Time travelling fetus.
Time travelling fetus.
If we're talking Spider-Man, that should really be a "hot wheat cake."
I think Escape from… is the best sequel as it stays so focused on the social issues that drove the original movie series. I watched it again last week and, tragically, so much of the antagonist's dialog sounds relevant in 2017.
Pop Rivets gazed up at the enormous face. 171 days it had taken him to learn what kind of smile was hidden beneath the orange toupee. O cruel, needless alternative facts! O stubborn, self-willed exile from the loving breast! Two gin-scented tears trickled down the sides of his nose. But it was all right, everything…
Her face on the still video is so unnerving. I'm afraid if I click play, she'll stretch out the screen, unhinge that Joker-smile jaw and swallow me whole.
But that photo could have been taking in the Ex Sant’Uffizio Palace.
You're thinking of magnets.
Young Justice's second season also had a different thinly-veiled version of the Superfriends-only characters.
I like the way Yarrum thinks!
And coming from Satan, that's saying something.
"You’re at a nail salon?" - Sean O'Neal
They should be part of the "Waid's Flash" collection; it's not like they don't crossover. Basically, if Waid wrote about speedsters, just put it all in chronological order.
Thank goodness for the horse's tail…
I take it you mean the statue part and not the preceding archeological dig? I agree that knowing about the statue doesn't ruin viewing the movie for the first time but I think it's absolutely critical to Taylor's journey.
So Ann is Lyta?
The Spectacular Spider-Man cartoon was really great. The art style is odd but you get used to it and the simplicity actually lends itself to fast paced action. It's made by people who really care about the characters and make sure to balance big moments with ongoing subplots so everything has weight. It's sadly only…
To me J.M. DeMatteis and Sal Buscema's Spectacular Spider-Man #178-200 was the last great run of Spider-Man comics. There have been high points since but nothing so consistent or that has held up as well.
I'm guessing you don't need recommendations for things like the Death and Return of Superman or JLA. '90s DC actually had good solid stuff that gets overlooked and rarely induldged in the excesses of the era. Until circumstances forced me to give up a lot of titles I was regularly reading: Dixon's Robin, Dixon's…
YJ/TT are all pretty much the same characters in different arrangements at this point. I think they used "Young Justice" on the cartoon because it was a title DC already owned, there had just been the drastically different "Justice League" and "Teen Titans" cartoons. So the studio just needed a title to separate…
I was going to say TMNT Adventures. My first comics were all media tie-ins but TMNTA was the first thing to hook me. I just recently completed the whole run but I haven't sat down to reread it all.