Does it, though?
Does it, though?
The comparison was not a matter of contention.
It's a fun movie.
To answer the question we're all thinking: yes, we do need a Mighty Mouse movie.
My (admittedly layman) understanding is that Fox holds the rights to Deadpool and X-stuff through two different, unrelated licensing contracts. The former was acquired from Lionsgate, while the latter was obtained directly from Marvel.
There wasn't much there, but it did at least give a little face time to the major players. For readers not familiar with the characters but interested because of the big movie with the same name, I can see the appeal, Also, the other story with the new Wasp was fun.
In the recent Hawkeye run, America Chavez is Captain America in the future.
You guessed it: Frank Stallone.
I'm sorry to hear that. It sucks.
it feels like you're coming in during the story and it's confusing
The Violent #4 - Another excellent entry in a series that sadly is ending the next issue. You want gritty? This series (along with the one right below) are gritty as fuck.
Sheriff of Babylon #6 - Excellent. The previous issue, my favorite so far, was a fascinating character study with no plot progression. This…
Captain America: Sam Wilson isn’t about the real Captain America,
or even the other two Captain Americas—it’s about Sam Wilson. It leaves
the impression that these aren’t the actual books, but instead
alternate titles that will soon be gone
I was under the impression Jon did have ravens sent out, but only Stannis Baratheon responded. Though maybe I have the timing wrong.
Trump: I'm going to literally club this baby seal
I think in cases like Shipka or Holly Taylor you also discover how well you cast and it opens up storytelling opportunities that wouldn't have been available with a lesser choice
Maybe I'm wrong, but I doubt most self-aware people really think of them as sociological terms rather than marketing terms. Even in this sense, I think their effectiveness is limited and for only certain demographic groups.
Some of these aren't that recent. 'Gross' goes back to the early 80's at least.
Well, it came from the Douglas Copeland novel of the same name. What relation that has to the old Billy Idol band, I don't know.
I don't recall that. Corky said 'bastard people'; perhaps that's what you were thinking of. The use of that phrase was a very distinct character trait, which is what made it funny.
When did the word garbage become an adjective? Is that a millenial innovation?