Anyone else find it weird that we haven't heard Don Shula chime in with his thoughts?
Anyone else find it weird that we haven't heard Don Shula chime in with his thoughts?
That scene is probably the root cause of my fear of dolls and my fear of clowns.
Nothing says "kids movie" like vengeful spirits kidnapping a little girl and trying to murder her brother with a clown doll.
It was pretty bad.
That book is not that at all.
They might have to adapt State of Fear into two movies in order to fit in the lengthy and exhausting author's note and appendices that he included.
"It's not a mixture that I'd predict without knowing how incredibly toyetic GI Joe became in the 80s."
This might be a hollow gesture since Discovery Communications, Inc. can just air the same B.S. on one of the other 53 channels it owns. Animal Planet is a perfect home for fake Megalodon documentaries. They can air them in a block with the two Mermaid "documentaries" they have aired.
One of my favorite things about Astro City is how it started out with a mythology already built up within the world. There was a Golden Age in Astro City complete with classic heroes. These heroes are referenced as if the audience knows exactly who they are and what their place in history is. Leaving out a lengthy…
I would like to see T.J. Miller as the voice of Dogpool.
Specifically Timothy Zahn Star Wars books never interested me, but I agree with what you are saying.
I don't know if the success of fantasy novels over SF novels in the '90s was a result of readers being able to digest them more easily or just the market working in cycles. While it's true that hard SF is more challenging to readers than a R.A. Salvatore novel, this downplays the fact that hard fantasy novels also…
I contributed more than my fair share of money to keeping those Dragonlance books on the top of the Waldenbooks and B. Dalton bestseller lists in 1991. The books mainly appealed to me because of their association with Dungeons & Dragons. Plus Forgotten Realms books had Drizzt! Science Fiction shelves at the time…
Brenda Warner's Righteous Flattop
I read that opinion piece on CNN and thought it was a very strange argument. Maybe Mr. Beale just has a very low midichlorian count.
I'm not sure it counts as a subplot, but the omission of Tales of the Black Freighter from the Watchmen movie bothered me. They did the companion movie that came out on DVD, but it wasn't the same. The comic within a comic intertwined so nicely in the original story that its absense was definitely felt in the film.
It would make a great plot for the sequel!
It's hard to believe that the Warrens haven't already locked this item up in their house with Annabelle.
Nobody takes my experiments seriously because I never introduce a control.
I'm really digging that hip robot flavor saver!