assless
assless chaps
assless

If you say so. I saw Costner and decided it was the perfect time to give my bladder some blessed relief.

I realize that what I suggest may be sacrilegious, but why not have a conversation with Superman before the decision to murder him? Not hissed words through clenched teeth, but maybe he should ask Superman what his background is, and what his motives are. Hell, even confront him about the carnage during the Zod fight.

Um, yeah, that spoiler about not sitting through the credits of this for a stinger? That came a little too late.

I really don't agree with this assessment at all.

It's insane, but I used to defend Zack Snyder. I was taken in by the visuals of 300. I thought that Watchmen, um, could have been worse. Even the horrifically bad Sucker Punch made me feel encouraged that Snyder could handle action on a large scale. But his misunderstanding of Superman in the punishing Man of Steel

Come one, somebody's gotta watch that shit. You've been selected.

I'm glad they've finally given her a chance to glam up. After years of wrinkled jeans and soggy blouses on the Killing, she's earned it.

I read the last two trades of the Walking Dead (volumes #23 & 24), and I think I'm done. Or I may wait until #25. And Dark Horse's collection of Evan Dorkin's Eltingville Club. So funny, and so sad.

I see myself approaching a jumping-off point with a number of titles in the next few months. Right now, I'm dumping some books that are getting cancelled when Rebirth kicks in (We Are Robin, Starfire), and barring some really top-flight creative teams on the Rebirth stuff, I'm going to be hesitant to get really

I'm glad she took the time to do this, too. Long overdue retcon.
I forget which record label it was, but they had a slogan, "All rights reserved, all wrongs reversed."

Stating the obvious: Jon Hamm is Superman.

Yeah, I get that.

In the comics, Matt reads by scanning the impressions ink makes on paper. I'm unclear on whether the show has stated this yet.

It is refreshing to see a romantic couple tripped up by actual philosophical differences, for a change. After the soap-operatic contrivances on display on other shows on other networks, it's surprisingly realistic.

While Laurel's character desperately needs something to do, reuniting her with Oliver is not the move to make. Do we need to go back to those chemistry-free scenes between he and Laurel from the first two seasons?

Inflating a one-dimensional nothing of a villain like Cupid to the sole adversary of an episode, at this point, is something Judge Judy would describe as "puffery." The only reason she was here was to prop up the Oliver/Felicity dynamic this episode. And really, the tail was wagging the dog.

And, oh, shit! Mark Arum, he gets props, too!
RIP, Phife.

IIRC, Outkast either flipped the colors to red, black, and green, or otherwise subverted it. Like Kanye said he was doing while selling $30 t-shirts with the flag on it while on the Yeezus tour. But he's an idiot.

Tricky by the Time.

Post-Nolan, the mandate for DC superhero movies is, apparently, be more dour than likable. Henry Cavill has been placed in the uneviable position of having to play Superman as smug, aloof, and self-righteous. Batman has embodied his qualities, in his various incarnations, for years, but now finds them compounded with