theoligarchicme
TheOligarchicMe
theoligarchicme

The article isn't just about Schumacher's Batman, though. The whole article approaches Batman and Robin's gay subtext as a run-of-the-mill repressed gay culture situation and appreciates Schumacher for carrying on the tradition.

"…a final, defiantly queer victory lap for the Bruce and Dick team."

Look, cyberstalkers have made errors in the past but we've been really committed to raising our fact-checking standards in the past year, okay?

Gone With The Wind: The North Awakens

Has Daniel Radcliffe displayed any of the known risk factors for actors releasing an indie-folk album? I know it's never the ones you suspect, but still…

It can be two things. Like naming a movie about Jesse Owens Race, get it?

Which is notable since Batman is the reverse. The standard superhero origin requires two parts that explain the character's super-empowering and then explain their call to heroism. Superman has lots of power but no particular instigation for becoming a hero, while Batman has no powers but an incredibly tortured and

Where does the part where he tried to get valet parking for Chewbacca fall?

God's Not Dead 2: The Legend of Nietzsche's Gold.

Ironically, this story proves evolution is real since it evolved from multiple copypastas found in older strata of the internet.

Is there precedent for The Purge becoming a cultural touchstone? Are there other not-particularly-lauded high concept movies whose high concept escaped out into the wild?

Impersonating Elvis? What a weird gimmick that only Weezer could come up with. That will never catch on.

It's true! We're so lame.

I grew up in the 1990s without cable TV. Judging by "90s kids" references on the internet, this is apparently indistinguishable from not experiencing the '90s at all.

You could pay them to install Spotify for you.

But isn't he just helping you solve a problem he created?

I'm worried about the emphasis on government regulation to drive the plot of the movie. Given that the movies don't acknowledge the shows' existence, there won't be any other superhumans involved, and having some government authority involved in one team of superheroes is not going to be anything comparable to the

We can. This single work of fiction doesn't, which made it notable in its genre in the first place.

The world is not is suffering from a dearth of fantasy fiction where rebellious princesses go on adventures and overcome society's gender prejudices and knights are brave heroes who totally don't rape and pillage the countryside.

When did you first hear of the plane U-2?