AverageDrafter
AverageDrafter
AverageDrafter

Sometimes peaceful explorer probes turn into berserkers due to bad programming. Be mindful of your self-replicating space probes!

Hugh Jackman. He even included Wolverine as part of his Oscar number when he hosted.

I was going to say Tony Stark. But then I remembered his real name is Robert Downey Junior. Then I remembered that he is so much Iron Man that I don't even think of Iron Man as a different person anymore.

To be fair to Chi-Chi, she's a lot more sensible in the manga. The anime Flanderized the hell out of her.

That's true. I suppose I am romanticizing, and all I can do is extrapolate based on what I know now (you think Ben Franklin could have ever imagined a world of computers and the web?), so the future will almost certainly look completely different than I expect. Still, I like where that extrapolation is going and would

You said all that I wanted to. Age of Transition is spot on.

It would also be cool if it was a stop motion animated feature directed by Henry Selick.

Guy from Cheers Credits takes the cake, totally nostalgic for me.

I've been telling everyone, at work, to watch this, all morning:

A long time ago I was offered one of two superpowers. An excellent memory or a huge penis.

I'm particulary appreciating the advert I'm getting alongside this article ?!

Who's been haunting your dreams?

That is going to give my Lego-maniac some inspiration!
He's been making Lego Jaegers, here's Crimson Typhoon with three minifigs in the ConnPod.

Popeferatu?

I'm just this guy, you know?

From left to right we have Red Robin (Tim Drake aka Robin III), Batwoman (Katherine Kane), Robin IV (Damian Wayne), Batman (Bruce Wayne... spoilers!), Nightwing (Dick Grayson, Robin Original Flavor), Batgirl (Barbara Gordon formerly Batgirl, then Oracle, now Batgirl again), and finally Red Hood (Jason Todd, Robin II).

I don't see an anti-space theme in Gravity. I see a survival theme, and a rebirth theme. For me, Bullock's character arc was about moving past the horrible shit that's happened to you and realizing that you still want to survive, still want to be reborn, to evolve and grow and experience new things. It wasn't about

And for what it's worth, I'm deeply invested in reading subtext, and Gravity came off as just the opposite to me - a deeply humanist film about the importance of confronting obstacles and pressing on outwards in order to reach our destiny as a species.

I gotta say I strongly disagree. I saw no "space is off-limits" theme. If you remember, a big part of the movie hinged on dealing with death and, at two moments, characters accepted death willingly—Clooney when he drifts away and Bullock when she says she's ready to die if that's what re-entry brings.

When Clooney's