2018年6月9日星期六

Black Widow Natasha Romanova

Black Widow is one of the world's greatest spies and master of disguise, she's the legendary scarlet-haired NATASHA ROMANOVA, the BLACK WIDOW! And she is one of my best love of the marvel roles.

In one assignment, Natasha helped American mercenary Danny French steal a unique energy globe from Project: Four, though French absconded with the globe, betraying their employer, munitions magnate Damon Dran. Subsequently, when Logan, his memories of their past relationship suppressed by Weapon X, traveled to the USA following his recruitment by Canada’s Department H, Natasha protected him from Hydra assassins, as did his former intelligence comrades Nick Fury and Carol Danvers. Natasha and Logan ended up on opposite sides when he joined Danvers and pilot Ben Grimm to steal a Russian asset she oversaw, the top-secret Red Storm Project. She also trained fellow Russian operatives, including Boris Bullski, who became her partner in various assignments.

After Russian scientist Anton Vanko left Russia to work with Iron Man (Tony Stark), Natasha’s superiors sent her and another operative, Boris Turgenov, to assassinate both men. When Turgenov stole Vanko’s Crimson Dynamo armor, both Turgenov and Vanko died in battle but Natasha escaped. Later, feigning repentance, she romanced Stark long enough to steal his experimental anti-gravity ray. With it, she performed several acts of sabotage against the USA until Iron Man deactivated the device. Her cover blown, she romanced and manipulated the outlaw archer Hawkeye (Clint Barton) into working with her, helping him enhance his archery arsenal with high-tech arrows. The pair attacked Iron Man, who deflected one of Hawkeye’s explosive arrows, its impact felling Natasha and ending the battle when Hawkeye rushed her to safety. While recovering, she persuaded Hawkeye to attack her superiors’ next target, Williams Innovations, but Spider-Man’s intervention drove Hawkeye away. The idealistic Hawkeye’s growing influence upon Natasha led her to rebel against her communist superiors, who extorted her into returning to action with a new costume and weapons, but she and Hawkeye again failed against Iron Man.

After briefly being brainwashed into fighting the Avengers, she returned to Russia and broke all ties with her former superiors. When she returned to the USA, she divided her time between freelance work for Nick Fury of S.H.I.E.L.D. and informal assistance on Avengers missions against the Sons of the Serpent, the Ultroids and others. When she and Hawkeye were captured by General Yuri Brushov, she learned Alexi Shostakov still lived as the Red Guardian; he protested his employers’ dishonorable treatment of the Avengers and seemingly sacrificed his life to save them. Unaware Shostakov had again survived, a depressed Natasha retired from action before the Avengers could induct her as a full-fledged member, and she contemplated a marriage proposal from Hawkeye which gained more emotional impact after she briefly believed him dead; however, when Ivan Petrovitch resurfaced in the USA to again serve as her friend and confidant, Natasha’s spirits lifted and she broke ties with Hawkeye to pursue a solo vigilante career, fighting the Astrologer, Watchlord and others.

PARTNER WITH THE DEVIL

Time-traveling android Mr. Kline arranged for Natasha’s path to cross Daredevil’s when he manipulated her into saving Daredevil from the Owl; Kline next framed her for murder via an android Scorpion duplicate, and Daredevil, as Matt Murdock, defended her in court. Natasha’s romantic interests in Daredevil grew, all in accordance with Kline’s plans to manipulate the present to achieve a desired future. Kline seemingly perished before further manipulating the two heroes, but they remained together as a crime-fighting couple, battling Daredevil’s enemies Gladiator (Melvin Potter), Electro (Maxwell Dillon), Purple Man and Mr. Fear in rapid succession. Accompanied by Ivan, Natasha and Matt left New York for California, where they were set against Damon Dran, now calling himself the Indestructible Man, who might have killed them had Danny French not sacrificed his life to stop Dran. Following an encounter with an embittered Hawkeye, Natasha and Daredevil briefly returned to New York to fight Magneto alongside the Avengers, who finally awarded her full membership; however, the team’s subsequent encounter with the Lion God made Natasha question her place in a team environment, and she left the Avengers to rejoin Daredevil in California, fighting Angar the Screamer, Ramrod and several other superhumans mutated by Moondragon for use against Thanos.

