I really enjoyed Revival.
I really enjoyed Revival.
King edited the first book of the series recently, then went on to say the books don't need any more revising and stopped. From what I could tell (I haven't re-read the revised versions), it was an attempt to cohesively pull together every volume by adding and subtracting small parts here and there.
I went about replaying these games recently. Friday The 13th is hard, but once you figure out Jason's repeating patterns of movement it becomes a lot easier. It still scares the hell out of me when you he pops up in a room that you enter.
Because of the historical replacing of minorities in films with white actors coupled with the historical dogshit treatment of minority groups throughout this country's history.
The books aren't too clear about anything related to Walter O' Dim. Except that he was raped as a orphan child in the desert and lived another 1500 years before a giant spider-child ate him.
Uh, no. I better see his whole ordeal in Tull in the first movie, as it's one of the best parts of the entire series.
That "Mr. Bojangles dialect" shit with Odetta is one of the worst part of the series. I hope they change the ethnicity of every character to pretend like race never came up in the novels.
"Cable and Deadpool" is very, very good.
If you think things are bad, just remember: the Superman vs. Batman trailer is holy shit stupid.
Is this the Bones/Sleepy Hollow crossover discussion forum?
Can we shame you to stop posting? A lot of people might appreciate not having to read your words.
He said it twice!
To the gaming aficionados out there: I just (kind of) finished Diablo III: Reaper of Souls for PS3. In that, my wife and I beat the story-mode and started playing on Torment I difficulty, but she isn't big on gear-grinding and so has lost interest. Had a lot of fun with it.
Yes, it is.
Can anybody else recommend a (well-done) scary movie about spiders like Arachnophobia?
I have a very, very hard time reading the inclusion of that Coke ad as anything but cynical. The transition of Don hugging Leonard while he expresses his fears of being alone/longing for connection and then changing that moment into a sales pitch to the mass public reads very cynical to me.
Says the Republamongoloid!
I still picture him as Nixon engaging in verbal combat with David Frost when I see him play Scrabble.
There's 80 personalities behind that cool Deadpool costume!
Ghost Stories is a great co-op if I don't want to experience any "brain burn" from complex decision making. I played it, along with Hanabi, for about 8 hours last Saturday and was a good way to decompress after a long week.