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JayeTyler
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I mean, neither would I, but the song came out before the show did.

I once read someone highlighting the Cheers reference as one of the reasons why that song's about the Ice King from Adventure Time. It's one of my favorite obviously-wrong-yet-somehow-wonderful internet theories of all time.

"Abandoned Flesh" is a perfect song.

Tartakovsky himself said on a panel that he didn't want to steer away from the original too much, so even though it's on Adult Swim now, they're saving the blood for the really intense moments.

You seem to have misspelled "Walk Hard and Popstar".

Animation. Animation is entirely missing from both lists. Thanks for asking.

I feel like Panel Syndicate only gets credit for the (admittedly great) The Private Eye, because it's behind a name as big as Vaughn; when they're publishing the best, most underrated and unknown current ongoing series, Albert Monteys' sci-fi anthology "Universe!".

I have so many strong reservations.

I find his voice rather charming, but if it helps, I'm fairly sure We Know The Way's the only one he's singing on. The rest seem to be character songs, unlike, say, a "Tarzan".

Agreed. ParaNorman was also nominated that year, which while arguably more divisive than Ralph, is another film that I love with all my heart and probably still my favorite Laika work.

Does this count? If so, definitely this.

I have faith on Moana because of Lin-Manuel Miranda but ESPECIALLY because it has a Bowie-inspired villain song performed by Jemaine Clement. I mean, that concept's hard to top.

I would love for that to be true, especially since Brave was the one to win the Oscar. Still, Brave's troubled production makes it unlikely.

I get that Disney Animation needed it brand-wise, but the fact that Lasseter chose to do it instead of just embracing Sanders' weirder film was more of a business decision than a creative one, which is my main problem with him these days.

It works about half the time. Brave and The Good Dinosaur would've probably benefited from the single creative vision they once had, and the writer and director of Lilo & Stitch deserved better than to be fired over "a film too quirky for its own good", especially to replace it with Bolt, which is pretty much the

I sure do love them apples.

Counterargument: Mission Hill.

Edgar Wright did it better.

Wander Over Yonder is the show for you.