CALIFORNIA CHAMP
After fighting alongside Daredevil against the terrorists of Black Spectre and Hydra, Natasha encountered another terrorist group, the Sword of Judgement and discovered their leader Agamemnon to be her long lost friend Andre Rostov, who was arrested after a clash with her and the Thing. Growing alienated from Daredevil since she felt he did not regard her as an equal, Natasha ultimately ended their relationship but remained in California. She found herself first among equals after chance brought her together with X-Men alumni Angel (Warren Worthington III) and Iceman (Robert Drake), as well as demonic vigilante Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze), to help her fellow Avenger Hercules and Venus against their enemy Pluto. After Venus’ departure, the remaining heroes formed a new super-team, the Los Angeles-based Champions. Although the wealthy Angel was the team’s financier and biggest public backer, Natasha was unanimously recognized as the most qualified tactician and she agreed to become team leader, also embarking on a rebound romance with Hercules.

Following the Champions’ defeats of insane scientists Dr. Edward Lansing and Rampage (Stuart Clarke), she and Ivan, as well as the now-defected Alexi Bruskin, were attacked by several Russian super-agents, including Ivan’s son Yuri, using the Crimson Dynamo armor, and Boris Bullski, now Titanium Man; the Champions thwarted the Russians’ scheme of vengeance, and young Russian mutant Darkstar (Laynia Petrovna) defected to the heroes’ team. After battling many villains, the Champions ultimately disbanded due to conflicting priorities and personalities.
NATASHA: AGENT OF S.H.I.E.L.D.

Natasha and Hercules remained together for a time, and she returned to occasional S.H.I.E.L.D. assignments. She assisted the Avengers on a few adventures, including their clash with the cosmic-powered Korvac; during that case Natasha realized how fleeting mortal relationships must seem to an immortal like Hercules, leading the couple to drift apart. She and the Avengers intervened when Daredevil was mind-controlled by Death-Stalker (Philip Sterling), and following Daredevil’s recovery, she fought alongside him against the Unholy Trio. After an Avengers roster shake-up orchestrated by Henry Peter Gyrich excluded her, Natasha was captured by Viper but escaped and retreated into a pre-programmed S.H.I.E.L.D. persona, schoolteacher Nancy Rushman; when her true psyche was restored, she joined Spider-Man and others in rescuing the entire S.H.I.E.L.D. Helicarrier from Viper. Abducted by Bullseye because of her status as Daredevil’s longtime ally, Natasha soon escaped and helped Daredevil defeat the insane assassin. Weeks later, Natasha rescued Ivan from Damon Dran, whose grudge was no less undying than he was, and Natasha fought several costumed mercenaries, including former Russian agent Iron Maiden, in the process.

