They've been very successful at making Gideon a villain we love to hate.
They've been very successful at making Gideon a villain we love to hate.
That was a great (If obvious in hindsight) reveal, and having Old Man McGucket be the builder makes perfect sense.
Mission Marvel looks like the most crassly opportunistic crossover since the Jetsons met the Flintstones, but oddly it might work if it went the other way, with P & F guesting in a comic and treated in a more realistic manner: a pair of brilliant adolescent boys whose inventive genius rivals Reed Richards', but who…
There's always room for giant robots! And really, the mo-cap suit is a sensible option.
Anyone have the (I think) NL Big Book of College? My college roommate had it and we loved it. It had some stuff I still think about, like the idea that college professors can get away with completely stupid, lowbrow humor and their students will eat it up ("A plumber who wears a light-up bow tie is considered a…
Yeah I kind of remember that one, but until it was mentioned and briefly summarized here I had absolutely no memory of it, something it has in common with a lot of TV I watched back in the day.
I disagree, but who am I to argue with a doctor?
No. I saw it, and while it wasn't the worst thing ever, it was far from
good. The range of tones and storytelling devices that some (well, a
few) are calling "daring" just struck me as indecisive and choppy. IMO
the only thing that might redeem it is a Phantom Menace-style fan edit.
The same thing could have been said about The Mask of Zorro, except that was actually, you know, good.
Sidelined from acting by chronic back pain.
I approached it from the opposite direction: when two actors were filming a sex scene, were they really doing it? (outside the context of actual porn, of course)
"From the Twilight Collection"
It's even worse if you try to use it on a mobile phone.
Oh, the same for me, and I don't regret going for one minute. (Also, I was 17 and staying in an unfamiliar city, so there was the thrill of being on my own—just getting there was an adventure in itself.) But I hadn't been to many live shows then, and SatB was one of my favorites, so it was a disillusioning example…
Touché.
Oh wow, I remember that used to be on cable a lot, and it stood out as one of the craziest of an already-crazy genre.
"OKAY, BRUTHA!"
I was a big fan for several years, but only saw them live once, at Lollapalooza. It was thrilling just to be there, but a big outdoor stadium wasn't the best venue for their rather delicate, Peepshow-era sound, and Siouxsie was hoarse that day. I've always loved her voice and it was kind of sad to not hear her at…
OK, I was an MTV kid who had never even heard of Siouxsie before "Peek-A-Boo" came out, but I bought Peepshow, and . . . didn't even like it that much at first. But for some reason I kept listening to it, and it really grew on me, and then I started checking out their older stuff. Once and Twice Upon a Time are both…
Cf: Chris Ware on the term "Graphic Novel"