"NOBODY CALLS ME A RETARD YOU FRIGGING HOBO!"
"NOBODY CALLS ME A RETARD YOU FRIGGING HOBO!"
3 had too many painfully inconsistent episodes, and really laboured to stay cohesive.
With a 60 year old man.
Antonia Bird continued her work in film in Britain, mostly focusing on tv projects until her death in 2013. http://en.wikipedia.org/wik…
At first glance I thought it was Artie Lange.
He was fantastic in Ravenous, a highly under-rated film that's loaded with gore and dark humour.
WHOA! Whoa, whoa… whoa.
Me too! Between Hannibal and R&M, the summer has more to offer than just never-ending sunshine, life-affirming heat, vacations, beach parties, bikinis and brews!
Fair enough. I hear their name and I have to swallow a gigantic belt of pure NERDRAGE when I think about their disastrous comic run on the Flash.
All your comment made me do is forget completely about whatever the hell this article is and want the new Rick and Morty NOW
Yeah, they're getting worse. Focused far too much on what Oliver wants to see rather than what is actually presented. He makes a few fair points about the body count though, as I'll really miss Wesley, Ben and Leland.
Better get eating, kid!
Wish I could upvote that about ten times. Zod's plan to have Superman kill him is pretty apparent, given that he could have just moved his damn eyes at any time to fry those civilians. Worst game of chicken since the tractor scene in Footloose.
I'm 33 this year, had to learn some hard lessons about life in many ways, and I find it depressing that the guy who is supposed to be the alpha hero, the greatest of them all, takes that long to "figure it out" (and in reality he doesn't, he gets his hand-held by his Kryptonian dad and Lois Lane) and finally step up…
The whole point of Superman, the reason the character has existed for 77 years (as of today) is that he can literally save everyone. He has that potential, and that's what makes is so heart-breaking and poignant that he cannot help his father, who goes when it's his time, in the original Donner film.
That's true of every Marvel and DC book at that time. There was a fairly high proportion of younger and/or female readers, which is something BKV noted constantly on his old forum when interacting with fans.
Except that a huge selling point in the trailer, and the word-for-word pep talk from his Kryptonian father was, "you can save them. You can save all of them." He saves a large number of them, ironically by fighting a gigantic machine in the middle of nowhere, but he fails on a large scale to save thousands of upon…
Because it doesn't him 33 damn years to do it under normal circumstances. The Superman in MOS is a lost, ineffectual chump, probably because his Dad would rather die than have his son help other human beings.
No
When I watched this episode last week (seems like forever ago now) I had been texting with a buddy in another town and all I could send was "ninjafightninjafightninjafight"