Posts by Michael Sacal
It was, though, heh.
But right now the conversation revolves primarily around Snyder's version, not the character himself.
Spaceballs 2 better open with Helmet and Skroob still on the Planet of the Apes...
Could someone please explain to me why it is that most often than not people erroneously call Lex Luthor Lex LuthEr and Jimmy Olsen Jimmy OlsOn?
What's that about?
I'd compare the eight episode of the first season of Star Trek Starfleet Academy to "Family", the third episode of the fourth season of The Next Generation.
Both revolve around the crew dealing with the traumatic effect of an event in which many died.
As I finished re-watching Dead Like Me, it made me wonder what a crossover between that and Final Destination might be like.
"Guardians of the Galaxy vibes"...
Is there anything either can do to move past this blunder the same way that Batman moved past West's Batmania from the '60s?
Could rehabilitating either of them be something just as simple as Burton's Batman ('89) and Nolan's Batman Begins, or would it require something more drastic?
At the end of the day once all has been said and done, which brand do you think will have ultimately suffered the most from copying the comedic formula Whedon, Gunn, and Waititi used for their Marvel movies in the belief that it would result in massive commercial success, DC movies or Marvel comics?
Could DC or Marvel ever publish anything that would have the same commercial effect on the industry as a whole as when the former killed Superman in 1992?
Let's be honest, if Superman REALLY wanted Clark Kent to be a mask he'd not only wear glasses, but he'd also speak with a thick Southern accent (like a cast member from Hee-Haw), wear a fat suit to appear to be overweight, and lifts in his shoes to appear to be taller.
If true, I imagine the impetus for it likely was that in the final episode of the latter's first season an alien android called Q'Tara claimed that the people that created her intended to turn humans into a food source, which was the same premise as the Visitors from V.
I remember that back in the '90s Hero Illustrated claimed that Malibu Comics planned to publish a comic book crossover between V and War of The Worlds.
I've always thought that would have been awesome and lamented that it never happened.
On the other hand, the Fear Street trilogy and Rebel Moon are films I don't get tired of re-watching (I've seen the former once a year since its release and the latter twice so far, but I am trying to find time to watch them again).
Leave The World Behind, Extraction, Frankenstein and other high-ranking Netflix movies are not ones I'd watch a second time.
Essentially, any criminals on either Law & Order TV series played by actors that passed away between the first season of either show till now died in prison.
Law & Order and Law & Order SVU have been on TV for so long that any criminals convicted to prison for 25 years in the first seasons of either have already been eligible for parole...
I think ever since Gable returned as The Original Grande Americano it was a given that he and El Grande Americano were going to have a mask vs mask match.
I'm pretty sure Gable will lose that one, mainly because Kaizer has made the character his own by now.
Superman killing and Batman using guns is considerably far more accurate to the comic book source material than Aquaman fucking fish, Superman eating poop, and Hawkgirl's ass getting larger from eating popcorn...
Live-action adaptations of these have become far more likely than a crossover between DC and Marvel...
Thing is that only those who watch it on Netflix get to see what happens during the commercial, so all they ever see is Wrestler A win and Wrestler B lose.
The choreography on the WWE shows goes that when the show is live Wrestler A is shown winning and Wrestler B is shown losing, then when it goes to commercial Wrestler B wins and Wrestler A loses, then when it comes back live Wrestler A is winning and Wrestler B is losing.
Storytelling vs commercialism...