GregCox
GregCox
GregCox

To be fair, Streaky was not actually from Krypton. He was an Earth-cat who got exposed powers from being exposed to some form of Kryptonite. Or so I recall from the Silver Age.

Krypto, on the other hand, was from Krypton.

Bottom line: not every big new tentpole movie can be a record-breaking monster like INFINITY WARS or BLACK PANTHER. Sometimes a decent movie can just do . . . decently.

Well deserved, but can we get a report on the other winners as well? Let’s not treat the literary awards as an afterthought.

Let’s not forget Batwoman’s other long-time love interest, Renee Montoya. I can’t remember: has she appeared on the CW shows yet or just on GOTHAM?

The Patty Duke Show, right?

This old-school fan still ranks KHAN as the best, with the whale movie coming in second place. Followed by THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY.

(In other words, all the Trek movies Meyer worked on.)

FIRST CONTACT is far and away the best of the TNG movies, but that’s not the same thing as being the best Trek movie. IMHO.

Dare I mention there are also LIBRARIANS novels? :)

See also THE LIBRARIANS, which was recently dropped by TNT. It’s also being shopped around to other networks and, trust me, has an enthusiastic fandom lobbying hard for its return.

Or Fox or ABC or Freeform or FX . . . .

Marvel shows are everywhere these days. :)

I’m torn here. As much as I’d love to see Kamala on the big screen, part of me thinks that the comic possibly lends itself more to TV, what with all the teenage soap opera stuff, the large ensemble cast of friends and family, the whole neighborhood feel and all.

The best part of the comic book, IMHO, is not the

Complete with a cameo by Neil Gaiman’s goth Death.

I remember enjoying that era. But at this point I’ve lost track of the various LSH reboots.

As I recall: the main villain—Holmes’ evil tutor—turns out to have survived and assumes a new name and identity: “Moriarity.”

Don’t forget YOUNG SHERLOCK HOLMES back in ‘85, which threw in a final twist after the closing credits. I actually missed that one and had to heard about it from my friends afterwards . ....

Don’t see a problem here. This is a fine old sci-fi tradition. FORBIDDEN PLANET was “The Tempest in space.” THE STARS OUR DESTINATION is “The Count of Monte Cristo in space.” Heck, Gene Roddenberry famously pitched STAR TREK as “WAGON TRAIN to the stairs.”

Works for me.

Amen. Doesn’t even have to be a rural or small town thing. Having one’s car keys taken away is a blow to most every senior. In our society, getting your driver’s license is a rite of passage. It’s all about growing up and becoming independent. Losing that . . . well, it’s not just about having to rely on mass-transit

Penny is my favorite character, too.

But, yeah, the kid playing Will totally sells the friendship with the Robot.

I remember seeing DUNE with my brother, who had never read the books. Afterwards, he turned to me and said, “So, this is some sort of drug thing, right?”

You beat me to the punch. That sentence has got the credits backwards: Thomas was the writer. Chaykin was the artist.

Let it be noted that BLACKHAWK previously hit the big screen back in 1952, played by Kirk (Superman) Alyn.