lupinyonsei--disqus
LupinYonsei
lupinyonsei--disqus

Only if he was yodeling it, Isis. That was another Derleth "addition".

I just finished reading all of Dr. Strange through 2007, and some of the Englehart/Brunner stuff also has a Lovecraftian vibe to it.

In the great house at Cancer, AIDS lies sleeping?

There's a new documentary on Lovecraft I just found on Netflix (not watch instantly, though):

Quick, someone write something funny so Stacy512 lizzes herself!

Why aren't you over on the HP Lovecraft article, thats Mr Fhtagn to you?

Someone mentioned it on page 1. I have the rule books, but could never find anyone to play with. My usual group was strictly D&D.

In a way, it's an argument for not being too controlling of your creations — I wonder if Lovecraft would have approved of a Creative Commons-type copyright for his creations? Certainly, if he'd been less sharing of his mythos, he wouldn't be as well-known today.

That doesn't sound very metal, Splint.

Good lord, there's a singularity in this thread. Time is collapsing upon itself as Nyarlathotep approaches!

Even had the umlauts. Some Douchebag didn't have any umlauts.

Had a big lunch, did you? Or are you down to bile at the end there?

If you have a Netflix account, be sure to check out the short I mention above. It was well done. I'd like to see him do Pickman's Model as a short.

Still sore, are we, Tom?

Ah, back when Metallica was good…

Stuart Gordon really seems to be the go-to guy as far as "getting" Lovecraft on film. I saw his "Dreams In The Witch House" streaming on Netflix recently, and while I haven't read the story in a while, it struck me as being very close. I certainly liked it well enough to add Dagon to my queue, which sounds like it

I know that, you idiot flute player. That's what the first SHOULD have been on this article.

Magnificent Man-Boobs
Molina's got 'em.

Ia! Ia! Cthulhu Fhtagn!
Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.

And if so, did he bring the funny?