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Stark's even making the "Dreamworks Face."

As someone who's been told I resemble both Linguini and Peter Parker, I'm especially amused by that particular mash-up.

I'd be ecstatic if Pixar started making shorts to air before Marvel and Star Wars movies.

Unfortunately, that isn't even true. The color palette for that movie is actualy pretty dull.

Horton Hears a Who really shouldn't be lumped together with the the awfulness of the other big screen Seuss adaptations. It was actually a pretty solid little flick.

And his name is Brieger! Can you imagine how disturbing it would be to see this guy right before you went under?!

Of all the characters, Brett bears the most striking resemblance to his model.

Maybe she has detachable goggles that aren't shown in this image?

Dallas made stupid decisions, but it was an understandable sort of stupid. He let his emotions get the best of him and failed to follow protocol. It wasn't an utterly random and nonsensical type of stupid, like, say, a geologist getting lost despite the fact that he's the guy in charge of mapping everything, or a

That first image looks delightfully Sussical.

This. It seems Futurama's already done a lot to undermine its core values, to the point that I was thisclose to canning it at the end of last season, but unfortunately the show has a maddening way of having just enough good episodes to keep me hooked. If it starts negating the emotional impact that really made the

Manti Te'o jokes make sense here, but I'm not sure io9 is the right demographic to get them.

A photo? I'm willing to bet he still has the suit, and probably wears around the house.

I wasn't too excited about Iron Man 3, but the more footage I see, the more I think it's going to be really good. Mostly because, like the first Iron Man and unlike Iron Man 2, this movie looks like it has a grasp of the meaning of its own story and the tone that's appropriate for telling that story.

Actually, Iron Man has a strong theme of large corporations and the ultra-wealthy needing to take responsibility for their actions and working to help the lives of those less fortunate than themselves, which is kind of the opposite of what I think of when I think of "Murica."

It's actually an American stereotype that we think we're the only place in the world with any real diversity. China, India, and Brazil all come to mind as places that have a lot of diversity, both culturally and ethnically. And in the case of China and India, they also have a lot more language diversity than we do.

I may have gotten a little carried away with the hyperbole, but there's no questioning that scene is one of the biggest "events" in movie history. And it absolutely had a huge impact on everything in the story that followed and how audiences everything that had come before.

Superman: Brainiac actually had some pretty cool stuff going on, especially with its take on Supergirl. It does suffer from Johns' writing, which is bland and on the nose, but the DCAU guys are better writers, so maybe they can take the intriguing plot and execute it well enough to make this movie worthwhile.

Wow, what a great little short film. Really shows that what makes Superman great isn't his powers, but his character.

Methinks JJ could learn something if he paid closer attention to how the big mysteries of Star Wars played out.