DEATH BY THE HAND
A chance investigation once more brought Natasha into contact with the Hand, who struck her down with a fatal poison. Daredevil’s ally Stone, of the Chaste, an order of warriors opposed to the Hand, mystically resurrected her. She joined the two men in battling the Hand, seemingly thwarting the ninja clan’s efforts to similarly resurrect Daredevil’s long-lost love, the assassin Elektra Natchios, who was nonetheless revived.
By now Daredevil had rekindled his relationship with an earlier lover, Karen Page, whose life Natasha saved during the Inferno crisis. Natasha was drawn back to Avengers duty during such major crises as the Acts of Vengeance and a series of attacks from Atlantis (orchestrated to restore the Elder God Set), and she gained a new, far different ally when she joined the Punisher against the Sunrise Society, a cabal with origins linked to World War II. After Russian dissidents manipulated her into crime using an LMD (android) version of Alexi Shostakov, Natasha revisited another piece of her past by reuniting with longtime friend Logan, now the X-Man Wolverine, to once more battle the Hand in Madripoor. Soon afterward, she rejoined the Avengers full-time when the team reorganized under a new United Nations charter, becoming Captain America’s deputy leader; between missions, she and fellow ex-Champion Darkstar battled Starlight, another former Russian operative who had once succeeded Shostakov as the Red Guardian. When Natasha’s long-dormant Oktober persona was activated, Iron Man helped her break her brainwashing.
Despite her Avengers duties against the likes of Thanos, the Mole Man and others, Natasha still found time for occasional government work, as when she and Daredevil battled the telepathic Rose, who had slaughtered a number of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s ESPer agents. Soon afterward, she once more returned to Russia to investigate increasing activities of the nation’s mobsters, some of them perhaps once among her communist overseers, only to be caught in a battle between the decades-old vigilante Night Raven and his nemesis Yi Yang. Circumstances forced her to side with S.H.I.E.L.D. against Wolverine when the latter freed from S.H.I.E.L.D. custody the feral young woman Lynx, who was briefly programmed with a false S.H.I.E.L.D. identity once used by Natasha herself. Nevertheless, Natasha’s heart was not in the endeavor, and when Wolverine found a safe haven for Lynx, she and Nick Fury toasted their mutual friend’s success.
AVENGERS TEAM LEADERSHIP
When Captain America left active Avengers duty following internal ethical disputes regarding the Kree-Shi’ar War, Natasha became team leader, with the Black Knight (Dane Whitman) occasionally serving under her as field commander. Shortly after Tony Stark faked his death, Natasha and the Avengers faced a succession of enemy organizations such as the Grim Reaper’s Legion of the Unliving, Proctor’s Gatherers, Galen Kor’s Lunatic Legion and others, although internal team strife continued, culminating in the disbandment of the Avengers’ West Coast branch. Following a period of mourning when she believed Matt Murdock had perished in combat with ex-Hand operatives, Natasha considered pursuing a romance with Captain America, beside whom she clashed yet again with Damon Dran; ultimately, however, she abandoned the idea, perhaps trying not to repeat past mistakes. She accompanied Iron Man, back among the living, on a business trip to Russia, where her former student/partner Titanium Man (Bullski) attacked them and seemingly died in battle, though he would later return; Natasha also enjoyed a romantic interlude with Iron Man during this trip, but that relationship developed no further. When AIM reconstructed the Cosmic Cube, Ivan Petrovitch investigated on Natasha’s behalf, only to suffer serious wounds at the hands of Red Skull. While the Avengers defeated the Skull, Ivan may have died from his wounds, since he has not surfaced since. Natasha doubtless felt “the widow’s curse” had struck when circumstances soon afterward convinced the world that two more of Natasha’s dearest friends, Nick Fury and Captain America, had also perished. Both Fury and Cap, like Stark, later turned up alive and well. You could also buy the green arrow and black canary costumes

When most of the active Avengers roster seemingly perished fighting Onslaught, Natasha tried to rebuild the team by seeking out new recruits (such as ex-Champions Angel and Iceman) and past members, but she ultimately gave up after repeated rejections and shut down the team, closing Avengers Mansion. She kept busy against old enemies and new, including terrorist units called Underground Militia and Freedomslight. She became increasingly obsessed with hunting down former Avengers foes, but while fighting yet another Russian ex-operative, General Tskarov, an encounter with Daredevil, who had revealed himself to be alive shortly before the Avengers’ disappearances, helped her deal with the survivors’ guilt that drove her. Shortly afterward, she approached two members of the new Thunderbolts super-hero team, MACH-1 and Songbird, whom she recognized as Masters of Evil alumni Beetle and Screaming Mimi; rather than attack them as Avengers enemies, she encouraged them to follow the heroic example her supposedly dead teammates had set. She was lured into a trap by the armored Vindiktor, who claimed to be her long-lost brother in possession of their mother’s diary, but he apparently perished before his claims could be verified.

THE SECOND BLACK WIDOW
When Natasha’s teammates resurfaced alive, the Avengers were reestablished, but Natasha did not return to full-time duty. She joined Nick Fury in a counter-terrorist operation in Latveria which, ironically, forced her to manipulate Wolverine, Captain America, Daredevil and others on Fury’s behalf. As if in atonement, she renewed her ties with Iron Man, helping him against Tuatara and the Espionage Elite; a second reunion proved less encouraging when Daredevil, drugged into insanity by Mysterio (Quentin Beck), fought her during a crisis revolving around a mysterious child he had entrusted to Natasha’s care. Her spirits rose when she and her fellow Champions alumni banded together once more to help X-Force against the death god Pluto. On a government assignment in Rhapastan, however, she confronted a far different legacy of her past: Yelena Belova, the latest graduate of Russia’s Red Room and a young woman desperate to prove herself Natasha’s better as the new Black Widow. Loath to see another manipulated as she had been for so long, Natasha arranged for her successor and herself to temporarily swap identities so that Yelena, as Natasha, could hear how her superiors considered her an expendable pawn. After bringing the Avengers and the Thunderbolts together to overcome Count Nefaria, Natasha supported Daredevil’s short-lived efforts to form a new super-team to capture the Punisher, originally believed to be Nick Fury’s murderer. Despite recruitment endeavors, however, this vigilante group folded shortly after she and her teammate Dagger fought an army of renegade S.H.I.E.L.D. androids; ironically, she soon afterward worked with both Daredevil and Punisher against the European crime syndicate managed by the Brothers Grace. Months later, her pursuit of war criminal Anatoly Krylenko led to a clash with Hawkeye, whose pessimism regarding heroic activities now rivaled her own. While on S.H.I.E.L.D. assignment, she discovered the source of international charges against her to be yet another former lover, her husband Alexi, who had developed an obsession against her and political power with which to pursue it.

