Board Thread:DC's Legends of Tomorrow discussions/@comment-9346948-20171115022502/@comment-2054358-20171115230045

Xandermcc wrote: SeanWheeler wrote:

Xandermcc wrote:

SeanWheeler wrote: It felt weird to hear Jax talk like Martin and for Martin to act like Jax, but at least they switched back after Firestorm. They probably should have tried to go Firestorm at the beginning of the episode so that the Freaky Friday thing could be resolved quickly, but they were just too scared of what could happen. The whole thing about Helen of Troy's attractiveness making men go to war is just ridiculous because Hollywood was at a more civilized time than Troy. Unless she was a metahuman, no man would act this way around her. The ending with Themyscira was a great sign that the Bat-Embargo doesn't apply anymore. I wonder who would play Wonder Woman in the Arrowverse? The embargo still applies man. This is why the Deathstroke mini-series that Manu Bennet wants isn't happening. So why is Flash going to be in the main cast of the Justice League movie this Friday while his show is still going on? Superman made guest appearances in Season 2 of Supergirl. And if Deathstroke can't have his own miniseries because of the embargo, why did he appear in last week's episode of Arrow? I really don't get why rights have to be divided up in subsidiaries within Warner Bros. The original reason for the embargoes was to avoid confusion. Doesn't the use of Multiverses help explain the different adaptations? No, the multiverse was used as a new concept on the Flash. Also the reason he still has a show is because of a deal they made with Grant years ago with a potential 2015 Justice League movie. It never came about and they made this deal with him around the time of his show's creation. Superman is not appearing on Supergirl anymore because of his reapearance in Justice League. Deathstroke being on Arrow in the two parter is the last time he is appearing due to some unknown movie with Deathstroke in the DCEU. The Multiverse wasn't a new concept on The Flash. The Multiverse was introduced in the comics through "The Flash of Two Worlds" in 1961. "Crisis on Infinite Earths" is a very famous Multiversal story that rebooted the comics from the Silver Age into New Earth. And the Flash wasn't the first other media adaptation to have a Multiverse as Smallville, Injustice, Batman: The Brave and the Bold, the DC Animated Universe and Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths had used multiple Earths.