What can I say, that Montezuma guy has a lot of enemies.
What can I say, that Montezuma guy has a lot of enemies.
Spoilers:
Like the fact that they're "trained" at all? :-)
I ejoyed them, and Marceline's dreams were interesting—but Moon's defeat seemed unearned. The last two have some heavy lifting to do to explain the Vampire King's "plan".
Although, in a non-climate change context, they could get very excited about a hero named White Wizard trying to make America a whiter place.
Or at least have something less tiresome to say about it.
Somebody in Gorilla City gets paid to dub the Powers Booth roles in TV & movies. But probably not Grodd.
Not an adaptation of his work, per se, but Crumb is pretty good, IMHO.
Thank goodness Superman is constrained by what real life people can do.
George R. R. Martin in a skinny mirror?
It's not just the actors, but the live audience as well, that probably weren't really up for it.
The lawn mower was a Decepticon the whole time!
And Genndy Tartakovsky's shorts did even more than that in three minutes each.
Part of the problem might be that they have to try for four?
Those Starfleet crews are so well trained, they make every saucer separation look exactly the same. Precision!
Leni Riefenstahl wins if you are big on authenticity in performance as a Nazi.
I had a computer instructor who liked to give "64" on a perfect exam, without labeling it as hexadecimal. It was good for an occasional, if brief freak out.
OK. Maybe another binary nerd will chime in.
Anybody can be an asshole. To alleviate boredom in a constructive (or even genuinely subversive) manner requires skill.
I think that jerking other people off is such a business school thing to do, that engineers disdain such methods.