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NobleVices
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Cringe-inducing, but more importantly, corporate designed. No wonder he looks like a clusterfuck of vague patriotism and American capitalist imagery.

An excuse for Bruce to have the Batmobile reupholstered the first time he gets in and tries to tap the gas?

Those leg spikes always concerned me.

To be fair, most men I know would happily go around in that getup if they were rocking that body.

I dredged through my Netflix. It's "Absence." 2013 film. (The whole primer for the plot—not spoiling anything—is that the guy's sister had a nearly full-tern pregnancy just...vanish some time back. So I suppose that's the relation.)

This was actually the gist of a...sorry to be vague, but one of the many bad horror movies I watch on Netflix to have something on my second screen while I work. I'll try to come up with the name.

It's really raining on my face today.

Does anything more need to be said, really?

Dug up famous guys and ladeez!

The ending of that show was the biggest blue-balling television has ever given me.

Interesting. I do much the same thing, though for very different reasons—I lived with Crohn's disease undiagnosed for several years, eventually until the point of physical starvation (dropping from my normal and already lean weight of 125 to under 90. A slow process; I was young and stupid and willful and scared,

A good deal of other modifiers (things like "free-range" or "eco-friendly" and even to an extent "organic," although that has become much more policed in the last five years) are also essentially a crapshoot. Eggs listed as being from free-range hens can mean everything from your local farmer providing a great space

I always felt that was a severely underrated movie. I know that it got relatively positive reviews, but I don't often see people who've seen it. I think it came out at an awkward time and especially with the intro, made most people think it was a very...generic wacky comedy movie rather than a quite neatly done

I agree. And not even so much a drug haze, though that was clearly present (from what I remember, anyway, it was some years back!) but very much a society that had done this for long enough that it seemed right and normal, and no one wanted to look very hard anyway.

More like a society far beyond what the writers could ever imagine in terms of scope, connectivity, and in this case, easily accessible fully automatic weaponry.

I feel the same way in that I've never felt I had any issues writing for male characters, but I do seriously wonder if it might be harder for men to write women at times because of basically what the article talks about—there are a dearth of movies and other media that contain enough women to create lots of meaningful

He has the perfect "feel" for Strange—the strong features and the ability to use them in a very animated fashion, and that sort of rugged handsomeness on an older man while still looking refined and sleek.

Re: Costume. I don't know if Marvel's MAX line ever did more than a miniseries for Strang Tales, but I remember some art for it that was very much the direction I'd imagine they'd roll with in a more cinematic take of the costume. Less cape, more long/gaudy jacket. You can make deep color variants look good on

I saw this movie when I was a bit too young to have seen this movie, in large part because hey, that guy from Jurassic Park!

Interestingly, I've gotten strangely different responses in comic stores when I come in for comics, and when I come in for Warhammer figures. I suppose part of it is that the customers and people working the front have different interests, of course, but oh man have I gotten grilled about Warhammer stuff, like people