chalkshark
chalkshark
chalkshark

The game play is actually a factor in the film? I thought this was just a straight up "us vs. them" science fiction/action picture. I figured the title was just more of Hollywood's misuse of brand names to lure in audiences, like "I, Robot" or "The Lawnmower Man".

Resident Evil:Dead Sea. You know, if it's actually happening on the water.

DC's reprinting "The Trial Of The Flash"? That story line was a trial to read. Canceling the series felt like mercy. Killing the Flash in Crisis on Infinite Earths felt like justice. Why on Earth would they want to punish a new generation of readers by digging up that ordeal of a tale?

I've always had a soft spot for the more obscure villains in any given hero's rogues gallery. I'll take a Gibbon story any day over one featuring Dr. Octopus.

The age of consent is 17 in the state of New York. Since The Amazing Spider-Man is set, again (unfortunately), during Peter Parker's High School years, it's likely that the wall crawler, at the moment of the above pictured assault was, in fact, a minor. The question is, will he risk exposing his secret identity by

Who do I think will be the villain in the sequel? I'm guessing it will be that guy raping Spider-Man in the middle picture. Or the Kangaroo. Whichever one they can build a better story around.

There's an Anne Hathaway comic?

Why is Anne Hathaway stealing Batman's ride?

So, it's a lot like this, just without the ears & jewelry. Shame. It really needs the ears & jewelry.

It was called "Lord of the G-Strings". This "studio" is actually pretty quick on the draw when it comes to producing soft-core lesbian parody versions of popular mainstream films. The last one I remember seeing was "The Insatiable IronBabe".

I think you forgot one. This one is, at the very least, as valid as Tim Burton "re-imagined" version.

What if... & I'm just spitballing here... what if the earlier ship that crashed, in the television series, was not Heston's ship? Kind of opens up a whole new slew of questions, doesn't it? The kind that, maybe, need to be explored in some kind of filmed adaptation of the television show. Cosmonauts would be

The only good thing about a the possibility of a Green Lantern sequel is the hope that , the next time, they'll actually get it right. Admittedly, it's a teeny... tiny... hope. A hope of the smallest order. Still, a hope, nonetheless.

DC does feature a number of female counterparts to their popular male characters, but they own the rights to half a dozen that don't stand in some dude's shadow. Phantom Lady, Liberty Belle, Miss America, Black Canary, Nightshade, Vixen are all decades old heroines with rich histories that DC could be making better

What about this one, or is it too soon to bring back the Romulans?

Always liked her better as a villain. So much lost potential for evil.

Keith Giffen.

Lee & Liefeld are only drawing books. One a piece. Justice League & Hawk & Dove, respectively. If either one of them are incapable of meeting their deadlines, I'm sure DC can find a dozen other artists hungry for the work to replace them. Liefeld is just a hired gun & has absolutly nothing to do with the editorial

I actually think it looks a lot like the uniform he wore on Smallville. It's looking like DC wants to bring their characters in line with outside media designs, I suppose figuring that the new audience they're hunting for is more familiar with that look. I doubt it's mere coincidence that Wonder Woman's new threads

Those that fail to learn the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them. Between 1975 to 1978, DC Comics added 57 new titles to it's publishing schedule. This was done in an attempt to boost sales. 20 of those books died a quick, terrible death, so sudden that many of them were mid-story when they got the axe.