I don’t know that they’ll get swept, but they look completely discombobulated right now, with no answer whatsoever to Anthony Edward. They looked silly last night. Hard slap in the face that the T-Wolves are not the Lakers.
Not digging the collar and red underoos, but I’ma wait for a more clear standing shot of him for final judgment. Seeing suits and costumes in motion can also provide different/better perspective as well.
Just not a fan of collars on these guys be it comics, animation, or live action. But I’ll reserve final judgment for a live photo of Corenswet suited up. I’m really digging the Kingdom Come inspired S-shield tho.
@mazahs117: Owlman's philosophy was that every action would be meaningless because of the infinitely branching timelines unless he destroyed everything. That would be the only thing he could do that would have any purpose.
Right. I will say this, Thanos did at the very least show some emotion or ability to have internal conflict when it came to killing Gamora to get the Soul Gem in order to complete his goal, while Owlman was completely stoic, emotionless, and everything was hard math to him. That in itself shows a bit of depth for Thanos’ character. If either of how the characters were portrayed makes one or the other better written does come down to ones personal preference. I’m probably leaning slightly towards Thanos, but it’s close. Both great in the owns ways.
I’d say there’s holes in Thanos’ logic/quest. His motivations seem to really just be an excuse to kill people when you strip it down. Meanwhile Owlman just wanted to destroy everything without any delusion of grandeur regarding his purpose iirc. I think Thanos had a bit more written around him to do, while Owlman was just very straightforward character. But it’s probably a little unfair seeing as IW Thanos had build-up and connections to other characters and the over plot, while Owlman had none of this.
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