Nothing so silly as a children's game where you wander around your neighborhood and wait for a cartoon animal to pop up on your smartphone screen.
Nothing so silly as a children's game where you wander around your neighborhood and wait for a cartoon animal to pop up on your smartphone screen.
Well, I don't play fantasy football or Halo, either.
See, this is why I can't get into Pokemon Go. People take this shit WAY too seriously.
Well, there's also the moment when Murtaugh pats down Riggs' jacket after they get up from the explosion of Daisy(the prostitute)'s house, and Riggs waves him off with the muttered line, "Hey! What are ya', a f@g or something?"
Superman! He had a great run on Adventures years ago…
Okay, since the comment board is now awash with such things, here is my list of things they left off of this list that should have been on this list:
Holy crap, Tropic Thunder should absolutely be on this list! If Josey and the Pussycats can make spot #48, Thunder deserves at least… oh, I'd say #24. (Take THAT, Obvious Child! I haven't ever seen the film, so I don't care if it gets knocked off the list!)
"If that random non-character was a wife instead of a husband, would that lessen his depth?"
Hmm. Well, that's ironic.
Doc wasn't even aboard the ship himself— he was on his own bridge, screaming at his crew of Klingon redshirts to get out of it before it blew up.
"Hometown Pride", indeed.
Rats. I was hoping that he wouldn't still be carrying that thing around…
I respectfully disagree. I prefer Denny O'Neil, capable-but-not-infallible Batman.
This preview tells us exactly as much as the last issue did: there are now two heroes named Gotham and Gotham-Girl. They can fly, and they have super-strength. We literally know nothing else about them.
Those costumes are atrocius. Then again, I guess they match the characters' stunningly stupid, on-the-nose names: "Gotham" and "Gotham-Girl"?
Originally it was because he was completely inexperienced with the ring. When he first got it, the Green Lantern Corps was in complete disarray and the Guardians were trying to turn all life in the universe into a gaggle of mindless zombies (which is a long, LONG story), so there was no one to train him when he was…
In my corner of the Internet— amongst the fanboys and comic geeks— the refrain was that she was a stick figure, too skinny and wimpy to be an effective, believable Amazonian warrior.
Well, crap.
Well, yeah, it should be kinda obvious that we haven't met the Punisher— Bernthal's Frank Castle was a human being, complete with emotions, vulnerabilities, and some degree of empathy and complexity.
I'd call her a lackey at best, a tool at worst. Nebula had virtually no character of her own— she was just there to execute Ronan's will. It's not hard to see why the author would forget her.