chalkshark
chalkshark
chalkshark

Thought he gave a solid performance in Flags of Our Fathers. He was great in the role of Chester Lake, on Law & Order:S.V.U. Didn't know he was featured in Cowboys & Aliens. I'm looking forward to it even more now.

Awesome! Not a Damn thing worth watching on television all week long. Looks like I'll finally be able to finish some long overdue artwork. It'll be nice to have a life without distractions for a change.

This is why no one really trusts Spider-Man.

The first story arc is set in the past to establish how the team came together. This explains why Hal is still Green Lantern in the Justice League, but Sinestro is Green Lantern in the Green Lantern title. It's confusing, I know. I think if we all just take it slow, we'll, eventually, get through it together.

It sounds like they're trying to have their cake & eat it, too. They want it to appear to be a freshly minted "new" DC universe with younger, hipper characters, but they don't want to completely dismiss their 80 years worth of publishing history. Somehow, that's all supposed to be compressed into a mere 5 years, as

Scott McDaniel is a bit of an unknown for me, so I have no idea if Static Shock will be a decent book. The art isn't grabbing me, so I won't be picking the title up. I'm thinking that the most Green Lantern-y of the four GL titles is going to be Green Lantern Corps, which looks to feature Stewart, Gardner, & perennial

It seems very Smallville inspired. I'm not terribly worried about it. Unless DC editorial intends to stifle it's talent's creativity, all it's going to take is a new artist assigned to the book, who hates the design, & either changes it back to one of Green Arrow's more classic iconic looks, or comes up with a whole

It's tough to make a recommendation when it's a total dice roll as to which of DC's rebooted titles are going to be worth the paper they're printed on. It seems pretty clear that these are no longer going to be the characters I grew up reading about, so I'm scrapping all vested interest in formerly favored characters,

It's probably premature to postulate too much information from a mere two pages, but this sure looks a lot like we're going back to the "pathetic-Clark-mooning-over-Lois" paradigm that was the standard, for forty years. It took the Lois & Clark television series to shame DC into moving the relationship forward in the

Would it kill them to start with Betty Brant as his initial love interest?

I very much doubt the cartoon continuity will ever be reflected in the films. Felicia Hardy was shoehorned into a lot more of Spider-Man's back story in the cartoon, because she was a very popular character from the comics, & at one time, had been a bit of a fixture in the series, prior to Parker wedding Mary Jane.

Lion's Gate finally gave up on the Punisher, though I doubt Marvel Studios has any plans to do anything with the property. Columbia Pictures still holds the reins on Ghost Rider, which is why we're getting a sequel in 2012, to keep Marvel from getting the rights back.

Don't look at it or you'll turn to stone! Damn! Too late.

For the record, this was my very first Daredevil comic.

I've become so accustomed to the kick-him-while-he's down style of story telling on Daredevil, that I'm having trouble getting behind Waid's return to a more happy-go-lucky, swashbuckling adventurer kind of Daredevil. Proceeding with major trepidation.

Well, if Captain America can't do it in the movie, at the very least, he can do it in this thread.

Would the worlds of Marvel's "What If" series qualify? I seem to recall an old Quasar story where he was tracking the Living Laser, on the Watcher's behalf, & ended up moving through several of the old "What If" earths, while in pursuit. Granted, thats the only time I can think of a regular Marvel character crossing

What is this? A prototype? Somebody slap some paint on those figures.

Peacemaker, the old Charlton character, who suffered a guilt/shame borne mental illness that drove him to commit horrific acts of violence to further a peace based agenda in the world. He was "haunted" by the criticizing ghost of his father, a Nazi commandant in charge of one of their death camps. As the character