! The image is not the texture. It doesn't matter if you can figure all that out, not with a thick-ass oil painting like that (what was particularly silly here was that they seemingly intentionally used an extremely lumpy painting where the texture was visually obviously completely distinct from the image).
< mutters darkly about ice-skating uphill >
I mean, I understand what you're saying about the texture of the painting and how unlikely it seems that would convey the level of information that Daredevil received from running his fingers across the painting. To us, that info would be meaningless, especially with the roadblocks you mentioned. To him... who knows.Yes it is.
No. That wouldn't work. That's not how paintings work, I know, I've done enough of them! The image is not the texture. It doesn't matter if you can figure all that out, not with a thick-ass oil painting like that (what was particularly silly here was that they seemingly intentionally used an extremely lumpy painting where the texture was visually obviously completely distinct from the image).
< mutters darkly about ice-skating uphill >
And this is a bridge too far? Not a ninja coming back from being burned alive? Nor someone able to use a tooth to incapacitate a guard? How about someone with bulletproof skin? Or able to lift a car? Or able to affect people with merely their voice? Or if we're just sticking to daredevil, able to not just pick up, but isolate a conversation several blocks away?I'm happy to drop it but my problem is precisely that this isn't "the comics", but rather a TV series which for three seasons, attempted of a kind of quasi-realism despite superhuman powers, ninjas, etc. It doesn't fit to pretend to realism in the way this series has continued to and then have pure comic book stuff in there. Maybe this is another remnant of when it was more of an MCU series?