From ComicVine
| News | Get Ready For A Magic Comic & Zatanna On Smallville | Feb. 9, 2010 |
| News | Comic Covers "Swiped" from Fine Art | Feb. 5, 2010 |
| News | Another Smallville: Absolute Justice Clip With Wesley Dodds | Feb. 2, 2010 |
| News | Even More Smallville: Absolute Justice Clips | Jan. 31, 2010 |
| News | More Smallville: Absolute Justice Images | Jan. 29, 2010 |
| News | 'Smallville: Absolute Justice': Are You Ready? | Jan. 28, 2010 |
| News | New Smallville: Absolute Justice Trailer (Canadian Version) | Jan. 26, 2010 |
| News | Reboots, Retcons, Spin-Offs, Crossovers, Team-Ups | Jan. 25, 2010 |
Added by HulkisAwsome on Feb. 7, 2010
In all of Hulks battles, He has proven his strength, At the end of the series , Hulk did Defeat superman, and he also defeated wolverine.. twice. Wolverne, even with his super strength and healing factor stood no chance against Hulk.
But hulk is a kind hearted giant, and thats why, no matter what you say, He will always be the strongest to me.
Added by sora_thekey on Feb. 5, 2010
Story
I'm going to give the plot without as many spoilers as I can... but let me tell you now... some of this might be even too much information, so you might want to skip to the actual REVIEW rather than what happens in the episode.
Chloe is once again the damsel in distress as she is approached by a mysterious man in a dark alley, surprisingly her threat is not this man but whoever kills him later... somebody with ice powers.
- and Cue "Somebody Save me" theme.
There's a hospital scene where there's this blonde girl's introduction (Courtney Whitmore) and the mysterious last phone call of Wesley Dodds.
The Canary and Green Arrow relationship is teased.
There is a deaths and the letters JSA splattered with blood... I'm not going to tell you who though but if you have to know:
Cue bad guy introduction, who has a score to settle with JSA... and is trying to out them all
An old "Golden Age" video in the archives of the Daily Planet introduces Al Pratt, Ted Grant, Jay Garrick, Alan Scott, Abigail Hunkel and adds an even bigger mystery to their connection with one another.
Dr. Emil Hamilton is back.
The next guy on the call list Carter Hall and then there is the intro of Kent Nelson and Nabu..
The Star Rocket Racer appears with a book of info on Smallville's JLA
The team starts getting together and the mention of Shiera is the reason for a full blown team-up.
By the way this is all just the intro of the story...
Oliver, Clark, and Chloe are now mixed in this huge mystery that lead into the few JSA that are left to be brought back together into a battle against this ice man!
Obviously I'm not going to give you the whole story... you have to watch it yourself!
Review
To start off the episode the scene was too familiar. Chloe as the damsel in distress, not an exciting start but the story picks up after this.
So first with the positive:
The story is a solid telling of these amazing characters, and I loved the fact that although this ties into the Smallville universe, yet you don't have to watch episodes before this to understand the plot.
This TV-movie had a lot going on, and yet there was time to discover deeper like Hawkman's and Stargirl's past, which was something that worried me about these characters. The story had enough space to show the complexity of these characters, and hint at various comic book moments and themes.
There were a lot of acknowledgements to the DC Universe, such as the introduction of Checkmate, and minor characters like Amanda Waller.
Plus the Suicide Squad!
John Johns returns sporting clothes that are very similar to the Martian Manhunter's wardrobe. (Red X over Green).
The battle between Stargirl and Icicle is downright awesome!
Now negative:
This 2-hour episode had a lot of expectations and hype, too much if you ask me, especially with the low-ress effects.
Smallville never did have cool action packed effects, but I was expecting a little bit more for these two episodes.
The worse effects were on Hawkman's wings and whenever he flew, but surprisingly these did not bother me as much as the totally fake cold breath in every scene with Icicle.
I must say I love those battle scenes where everything slows down so you can see where the hits and kicks are but on this particular even the slowing down only made the last battle mere tedious...
I have only read a few issues of JSA, so most of these characters were new to me, and to be honest the less I knew about them the less picky I was about their portrayal.
Rating
4 out of 5
I think if the special effects were amped 10 notches up the I would've given it a 5...

@Mods/Staff: Can somebody help me with the SPOILERS I put on this, for some reason they don't hide the content. Thanks!
