Agnostics are often characterized as ambivalent or wishy-washy fence sitters who refuse to make up their minds. But…
Agnostics are often characterized as ambivalent or wishy-washy fence sitters who refuse to make up their minds. But…
Peripherally related: I know someone who had a stillborn daughter last fall. About six months after the stillbirth, someone was going through her back posts for some reason, and came across an ultrasound picture she had posted early on in her pregnancy and commented on it.
It was a sweet, nostalgic finale with just the right amount of familiar faces. (Okay, I wouldn't have minded one final scene between Artie and Lindsey Wagner, but . . . .)
And I was glad to see that Leena was not forgotten in the end.
The Spice must flow.
I've never seen the movie, so I can only assume this is the scene where he tries to resurrect Jerry Garcia as some sort of guitar-lich.
Not only did he THINK he was the most important man in the universe, he was told so.
The other big contenders I haven't seen mentioned yet:
For its time, Barry Windsor Smith's Weapon X was pretty groundbreaking, at least in comparison to other popular comics. I kinda liked Logan before WX, esp after Frank Miller's run, but totally fell for the brutality of his origin. BWS artwork, which I always viewed as primal, is perfectly suited for this story arc.
Marvels by Kurt Busiek and Alex Ross
The one I always go back to read.
Wolverine miniseries.. got me into collecting and I still re-read it.
This gave me chills back in the day. I counted the days until the next issue.
The lead up to the and the Phoenix saga in the X-men. First time I saw Wolverine go beserk and hack a bunch of minions to pieces John Byrne style.
Alright, technically it's several of them, but it's still a really fantastic retrospective/nostalgia trip of the company's first few decades of stories. Lovely art too, from back when Alex Ross could be bothered to draw more than three distinct faces
God Loves, Man Kills
I want. So bad! I like the Beast plushie more than I like her dress. She did a great job on her hair, though.
I admire her confidence and courage. And I'm being 100 percent sincere.
Interesting buildings, but the overall design of Brasilia was terrible. Massively wide roads in the central area that make being a pedestrian almost impossible, a sectored pattern that meant that, for example, you'd have a pharmacy district with four or five right next to each other, but not intermixed with…