uncommonlaw--disqus
Uncommonlaw
uncommonlaw--disqus

I'm sorry, I know it's been a day since you posted this, but I have to ask—even more than Liefeld's?

No, the Stonecutters are dead and buried. Hail the No-Homers.

Two, I suppose. They got it done in two parts back in 1990.

I'm surprised they're waiting to see how this turns out before making part two. That seems almost prudent for a film studio these days.

I remember him because he was an important character from Charles Soule's much-too-short run on "She-Hulk".

New York City??????

Something like that, but the why is an ongoing debate. There's your version. There's the "Carrie Fisher kept blowing her lines so Ford just said 'I know' to get it over with" version.

I had a similar thought.

Shark Attack 3: Megalodon. And that's literally the least memorable part of that movie. There is a line dialogue in this movie that is the bad movie equivalent of "Frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn." A line so inappropriate that this movie will always belong to the ages. I'd quote it, but you really need to

You remember it, though. That's probably more than most people can say. I certainly can't remember it.

No, it's a movie so it does not COUNT. It's not possible for it to COUNT.

Are you counting The Mummy's Hand? Because that's THE best evidence for your hypothesis. When the time came to do a sequel, Universal chucked Imhotep the living dead priest with magical powers in favor of Kharis, the walking dead dude in bandages being controlled by some pissy Egyptian priest, and basically started

In some fairness, the original shared universe was organically created out of a mixture of financial bravado (The Wolf Man was a huge hit) and desperation (The Ghost of Frankenstein not so much). So why not capitalize on the one successful property to help bolster the other.

Nor would they be comprehensible.

Yeah, I don't remember that. And I find that I have no desire to sit through the movie again. So I'll take your word for it.

After reading these comments, I am forced to conclude that I should watch "Banshee". Happily seasons 1 and 2 are on Amazon Prime

She's not old enough…(Googles and finds it is so) I'll be….Of course, I remember very little about Kindergarten Cop.

Probably because the series went into production before Jughead was explicitly asexual in the comics.

No, international law. Which remains one of the areas of law I've never had an opportunity to actually practice.

You're probably right, but the actual application of the copyright probably pertained to the actual album, or something like that. The specific arrangement of the recordings, along with the lyrics and music of the songs. I do remember even my professor commenting on just how screwy music copyright could be, and that