theotocopulos
Theotocopulos
theotocopulos

Yes, and in the comics, he’s now changed his name to Morales.

We can argue specific rankings, but the Dominik thing is as good excuse as any to provide a retrospective on Monroe’s actual work. When people like him say “Does anyone watch Marilyn Monroe movies?”, someone needs to stand up and reply, “Yes, and here are the ones worth watching”.

2.  Good to know, but I see that Spotify does have the 2022 remaster of the Low Fi EP as a separate album. Listening to it now!

Maybe it was a transcription error? (as the “[song]” was inserted) Loggins may have just meant that to him, Dylan represents the quintessential rebel or concept of rebelliousness.

Ser Pounce’s Animated Adventures!

This does raise intriguing potential for an expanded universe in which Nora Durst is Proxima Midnight.

PROTY!

Fat Man and Little Boy! I remember that, one of the first movies I saw at the theatre. Dwight Schultz as Oppenheimer, Paul Newman as Leslie Groves, and John Cusack as some totally made-up character!

Crossfire Hurricane (which came out on HBO) was surprisingly good. I thought I’d seen/heard it all about the Stones, but Morgen somehow made them seem vital and fresh again.

I also read that Dylan recorded his own version of “Mississippi” because he was aghast at what Sheryl Crow had done with it. He had done a rare thing for him, which was gift an original composition to someone else, and she had turned it into a rollicking, happy upbeat number. His own version was more like the dirge

You are perhaps thinking of the trilogy of movies based on the hack-n-slash video game Dungeon Siege?

And then there was the one with the robot defendant.  It went to circuit court.

Unmentioned, but the haunting baritone singing “Little Bit of Rain” belongs to oft-forgotten folk-rocker Fred Neil, the songwriter of “Everybody’s Talkin’” (famously covered by Nilsson).

St. Gerard gets my vote, if only because he played in Elvis in four different projects: Great Balls of Fire, Heart of Dixie, the 1990 Elvis TV series, and an episode of Quantum Leap.

Disappointed this was not an adaptation of the Alan Moore/Melinda Gebbie graphic novel. [Edit: Oops, missed that this was mentioned in the article. Still, shared universes are still in vogue, right?]

Not really, as the rainbow effect was applied specifically to the letters in the word “PRIDE”.  But if you want to claim BI-Frost, go right ahead.

This was me, except it’s not just the mere fact that it includes the Batmobile. If the Batmobile were easy to drive and use, that would be fine. But the game insists that you toggle the Batmobile between two modes, a street mode (in which driving is relatively easy) and a battle mode (which has offensive power but is

Agreed with all the negging on Tron: Legacy here; as a fan of the quirky, awkward original, I found the sequel to be prettily designed but hollow. However, its story had what I think are two awesome little reveals in the context of greater Tron lore.

Rave, imp!

Remain in Love: Talking Heads, TomTom Club, Tina by Chris Frantz