He was first introduced as a Thor character, and despite the evolution thene hasn't been that tightly tied to the X-Men.
He was first introduced as a Thor character, and despite the evolution thene hasn't been that tightly tied to the X-Men.
I kind of want the justification to be that it's a perfectly normal Latverian name.
At least she kept up the family tradition of making movies that are really quite depressing.
Kang's apparently locked up with the FF rights too — using him and a great big time-paradox plot would have been another strong follow-up.
Cletus the spiky-jawed yokel.
He's chosen to wear a tall pointy hat with a wide brim.
"I don't think there's anything in television history that can compare to what might happen over the next decade or two."
The rapid of uptake of TV early on, but run in reverse?
His guest star roles often amounting to deus ex machina probably don't help as a pitch for buying the regular series.
Played Alpha Centauri? The place you end up in isn't that great….
I flew longhaul recently, in a way that went through about four different carriers there and back. They *all* mentioned the Note 7.
I can see how there being precisely one animal Inhuman might have inspired that.
Yes, the origin appears about half-a-dozen issues in — doesn't sound like a big wait compared to some of the convoluted mystery origins that came later, but it was obviously a retroactive decision by the standard of that era.
If you do that, you'll just be asking why all the backgrounds are so static during the magic scenes.
I've seen Doctor Strange (out in Britain already), and the injury and surgery elements are probably going to be your biggest concern about taking your nephew.
The middle ground between low-budget films and multi-million dollar spectaculars seems to have gotten less viable over the years, which makes smooth progression for directors between the two more difficult.
Never had the pleasure of visiting Glasgow, though.
So you've been there, then?
Part of it might be that Japanese popular legend attributed abilities to them far less connected to reality than James Bond is to real-life spying, so getting to historical reality and deciding whether that justifies saying that ninja as such were real is difficult.
Was “meathead” common slang in the ’40s?
It was the name of a minor Tex Avery character back then (the dog in the Screwy Squirrel cartoons), so I'd guess so.
"Zettai boku no jam", probably.
And, y'know, that poison's not going to be any *worse*….