[QUOTE=Mel Dyer;2276060]Children believe in angels, because they want to. Grown-ups believe in angels, because devils make them.[/QUOTE]
What do you mean?
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[QUOTE=Mel Dyer;2276060]Children believe in angels, because they want to. Grown-ups believe in angels, because devils make them.[/QUOTE]
What do you mean?
[QUOTE=Agent Z;2276083]What do you mean?[/QUOTE]
Not to stray too far off-topic...
I think grown-ups often turn to religion, spirituality or mysticism, through facing extreme hardship in the real world ..and the need to connect to some hopeful power, beyond that world. It makes sense to me that this is what Wonder Woman represents for Steve Trevor, ..perhaps, having come close to death, so many times in his military career. Of course, his recurring, annoying habit of calling Diana, his [I]'angel',[/I] could [I]also[/I] be grounded in some dark, unexplored episode of his narrative history - an untold story.
That would make it [I]..less[/I] annoying.
Anyway, Steve haunted by some tragic injury, physical or psychological, inflicted by Doctor Psycho would forever change his and Diana's dealings with him - even of how we see Psycho. We need to think of Psycho and recall such a story, if he's ever to be the major super-villain that we all know he can be, [I]beyond[/I] the WW comic.
[QUOTE=Mel Dyer;2276166]Not to stray too far off-topic...
I think grown-ups often turn to religion, spirituality or mysticism, through facing extreme hardship in the real world ..and the need to connect to some hopeful power, beyond that world. It makes sense to me that this is what Wonder Woman represents for Steve Trevor, ..perhaps, having come close to death, so many times in his military career. Of course, his recurring, annoying habit of calling Diana, his [I]'angel',[/I] could [I]also[/I] be grounded in some dark, unexplored episode of his narrative history - an untold story.
That would make it [I]..less[/I] annoying.
Anyway, Steve haunted by some tragic injury, physical or psychological, inflicted by Doctor Psycho would forever change his and Diana's dealings with him - even of how we see Psycho. We need to think of Psycho and recall such a story, if he's ever to be the major super-villain that we all know he can be, [I]beyond[/I] the WW comic.[/QUOTE]
People also turn to religion because that's how they've been raised. Then again, apart from calling Diana "angel" as a nickname, Steve never seemed particularly religious.
[QUOTE=Agent Z;2277118]People also turn to religion because that's how they've been raised. Then again, apart from calling Diana "angel" as a nickname, Steve never seemed particularly religious.[/QUOTE]
Most people, who've been [I]'raised'[/I] with religion, don't have to [I]'turn'[/I] to it. They're relationship with religion matures and evolves, over the course of their lives.
If Steve is from a heavily religious background, I wouldn't mind seeing writers explore that. I think it would be intriguing to see what Doctor Psycho's torturing him might reveal.
[QUOTE=Carabas;2275672]The Mad Hatter is an Alice In Wonderland fan who uses technology for what he does.
Doctor Psycho already is a psychic monster and a serial rapist, and there' not really much more aweful you can make him while still having him not be a complete charicature of a cartoon villain.[/QUOTE]
Maybe, but in Greek Mythology, and some Nazis, some have done alot worse. I believe I read once Psycho is also into cannibalism, in fact maybe he could be a worshipper of some secret Greek God of Cannibalism or the Titan Cronus, who tried eat his children: Zeus, Hades, and Neptune?