::shudder::
::shudder::
The most important thing they can do is to not come up with any new ideas. Let's just continue to rehash the past, but make it shinier, with more lens flares! Why develop new characters and a carefully developed plot, when we can just rewrite an old episode!
Is there any doubt that this is just a prelude for another DC cartoon movie? I'm not complaining, because usually their cartoons are better than their comics, and much better than their films, but still, I can't help but think the comic will only exist as a lead in to the film, or, hope of hopes, a new TV series that…
Ha, shows what you know. North Carolina passed a law prohibiting rising tides! Science!
Thank you. Very cool!
What is the source of this image? It does not appear to be on the linked article, though I may have missed it. It is quite spectacular.
A little while back there was a story about possible signs of life, or signs that the conditions could exist for life, in the craters on Mercury. Has anyone heard anything new about this? Why are we not funding research into these other planets?
Total side note, we have really lost our way with Sci-Fi nowadays. Where are the great pulp stories of today? I miss the campy old stuff like this that we used to have.
Just your soul.
What do you mean "not prepared"? He has an umbrella and rolled up pants! This man is prepared for anything!
Matt Smith said these guys were the scariest monsters of the series. They hissed a lot, then vanished...yeah...I'm sticking with the Daleks.
I'm touching an old man for money. All my parents' dreams are coming true for me.
Just depends on your focus. I always preferred British classics so that is what I took courses in. Big help when I taught British Lit myself. I could have focused more on American lit, but the heart wants what the heart wants.
Nope, while the original was written before (14th century), it was not really well known until the early 19th century. So it was not part of what Malory translated, which was itself largely taken from Geoffrey on Monmouth and the French Vulgate Cycle.
It actually is just Jack Kirby cologne, but Stan Lee put his name on it and called it his.
Actually, I had to read it in Middle English in grad school. I also had to read The Canterbury Tales and le Morte d' Arthur in the originals as well.
Remember when America spent money on stuff like this? Not anymore.
Maybe I missed it on one of the lists, but if you are going for classic epic fantasy my personal favorite has always been Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. If you have never read the Tolkien translation it is a real treat, especially for Anglophiles such as myself. A British Arthurian tale of knightly chivalry that…
Seriously, "Safety Matches"? What in this image screams safety?!
These are the tendrils of the beast with a billion backs. Futurama fans unite!