scoutinthenight--disqus
scoutinthenight
scoutinthenight--disqus

I thought the whole cream comment was cut out after the initial airing. It's been a long time, I didn't remember Homer having a response.

Would you like some cream with that?
*cut to commercial*

I was the only person in the theater who laughed at the Chinatown reference. I did't expect the kids to get it, but was depressed none of the parents did.

I'm amused by how many products in Blade Runner died and then came back.

I made the mistake of watching Diablo the other day. Walton Goggins chewing scenery was fun, but everything else in that movie was terrible. The guy looks alot like his father, but definitely doesn't act as well.

But you're also getting Scott Eastwood, so I'm dubious that's a gain.

My local game shop would frequently have tournaments with weird formats. The "Tribal" tourneys required every creature to share a common type, and 60% of the cards in the deck had to be creatures. I messed up so many people's combat math by playing a Wall tribal deck where I used Fortified Area to give everything I

More than half of what's getting reprinted are Modern staples, which is a very popular tournament format. It was the same thing with the Expeditions from the Zendikar block.

It was not banned fast. It was a four of in every top eight deck of something like three pro-tours before they acknowledged it was a mistake and banned it. And that was despite one of their designers writing an article saying it should never have been printed and was going to warp the metagame.

I've watched them more recently, since I picked up the Disney DVD releases. However, those releases sort of suck since they're "Compilations" not seasons. There are tons of episodes left out, and they're not even remotely in airing order (the episode where the Justice Ducks first show up before all the episodes that

Darkwing's 25th anniversary is coming up, and they started printing comic books for it again this year.

I don't buy the "disowned" it line. It was animated by a different group, because Disney took forever to actually notify anyone that they were renewing the show, and their regular animation studios were working on other projects. From what I recall (I only caught a couple of the shows when they were running, since

I joined the Disney Club just to get that DVD release. They did actually do another release of it about a year later, and it's still available:

Split personality? I thought he was from an alternate dimension. Quackerjack is clearly the Joker analogue.

I think there was maybe one Ducktales episode with the Phantom Blot. I had an uncle loan me some large compilation books of Disney comics, and I loved the Phantom Blot in those. I kept an eye out for him in the animated shows. If I recall correctly, it was one of the few episodes that also had Donald Duck in it.

Byung-hun Lee is in the best "Western" of the past decade; The Good, The Bad, The Weird. He's the only reason I've considered watching this.

The Glass Key inspired Yojimbo, which inspired A Fistful of Dollars, which inspired Last Man Standing. The Glass Key and Red Harvest were inspirations for Miller's Crossing. There were two movie adaptations of The Glass key, as well. It makes for a fun day watching through them all, seeing how they blend certain

I'd be clever if it was right. In interviews Kurosawa said that he was inspired by a Hammett novel, but it was The Glass Key and not Red Harvest.

"The Salvation" is an excellent western, and "Slow West" is pretty good, too. "Jane Got a Gun" was fantastic up until about the last ten minutes, which are somewhat easy to ignore. Others have mentioned "Bone Tomahawk". I liked it, but didn't think it was as great as the hype around here had me expecting it to be.

Everything in those clips looked like it could have come straight from a DC or Marvel show/movie. Maybe that's Amazon's way of trying to sell this, and not indicative of the actual show, but if you're just aping your target it's not really parody.