jofis82
jofis82
jofis82

Thank you. When I read that I thought again, Steve Ditko gets the shaft.

Jack Kirby didn't work on Spider-man. That was Steve Ditko.

Look everybody - I still play Magic occasionally, but I sold my 30-some Revised dual lands for $100/per about a year ago. It was awesome, and I did it for store credit and walked out with a decade's worth of new games. I don't know why anybody would pay that much for cards you can't even use with the modern game

"John Carter of Mars." Despite Disney's intentional tanking of the film for a pre-Star Wars purchase tax write-off, this was a very good sf film, as true to Edgar Rice Burroughs' original novels as was practically possible, and one of my favorite films in recent years. (And developing a major crush on Lynn Collins as

It's set up for a sequel already! Seriously, if Del Toro and Mignola want a closure to the series, they'd better get to it before Ron Perlman is even too old to play the titular character.

There was chatter about this, the sequel (Arctic Thunder) as I recall was going to be about the actors doing a film about the Shakleton Expedition, RDJ was going to try and play and eskimo. Normally I'm not big on sequels to comedies (and for good reason) but I think this one would be similar but different enough to

Would you mind defining "ruin" in that context? It's not like Mars has wildlife for us to screw up, it's not a delicate eco system we can decimate and it's climate is already pretty hostile. The things we've "ruined" on this planet are all related to their interaction with life. Unless we start finding those things,

I had a baby sitter who wouldn't let my He-Man toys to be brought to her house because "H-Man doesn't have the power. Jesus Christ has the power."

There are a handfull of reasonable people in Kansas.

P.S. Send reinforcements.

I want a far-future Star Trek where the Federation is crumbling under the sheer weight of too many planets, too many conflicts, etc and the story could evolve around a new ship being given the old name Enterprise as a symbol of the Federation's golden age as it takes on missions to try and retain as much peace and