Related to:
Lois Lane,
Sandman,
Doctor Fate,
Hawkman,
Stargirl,
Green Arrow,
Chloe Sullivan,
Superman,
Justice Society Of America
Added by Omega The Supreme Being on Jan. 28, 2010
so when im reading a comic some of the words are written bigger than the others whats up with that?
Added by StrongProtector on Jan. 19, 2010
From Top Gun, Total Recall, Starships Troopers, Free Willy, and many more, Michael Ironside always seems to find an audience no matter what role he accepts. Now, he plays Chief Bannen, a police chief with a mobster brother and con artist son, in the new web series The Bannen Way over at Crackle.com from Sony Pictures. Seemingly being on top of the New Media game, I also spoke to him about his decision to reprise his role as Sam Fisher in the popular Splinter Cell video game series, with the 5th installment ready to land in stores in late April 2010, and also got him to divulge about his childhood love of Superman and how it helped lead him to voiceover work as one of the Man of Steel's most nefarious enemies, Darkseid. To listen to my interview with Michael Ironside, CLICK HERE or read the transciption below!Ray Carsillo: Hey there everybody, this is Ray Carsillo and I have the distinct pleasure now of talking with a man who has hundreds of screen credits over the course of his career. I mean, literally, the list is the length of my arm folks, but for all of us comic book and maybe video game geeks out there we may know him better for his countless voiceover credits including Darkseid from the Superman cartoon and of course a little guy you might not have heard of. I don't know. Sam Fisher from Splinter Cell? Is that pretty popular? Yeah, I think so. I have the pleasure now of talking with Michael Ironsides! Michael how you doing today?
Michael Ironside: I'm doing real well. It's a little cold and wet in Los Angeles at the moment.
RC: Well, it's not much better here in New York. A little bit of weather parallel I guess. But right now, you're working on a web series called The Bannen Way, it's on Crackle.com, it's from Sony Pictures, and the first question I have to ask you about is why do a web series? Somebody with your great list of credits, why would you decide on doing a web series like this?
MI: I don't think the end product really kind of figures into it for it. It's the writing and when I was introduced to this property, I just found the writing to be exceptional. It's very witty, very cleverly written, and very solid definable characters. Jesse Warren, the writer/director and Mark Gantt, a friend of theirs sent it to me, I looked at it and went "wow" and it's kind of rare. For every hundred scripts I get, there's probably one that hits me like this. I met with them and they were as pleasant and as talented as their script and we did it. As far as it being a webisode, how you cook the pie, it's still a pie. How you cut it up and deliver it is a different deal. It doesn't really affect the way something is shot or how something is handled on set.
RC: Very cool. You're starting to see a lot of web series really start to gain some traction online and in the media, and obviously at the forefront of the New Media surge. Do you think that's the future? Do you think that television and radio and these other, more traditional, mediums will see this cut into their viewership, especially when producing such high quality content like The Bannen Way?
MI: I've been around long enough to watch this happen. I've been around to watch television and movies sort of fight it out and find a balance between themselves and I think it's the nature of our times and money and you can't just make a pilot or shoot something and if it doesn't work throw it away. It has to have more than one life to it. For example, this project, The Bannen Way, as far as I know, it starts as a webisode, then it'll go to a DVD or MOW, movie of the week, sort of format, and then it is also being used as a pilot as a network series. For a project to be, I think, financially responsible and fiscally responsible, it has to have more than one revenue scheme and I hope these guys do well with it.
RC: You mentioned Mark Gantt, and of course, he is not only one of the writers, but also the star playing Neal Bannan.
MI: Yeah, he plays my son.
RC: I was going to say, talk a little bit about your character. Your son's a con artist and you're the chief of police. How does that dynamic work and talk about the character some.
MI: Well, Mark is a mercurial guy as it is, very clever, a very likable guy. His character is a kind of flash about town con man who likes women and cars and gambling. I play his father who is kind of a stone-age chief of police and my brother, who is played by Robert Forrester, is the local mafia kingpin or crime boss. We're the yin and yang of Mark's life and the story is basically revolving around him owing his uncle $150,000 on a gambling debt and how he is trying to contort and run around town to get that money. And at the same time, I'm trying to get him to turn over evidence on his uncle, my brother, so I can put him away. It's a very clever story, very enjoyable.