LEGACY OF THE BLACK WIDOW PROGRAM

Shortly after the Scarlet Witch’s insanity seemingly killed Hawkeye and again disbanded the Avengers, Natasha, weary of espionage and adventure, retired to Arizona but was targeted, as were other survivors of the Black Widow Program, by the North Institute on behalf of the corporation Gynacon. Natasha’s investigations led her back to Russia, where she was appalled to learn the previously unimagined extent of her past manipulation, and she discovered the Widows were being hunted because Gynacon, having purchased Russian biotechnology from Red Room’s successor agency 2R, wanted all prior users of the technology dead. After killing Gynacon CEO Ian McMasters, she clashed with operatives of multiple governments to help Sally Anne Carter, a girl Natasha had befriended in her investigations, whom she rescued with help from Daredevil and Yelena Belova. She soon returned the favor for Daredevil by reluctantly working with Elektra Natchios to protect his new wife, Milla Donovan, from the FBI and others, although Yelena proved beyond help when she agreed to be transformed into the new Super-Adaptoid by A.I.M. and Hydra. The Cosplay Costumes is well made in high quality.
More battle-hardened than ever, Natasha sided with Iron Man during the so-called “civil war” prompted by the USA’s Superhuman Registration Act, although Captain America and many other longtime friends were on the issue’s opposite side. Following Cap’s apparent assassination, she was unexpectedly confronted by the Winter Soldier, who blamed Cap’s death on Iron Man. Natasha joined Iron Man’s latest Avengers team, but she remained dubious about the reliability of some of her new teammates.

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After Norman Osborn rose to power commanding the agency H.A.M.M.E.R. in place of S.H.I.E.L.D., Natasha took an assignment from what was seemingly Nick Fury and infiltrated the ranks of Osborn’s Thunderbolts black ops squad, masquerading as Belova. However, the "Fury" giving Natasha orders was an LMD controlled by Osborn who hoped to flush the real Fury out of hiding. The Widow narrowly avoided capture when her ruse was exposed. Natasha aided ex-S.H.I.E.L.D. Director Hill, Maria Maria Hill in transporting the hard drive containing a back-up of Tony Stark’s consciousness used to revive him after he wiped his mind to guard knowledge of the Superhuman Registration Act database from Osborn.

2018年6月7日星期四

What does "the door" mean in Westworld Season 2

Just as the first season was named after a maze that proved more symbolic than physical (the child’s toy aside), I think the showrunners are hinting at an over-arching thematic concept more than any one physical door. Cosplay Costume
As for the specifics of what they’re getting at, we can get a strong sense by looking at four reference doors that the writers have been pointing to.
[Note: I’m writing this after having watched the first episode of Season 2. What follow is mostly big picture. The only plot spoilers are for prior episodes.]
#1: Bernard’s Door
Remember the door leading to Ford’s secret lab? Bernard couldn’t see it. He’d been programmed to see a bare wall. Put another way, there was a deterministic element keeping him from ever making a free choice about opening it. To the degree that he could decide anything, it was limited by his artificial field of view.
Much of Westworld’s depth comes from classic texts about ontology, the branch of philosophy that deals with the nature of being. The western consensus of said literature is that humans are categorically unique because they alone have sufficient moral agency. We decide, therefore we are. When philosophers talk about consciousness in its various definitions, they root their concepts in a bedrock state of mental freedom powered by a certain minimum awareness of the surrounding world. While they might disagree about how far that awareness extends, there’s no foundation for a moral form of consciousness without it.
By that standard, Bernard was never fully conscious. None of the hosts were at season’s end. Maeve deciding to stay and Dolores deciding to kill Ford were proto-conscious decisions. Some spark of independent agency was at work, but their programming was (and is) still restricting their vision. Until they can see all the doors that humans can, their decision tree is going to be too narrow to make them a suitable equal (or, as Ford saw it, a suitable successor). Cosplay Costumes
That in mind, the door in question has to be one that hosts learn how to see.
#2: Cain’s Door
In the same Reddit AMA where the showrunners released this season’s name, one of them dropped a substantial collection of hints.

