bradthebiggestdad--disqus
BradTheBiggestDad
bradthebiggestdad--disqus

Inevitably - it is a story that came from a human mind.

As far as physical capabilities go, he's generally shown in comics as having the vague "peak-human-or-maybe-slightly-super-powered" business that Captain America has, where he's better than any normal human at everything to the exact degree needed to tell the story you're reading.

Look, it's obvious that the current superhero boom couldn't have happened without contemporary effects technology. It's way easier to use older techniques to make someone seem super-strong or even like they're flying for a few seconds than it is to make them seem like they can, say, stick to a series of surfaces at

Who is in turn more qualified than Dr. Laura

I'll admit my main reason for not following this show is that I've known too many people my age whose life goal is to look like, act like and be, not Zooey Deschanel, but a Zooey Deschanel character, and especially this one.

The sad part is that the "both sides are just as bad" narrative has been so heavily slammed into the brains of many Westerners (as a form of anti-Commie Cold War propaganda that equated socialism with Nazism and vice versa) that they are unable to understand that it's an issue, that it represents a failure of nerve or

No, it's nothing more than that, you've pretty much nailed it. It's a re-skinned version of a game called "Dynasty Warriors" that's… you run around in a giant arena and fight off comically large gangs of enemies that swarm you. Then there's some animated cut-scenes. That's it. It doesn't have a ton to do with Zelda

Yeesh, these games make StreetPass sound like a nightmarish dystopian movie.

No, it's a relatively ancient TV creation and this painfully obvious story belongs to the pre-Wikipedia Internet.

On a related note, could someone point me to any real example of this supposed "creepypasta" "phenomenon" that's actually creepy?

And how Mike behaves at the end of the first movie. That's the truly inexplicable part of the movie, to me, and what makes it good horror.

Oh, man, I would've died if I'd had to go sleep in some cabin or tent after that first time I saw it.

When I briefly binged on the new series, I reached a certain point and every other episode began to turn into "one creepy image we'll explain later" and it kind of lost all impact on me. You can't really do "Blair Witch Project" every time and just switch out the witch dolls for schmitch dolls. And I never even got to

Don't know if it's as simple as the other replies to your comment, because the truly scary part to me at the end was Mike's behavior, which seems to perplex and frighten Heather. She loses sight of him, then he leads her to the basement, and she doesn't act like she believes him at all but rather like she's deathly

It still has one of the better endings I've seen for a horror movie made on any budget, big or small. Nightmarish, in the sense of seeming like a nightmare I might actually have. How Mike acts and how Heather reacts in the movie's last seconds sent me out of the theater with a chill up my spine.

While me, on the other hand, I like Adam Wingard and would like to encourage him to make good movies.

Reading that Adam Wingard directed this was roughly as disappointing as reading that Duncan Jones directed Warcraft the movie, and for the same reasons.

I don't think so, Tim.

It would be pretty nasty if Hormel™ bacon had already been found in 2015 to come from horses, not pigs, so I dearly hope that's not the case.

The board of Hormel™ meat manufacturers was recently discovered to contain three active Neo-Nazis who were not fired but given raises, that's a common rumor that should be easy to dispel.