RC: You always seem to play these, like you said a stone-age police chief, a general, or a high position of authority. Do you sometimes get typecast into that and how hard is it to sometimes branch out away from that?
MI: Well, I don't think it's difficult if you're willing to do different things at different economic levels. I mean, most people know the mainstream stuff I've done from like Top Gun, Total Recall, Starship Troopers, Free Willy, T4, those sort of things, but for every large film I get to do about four or five small ones that are really my choice. Like last year, I did something called The Jazzman, where I'm playing a saxophone player who is dying of cancer. It was loosely based on Mo Kaufman's life. I get to take that opportunity based upon the fact that I can affect distribution from doing larger pictures. I've been around a long time. I'm never going to be the lead actor guy. I'm real quiet and real happy and real fortunate to keep working. It's what I do. It's like the circus. I ran away and joined it a long time ago.
RC: As long as you're happy, that's all that matters, right?
MI: Heh, and paying the bills. That's what matters.
RC: I mentioned Darkseid before from the Superman cartoons and Justice League cartoons and you were also in a couple of episodes of Smallville. Are you a closet comic book geek or really big Superman fan?MI: No. Well, growing up yeah I did. I was enamored with Superman because I thought, being Canadian and from Toronto, that the original series was based around Toronto. I remember as a kid being told that. That the Daily Planet was the Star Newspaper and the whole idea was based around that kind of small cosmopolitan city so that caught my attention. I don't know. I just like trying things. The voice work with cartoons and stuff has worked, but I'm not interested in doing that stuff at all for commercials and stuff, but it is kind of fun to get in a room with a bunch of other actors and have the freedom of not being watched so you can sort of take risks with a character like Darkseid or the Sam Fisher character in those Splinter Cell things. It's fun to work. It really is. It's not all just hit your mark, take your money, and go home. It's fun. It's creative. It's challenging. You get to meet great people.
RC: That's great. Not a lot of people out there get to really love what they do and you really seem to enjoy it. That's a great thing in life.
MI: My dad referred to it that I ran away at a very early age and joined the circus and I think it is quite apt. It's a great way to live. You get to move from family unit to family unit, from set to set, from project to project where you're thrust into a very intimate, very honest relationship with people and you have to either tell the truth and step up or it can be a really horrific situation if you try and manipulate it every time and over 40 years I've met a lot of great people.
RC: Is it hard then, you describe it as a family unit, when the project wraps up and you have to kind of move onto the next project? Is it a sad moment there?
MI: Yeah, absolutely, but I would like refer to it as postpartum. I've gotten to the point over the years that I actually get it before the film is over and I start getting a little bit of melancholy over the last few days of a project when I look at people. But, you get to see those people again, just not in that family unit or configuration, but man it is a great way to live.
RC: We mentioned Sam Fisher earlier and it is one of the most successful and beloved shooters of all time and you really breath a unique life into that character. Did you ever get into games? Are you a gamer? Do you have an Xbox 360 or PS3? Ever pick up the controller after the game is finished?
MI: Yeah my daughters are into that and the gaming, but I'm not a gamer. I don't physically translate to that way of doing things. I'd rather get out there and do it myself. I don't mean kill somebody though, haha.
RC: Yeah strap on the night vision goggles and go crawl in the shadows, haha.
MI: No, it's like people go online golf, not to take a shot at the game, I just would rather be out there doing it. But no, Splinter Cell was interesting because I actually passed after the fourth game. I didn't think we could take it any farther and wasn't really interested in doing such and they came back at me with a fresh look at the character and a new way of doing things and the new artwork and we just finished the fifth one. It'll be out I believe in about two months.
RC: Yes, actually Ubisoft just announced that it got pushed from a late February release to a late April release.
MI: And ya know, I think that is to their credit. They were actually going to, there were parts of the company anyway, that were going to try to force the game out for Christmas and they opted for the quality rather than quantity and I think that speaks for Ubisoft to give up a huge payday or a rushed payday on an old title like that and force it through on Christmas. And I'm not kissing their a** here. It's just rare that you find something in a corporate level that makes organically sound decisions and they did that. And they pushed it again to make sure they get it right. Yeah I was supposed to go out and do the release and stuff like that, but I just got the call the other day saying they're going to push it back another month and a half, which is cool. Get it right! RC: Definitely, as a gamer, we would rather you take the extra month and a half and get it right, especially for such a beloved series.
