You pegged it with your headline picture. Despite an emotional attachment to Gigantor, the Iron Giant is my favorite design-qua-design.
You pegged it with your headline picture. Despite an emotional attachment to Gigantor, the Iron Giant is my favorite design-qua-design.
Hulk smash puny soldiers. After Hulk finish this delicious lobster ravioli.
I think that guy runs a deli near me.
You and I may remember the 1978 movie a little differently; Pa Kent was played by Glen Ford, then an important enough actor that his appearance, even if brief, added heft to the part.
Great, more origin. Because I wasn't sure where this character came from.
If you had a Superman based on physics, I think he'd be called Pa Kent, Kansas Farmer.
In related news, the same producers are being sued by Israel, India and the United Kingdom for turning their respective gods and heroes into cheesy movie devices.
By the same reader: "Hey, Professor Tolkein — you know Gandalf was really an elf, not a wizard, right? Man, your books are so fake!"
"War on Science"? A bit of an overstatement, don't you think?
Wait. Leeches have cocoons? Since when?
I blame Jim Lee for this. Decent artist, but he has a distinct vision of how superhero costumes ought to look, which he is now able to export to the whole DC line at will. So outer-undies are ... out, and mock-turtlenecks are in.
I'm with you. Xavier walks, he doesn't walk; Jean is alive, she's dead, she's Phoenix or she's not — I haven't been able to keep it straight since about 1983. Which is why I try to avoid the X-Men comics the way I avoid the flu, incidentally.
"Physics are" or "physics is"? Or either way? Can we get some input from an expert on this?
For what it's worth, I'm a pretty religious guy, and I've been mocking creationism for years. I don't mock creationists — they're people, and deserve my respect. But the sort of claims this article describes are deeply at odds with the old-fashioned Christian approach to nature, which was (and for most of us,…
I'm with you on this. Lynda Carter was in the 5"8"-5'10" range (reports vary), but I distinctly remember reading, when the 70s series was still on, that she was six feet tall. My guess is that the publicity people were exaggerating for just this reason.
So .... once the son gets the crown, does the currency read "Charles in Charge"?
Yeah, yeah, Ledger was great. I mean, he was no Cesar Romero, but still great.
I guess it's about scientists balancing their own natural (and admirable) enthusiasm for their work with care to preserve the measured, objective character of the work itself.
I'm not quite sure I follow. Are you suggesting that the various churches which ordain women (as clergy and, although not in England, bishops) aren't Christian? Because it's not even especially uncommon in the West anymore, and one of the Anglican churches in Africa just chose its first female bishop. Obviously,…
My thoughts exactly.