My thoughts as well. This is what you get when you read both news and sports at the same time. And also prefer sports.
My thoughts as well. This is what you get when you read both news and sports at the same time. And also prefer sports.
But clearly some parents think that kids should go to the movies, and some kids still love going to the movies, or otherwise all those Pixar and Disney films wouldn't be making so much money. I would applaud any parent who told their kids to watch someone better on Netflix, or any kid who told the parents they would…
I was also sort of disappointed that Lex's time in the League ended so abruptly. Then again, I was disappointed in general with Hitch's run (which is slated to end soon).
I can't speak for Dunkirk yet or other kids. But from what I have read about the intensity of Dunkirk, I would have hated it as a kid. (I was very timid. And even today, I am not sure how much I want to see certain war films.)
Some perspective: there was one film on this list even remotely suitable for kids. If you wanted something to take the kids to, Emoji was it.
Could have been a bit better. My wife came down with a fever yesterday and any plans to do something fun fizzled while she rested.
I tend to like chicken breasts without wings, my wife drumsticks, so tend to not even get wings - or whole chickens - any more. So all you wingnuts, more for you!
Luthor has very quietly become one of the more intriguing DC characters since Forever Evil. He's operating as a hero, he's been helping Superman more and more, he hasn't really schemed the way he used to, but we all know he's up to something. But he is far more interesting as an outright jerk AND a hero than he was…
The crazy thing is that Clue is somehow a good movie. Not a great one, but it's a cult classic for a reason.
I like when silly villains become interesting, though. Calendar Man in The Long Halloween. Or the Calculator as the evil Oracle.
I would argue that Paul Dini turned Hush into a very interesting bad guy. But he was the weakest part of the Loeb/Lee story that created him.
I am seriously out of cope. All this endless crap from WashDC, and the world watches in horror. Or in glee, if you are North Korea, poking at us and trying to see if we react. I need to be offline. Rarely has the radio silence of the Jewish sabbath seemed like a better idea.
The details are here (spoilers for a comic from 2010):
The IDW run was such a mess that I forget it existed. The first two or three years were some crazy Hellmouth in LA stuff that Joss sorta kinda worked on, and it had some great moments but it petered out. And then Joss was off the book completely and it was awful. Never mind that Angel was busy doing something in…
There is a reason I said the first year. In point of fact, I stopped reading till late in that run, by which time Joss was admitting he had screwed up.
The term is kind of outdated given how many people of all ages dye their hair blue. Including some older women I've seen who are not stereotypical blue-haired biddies.
If they really wanted to, they could post emergency sketches to YouTube.
Never thought we'd be at a point where this sort of thing would be going on every day. It's a far cry from the novelty of "expletive deleted."
The scheduling problems drive me nuts. In the case of The Autumnlands, I am kind of used to Busiek's problems - I think that he will never be 100 percent healthy again, though gaps between standalone issues of Astro City are not as annoying. But I remember when I was getting that wacky Nick Spencer story with all…
The premise was very interesting, but I read the first issue and bailed. Soule can be a very imaginative writer, but sometimes he gets lost in the Big Idea and forgets the actual ideas needed to carry a story.