Modified Fire Extinguisher 🎥
#COOL
NOW THAT’S JUST SHOWING OFF
Filming the Cloud City arrival and departures for The Empire Strikes Back
I would like to remind you that Canada also had segregation. Viola Desmond was a Black Canadian businesswoman and civil rights activist who fought it by refusing to leave a whites-only area at a movie theater in New Glasgow in the province of Nova Scotia, Canada. Today she became the first Canadian woman to appear on a banknote. I’m extremely happy that Black women get the recognition they deserve!
#BlackWomenMatter
Supergirl’s Season 2 Premiere Is One of the Best Hours of Superhero TV Ever Created
This is a non-spoiler review. No plot information will be shared here, other than in very general terms, that is not already widely known thanks to pre-season interviews and other press.
There’s no better way to start this off: the season two premiere of Supergirl is one of the best hours of live-action superhero television ever created. It’s utterly joyful television that perfectly communicates the wonder, fun, and action of the best superhero comics.
As it enters its second season, The CW’s Supergirl (née CBS’s Supergirl) doubles down on its appeal to fans whose preferred brand of superheroics is less angsty and more inspired by ‘60s and ‘70s comics and the Richard Donner Superman movies. Through strong performances, though, it manages to appeal more broadly: even fans of post-Crisis on Infinite Earths comics and the Zack Snyder DC Extended Universe should find something to love in the premiere.
With the introduction of Tyler Hoechlin’s Superman, the episode feels
more than a little like “Worlds Finest,” the season one episode that saw
Grant Gustin guest star as The Flash, establishing for the first time
that Supergirl existed in a multiverse with the rest of the CW
superheroes and that the heroes could appear on one another’s shows if
they were so inclined.
It was also an episode where the villains got a bit of the shorter shrift as the heroes and supporting cast took the spotlight, something that’s true of the premiere – titled “The Adventures of Supergirl” – as well.
Unlike “Worlds Finest,” though, “The Adventures of Supergirl” doesn’t have to introduce its villain in any meaningful way. Whereas valuable screen time was spent creating the Silver Banshee during the Flash crossover last season, the premiere splits time between Supergirl and Superman averting catastrophes and, finally, battling a less-complex villain who doesn’t need a lot of establishing. That extra time is spent developing the villain’s plan and making the story’s conflict more fleshed out, ultimately to the benefit of the show.
While the chemistry between Hoechlin and Melissa Benoist, who plays Supergirl, is a high point of the episode, it should be clear that this is still very much her story. The premiere sees Cat Grant get about as much screen time as Superman, and she has one of the best moments, too.
There are bits of the premiere that set up the season to come, and those are interesting but perfunctory. It’s clear that the biggest priority is getting all the players in place: since this picks up as the previous episode ends, there are a lot of urgent questions – Jimmy and Kara’s relationship, the crash-landed Kryptonian pod, Kara’s new career choice, and more - that require attention. They all get what they deserve, but none completely take center stage in the episode, which decidedly belongs to the first live-action team-up of Superman and Supergirl.
The episode is as Richard Donner-inspired as you can get without actually playing the John Williams score when Superman comes onscreen for the first time. This means that folks tired of the stoic Superman from Man of Steel and Batman v Superman should be very happy with the premiere, but it also means longtime viewers, regardless of their feelings about the current state of the DC Extended Universe, will be rewarded for close attention.
One area where some fans may eye-roll a bit: we’re back to pre-Crisis
levels of clumsy, geeky Clark Kent. That’s likely to be appealing to
some members of the audience, although there’s also some value to having
a less buffonish Clark, who we get to see when he’s interacting with
members of Kara’s inner circle instead of the world at large.
Hoechlin’s Superman, meanwhile, is pitch-perfect. He feels like what
Superman should feel like with a decade of experience behind
him and the responsibilities of being the world’s most famous and
visible alien already processed and dealt with.
This is the first time in years (we’re including Smallville here) that we’ve seen Superman accept his role without angst or frustration, and becuase of the relatively small number of live-action iterations where other heroes have appeared, this is the first time audiences will have seen him acting as a leader of the superhero community.
The episode is full of changes. Not all of them make perfect sense, but they all feel right. There’s an emotional truth to the episode, so that even when audiences do a bit of a double-take at a certain idea or story beat, it will reconcile itself on second glance.
On that same note, there’s a storytelling contrivance in the final moments of the episode which, in any other show, could easily feel silly. Supergirl has built a world where it…works. It feels a bit like a magic trick, which may defy logic, but at its best – such as in this episode – Supergirl is a little magical.
Supergirl airs Monday nights at 8 p.m. ET/PT. New episodes begin on Monday, October 10 on The CW.
this is just beautiful, hope it spreads!!
https://www.flickr.com/photos/usnavyresearch/10855485535/
“Only 55 feet remain visible after the crew partially floods the ballast tanks aboard the Floating Instrument Platform, or FLIP, causing the vessel to turn stern first into the ocean. The 355-foot research vessel, owned by the Office of Naval Research (ONR) and operated by the Marine Physical Laboratory at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at University of California, conducts investigations in a number of fields, including acoustics, oceanography, meteorology and marine mammal observation. (U.S. Navy photo by John F. Williams/Released)”

My headcanon as to what Jasper’s gemstone might actually look like once poofed
I HOPE YOU DONT MIND ME HOPPING ONTO UR POST!! but it gave me a fun idea about the rest of her gem jutting out from the roof of her mouth..

liiiike

so! also ft. some extra teeth for crushing and grinding gems, and a weird little..divet to keep HER gem safe when she is doing said thing. i probably coulda fit a tongue in there but for clarity’s sake…….no tongue….
want
dustythewind