" let me explain that when he was a boy he was a victim during the nazi invasion of poland, his parents were taken away from him and was put in a camp were jewish were treated cruelly and it was through this that he saw the evils of human kind which began his path as magneto but besides that the fact that he is jewish is were you can make it humorous i can picture mort from family guy when im thinking about this ya know "
I'm still trying to understand why this would this be humorous?
Taking the question seriously, though I doubt it was meant as such...
According to Magneto Testament, Max (Magneto) did not enter Auschwitz until he was 15/16, so it is entirely possible that he had a *very* low key bar mitzvah while they were living in the Warsaw ghetto.
~ Solsbury Hill - Peter Gabriel ~ Whisper to a Scream - Icicle Works ~ Falling From the Sky - Vast ~ Dairy of Jane - Breaking Benjamin ~ Battle Without Honor or Humanity (The Kill Bill theme) - Tomoyasu Hotei ~ Stupefy - Disturbed ~ Higher Ground - Red Hot Chili Peppers ~ Ave Adore - Smashing Pumpkins ~ Requiem for a Tower - (Two Towers trailers) ~ Kings and Queens - 30 Second to Mars ~ Cities in Dust - Souixe and the Banshee's ~ This is Gallifrey, This is our Childhood - Murray Gold and the BBC Orchestra ~ Firefly - Owl City ~ Roam - B-52's ~ Dizz Knee Land - Dada ~ Desperado - Eagles ~ This Woman's Work - Kate Bush ~ Broken - Seether/Amy Lee ~ It's Not Over - Daughtry ~ Kyrie - Mr. Mister ~ Section 9 (Light and Day) - Polyphonic Spree. ~ Wild Horses - The Sundays ~ Red Rain - Peter Gabriel
I will actually admit to having a "Comic Book Superheroine" playlist on my iPod.
I have not seen season two yet, so I can't comment on that. And I watched season one in DVD format, so there wasn't too much time for me to get bored.
It was kind of unusual for a Joss Whedon show, because usually with Whedon it is the character that draw you in, but with Dollhouse by necessity it was the plot. Once I got into the plot, then I came to love the characters.
I personally think that Topher should be named among the Geek Gods of the new millennium: "slightly amoral genius".
Actually in that final episode of season one, Topher comes across as a lady MacBeth character, who was not as amoral as she thought she was.
But you can tell that Whedon expected this to get canceled after season one, the way he whipped through things. The premise was very imaginative, but the big issues about identity, like what makes a person: memories or is there a "soul" at the core that makes a person who they are, were never examined properly. And the the final episode of season one...where was he supposed to go from there?
So, not surprising. I will wait to see season two to know if I should be disappointed or not.
I can't stand secondary mutations, especially when they have nothing to do with the initial mutation, such as Emma's diamond form.
It's just power stacking serving as a replacement for imaginative writing. I enjoy it much more when writer find new and interesting way character can use their existing powers rather than just adding more powers onto a character.
Yeah, to echo Quiosling and bathroy, it was during Fatal Attractions, X-Men Vol. 2 #25, Magneto yanked Wolverine's admantium out after Logan had gutted him...for like the third time. Three time Logan had pratically evicerated Magnuys before Magnus took the gloves off...
And then Logan whined and moaned and held a grduge for years afterwards.
"Dear Logan,
When you try to kill someone, you shoudl not take it so personally when they try to kill you back..."
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