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Ryan S.
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I'll take your advice and see what I think when I get to 137.

I haven't even seen a trailer of Westworld so I didn't know it was higher budget. That gives me hope.

Wow, even with skipping it still sounds impressive and fun. I have a lot of those omnibuses also but I haven't really had the time to read them. I eventually will though. I think I tried to do a similar thing a few years back by starting with FF#1 but I think I only got to like 1966 or 67 or something. I remember

I also need to read my Spider-Man and Fantastic Four omnibuses at some point. The Claremont X-Men run reminds me a lot of my childhood because I had a copy of the The Dark Phoenix Saga. I remember liking a lot of the smaller moments like when the team was dressed in civilian clothes and walking through Central Park

Recently, I finished reading the Sandman series in its entirety. I had done so before in the past but hadn't since the new mini-series came out. I loved reading the whole thing again. I probably need to reread Overture a few times to decide how much I really liked it but the original 75 issues are fantastic.

Your Marvel read? What are you doing, reading every comic Marvel put out or something? Would that even be possible? I am planning to read Chris Claremont's entire run of Uncanny X-Men at some point within the next year (Actually, I'll probably start pre-Claremont with Giant-Size X-Men.) I have collected all the

Oh, wow. I think I totally misread you there. Sorry!

I think I agree that I prefer practical effects over complete cgi effects but like I said above, I am still able to believe the effects in most cases, unless they just look totally out of place. I'm searching for examples and and I just looked up stills of the cgi monster from The Host and they look horrible but I

I don't think it's about picking sides. It's about being critical of something that isn't working so the people responsible might try to fix it. It looks like it may be working after how disappointing Suicide Squad was to so many people. We want to love these films but they are just too mishandled to completely

I haven't seen The Neon Demon. Which filmmakers does it pay homage to?

When I'm watching a classic film, I believe all the special effects or miniature work. I am able to completely shut off that part of my brain that notices any of those issues. I am actually so thankful that I am able to do this. I probably wouldn't enjoy movies anywhere near as much as I do if I noticed all this

Of that list, I've only seen It Follows and I loved it. I would add:

I don't really like the idea behind this article. There are too many variables in what makes a film scary to someone. Did you see the film during a first run, or on a small television 50 years later after seeing hundreds of films that were influenced by it? If you saw it at home do you have a good quality surround

My problem with rap is that too much of it hinges on the lyrics and posturing of the rapper, and I just don't care about that and I actually used to be a huge hip hop fan about 10 years ago. With most of the music I listen to now, if there are lyrics I actively ignore any of their content or meaning and just listen

Totally agree. Ponyo is also perfect for someone that age.

Counterpoint: It is probably the greatest movie. The only qualifiers are that you had to see it for the first time at around 8 years old at some point during the 80s. See also: The Monster Squad.

EMT's make jack shit.

I'm probably in a certain niche category of gamers who hates console gaming because I own a projector rather than a television and I have no desire to ever own a television ever again after owning a nice projector. The only thing I ever play is my 3DS despite owning a PS3 (basically and Blu-ray and Netflix machine)

Touch screen controls are great for certain puzzle games… and that's about it.