MI: Yeah and there is a lot of money involved here. People put a lot of money on these games. I remember I was on a plane somewhere and somebody stepped up and said "Sam Fisher?!" I had ordered some bloody drink or something and I then started talking to them and they were talking about how it keeps them as a family unit these online games, where they sit and play with family members from different places in the world and stuff like that or have conversations with different people in different places around the world and I never thought that a game, an internet game, would be the kind of meeting place where people could exchange ideas and real truths about each other and stuff like that. It's kind of a strange world when you can trust a game format or platform more than the network news.
RC: Yeah, it's insane how far games have come in the past couple of decades. Would you say Sam Fisher is the character you're most recognized for or most approached about?
MI: Not really. I think it goes generationally. I've been around a long time. If someone walks up and says "Jester's dead" then I know it's from Top Gun, and they're probably in their 30s-40s. If they walk up and say something like "I hate that whale!" then they're probably in their late 20s, that of course from Free Willy. Or "See you at the party, Richter!" or something like that. It depends on where these people are coming from. It seems like every six or seven years I hit on a big box office film and people get to regurgitate specific lines from the film. As for Sam Fisher, I'm totally anonymous until I open my bloody mouth and people recognize the voice.
RC: Do you ever get to chill with Tom Clancy? Do you ever get to say "Hey Tom, maybe Sam would do this in this situation?" Since the character is really you, do you ever get to influence what he does a little bit or go to Tom Clancy?
MI: No, but what I did do was that I turned it down at the beginning. I wasn't interested in doing it because structurally the way the character was built was that I thought "I don't want to do this." And they asked what was wrong and I said "Well, he is too monochromatic. There isn't enough humanity in the character. There is no conflict underneath his decisions." It was interesting, when we first went in to do the first game, I actually did it up in Montreal at the Ubisoft labs and I had them bring in other actors since these things are usually done singular evidently where you bring in one actor at a time and it was my first big game. So I had them hire some actors so I would have somebody to work with as we worked the character up in the dialogue. And it really worked. It is the nature of communication that if you want to play tennis or play a game with somebody, you need to talk and have a conversation.
RC: Of course, of course. You've had such a long career as you had mentioned and you've been around for so long that you did a series in the 80s called "V" and of course they have kind of come back with that, a new iteration of it that is based on the series you were in. Do you ever think that you might ever want to get back into the series, maybe as a guest cameo to link the two?
MI: There was that talk, but I really wasn't interested. The original character of Ham Tyler that we built in the mid-80s for that original format and that original show, to revisit that and revisit that character would do that whole show a disservice. It is really a different animal now. They have computer generated graphics now while we were using puppets and everything in those days. We were sort of making it up as we go, to the best of our abilities. And no I think Ham Tyler that they sent him to Chicago in that original series, where I wanted him to go. I got out of the show so I could go do Top Gun and the Richard Pryor film. No, I don't think I'd want to go back and do it. It's like going back and driving an old car. It had its place in time. I had a '55 Chevy that I had for a lot of years and it was a cool car, but if I had to use it every day, no, it had its time and place. RC: I hear you. That's a great analogy. Aside from The Bannen Way, which is of course at Crackle.com right now from Sony Pictures, and Splinter Cell: Conviction, which is coming out in April from Ubisoft, what else can we see from you in the future?
MI: That film I did last year, the film called The Jazzman, based on Mo Kaufman's life, the horn player who died of cancer and was written by his grandson. I think it is coming out, or is out now, or will be out soon. I don't really follow the things. And a thing I did in Romania called Eva, which is a historical piece.
RC: Alright, very cool. Thank you very much Michael. Of course, the web series is The Bannen Way which is available now at Crackle.com from Sony Pictures, the video game is Splinter Cell: Conviction which will be out for Xbox 360 and the PC later in April, and of course the man is Michael Ironside! Michael thanks for the time. -Ray Carsillo
Added by brendon277 on Jan. 18, 2010
Which is bigger in marketing because DC has released so many batman movies that probably are close to as many marvel movies there has been not to include how many superman movies there has been. Which is a bigger franchise?
