I can do both!
I can do both!
"Canon" is a term that refers to a defined series of works; it does not refer to an authoritative list of "things that count the most". People referring to it without distinction normally simply mean "that portion of the story which is legitimate within its corporate context".
he basically falls to the dark side because he dared to be open-minded about alternate Force techniques outside the Jedi dogma
I loved Traitor as well. It so brilliantly reinterpreted and subverted the traditional Jedi morality system, giving it real narrative depth. That all of Stover's ideas were thrown out and Jacen was portrayed as a dupe whose heresy led him to an inevitable darkness was a significant factor in me dropping out of the EU.
Isn't that basically what was happening every time someone invited a foreign king to invade their country?
Sure you can have levels of canon. Canon is a mutable concept, not a law (excluding Canon Law of course).
"Oooooh, a quotation. How authoritative." — 1derer.
The end result of the non-tax credit competition version of things is that one or two locations becomes immensely wealthy while the rest languish. The wealthy places don't make everyone wealthy, they create structural inequalities, and most of their generated income fails to trickle down. Then, when tax credits are…
New York offers tax credits for movies too. I'm sure it's done for a reason: http://variety.com/2014/fil…
1.The first (50 issue) story arc of PAD's X-Factor run, plus some of the second.
2. Brian K. Vaughn's Runaways
3. The first volume of Scott Pilgrim
4. Fraction's Hawkeye
5. Lemire's Essex County
6. DnA's reinvention of Marvel Cosmic. All of it.
The one good thing about that movie was that it reminded everyone that practical effects are still a thing that films need to use.
Well I'm a Canadian, and I'm not vapid at all. I'm a mix of solid and liquid, truth be told.
China hates this dude a lot.
This is basically The 100 in a nutshell:
Given what Family Guy is like, I think the chances of the latter episode happening are basically nil.
The 100 drove me crazy. I wanted to like it, but the themes on the show are so shallow. There is never any reasoning behind what they're doing, and Finn's role as a quasi-pacifist has essentially been to simply be portrayed as ineffectual, without any discussion of the implications of his attitude.
I enjoyed this. Hurray!
Exactly. The terror of Dracula comes from the combination of him being unseen while the various atrocities he creates are very seen.
Are you saying that Bones has a story now? Which season did that happen?
Say whaaaaaaaat?