Older Beholder
Hero
I imagine the zombie episode isn't going to be too cheery either![]()
So, I wasn’t completely right. Today‘s episode had it’s far share of humour.
I imagine the zombie episode isn't going to be too cheery either![]()
as a funny aside, this commonly cited “paradox” is really no paradox at all. An unstoppable force would simply move through an immovable object without affecting it. Done and done.Yeah, it's basically the unstoppable force versus the immovable object.
I got real tired real quick of Lang's quipping.So, I wasn’t completely right. Today‘s episode had it’s far share of humour.
I like my zombie stories to be about inter-personal conflict, as per Romero’s films. This episode wasn’t very much of that.I got real tired real quick of Lang's quipping.
I think it was tonally all over the place and not in a good way. Then again, with only a couple exceptions, I like my zombie apocalypse bleak and depressing. For me, the best ZA stories are 28 Days Later and "The Grove" episode of TWD.
It isn’t a waste if the purpose is to drive home the idea that there real stakes in the multiversal adventures to come. They probably won’t be able to explore that facet very thoroughly in the movies.The last couple of these do feel like a waste of an episode. If the answer to the "what if?" is "everything is awful, the whole universe dies", that's not really an interesting scenario.
It just feels a bit like stating the obvious. We already know that in the really big movies the stakes are very high, and that if things had gone even a little bit differently, it would have ended in disaster. If Doctor Strange spelling out the odds of success at 1 in 14,000,605 isn't enough, I'm not sure what is.It isn’t a waste if the purpose is to drive home the idea that there real stakes in the multiversal adventures to come. They probably won’t be able to explore that facet very thoroughly in the movies.
It’s not a statement of the concept. It’s a reinforcement. And a reasonably subtle one, at that, given that they aren’t specifically calling out the implications these failed universes will have on the multiverse at large.It just feels a bit like stating the obvious. We already know that in the really big movies the stakes are very high, and that if things had gone even a little bit differently, it would have ended in disaster. If Doctor Strange spelling out the odds of success at 1 in 14,000,605 isn't enough, I'm not sure what is.
Hmmm.... I think this What If? show is really one of the TVA's propaganda tools.If the answer to the "what if?" is "everything is awful, the whole universe dies", that's not really an interesting scenario.