team-zissou
Team Zissou
team-zissou

Fantastic Four was the first comic I ever really collected, even before Spider-Man or X-Men. It was the terrible Tom DeFalco run from the 90's, but the core concept is so good that its strong qualities still shone through. I love them because they're a bright and colorful family of classic-feeling characters who just

AVC Comics wouldn't be the same without you @mistersplendiferous:disqus ! I'm not letting you get away that easy mister.

That character has long been Bendis'd into unusability.

Good luck to you both and I hope your wife gets better soon.

Thanks for the info. I went ahead and set up an account at TIF (which I had legitimately never heard of before) and will have that ready to go in case this ship sinks and need a life raft.

Plus the arcade fighting games and Battle & Chase would have been nice. What's disappointing was that they did manage to collect all those games two generations ago.

As someone who - in hindsight - picked the wrong side of the 90s console wars, having the non-censored versions of the MK games on the Genesis was a huge boon for us (no pun intended).

Between MK and Billy Madison alone (and not much else TBH), Bridgette Wilson was an outright icon for preteen boys like myself.

I first saw it as a handheld bootleg copy playing on a tiny CRT television in a comic book store that soon shuttered after the speculation boom ended. It was one of the most 90's moments of my childhood. I was probably buying an issue of War Machine.

My favorite part might be when Johnny Cage mocks Goro, "This is where you fall down" — a callback to an earlier joke that none of the other characters even witnessed. He's just making the joke for himself. What a cheese. I love him.

The Conjuring 2 / spinoff reference is…

I saw it last night and it felt really good to be surprised by an actual good movie. I thought it was scarier than both Conjuring movies which I already liked. Sandberg has a similar style to James Wan that makes it really enjoyable to watch these kinds of movies, with escalating tension followed by a release and

Saw it last night at a press screening. I didn't see the first Annabelle, but I could the connect the dots enough…

A problem with a Spidey cinematic universe is that most of the supporting heroes are just variations of the same powers: Spider-Gwen, Miles, 2099, Silk, etc. It's hard to spin them off in movies without diluting the brand a little and fatiguing the audience on web-slinging.

Batman's such the clear winner in this case because they're actually giving members of his supporting cast their own spinoff movies even whilst building their DCU. There's likely to be movies for Batgirl, Gotham City Sirens, and Nightwing before they even get to The Flash or the Green Lantern Corps.

Found it on wikipedia, sourced from his autobiography apparently. I think I may have misread it though and maybe just the on-location episodes (like the spring break ones or whatever) were filmed in advance.

At the very least, Eric Andre is following in Green's footsteps by being a cult comedian who is in a relationship with a woman way out of his league.

Not just any music video, but one that instantly got voted to #1 on TRL and nearly broke the show, which was typically recorded weeks in advance despite being called "Live." Dude was huge during his 5 minutes of fame.

Hm… did you get past the first episode? She certainly does a lot more than that throughout the season, but I can understand not wanting to watch any further if you could already tell the show wasn't your cup of tea.

I don't think I'd mind this either. The only Hunger Games movie that actually shows you a real Hunger Games is the first one and it does a bad job of letting you see what a Hunger Games should look like.