Yeah, that's… a thing James Robinson would do, all right. *sigh*
Yeah, that's… a thing James Robinson would do, all right. *sigh*
I'll likely never play MH again unless it comes to console or PC, but the portable-release model seems to be financially feasible for Capcom so it's hard to question their decision.
I'm curious to see if they've fixed "Wasteland Workshop" so that monsters don't Star Trek teleport out of the arena into the middle of a bunch of farm workers.
…the same thing Nintendo's been doing for ten years? I mean, disappointment I could see, but a surprised reaction is … surprising.
Could be this was already hashed over endlessly in the last discussion, but: aren't a lot of video game series like that, story-wise?
Safe to assume we're not talking about a history hungry archive junkie, because most comics readers aren't that. When you're going from moviegoers to comic book readers, you're slicing a tiny little sliver out of the pie, and then when you go from comic book readers to back issue researchers, you're gonna need a laser…
Don't think about it too hard, but funny story, thanks to a discussion with a plastic surgeon, I am 100% sure that this is the right term even for someone's face.
So I get that you like She-Hulk and read a lot of She-Hulk comic books but there are not enough of you to make a good opening weekend for the She-Hulk movie.
On the contrary, you could stand to raise your expectations a little.
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Evil
I knew who Jessica Jones was a long time before I knew what "Alias" was, other than a TV show with Jennifer Garner, and a long time before there was a "Jessica Jones" show on Netflix. You couldn't really miss her if you were reading Marvel Comics at a certain time. The Inhumans, I had a vague concept of them as some…
And to top off the fact that he was the only member of that movie team to appear in the 1960s, Groot was only in one issue of one non-superhero comic in the 1960s and appeared there as a throwaway villain-monster in a time before Marvel even dreamed of their '60s success with superheroes. Then he wouldn't appear…
That's not true, for one thing, and on the other hand, there were a lot of characters who showed up in those books who don't get a movie, which was my point.
Thanks, I am pretty sweet.
I'm feeling a little insincerity from you over on my side here.
I'm very glad this isn't true.
The comment was worth it just to see these responses. Gee whiz.
It's one of those things that was never that great but now it's important history because of its influence, kind of like how there's enough to say about The Dark Knight Returns that they could do a round table on it here.
I mean, you probably can't fit much more into a paved-over landfill either.
It often has more to do with, "did the person who took this project happen to make a good movie regardless". Blade in the Norrington/del Toro movies has pretty much nothing to do with the comics character, and Marvel wisely wrapped their character back around to meet New Line's.