Related to:
Batman,
Batwoman,
Catwoman,
Superman,
Deadpool,
Marvel Publishing,
DC Comics,
Wolverine,
Elektra
Added by Blurred View on Jan. 8, 2010
A little late on this one, but I couldn't just leave it at a list for Marvel. DC's list was a little tougher. It was hard to find many characters who had a consistently good decade in the DCU. Most of the time it seemed like a good run for a character would be balanced out or outweighed by some pretty terrible stuff also in the decade. Batman's a prime example of that, if anyone wonders why he isn't on the list. But here it is: the top DC characters of 2000-2009.
10. Green Lantern (Hal Jordan)
This was the decade Hal Jordan made a triumphant return and retook the spotlight of the Green Lantern franchise. Thanks to Geoff Johns and an assortment of top artists, Green Lantern was one of the company's bestselling titles for the rest of the decade with Hal Jordan at the forefront, benefiting the most. His origin was retold, his villains fleshed out and added to, and greater detail and thought went into framing the Green Lantern Corps he belonged to. 2009 came to an end with Hal Jordan starring in DC's event Blackest Night and being set up to lead his own unique Justice League of America lineup.9. Captain Cold
Somehow, the Flash's Rogues become one of the most interesting villain groups in comics. The characters were colorful and campy at first glance, but Geoff Johns turned each of them into three-dimensional human beings. No longer did they seem outrageous. They became grounded and relatable. You understood who they were, and why they did the things they did. Chief among the Rogues was Captain Cold. He stopped being a joke villain with an ice gimmick. He epitomized the working class metacriminal. He was smart and dangerous without being a villainous mastermind. He just had common sense and a set of rules. Later writers of the Flash would drop the ball on the development Johns had accomplished with Cold and the other Rogues, but reparations came during Final Crisis with Rogues' Revenge. Captain Cold was back to form, and with Geoff Johns returning to the Flash franchise, it looked like things would stay that way.8. The Question (Renee Montoya)
Renee Montoya was a character from the animated series who had found her way into comics in the nineties, but it was during this past decade that she really shone. Greg Rucka took the character under his wing when he first came to Detective Comics and stuck with her through what became years of excellent writing and development. From Detective Comics, she went on to be a main character in the critically acclaimed Gotham Central. Following that, 52 followed her journey into the next Question, and two limited series later, she was back where she belonged in Detective Comics.7. Green Arrow (Oliver Queen)
Overlooking a hero returning from the dead is hard to do, especially when that return is followed by almost ten years of good writing. Oliver Queen was brought back in 2001 by Kevin Smith, followed by an arc from Brad Meltzer and a prolonged run by Judd Winick. Through this time, he reunited with his former sidekick Roy Harper, rekindled things with Black Canary, embraced his biological son Connor Hawke and picked up a new Speedy in Mia Dearden. The Arrow Family became one of the closest and most compelling families in the DC Universe, and Oliver Queen went on to appear prominently in othe rmajor books, such as Identity Crisis. The decade may have come to an end with Green Arrow & Black Canary in an unstoppable nosedive of quality, but Oliver Queen spent most of it as one of DC's most engaging and interesting characters.6. Superman
The Man of Steel got off to a shaky start at the turn of the century. Honestly, it seemed a lot like DC had run out of ideas for what to do with Superman ever since they killed him. But this was the decade things began shaping up again for the man meant to be DC's top hero. Writers like Kurt Busiek, Greg Rucka and Mark Verheiden began pulling together all the frayed edges of Superman's franchise and set the stage for Geoff Johns to really revitalize things. As bad as the idea of bringing in 100,000 other Kryptonians seemed at first, New Krypton worked to not only expand on Superman's heritage in ways never done before but also to show what makes the character so great even in a population with powers equal to his own. And if that was not enough, this was also the decade of Mark Millar's Red Son and Grant Morrison's All-Star Superman.5. Booster Gold
Here's one of those characters who came out of nowhere. Booster Gold was one of those characters thought well past his prime, back in the days of Justice League International. It took the death of Ted Kord to shine a new light on Booster in the Omac Project and beyond. He went on to be one of the main characters in 52, spinning off from there into his own series. The most surprising thing was just how successful his ongoing series was, becoming one of DC's top selling ongoings thanks to Geoff Johns. Booster Gold carved out his own niche in the DC Universe as its new premiere time hero, and the decade came to an end with his series outlasting his original run.4. Catman