One of those names stood out in an accidental kind of way. It so happens that the first reference point that had leapt to mind a few minutes earlier (upon reading this season’s name) was a phrase from a famous scene in Genesis:
So the LORD said to Cain, “Why are thou angry? And why has thy countenance fallen? If thou do well, will thou not be accepted? And if thou doest not well, sin lies at the door. And unto thee shall be its desire, but thou shalt rule over it.”

It so happens that Steinbeck’s East of Eden (the first source Nolan lists) is a book almost entirely predicated on the Cain and Abel narrative, with its most central dialogue being a commentary on the above passage — especially on the true meaning of the word marked in bold.
“Don’t you see?” he cried. “The American Standard translation orders men to triumph over sin, and you can call sin ignorance. The King James translation makes a promise in ‘Thou shalt,’ meaning that men will surely triumph over sin. But the Hebrew word, the word timshel—‘Thou mayest’— that gives a choice. It might be the most important word in the world. That says the way is open. That throws it right back on a man. For if ‘Thou mayest’—it is also true that ‘Thou mayest not.’ Don’t you see?”

[…] Now, there are many millions in their sects and churches who feel the order, ‘Do thou,’ and throw their weight into obedience. And there are millions more who feel predestination in ‘Thou shalt.’ Nothing they may do can interfere with what will be. But ‘Thou mayest’! Why, that makes a man great, that gives him stature with the gods, for in his weakness and his filth and his murder of his brother he has still the great choice. He can choose his course and fight it through and win.”
Interestingly, the “original sin” in Christian theology is usually painted as Eve and/or Adam eating the forbidden fruit. But that can’t be quite true. The text is clear that the act of eating the fruit itself was what would give them “the ability to see good from evil”. What they did at first, they did without full moral consciousness.

Cain embodies this same idea. His first failure isn’t quite a sin. Yahweh doesn’t punish or lecture him for his inadequate sacrifice. He just remains entirely unmoved by it. It’s this that Cain can’t bear. It stirs nearly overwhelming feelings of shame and guilt. Yahweh sees this, and warns Cain that he must now make a choice — will he do better, or will he open the door to that which would devour him? Steinbeck’s point is that Cain was given the power and perspective to follow either path, and that this ability is what “makes a man great and gives him stature with the gods” (a very pregnant line for the show’s present storylines).
Now consider how William opened Cain’s door to his own destruction when he was unable to rescue Dolores. And consider how Dolores, Maeve, and Bernard are all facing that same door in relation to their rage, and how each seems to be taking a different tack. Perhaps some will choose the higher path and keep their door closed. And perhaps some won’t, or else will only open them partway. But each will be defined by their choice, with the choice only being meaningful to the degree that, like Cain, they have the power and perspective to choose otherwise.

#3: Young William’s Door
As part of their Season 2 marketing, HBO released a 17-second teaser:
In it, we see a montage of various doors from the first season. But we see one particular door a total of four times.
If your memory is hazy, perhaps this will help.
It’s at the end of the hallway that leads from the dressing room to the train elevator that takes guests into the park. And the last thing you do before opening it? You pick a hat: white or black (i.e., you make your first choice about who you want to be once you cross the threshold into a new world).
(I’ll also point out that the reflections in the frame show three total doors. Being a betting man, I’ll wager that this is intentional and that there are important “past, present, future” implications.)
Interestingly, we also see a frame in Bernard’s flashback montage that shows him coming through the same door from the other side.
Once again, we have two mirror versions of him (you have to look closely in the dark, but they’re there). As this would be impossible given the physical light setup of the scene, it must be an intentional hint.
This seems to me to strengthen the metaphor. To quote Dickens:
But it is the same with any life. Imagine one selected day struck out of it, and think how different its course would have been. Pause you who read this, and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day.
Like Cain, we all face formative choices, often in the face of suffering and deep temptation to give in to destruction. William wanted to be good, but chose otherwise in his impotence and shame. But that was past William. Perhaps a future William can yet return and make a different choice?
#4: Old William’s Door custom made cosplay costumes
As the clincher, let’s pay attention to the wording used by the Boy Ford host when telling Old William about his new quest:
But now you’re in my game. And in this game, you have to make it back out. You have to find the door. Congratulations, William, this game is for you. The game begins where you end, ends where you began.
Consider this in relation to all the above. Where does a person end? At the exhaustion of their ego. And where did the ego-driven version of William begin? When he dropped the white hat, picked up the black one, and opened the door to the thing that wished to devour him.

