At least the 'clues' motif lends itself to a noir parody.
At least the 'clues' motif lends itself to a noir parody.
You're kinda bending over backwards to justify a character's badassed-ness who has done nothing to justify it yet himself. Space Robot makes some pretty good points.
Here's your medal.
Back in the day I used to be really depressed, and often contemplated suicide. One of the reasons for that was that I couldn't find anybody who could relate to me, or share my problems.
Strangely, the character who saved me wasn't a superhero, but a villain. I read Andy Helfer's Two-face origin story 'Eye of the…
Okay then.
I'd say Robocop has AT LEAST as large a fanbase as Ghostbusters, but I didn't see anywhere near this level of vitriol when it got remade.
If they're Reeds written by Stan Lee, I'm all for it.
How's Bloodshot: Reborn?
I love SH5, but Breakfast of Champions is still my favorite Vonnegut. I don't think any other book I've read captures self-loathing with such poignancy and humor.
I don't really like the fact that Barry's the current Flash either, but Johns didn't bring Barry back. That was Morrison in Final Crisis.
I loved OGF too! There are dozens of- actually no, I don't think there's even a single dozen of us.
Seriously. that 'Fuck you, Liv' shit is something I'd expect if I watched a movie with a bunch of frat bros, not an audience at Cannes.
Really? People hated the depiction of Superman in Man of Steel mostly because they didn't do him like he is in the comics.
I thought he was pretty good in Frances Ha too.
One of the true modern visionaries of the medium. His work on New Frontier made me realize why superheroes are considered modern mythology, and why they're such an important part of American culture.
I, on the other hand, hate animal movies that have people titles. There's only one Bolt dammit, and his first name is Usain!
Working on the Bangla translation of the first Dresden Files novel, and working on a 12-page comic book story. I'm very excited about both, I'm a huge Jim Butcher fan, and it's been an almost life-long dream to write a comic book story.
It's a sequel to the book. It pretty much picks up where the original book's ending left off.
I actually enjoyed it quite a bit, and was surprised by its quality. Palahniuk seems to be quite adept at utilizing the unique advantages offered by the comic book medium. If you can judge it on its own merits, I think you'll enjoy it too.
I assume it's the latter. The review read to me like 'You have to at least give it points for trying something that's not the standard superhero formula.'