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Demolition Man is one of my favorite films. I'm also friends with the production designer, so it's hard to criticize.

Extremis was nano-technology adapted to heal organic materials. They were using Extremis specifically to regrow appendages, not heal the entire body.

It's good for what it was trying to be and what it was trying to accomplish, but it really could have been written much more intelligently. I felt it was really sort of generic and rushed.

The animated series is a great alternate continuity to the film's universe. I recently re-watched most of the entire run and felt it more often than not had genuinely good, smart science-fiction stories and concepts.

Agreed. If anything, the best reason to revisit the original Men In Black is the practical alien effects. It's also a rather good stand-alone film if you choose to ignore the sequels.

I liked the film upon release, but ever since I've done a lot of thinking and come to the conclusion that it just didn't amount to much. It wasn't the thoughtful film that it should have been and I put that all on Whedon.

I'm going to join this party by sharing my preference for Tangled over Frozen.

Plenty is changing. Since the novels are no longer canon, even within their own universe, all new licensed novels will follow the continuity of the new films. There will no longer be novels that continue the established stories and characters.

Yep: Amnesia Psyduck and Surf Pikachu.

There was also Hey, you! Pikachu!

The canceled 64DD add-on was planned to have online interactivity that would have allowed for patching via the Internet.

I had a similar sentiment towards the "Firefly if done by Disney" article posted on io9 last week.

Oh, totally. As I was writing my comment I had a clear image of Lucas at least focusing on the important characters, but I also remembered him jumping around a lot between their perspectives and that of the antagonists.

Isn't it sad that a completely legitimate desire for a unique prop was fueled by bad writing/cinematography? There should never be a fight scene where you cannot track the protagonist(s).

I thought that was Heather Graham!

I've heard a few alternate theories stating that Sam is either still in the Cage or still in Gabriel's time-loop.

When monsters die they go to Purgatory where they cannot die permanently (they just respawn) so it's feasible that, with enough time, a monster could run into someone that they knew in life so long as the other person was also a monster.

Sam's hair is ridiculously and distractingly long in season eight, but by season nine it's much more manageable.

That's part of what I liked about the original five season-arc: they weren't afraid to avoid cliché formulas or to subvert said formulas. They treated vampires fairly uniquely for such an over-saturated genre.

She was written out because she wasn't relevant to the show. Bringing her back would require some enormous accommodations.