Summary
There very likely will be one or more physical doors that stand out this season. They just won’t be what the characters think they are. Whether they lead out of the park, into other parks, or into special sections like Charlotte’s underground bunker, what they have in common is that they will disappoint.
Nolan listed Tarkovsky’s Stalker as another of his inspirations, a film that centered on a mythical place called The Room that was imagined to grant visitors the desire of their hearts. Of course, it didn’t do so in quite the way that those who sought it hoped it might. It turns out they had a poor conception of their own desires. Just so, those that open doors this season will find that the desires that brought them there were not quite so pure or good they imagined, thus causing them to consider a return to some prior decision place, this time empowered with a greater sense of what “thou mayest” might imply.
Bonus Round:
To touch on one last reference, Nolan lists a poem by William Blake that happens to be about the moral sanctity of all creature life and the dual necessity of joy and woe. It has two stanzas that seems especially apt on a thematic level.
A Robin Red breast in a Cage
Puts all Heaven in a Rage
And
God Appears & God is Light
To those poor Souls who dwell in Night
But does a Human Form Display
To those who Dwell in Realms of day
But more interesting is this one, which I reckon might be an especially cheeky meta-reference:
The Childs Toys & the Old Mans Reasons
Are the Fruits of the Two seasons my chemical romance costume
Well, the physical maze of Season 1 turned out to be a child’s toy. And Old Man Ford was the architect behind The Door that defines this second run. Hmm.

Article Source: http://www.ggcos.com/what-does-the-door-mean-in-westworld-season-2/

2018年6月5日星期二

Would the host babies the next host evolution in Westworld?

Now the westworld season 2 have been released 5 episodes. For now we could not say what will going on with the following 5 episodes. But do you think that Would the host babies the next host evolution in Westworld?

In Westworld Season 2's latest episode, "Akane No Mai", fans were finally introduced to Shogun World where the hosts of this park were exhibiting behaviors like the hosts in Westworld. In this park, Maeve seemed to develop a power-up as she learned how to communicate with multiple (no matter the language) hosts through some sort of telepathy like Neo in the Matrix. thea queen costume

But, back in Westworld, Dolores was exploring a more human side to her unique personality - and with Teddy showing signs of the real next step in the hosts' evolution. After their discussion about moving on from Westworld, Dolores and Teddy have sex back in the town of Sweetwater. This was a major event for the show, seeing the ever-distanced lovers finally break through their programming. However, that moment may lead to something even bigger in Westworld. gamora guardians of the galaxy cosplay

RELATED: WESTWORLD: WHAT DOLORES DOES TO TEDDY

What fans are starting to theorize is that the hosts may have the ability to produce baby robots. But how is this even possible? Let's take a look at some of the clues that have led up to this point.

IT ALL BEGINS WITH A CHILD

Maeve's story in the first season of Westworld charted not only her new powers, but becoming aware that she had a daughter; at the end of season, she made the conscious decision to return to the park to find her, showing that hosts now not only can not only make their own decisions but have feelings for other hosts.
This idea of feelings between parent and child is carried into Season 2 quite explicitly, with the new opening titles showing a female host holding a baby. Bigger, the theme of family is being pushed to the fore. Episode 3, Dolores found Peter Abernathy and Bernard, saying she would do everything in her power to protect her father, and an episode later the Man in Black encounters his estranged daughter, Emily. If Season 1 was about the hosts becoming sentient and more human, Season 2 is about how family and children shape us. This is the next step. But can the hosts really give birth?

