flylikesymptoms
FlyLikeSymptoms
flylikesymptoms

Well, to be frank, the fact that he is even getting a phone call about the matter shows that the industry is at least more in tune with how fans believe creators and artists should be treated. It wasn't long ago that they were still dragging their heels about acknowledging Jack Kirby and Bob Kane's role in their

You do realize that he created Cable and Deadpool right? And would recieve on screen credit at the very least and should be in the loop in regards to any film production or adaption.

Cessna? I'm thinking Spruce Goose.

I watched Spring Breakers, I'm fairly sure I had a much better time.

Admittedly calling it heroic is kind of far fetched even though I brought that word up; Leonard killed his wife, John G, however many people Teddy tricked him into whacking, committed grand theft auto as well as assault and abetted in whatever crimes they may have been involved with. Sure Teddy dying was a good thing

There hasn't been much buzz about it but I think the new Gozilla film written by Frank Darabont is going to be amazing if his vision makes it unmolested to the screen, from what I've read in interviews it will be utterly terrifying.

I think any degree of Philly fandom is grounds for being "wrong."

Leonard didn't kill his wife with Teddy's help, she committed suicide via Leonard or at least that was implied. Teddy helped Leonard find a John G. and kill him, then proceeded to use him as a hit-man for however long, but Teddy didn't meet Leonard until after his wife had died.

That's no different than the point I was trying to make, Quixote didn't really have a proper quest because everything he believed was fiction, Leonard was in the exact same situation except he had lost his memory. The outcomes were heroic, but they both in no way furthered their own insane goals.

I don't think its really that off mark considering Nolan's modus operandi is usually a shell game. His strength as a storyteller is in his ability to find the right rabbit hole to jump down where metaphors seem to grab similar threads even if there isn't an outright conclusion to be made. It wouldn't be beyond him to

Biomega

I would say Momento's use of the protagonist who has lost his memory, but instead of a singular moment where the story is derived they instead use it as an ongoing source of tension and conflict. Upon thinking about it, it's actually closer to Don Quixote than the noir films that informed its style and pacing.

It occurs to me that Kirk's prime objective is getting laid by everything he can drop his pipe in.

"The new YA movie adaptation that everyone likes to call "the next Hunger Games" has revealed a bit of behind-the-scenes footage showing how the future factions work."

Of course it takes the power of Zu'ul for the Buc's to beat Oakland, fortunately we normally don't have to bring him out when the Raiders come to town.

"Ugh... wait... it's all so clear now... why in the fuck am I living in Philly?"

Appologies, didn't notice that.

I was speaking about the "balls" joke he makes in TF2, its the one line that I would have found a way around because it just drops the character from buffoon to dick joke emitter.

I do agree he did as well but you can't make a giant swinging dong joke and walk out unscathed. I think it's called Agent X and it is an utterly boring film, not so much as a performance but a non-performance.

First, I call bullshit on Kong over Godzilla. Secondly, I call bullshit on Kong over Godzilla.