JEM WEPT.
JEM WEPT.
She wrote four non-Harry Potter novels, three under a pseudonym. That’s a lot more than some other authors who’ve hit big with a successful franchise.
Albus is the youngest son, but the middle child. The youngest is a girl.
“Maybe it’s true. Maybe you’re not a soldier anymore.”
Preach it! Much love for Bronze Age Batman here!
If the next Star Trek film is about hotrodders racing a stock car they call “Enterprise” on the Bonneville Salt Flats, I’m sure Io9 will also cover that travesty.
The original series was science fiction.
My friend had it on constantly when I was over at his house—we loved it. But I think Alan Rickman and Morgan Freeman are the ones who make it watchable.
I really wanted to add to this thread, but I had to drop the kids off at the pool.
Close! It’s the alias Jose Chung gave him in “Jose Chung’s Tales From Outer Space”, in his “non-fiction fiction” on the UFO phenomenon. (Scully’s was “Diana Lesky”.)
Crap. I’m going to have to bust out the d12 for this, aren’t I?
The TV version of this chart would definitely include that, plus “Inhuman heritage,” “exposed to terragen mists,” and “HYDRA subcontractor.”
/u/reynard_muldrake, a flaired mod on the /r/IWantToBelieve subreddit.
I don’t think the MCU has used that one yet, so at least it’d be fresh.
Just roll a die and consult the Marvel Cinematic Universe Villain Backstory Chart (film version):
Yeah, Wasikowska is like the new Winona Ryder or Christina Ricci: she nails both period-piece ingenue and modern creepy goth girl (see Stoker). I hope her later career is more successful than those two though.
Watched it! It’s everything I wanted from Vin Diesel playing D&D.
Thanks! Been meaning to watch this, so it’s nice to be pointed right to it.
Rather, science fiction as a genre is one where the film (or whatever media) takes a scientific principle, poses a question or hypothesis about that principle, and then explores the effects of that principle on society/culture.