agreed
I got a feeling penguin generally liked butch, but tabitha crossed that one line so he pulled a thanos.
agreed
I got a feeling penguin generally liked butch, but tabitha crossed that one line so he pulled a thanos.
I've just started reading Dawn of Darkness (and rewatching Gotham having not seen it since series 2 ended). Early in Dawn of Darkness, Thomas Wayne says that Arkham is overflowing, but I was under the impression that Arkham has been shut down for many years at the beginning of Gotham. I can barely remember most of Gotham, so please no spoilers, but am I missing something here?
“We have a saying, my people. Don’t kill if you can wound, don’t wound if you can subdue, don’t subdue if you can pacify, and don’t raise your hand at all until you’ve first extended it.”
First look at Bane
https://twitter.com/anygivenchunday/...81244140666880
I'm watching it on Netflix, and, considering how the bad guys treat their captives, the writers must have a thing for bondage.
Anyway, it's coming across like a soap opera, with plot and character development over successive episodes, so it's more like Hill Street Blues than Stargate or Star Trek: The Next Generation. I'm enjoying it, especially because I'm a Batman fan.
The best way to think of this series as a grimderp version of 60's batman.
and in that way, it is one of the better comedies out there.
I don't see any campiness from the 1960's show; in fact, all I see is the legacy of Batman: Year One and the darkness and grittiness that came after.
Where's the campiness?
There's a ton of silly stuff that happens in Gotham. Like the Penguin showing up to blow someone up with an RPG, criminals having a super market to buy guns and explosives, the sheer amount of times the police station is taken over by villains, the narrows in general.
Yeah, it's not obvious immediately, but around season two is where it starts getting noticeably campy.