avclub-cfe912f5cb3aa572bd1c9ae2a9b82207--disqus
Craig J. Clark
avclub-cfe912f5cb3aa572bd1c9ae2a9b82207--disqus

Likes are back, but editing doesn't work.

stick with, damn it.

I think I'll stick with Killer Condom, thank you.

There's actually a rather sweet, queer-themed fantasy film called The Wolves of Kromer that would be a terrific tool for teaching children about tolerance if not for the scene where one of the characters talks about his fear of vagina dentata.

A sweet girl killing people with her vagina?

Or Technicolor Films That Will Sear Your Optical Nerves Week.

No Red Shoes?

That was obviously part of their "Rice to Meet You" campaign.

If you're talking about the double murder at the cabin up the road, that was done so the police would think the killings were part of a spree and not that the one family was targeted.

Caption Time

@avclub-28b1819668d7c62501acb9852cad10a9:disqus I get where you're coming from. If I hadn't just read two JSA trades, I would have have been completely at sea when it came to the supporting characters in one of the stories (the Golden Age "Jesus Society of America"), but there's so much more to Marshal Law than the

Because for Mills, the point was not the superhero parody, full stop. The superhero parody was merely his vehicle for satirizing issues like the (mis-)treatment of soldiers with PTSD, the military-industrial complex, the gulf between the haves and the have-nots, and so on.

This may surprise you to learn, but I was not bothered at all by the costuming choices.

I don't see why that would be an issue. If you're going to satirize something, it helps to understand it inside and out.

I read Marshal Law: The Deluxe Edition. It changed my life, man.

@Scrawler2:disqus You were able to watch Behind the Candelabra with your grandmother. You can do anything if you set your mind to it.

Mumblecore has been in existence for about a decade

Forgive me if this is out of place

I'm just doing my duty, ma'am.