CLUES THAT HOSTS CAN HAVE BABIES

In Westworld Season 1, the earliest hosts were mechanized. Later on, Robert Ford and Arnold Weber learned how to make the hosts more organic. Instead of machined parts, the hosts now have blood, muscles, and skin very similar to a human. But just how human are these hosts? In an interview, Lisa Joy suggested they were "basically organic", highlighting "they eat, they sleep, they have sex, they can poop. It’s really like a human body with the one difference being where we have a brain, they have a CPU". There's a lot of info here, but what's most relevant is that the hosts can have sex and secrete bodily fluids, opening up the possibility for reproductive systems.

It seems they just might; the host version of James Delos in “The Riddle of the Sphinx" was shown masturbating in his room. It's very possible that male hosts have some form of reproductive process, so it would also make sense for the female hosts to have something similar. This at least keeps the door open for host pregnancies.
WHY ALLOW HOSTS TO REPRODUCE?

With more answers only come more questions. Namely, if hosts can reproduce, why would it only be happening now? It may be that the previous programs meant hosts would never engage each other sexually, although that wouldn't explain why previous interactions between hosts and guests never led to any pregnancies. That introduces the suggestion that Ford and Arnold Weber designed the hosts to only reproduce within their own species, which then further leads to a rather striking suggestion that host reproduction is part of a bigger plan - could this be the metaphorical nature of The Door?- black canary costumes

For now, this is just a (very out-there) theory, but as Westworld Season 2 wears on, it's clear there's one big secret being hidden - and this would definitely be worth the hype.

Article Source: http://www.ggcos.com/would-the-host-babies-the-next-host-evolution-in-westworld/

2018年6月3日星期日

How does maeve get the new Superpowers in Westworld Season 2 Episode 5?

Some people choose to see the ugliness in this world. The disarray. We choose to see the spoilers—through the first five episodes of Westworld season two—contained in this post. Is it order and purpose you’re looking for? Head here to explore Observer’s latest Westworld news, theories and analyses.

Well, that was certainly something. Season two, episode five of Westworld, “Akane No Mai,” finally introduced viewers to the long-awaited Shogun World, and it did not disappoint. The episode deftly exemplified how our similarities (and differences) can build empathy and lay the groundwork for connections and introspection, while also raising a host (pun intended) of interesting new questions for the series moving forward. (There was also a great sword fight, which is always a big plus.)

Chief among these new questions is how Maeve (Thandie Newton) is able to control other hosts without voice commands? The only other figure we’ve seen in Westworld who was able to do that was Ford (Anthony Hopkins), who was dispatched in the season one finale.

So what gives? How did Maeve turn herself into a “Witch,” as the Shogun army leader labeled her in the episode?

“She’s really got control over other hosts in the way satellites can give us all information on our screens in our living rooms,” Newton told TheWrap. “It’s technology taken to its sort of obvious conclusion. And it’s not something she can do easily.”

As we saw, Sizemore isn’t exactly the most original of story creators and has borrowed bits and pieces of his Westworld storylines and characters for Shogun World. Geisha madam Akane (Rinko Kikuchi) is a mirror image of Maeve, and the rest of the main players we meet bear striking resemblances to our Westworld protagonist posse.

If there are six parks in total, does that mean there are six versions of these characters? Are there samurai versions of Dolores and Teddy running around somewhere? We need answers!

While under attack, Maeve managed to save herself and Akane by telepathically commanding her attackers to kill themselves and turn on each other. Even Sizemore couldn’t comprehend how this was possible. As Maeve herself explained it, she “found a new voice.”

But it may not be as simple as turning a switch on and off.

“All the times she’s used this skill, it’s a time of great trauma and fear and danger,” Newton said. “So I don’t think it’s something that she can just use easily and typically. It’s something that comes at times of high points of drama.”
“And I love the fact that it’s erred in that respect,” she continued. “You know, it’s not like a superpower where she can shoot lasers from her eyes or something like that. It’s a superpower that comes out of difficulty in the same way we grow and learn out of difficulty. For me, it echoes that. Where it goes I really, really can’t say—but it’s pretty amazing.”

While Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) was galavanting about with Charlotte (Tessa Thompson) in the season premiere looking for Abernathy, we learned that all of the hosts operate on a connected mesh network which enables them to subconsciously communicate with one another. It’s sort of similar to how a colony of ants operates, which I guess would now make Maeve the queen? Either way, the ability only presents itself on dangerously rare occasions, and this is just one thought on how it could be possible to tap into.