Catman was even more nowhere than Booster Gold. He appeared early in the decade as a loser of a crook well past his prime, and somehow he became one of DC's more badass villains. This was all thanks to Gail Simone. He appeared in Villains United as part of a new Secret Six and was immediately welcomed with a new fan following. It only took a few limited series and appearances before he and the rest of the Six were given their own ongoing series that persisted for the rest of the decade. Catman never had it so good. It probably helped that he ended up naked a lot. It was a cold, but good, decade for Catman.3. Oracle
Barbara Gordon was already well established as Oracle before this decade began, but this was the decade of Birds of Prey, where she really became a character to be reckoned with in the DC Universe. She broke away from the Bat-franchise and along with Black Canary was treated as one of DC's top female heroes. It was a shame that Birds of Prey didn't make it to the end, but there's no doubt that the book had a good run. Oracle remained a major player even though she returned to the Bat-family, adopting the role of mentor over the newest Batgirl.2. Sinestro
Hal Jordan wasn't the only one brought back in Green Lantern: Rebirth. Sinestro used to be the epitome of the mustache twirling villain cliche. Just look at him. He even has a mustache for twirling. Geoff Johns didn't make him any less a villain, but Johns did expand on Sinestro's motivations. In his own way, Sinestro was trying to save the universe and he created his own Corps for the job. He had friends, loves and a daughter. Throughout the decade, we saw Sinestro at his best and at his worst. We saw him in his days as the greatest Green Lantern and the seeds being planted that would lead to his eventual downfall. We saw him lead a war against the combined might of the Green Lantern Corps and Earth's heroes. The decade came to the end in the middle of Blackest Night, where we saw Sinestro as one of the last hopes for fighting back the darkness. Sinestro was arguably the true star of Geoff Johns' Green Lantern run.1. Mr. Terrific
Created in the late nineties, it was this decade when Mr. Terrific rose in the ranks of DC's characters. The character was redesigned and joined the JSA as the third smartest man in the world. It wasn't just hyperbole, because it wasn't long before Mr. Terrific was appearing all over the DC Universe as one of its most brilliant heroes. Soon, he was the chairman of the Justice Society of America and then went on to be the White King of Checkmate. No other character in the DC Universe had anywhere near the ten years worth of quality writing and growth that Mr. Terrific had, making him the #1 hero of the decade.
Related to:
Superman,
Sinestro,
Renee Montoya,
Oracle,
Mr. Terrific,
Hal Jordan,
Green Arrow,
Catman,
Captain Cold,
Booster Gold
I recently looked at supermans power and he is in first place in a majority of of power and the only power he isnt in the top ten is energy absorbtion
Related to:
Superman
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What? Someone's Saying "I Am A Secret Avenger"
I knew there couldn't just be one Avengers title.
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No Surprise, Fox Plans Daredevil Reboot
It's either reboot or lose the franchise.
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Logan Lerman 'Very Interested' In Upcoming Spidey Film
Move Over Zac Efron, Logan Lerman wants to wear spandex!
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Watchmen 2 Comic Project?
More stories featuring Watchmen characters?
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DC Entertainment To Make Big Announcement!
What are my best guesses? Well, you'll have to read to find out.
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Another "I Am An Avenger" Promo: Hawkeye!
I have two words to say about this, "Woo" and "Hoo!"
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Red Skull Will Be The Villain In The First Avenger: Captain America
This makes the most sense.
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Finally, a Face Under the A?
Captain America casting coming "real soon"
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No Surprise, Fox Plans Daredevil Reboot
It's either reboot or lose the franchise.
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What? Someone's Saying "I Am A Secret Avenger"
I knew there couldn't just be one Avengers title.
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Red Skull Will Be The Villain In The First Avenger: Captain America
This makes the most sense.
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Watchmen 2 Comic Project?
More stories featuring Watchmen characters?
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Logan Lerman 'Very Interested' In Upcoming Spidey Film
Move Over Zac Efron, Logan Lerman wants to wear spandex!
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There's Going To Be A Sacrifice In "Second Coming"
These poor mutants never get a break.
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DC Entertainment To Make Big Announcement!
What are my best guesses? Well, you'll have to read to find out.
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Finally, a Face Under the A?
Captain America casting coming "real soon"
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