He's like Superman!
He's like Superman!
Yea, the Needful Things trailer really broke the mold with the use of the Peer Gynt Suite in movie trailers. They had the balls to play the majority of the movement and really went for broke in matching it to a darkly comic tone.
https://www.youtube.com/wat…
Is it me or has there been a huge gap in Endgame since the last issue.
I own a page of Bermejo's original art from that book!
What's the score? What does he win if he maintains this lead? Who are his competitors?
Like Adam Scott and muuuuuuusical guest U2?
Winning what?
Do you have a UTI? Because I prefer red.
But it's the only popularity basis. I mean, under the logic of non-comic reading popularity we wouldn't have made an Iron Man movie either and we still wouldn't be making an Ant Man movie.
"He has not yet done this"
I'm not sure what you're saying, but Miles Morales is the highest selling Ultimate title since his own title launch October 2011:
http://www.comichron.com/mo…
Spider-Man's origin and Spider-Man in high school are two entirely different concepts.
If it works, that means they're making money because people are buying the comic, ergo he's popular.
He's been their highest selling Ultimates title since his introduction. Having a bunch of reactionary pushback doesn't make him unpopular. Look at the real numbers instead of whatever unofficial polls you're unable to…
I liked your comment before I was even finished reading, so now I want to give you an extra like for saying "streets ahead" but I can't without signing out and then signing back in and who gives a shit.
At first I read this as "pulled over" and was like, "Ain't that like the NYPD! Swinging while black!"
What movie was that again? There's literally been one action scene set in a school over 5 movies.
Hell, in the Raimi movie, Parker graduated halfway through.
I'm not necessarily clamoring for Morales, but I'm calling shenanigans on your "isn't a very popular character" claim. Explain why he was the only Ultimate book being sold for awhile? Does Marvel typically give a character a flagship book for 5 years and a spin-off tv show just because of "social justice"
Which is what I like about it. When I think Spider-Man I think of a teenaged superhero who is brilliant but never does his homework because he's out fighting muggers after being wracked with guilt for the death of Uncle Ben. Even though that isn't my era of Spider-Man in the comics (or hell, even the cartoon from…
He looks like if Mandy Patinkin had a brother who was disowned by his parents for quitting his day job to become a magician.
To be fair, that does feel a little expected of a reveal and basically hits the same exact storybeats as the original Iron Man, where the hero has to fight his older mentor wearing a similar, but more powerful, suit.
I know, right! Look at the mess Role Models is! (he said sarcastically)