Yeah, it's the Lego Gap. You and your kids can both appreciate Legos, but never in quite the same way.
Yeah, it's the Lego Gap. You and your kids can both appreciate Legos, but never in quite the same way.
I for one, welcome our new Elephant overlords.
I was just thinking that.
Well, that's why I said "adult film" rather than "porno". Regardless, it's a rather curious reference for a comics story, particularly in 1970, when comics were considered kids' entertainment to an even far greater degree than they are now.
Don't forget that the title of the stoyline title "I Am Curious (Black)" gets its title from a famous adult film.
"For those of you bemoaning Spielberg for slopping on some sentimentality and ruining Kubrick's "real" intent, realize that Kubrick was going there already."
Remember, too, that Chaykin's original concept for The Flash was a world where superheroes are banned and Flash (and other DC heroes, in cameos) operate illegally. (The networks balked at this approach, and the series ended up as a more straightforward superhero tale.) The original concept would do even better today,…
Robots of Death and Talons are a couple of my favorites. If you're not up for buying the DVDs, many of these stream on Netflix. Worth a look.
Ah, that explains the prevalence of fanboy targets. I get it.
While there are a few titles on this list I have some personal affection for, I'd argue that all of them are better choices for the competition than most of what's there.
Feh. I was looking forward to participating in this when I read the article title, but when I perused the list of movies I discovered how heavily it skews away from "films that are actually bad" and towards "films that fanboys love to hate".
Nice work. I don't think I could have resisted putting an ellipsis before "ears".
True that SyFy used to be a great place for space shows, but most of their recent focus has been on shows like Warehouse 13, Alphas, Being Human; their movies tend to be Eco-disasters or Mega-Croco-Shark-asaurus monster flicks. I hope you're right and they remember that they had success in the past with space opera…
Bear in mind that for a lot of people, that fifty-cent-cheaper box of cereal can be a big deal, especially when added to a lot of other purchases of cheaper and less-healthy food.
Perhaps if Abrams' Trek 2 is really successful, TV networks will decide they need to do shows set in space. Oh, wait, that's not out until 2013. (sigh.)
Yeah, FX knows how to keep a show focused on the characters.
(Sigh.) Didn't see the word "spaceship" even once.
And for the umpteenth time, I find myself thinking, "What the hell is that weird pink thing…oh, yeah. Right."
Absolutely. Use of superglue to close wounds is routine now. Imagine how that would sound to a surgeon of a hundred years ago. "We just glue it shut."
Nicely done! Also Warner was Chancellor Gorkon in Star Trek VI. Oh, and he was in V, also, as the Earth Representative. (Meaning that in Trek alone he's played human, Klingon and Cardassian. There's another whole trivia category there.)