Victor Von Doom
Fist of teh Internets.
E said:Or it goes back even further to him punching the T. Rex.
You know who else obsesses this much??? Batman. And he's cuckoo bananas.
Don't be the Bats E...
E said:Or it goes back even further to him punching the T. Rex.
:sure: Expands his grey matter so he can become smarter?Goodwill said:Reed's been dumbed down since Millar came on.
Funny, because "or something" was never said. Reed told Johnny to go hotter than he's ever gone before. A million degrees hotter.Goodwill said:Reed read like an extremely intelligent man when Ellis was writing... In the most recent issue, Reed says something to the effect of "Johnny, I want you to get really hot or something"... First of all, if Ellis wrote that, he'd give a certain temperature and replace "something" with something entirely witty, that would suggest how smart this guy is... Millar makes Reed sound like he's searching for words when he speaks. Bad form.
Goodwill said:In the most recent issue, Reed says something to the effect of "Johnny, I want you to get really hot or something"...
Bass said:You... you have to let it go, E. Think of your children.
Bass said:That's a very good point, Goodwill. While the specific example isn't correct... I agree. Reed doesn't feel as smart under Millar.
MaxwellSmart said:As for Millar's run being a bit dumbed down, I think there's truth to it. One of the things I thought was always so great about Reed is his ability to observe things no one else would notice and see the trap before it sprung. I think Millar lost some of that in Reed. In the Namor arc, he wasn't prepared to contain or control Namor. In the crossover arc, Reed assume zombie reed was trust worthy and transported over to him. In the President Thor, Reed doesn't believe their might be any ulterior motive behind the Skrull and when all the timetravel went on he was slow on the up take.
E said:This was brought up before...you have to remember - and this is something that was established in Bendis's run and Ellis used it too - that Reed is extremely trusting and eager to please. It's his Achilles Heel. As smart as he is, that quality leads him to make some remarkably stupid decisions.
I love that about him...616 Reed doesn't really have that, and he's a little less interesting because of it.
MaxwellSmart said:I know Reed is still a wide eye bushy tailed kid, but he's also one of the smartest men alive. Someone that smart should automatically prepare for every contingency in his mind. As a result, when s*** goes wrong he should already have a plan formulated. He should also be tremendously observent, when it comes to the actions of other. He should spot the irregularities in other people.
I agree that it's a conscious decision to make Reed seem more naive. My problem is that it's a frustrating character flaw that Millar could easily correct. I know it's important that characters not appear flawless. Making him seem naive is just such an easy character flaw that it comes across as bad writing in my opinion.E said:Exactly...he SHOULD, but he doesn't. That's his problem. It's a character flaw, not poor writing.
Maxwellsmart said:He should also be tremendously observent, when it comes to the actions of other. He should spot the irregularities in other people.