This one wins.
This one wins.
Torchwood: Children of Earth
This was my immediate thought, and yes, it's still a great film to watch. Totally ridiculous, but fun.
That's what I thought we had read too. Wonder if something has changed?
Beg to differ, but this.
Pick up Hannibal. Like Pushing Daisies, it takes place in the same universe.
Speaking of Inferno, most of Paradiso is pretty good, as literary heavens go. You have to have a little faith in the final unexplained vision of Dante, and set aside his veneration of Julius Caesar, but it's not that bad.
I was felt it was more "fearless" than "brave," i.e. not controlled by your emotions. I've seen the film many times (it's one of the first "grown-up" movies I remember watching) and it's never seemed to me that the goal was to get people who were just brave.
Why exactly should I rejoice about a new version of something that I hold to be nearly perfect? That said, I am more than open to reading the books.
That is not Gobo Fraggle.
Better idea than this: hire Aardman to make stop motion shorts telling short stories using all of the Doctors/companions. Air these between programs, a la the DC Universe shorts. This seems like it would have been a perfect idea to run all during the show's anniversary year.
Isn't that him in the middle of the last piece of artwork? If not, who is it?
My dual core macbook won't let me install ML. It's a 2007 model, so I'm not stunned, but there you have it.
Studio Ghibli didn't do that. Disney did. Actually, you can thank pre-Disney buyout John Lasseter for the excellent localization of Ghibli movies.
Streaming <> DVD-quality. Even at the best streaming can do, it's substantially inferior to DVD quality.
@Lewen Stonewar: My thoughts exactly.
Can't the people of developing countries see that our Western diet is killing us?
@jinchoung: Yes
@MrGOH: That had better not be a dig about Doomsday Book, which is one of my all-time favorite pieces of literature in any genre.
@txtphile: Bravo. This was the first and only thing I thought heading into this article. For it not to be there was a great sadness.