Is figuarts the one where they take characters and anime them into uniformity?
I like the idea of all these universes having a neat, artistic common ground so that, say, Isaac Clark looks good next to Superman (Clark and Clark Investigative Services?). But I think the fans are paying a real...
Re: Terminator: Genesis
A good sci-fi movie holds itself up to analysis. Part of the charm of a good sci-fi movie is that it will open your imagination and make you speculate. A great one (Alien, Star Wars, Matrix) will make you think about it for _decades_.
A poorly thought out one (Looper...
Re: Kingsman: The Secret Service
I'm on board. Some doubts initially because I think the Femme Nikita trope is wearing a little thin, but coming from the director of X-Men: First Class? Yes, yes, yes.
When I briefly spotted Samuel L Jackson, I immediately thought of this clip:
Glad they went...
The haters, they will hate. Roadhouse is a cinematic masterpiece. Beethoven's 8th, with roundkicks.
But so much of that movie was centrally 80's. The world is entirely too pussified to handle a movie about zen-bouncers and small town tzars getting cummuppanced (with roundkicks).
Howabout a REC gun attachment and/or ultra batclaw attachment. A beefy rare earth magnet in the barrel of the grapple gun and another on the attachment to hold it together.
This Wiki page on rampage killers is pretty informative.
List of rampage killers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Looks like there was a US school shooter back in 1927
You're right. I was suggesting that probably 5% of people in daily life could be dangerous (not necessarily mass murderers). But come to think of it, even that number is probably way less than 5% too.
I would say no. There have always been homicidal fruitloops. I'd say that saying that a movie, game, rap song etc "inspiring" people is more along the lines of an excuse for what would have happened anyway.
It's hip to be cynical about the "human animal" and how you can't trust people to...
Brian Azzarello's "Joker" is a fantastic view of Batman from the point of view of his enemies.
Grant Morrison's "Arkham Asylum" is a psychotic masterpiece that has been expanded on by other writers, but IMO, never surpassed.
Frank Miller's "Year One", definitely.
Not a comic, but a fantastic...