Getting a strong vibe of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman off this, but that’s not a bad thing at all.
Getting a strong vibe of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman off this, but that’s not a bad thing at all.
I see the family of the murdered teen is speaking out against the rioting, but I guess their opinion is worthless too, huh?
It’s nice to have, but deliberately incurring a loss to get the tax break does seem like an abuse of the system that needs to be dealt with. After all, insurance companies don’t let you deliberately burn down your business for the insurance money.
It’s nice to have, but deliberately incurring a loss to get the tax break does seem like an abuse of the system that needs to be dealt with. After all, insurance companies don’t let you deliberately burn down your business for the insurance money.
It did beat the Eldorado by a year, and I loved that ‘60s futurecar styling.
My dad owned a ‘67 Toronado, and it was indeed awesome. If living room on wheels luxury is what you want, then front wheel drive is definitely the way to go
We do not speak of it...
You’re still using the name recognition of the existing characters as a crutch.
And of course the tremendous irony of fanfic writers going, “Hey! They used my work without my permission! That’s just wrong!”
Thanks for the recommendation. I will check it out.
I admit, I gave it a miss the first time because I was expecting something along the lines of Marvel’s lame TV cartoons. When I did finally see it on TV, I realized just how wrong I was.
I admit, I gave it a miss the first time because I was expecting something along the lines of Marvel’s lame TV cartoons. When I did finally see it on TV, I realized just how wrong I was.
Raiders of the Lost Ark is a perfect example of why you don’t need to start off your franchise with an origin story. It’s just a huge expository lump that bogs things down, and as so many recent films have shown, assuming that you’ll get to tell the real story in the next film is a risky strategy.
And what makes this stuff relevant is that supercar tech eventually trickles down to more mundane vehicles.
Walter Christie was building front wheel drive race cars at the dawn of the 20th Century, and Chadwick was running supercharged racers in 1907
Up to now, I had no idea that the Lamborghini film even existed
The attention to detail on Perry Mason is fantastic. There are a couple of scenes where they’ve used modern replicas instead of original classics, but considering what a genuine Duesenberg goes for, I can totally understand why they went that route.
I knew before he worked for Chrysler, he had his own design house, and produced some classic designs for the coachbuilt set, but I never knew about the guitar connection. Thanks for the article!
Now, I love the Stratos Zero. It’s one of my favourite concept cars. But when you come up with something that makes the Zero look sensible and practical, that is no small feat.
The literal Cadillac of minivans?