Frankenstein_Superstar_Webcomic
John Hazard
Frankenstein_Superstar_Webcomic

It's true. Every new theater production of a classic play is a remake.

I wonder if they're going to do that scene in NOAH where Noah (Russell Crowe) is found passed out naked and drunk in his tent by his son and Noah curses his son's son Canaan for it —or the Canaans, it doesn't really make sense because, you know the Bible.

No, it's childish to believe in things simply because there are stories about them, even though there's no evidence they exist. Even if they're cool stories that we just WANT to believe in. Are there unicorns? Fairies? Dragons? Vulcans? Kryptonians? Maybe somewhere in this vast universe, by some nigh-impossible

You can't seriously believe that EVERYTHING that hasn't been proven to not exist may just as likely be true as everything that we know does exist? Come on.

Someday. Maybe I'll get the girlfriend and her kids to watch it with me. We need some new shows.

I don't know Spanish, but I know that was muy bueno!

Vorik! I miss that guy, he was such a cute Vulcan.

Sigh. True, true.

Agreed. Limits are good. If it's tight, and still runs this long, fine. But I often feel now that directors are over indulged. Superman Returns felt like you were stuck on a two-and-a-half hour train ride with Bryan Singer sitting next to you explaining the story really slowly.

Why are parallel universes any more believable than ghosts? There's no evidence that either exists.

So... nothing to watch all week until TRUE BLOOD returns on Sunday. Got it!

That's the world that anti-government regulation Republicans want us to live free and die in.

The job creators know what's best for you.

Oh Zod, we do not need more funerals in superhero movies. Raimi's Spider-Man movies seemed to begin and end with them. I know you need some, but let's have fewer downers and more escapist fantasy!

Works for me! It could be struggling between the dangerous Ultron programming and the more heroic, compassionate elements of Coulson's psyche. Eventually he purges Ultron from him. Or Ultron uses him to build a body of its own to escape to.

I'm not saying they wouldn't do it, I'm saying they shouldn't. None of the heroes is in much risk of dying. Having a beloved member of the team really die is powerful. It implies some real consequences if the heroes fail. It creates drama. Without the risk of death or real consequences there's no drama, just a bunch

Good point. Loki could easily bring him back as evil, then he turns good, but retains some super power.

You WANT a fake-out death? Don't do that. They cheapen drama.

He didn't mention engineering. Also no Apple store bridge with price scanners and glass walls with circuit decals in the middle of the floor and spotlights in the eyes would be good.

the time machine in Looper reminds me of the Kirby-esq doomsday bombs from Mike Mignola's Cosmic Odyssey.