Nothing tops Raiders. Except, Nazi chick in the last movie was the hottest Indy girl.
Iron Man 2 and Thor are next on Marvel's slate. Green Lantern is in preproduction. Martin Campbell is directing it.
Batman: The Brave and the Bold. Spectacular Spider-Man. Iron Man Armored Adventures. These are airing on Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon.
nah, that's on hiatus. i read about it. there's a script, there's a cast, there's a director. warner bros just doesn't want to make it yet.
Wikipedia would have served you better. ****, I already covered that Darkseid killed Bruce in this thread. You're just hurting yourself. And regarding Captain America, the series that deals with him coming back to life started last week. So yeah, he's not staying dead either. Would have been good idea instead of providing false answers. It's actually not as common as you think.
You know, I was always told that if I didn't know what I was talking about, that I should keep my mouth shut. Guess no one was around to give you guys that life lesson.
All depends on what you're reading. Books like Amazing Spider-Man, Captain America, Invincible Iron Man, Dark Avengers, etc. are connected to each other, sharing a universe. It's even more explicit at the moment with the Dark Reign storyline going through all these books at the moment. Marvel Knights books are strictly non-canon and there's also the Ultimate universe which is covered by all the 'Ultimate title' books or now they'll be 'Ultimate Comics title'. I'll be honest here, this isn't the regular Spider-Man book. It's from Ultimate Spider-Man, but as it stands this is from the last issue of that book. As far as we know, Peter's dead. They plan to bring the book back as Ultimate Comics Spider-Man, but it may be someone else under the mask.
Yeah, you go do that.
This is difficult to explain to someone who hasn't read the issues in question. "Batman's apparent death occurred in Final Crisis #6 when he confronted Darkseid. Batman proclaimed that he would break his "no-gun" rule while facing Darkseid. Wielding an Apokalips-based gun, Batman shot Darkseid in the shoulder with a radioactive bullet made of Radion (the bullet used to kill Orion), just as Darkseid unleashed his Omega Sanction, or the "life that is death", upon Batman. However, the Omega Sanction does not actually kill its target. The Omega Sanction sends the consciousness of the target into parallel worlds. Although the presence of Batman (Bruce Wayne's) corpse would suggest that he is dead, at the conclusion of Final Crisis it is revealed that Batman had been sent to the distant past where he is able to watch the passing of Anthro." In essence, he's both dead and alive. But for all intents and purposes, Bruce is dead and **** is now Batman. ... the ****?
What am I meant to do to prove to you guys short of posting every ****ing page of three issues that cover this? Strange's house blew up. This wasn't portal magic or whatever the ****. This was **** everything up magic. Everything in the vacinty was wrecked to **** and Spidey was in the epicenter and copped the blast head on. Hulk was there too, but survived because he's the ****ing Hulk. The next issue has absolutely no dialogue and no ****ing Spider-Man. They search high and low and find **** all, apart from the mask because he wasn't wearing it. Kitty Pryde phases all up and down the joint and guess what, no Spider-Man.
There was no blood. Dr. Strange's house blew up and all that was left was the mask.
hey, if Batman and Captain America's death is considerd news, then why the **** not. Yeah. He's dead.
Back in 2006, DC COMICS launched their first weekly comic book series, 52. This was a milestone for the comics industry because up until then, almost all comics had been monthly. 52 ran for a year, and never missed an issue. It was then followed up by Countdown and Trinity. Both series, never missing a week. And with the conclusion of Trinity this year, DC decided to do something a little more ambitious. Wednesday Comics. http://www.newsarama.com/comics/030919-Wednesday-Comics.html The premise, get a bunch of top industry talent and let them play with whatever characters they want, free of continuity and anything else that hinders new readers and let them tell a story serialized over 12 weeks. The idea, to evoke that nostalgia we all had as kids reading the Sunday comics in the newspaper. And today, DC announced via their Blog that they have struck a syndicate deal with USA TODAY. http://dcublog.dccomics.com/2009/06...superman-strip-to-be-serialized-in-usa-today/ On Wednesday July 8, USA TODAY will print the first strip of John Arcudi's and Lee Bermejo's Superman story. For the following 11 weeks, USA TODAY will post the remaining strips online and promote them in the newspaper. Wednesday Comics itself is still only available at comic shops at present, priced at $3.99 per issue. A project like this is what everyone has been waiting for. You don't need to be familar with the characters, you don't need to know their history or who they are. It's just like those comics you read on Sunday when you were little. Fitting that comics are finally back in the medium where they were created. And while Wednesday Comics itself will only run for twelve weeks, Dan Didio, Editor-in-Chief of DC COMICS, has stated that he would like to see the project continue should it get the amount of attention it deserves. This a big step for making comics accessible again, and who knows, maybe they'll finally be available in grocery stores again.
Next they'll start on the Zoids and Evas. Then we're all ****ed.
you're not black. you cannot play that instrument.
so you knock them out first, duh. that's standard whether it's rape or not.
Yeah, but a blowjob is an obligation. Not an option.