![]() ![]() I'm not super familiar with Doctor Who (I only just started watching it recently, beginning with the 9th Doctor), but this season finale brought back a villain who's (by my understanding) one of the Doctor's arch-enemies, and it didn't disappoint. (Thankfully, "Blink" wasn't as jumpscare-heavy as I was expecting) I'm not much of a binge-watcher, but I watched five episodes back-to-back yesterday. I just finished the 10th Doctor's second season in Doctor Who. It turned out lighter than I expected on newcomers and villains, but I more or less just wrote the first idea that I thought of without tinkering with it.ĮDIT: for DLC or some sort of special edition. ![]() I heavily considered Akuma or Viewtiful Joe, but nowadays, Capcom seems more likely to save Akuma for DLC given that they know he'll sell (see Street Fighter 5 and 6), and I wanted a character from a new franchise. ![]() Still, going bigger than 40 (20 per side) for the base game seems like a lot.Īgain, not as many newcomers as I'd like (Rashid, Juri, Nero, Tessa, Leon, though give how heavily Mega Man and Monster Hunter would be revamped, they might as well be new), but it's hard to fit so many fan favourites into here on top of the newcomers. This turned out lighter on newcomers than I expected - just Miles, Ms. Ultimate Spider-Man (aside from his Venom Touch and cloaking, Miles can apparently make electricity constructs like lightning swords, so that helps set him apart from Peter) So while Charlie the Gorilla might have been thought to be referencing any one of these many talking Gorillas, his presence in the Peacemaker series is more likely to be James Gunn referencing just how enamored DC seemed to be with talking gorillas for a while.2. DC comics include over 50 talking gorillas, with many of them appearing during the 1950s at a time when the company found that including a gorilla on the front of a comic substantially increased its sales. Ultimately, while fans were quick to jump to Gorilla Grodd, James Gunn’s inclusion of a gorilla-based character here is probably actually a different deep cut on DC’s history. That said, this is somewhat on viewers themselves being so quick to jump to conclusions rather than letting the story play out. In one of Gorilla Grodd’s origin stories, he gained super-intelligence after an alien spacecraft crash-landed in his homeland. When toying with an item he took from the Butterfly’s apartment in episode 1, Peacemaker discovers that it is actually a small spaceship that was presumably used to get the Butterflies to Earth. The tease and turnaround from the Peacemaker TV series is made worse for audiences by an episode 2 clue that made Gorilla Grodd seem that much more plausible. However, given that the hints in the previous episodes are devoid of these clues, it does mean that James Gunn’s choices here end up doing a bit of trolling of the fans he must have known would jump to Gorilla Grodd as an explanation. While a gorilla is not a chimp, the telegraphing makes what is to come clear as it makes sense that if the Butterflies can put themselves into any living form then a superpowered Gorilla would be exponentially stronger and a better security guard for the factory. Economos explains during his presentation that the Butterflies make humans four times stronger than they normally would be while including an image of a chimp because they themselves are 4 times stronger than humans. Related: Why James Gunn Changed Peacemaker's Origin - Brother Death ExplainedĮven with the setup and Easter eggs in Peacemaker episode 4, the logic of how Charlie the Gorilla makes sense and is well established in Peacemaker episode 5. In Peacemaker episode 5, “Monkey Dory,” Charlie the Gorilla is discovered at the Butterflies’ Glan Tai bottling plant and is dispatched in the same episode by John Economos (Steve Agee) with a chainsaw shortly after the gorilla has yelled, “ Die humans!” Later in the episode, when Vigilante (Freddie Stroma) is getting himself arrested, one of the officers at the jail is reading a paper that notes the gorilla is still on the loose. An extended newscast plays in the background when Peacemaker (John Cena) visits his father’s house discussing how the gorilla was stolen from Evergreen Zoo. Peacemaker episode 4, “The Choad Less Traveled,” includes two background elements that telegraph Charlie the Gorilla’s introduction in a future episode and set fan expectations for Grodd. Gorilla Grodd is primarily a Flash supervillain who has super-intelligence, super-strength, and various mental powers.
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