Opportunistic.
Opportunistic.
I thought that guy was Gateway, the Aborigine from Australia, who used a bullroarer and carried a dangle-strung staff.
Hutchinson
Math Check:
"including" does not mean "consisting of only"
Life Model Decoy:
Gulp.
Kim in slow motion to this.
So the two lead items are a remake of Slaughterhouse Five (forget speculations about the Trafamadorians, I wanna know who plays Montana Wildhack this time around) and the 99th (I underestimate for credibility) remake of Frankenstein.
I am so happy that I bailed on this series a couple of weeks ago. Thanks for justifying my reclaiming of 47 minutes every Monday evening.
I remember when Heavy Metal magazine came out in the late 70s, an Americanization of the the French mag "Metale Heurlant" (Screaming Metal), and it featured this weird-ass art strip called "Harzak" by this french dude calling himself "Moebius."
World of Tanks is my go-to game.
A note from Mr. Language Man:
Can you hear me now?
Thanks, all. Makes sense, although this particular plot device has been done to death, even if Marvel did it first.
Tarantino's use of the very same theme in Kill Bill (I believe it was Daryl Hannah's character who killed their karate master with poison), which was a studied pastiche of of genre revenge movies.
I thought Baron Mordo was, like, Dr. Strange's mortal enemy.
When did he become a spirit guide?
Excellent poser, there.
For me, it is when the authors "jump the shark" in some way.
I read almost all of the X-Men comics for more than a couple of years, then the writers did that whole "Wolverine without adamantium" story line that had one episode when they are seeking Apocalypse in some mystic cesspit or other and…
The rampant bad grammar, repeated use of incorrect cases, tenses, spellings and phrases should have given a small clue. Hint: it's called "irony."
I could care less; ain't me and you never gonna conquer on that idee anyhow, irregardless. Tha verry idee is like making me literally puke my guts, ya know?