‘The Flash’ official movie thread

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Marvel should sue DC :russ:

DC are some bitin ass nikkas man

I saw this shyt yesterday :laff:

Multiverse fukkery

The Michael Keaton shyt is blatant biting with Spiderman

The Nicholas Cage/Superman shyt was some Jim from The Office Mr Fantastic shyt

Jesus Christ the amount of flagrant biting

DC is shameless

Learn your history fakkit

It’s difficult to overstate the importance of 1961’s The Flash #123. Even at the time, readers knew that the story of Barry Allen accidentally traveling to another Earth and meeting Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick was something special. 'The Flash of Two Worlds' won a number of fan awards upon publication, including Best Story and Best Artist for Carmine Infantino in the Alley Awards. It’s unclear whether it was writer Gardner Fox or editor Julius Schwartz who initially had the idea to not only revive the original Flash, but also to place him on another Earth, but it was one that would go on to form a significant portion of DC’s mythology over the next quarter century and beyond.

Our Flag Means Death writer attends Our Flag Means Strike event through felt-portation
Read more on Popverse
Two years after Barry first met Jay – and around the same time that Michael Moorcock was writing the word 'multiverse' into The Sundered Worlds – the Justice League traveled across realities to meet the Justice Society. 1963’s Justice League of America #21 laid the groundwork for DC’s future event programming in a couple of ways; not only was it the first meeting between multiple superhero teams, but it was also the comic that instituted a classification system to keep track of the different Earths, as evidenced in the story’s title, 'Crisis on Earth-One!'

As with 'The Flash of Two Worlds,' the issue was enough of a hit that crossovers between parallel Earths became a regular part of the JLA’s DNA. Almost every successive crossover, taking place every summer as an annual tradition, would add a new parallel Earth with its own superpowered heroes or villains to contend with. The DC universe was expanding in ways that even its fans would have trouble keeping track of… which would, eventually, have significant consequences.

Marvel, meanwhile, initially didn’t really follow DC into the parallel Earth game. Sure, there was an occasional visit to a world just like the regular Marvel Earth – 1968’s Avengers Annual #2 is the first of those, with the contemporary Avengers facing an almost-but-not-quite version of the originals. Avengers #85 would be the first issue to introduce a recurring parallel Earth to the Marvel Universe three years later, with the Squadron Supreme showing up for the first time – but they were few and far between, and often referred to as alternate timelines instead of officially parallel Earths. Even a series like What If…?, which launched in 1976 and is, in theory, set entirely on parallel Earths, shied away from using the terminology on a regular basis.
 
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Ignore that shyt bro. These nikkas just hating to hate. Ain’t not one Comic Book movie on the level of a Scorsese film except maybe The Dark Knight. But nikkas wanna go with the hyperbole. Rather than logic.

It always be those same MCU stans tryna act like their movies are comparable to real cinema... it's sad actually

these retards actually think Ant-Man is some Oscar shyt lmaoooo
 

spliz

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Learn your history fakkit

It’s difficult to overstate the importance of 1961’s The Flash #123. Even at the time, readers knew that the story of Barry Allen accidentally traveling to another Earth and meeting Golden Age Flash Jay Garrick was something special. 'The Flash of Two Worlds' won a number of fan awards upon publication, including Best Story and Best Artist for Carmine Infantino in the Alley Awards. It’s unclear whether it was writer Gardner Fox or editor Julius Schwartz who initially had the idea to not only revive the original Flash, but also to place him on another Earth, but it was one that would go on to form a significant portion of DC’s mythology over the next quarter century and beyond.

Our Flag Means Death writer attends Our Flag Means Strike event through felt-portation
Read more on Popverse
Two years after Barry first met Jay – and around the same time that Michael Moorcock was writing the word 'multiverse' into The Sundered Worlds – the Justice League traveled across realities to meet the Justice Society. 1963’s Justice League of America #21 laid the groundwork for DC’s future event programming in a couple of ways; not only was it the first meeting between multiple superhero teams, but it was also the comic that instituted a classification system to keep track of the different Earths, as evidenced in the story’s title, 'Crisis on Earth-One!'

As with 'The Flash of Two Worlds,' the issue was enough of a hit that crossovers between parallel Earths became a regular part of the JLA’s DNA. Almost every successive crossover, taking place every summer as an annual tradition, would add a new parallel Earth with its own superpowered heroes or villains to contend with. The DC universe was expanding in ways that even its fans would have trouble keeping track of… which would, eventually, have significant consequences.

Marvel, meanwhile, initially didn’t really follow DC into the parallel Earth game. Sure, there was an occasional visit to a world just like the regular Marvel Earth – 1968’s Avengers Annual #2 is the first of those, with the contemporary Avengers facing an almost-but-not-quite version of the originals. Avengers #85 would be the first issue to introduce a recurring parallel Earth to the Marvel Universe three years later, with the Squadron Supreme showing up for the first time – but they were few and far between, and often referred to as alternate timelines instead of officially parallel Earths. Even a series like What If…?, which launched in 1976 and is, in theory, set entirely on parallel Earths, shied away from using the terminology on a regular basis.
On top of the fact that Marvel even took Captain Marvel from DC. Shazam is the original Captain Marvel.
 

Rekkapryde

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TYRONE GA!
The Snyder cut of Justice League is one of the best superhero movies ever made.
My mufukkin nikka
handshake-agreement.gif
 

Numpsay

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Wow, was not expecting this at all. What happened, went from a must see to an underwhelming flop. WTH happened this was supposed to be the one.
:mjlol: this was a must see for the people that were going to like this movie regardless. If you have been paying attention this was never going to be the one. No surprise the people hyping this movie earlier in this thread are the same ones that are in the minority of people that enjoyed the movie.
 

Majestyx

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The Snyder cut of Justice League is one of the best superhero movies ever made. If EVER WB or any studio should have let a director make a 4 hour epic and actually RELEASE IT, it should have been that film. I mean the Snyder Cut is legitimately a completely different film than the shytty theatrical version
I fukks with you breh, but you WILD for that :russ:
 

Supa

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Yall gotta get over the Snyderverse, it’s dead :pachaha:

If Gunn doesn't deliver we're gonna be hearing about the Snyderverse forever :unimpressed:

I don't envy that man because he's gotta move forward while WB keeps releasing these DOA movies from the DCEU and having actors want to continue into the new universe. He should have just said he's wiping the entire slate clean but seeing everything flop jeopardizes what he's trying to do. If audiences have lost faith they may not turn out for what's next.
 
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