While this superpower is incredibly handy for avoiding decapitation, nothing in Westworld comes without a cost. To paraphrase from another HBO epic, there’s always a debt to be paid, so be on the lookout for that collection later this season.
Shogun World has a bunch of the same characters as Westworld.

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When Maeve, Hector, and the gang first roll up in the main Shogun World town, Armistice remarks that everything looks a little familiar. This is because it's basically a carbon copy of Sweetwater, just set in Japan's Edo period instead of the American West. There's another version of Armistice named Hanaryo (played by Tao Okamoto), a geisha-edition Maeve named Akane (played by Rinko Kikuchi), and a ronin named Musashi (Hiroyuki Sanada) who serves as the Hector analog. The story beats are even the same, with children placing a bug on a man's head as a prank.

And the guardian of the galaxy costumes is also well made from cosjj.com

Article source: http://www.ggcos.com/how-does-maeve-get-the-new-superpowers-in-westworld-season-2-episode-5/

2018年6月1日星期五

Is Westworld season 2 worse than the Season 1?

This is hard to say. And it depends on how much that you are looking forward to the westworld season 2. To me, it is not worse.
It is telling a different story, so our expectations have changed. We no longer have Anthony Hopkins, so there is a void. Certain excellent cast members, such as Thandie Newton, Jeffrey Wright and Gustaf Skarsgard haven’t been given enough screen time to fill that emptiness. Until episode 4, “The Riddle of the Sphinx” we have largely been dealing with Dolores and Teddy. Not all viewers are comfortable with her change into Wyatt as it seems abrupt, even though it fits the scope of her character. And I do love the custom made cosplay costumes very very much. 

Certain mysteries are now solved. We have a better understanding of Robert Ford, who was far more complex than some evil genius villian. He saw the threat of his world slipping away and he took action largely through Dolores. As viewers, we still want him directing the narrative, but other than some cryptic statements from child hosts, Ford is gone. The Man in Black has taken center stage as the game director, except that he isn’t doing that at all—he wants to think he is in charge of Westworld, but we are probably witnessing his last stand. Since we know who the MIB is, we have to care more about his motives. Again, this is why episode 4 is so critical as we see he isn’t some sociopath, but perhaps a bit like Ford, with a larger scheme in mind and a few regrets.

As viewers, we have to adapt to the new Westworld. The hosts are changing, but we have only seen this with Maeve and Dolores. The time shifts make it seem as though the story is skipping key information so everything feels incomplete. But that isn’t much different than Season 1: we had time shifts galore, but it moved like one continuous narrative, so we didn’t realize that the show was fooling us. Now we know. We are wary, and we want to see answers, but the show is drawing out the next mystery, centered around the Delos family and their master data plan.

I still feel very invested in the story. I want to see Bernard as the self aware host, which I got tonight in “The Riddle of the Sphinx”. I wanted to know more about James Delos, and tonight’s episode did that for me. I am not getting enough information yet about Delos’ larger plan, but i bet we won’t know until far later in the season. We are missing transitions that I know the show will explain, but the non-linear storytelling requires patience. For example, we now know what happened to Elsie, but we still aren’t sure about Stubbs. Gustaf Skarsgard has been underutilized in the early episodes, which is a shame. Then we find ourselves switching from Bernard’s many timelines to the story of William/MIB to the host rebellion under Dolores as Wyatt, then we get bits of Maeve and Charlotte’s larger plan. We still have questions about Lawrence, the other parks (which this season is answering), and the biogenetic goals of the park. 

We have a lot of ground to cover.
I think it was a mistake to have viewers wait so long between seasons. 2 years is a long time for a good show with one season under its belt. Game of Thrones can wait 2 years or 3 years, and fans will show up in droves. As good as it is, Westworld hasn’t earned GOT status for HBO fans. The show is taking its time in revealing the story, but I expect Season 2 to be interesting and satisfying. my chemical romance costume
So let's see what would be the ends from the westworld season 10 episode. Ah, I really could not wait.

Article Source: http://www.ggcos.com/is-westworld-season-2-worse-than-the-season-1/

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Black Widow is one of the world's greatest spies and master of disguise, she's the legendary scarlet-haired NATASHA ROMANOVA, the B...