Part of me can sort of imagine it. Because RDJ can make anyone or anything look good.
Part of me can sort of imagine it. Because RDJ can make anyone or anything look good.
If you're thinking of the female character with the dragonfly wings in X-Men: First Class — that wasn't Janet Pym / Wasp. That was a character named Angel. (Which is gloriously confusing, since an original member of the X-Men team was code-named Angel, but that was a blond guy with angel-wings named Warren…
Nah, if it's really, really dark enough, then you can't miss it.
I'm not sure if this will help, but I always thought it kind of tasted like what we call "cream soda" here, which is sort-of vanilla-flavored? Except I think Dr. Pepper also has some additional flavor notes; it's been far too long since I've tasted it to say more than that.
I knew it because of the Cadfael books.
I feel the need to be pedantic and note that the correct quote from Buckaroo Banzai is, "No matter where you go, there you are."
Speaking as someone who has been a dinosaur fan since she was five, and for whom dinosaurs were featherless for about 30 years — finding out that some dinosaurs (therapods specifically) had feathers made them EVEN COOLER and more BADASS. I love this concept. The only reason I want to see a Jurassic Park 4 is for them…
I could have sworn, in the promo that came out a while ago, that when they showed Giancarlo Esposito riding in, he was carrying a gun (like, a rifle or shotgun). Which I immediately noted, saying, "Huh!", because prior to that I was assuming they were operating on Dies the Fire principles, which would have meant no…
I don't know, I think the pilot of SG-1 gets a sort of extra handicap, because it wasn't just a pitch for a new show — it had to function as a bridge from an existing 2-hour movie, and remind you of all the elements from that movie, resolve the essential "problem" of the movie (Daniel Jackson was left on Abydos), and…
It's astounding. I assure you, from having rewatched it recently, that you have probably forgotten some of the craziest costumes. (They aren't pictured above. No, not even Jenna's.)
It's probably hyperbole to say that if SyFy goes that dark with a new B7, it's a mistake, because yes, BSG was very popular.
I think this is a very good, even-handed summary. It's not that SGU was "bad". It's that it was really a new show with only the most tenuous relationship to the Stargate franchise. The attempts to exploit that relationship just pissed off the people who were fans of Stargate, and you're right, the title confused…
That would be a simple explanation, but it doesn't really take other evidence within the movie into account — such as Loki's capture and presence on the Helicarrier being part of his plan, and as revealed by Black Widow's interrogation of him, part of his plan also being to use the Hulk to cause havoc. Add those…
Right — in the TIH movie, Bruce controlled the Hulk up to a point. And the ending seemed to imply that he was gaining even more control.
AFAIK, the explanation was that on the Helicarrier, the Hulk's lack of control was due to one of two possibilities, or a combo of both:
You missed a real opportunity to Photoshop that group in front of the Sphinx...
Totally. Man, he was such a consistently entertaining part of watching "The Legend of the Seeker".
I'm shocked to find out that he actually survived the first film.
Thirded, or fourthed, or whatever. I was reading various other stories about this and thinking, "Am I the only one who remembers that before the movie even came out, the word was that the sequels would be Huntsman-focused?"
Yeah, those are the editions I have, too. Gorgeous. They were some of the first comics I ever bought, I got 'em as they were coming out. *clings* (Man, the late 80s had some really awesome independent stuff.)