All this and Stan Lee, too?!? I might be ending my frustration with this show soon. 🙂
Doesn’t she look more like a movie Wonder Woman here than the future one does? 🙂
All this and Stan Lee, too?!? I might be ending my frustration with this show soon. 🙂
Doesn’t she look more like a movie Wonder Woman here than the future one does? 🙂
Too geeked out for words! 🙂
Okay, I’m my old ass is gonna look up what the HELL is an “Instragram trailer”! 🙂
I don’t know about Warner Bros. film executives’ sleeping habits 🙂 , but with all of the motion around the “Man of Steel” sequel, it’s clear the above image keeps them up at night. 🙂
FEBRUARY 2nd UPDATE: And yes, this makes sense when you think about it long enough. Who would Lex Luthor be in 2014? Right! 🙂 So who better to play him (again) 🙂 ?
I don’t think it’s emphasized enough that the brother had an ABC cartoon based on his strip, a rare honor–especially back then.
“Wee Pals” never ran in any paper I remember. But as a little tyke, I do remember this show because it would come on Saturday mornings in the early 1970s. I watched it while waiting for “Superfriends” (then a NEW program) to come on! 🙂
Fanboys have called for this FOREVER!
(And I thought the above was hilarious when I found it on Youtube. 🙂 )
JANUARY 27th UPDATE: I’ve posted “The Dark Knight” version of the 1966 intro before, and now I just found this! LOL! 🙂
MARCH 31st UPDATE: Smart idea!
…..what the show is, and what it’s doing.
Very few comic artists live in the shadow of one work. Art Spiegelman is one.
Django Unchained.
 Screenplay by Quentin Tarantino (adapted by Reginald Hudlin).
 Art by R.M. Guera, Denys Cowan, Danijel Zezelj, John Floyd and Jason Latour.
New York: Vertigo/DC Comics.
244 pp. $24.99.
Is this the perfect medium for this kind of fantasy revenge? The seriousness of “12 Years a Slave” has spoiled, for this reader, the fun of this Western Blaxploitation tale–as a movie and almost as a graphic novel. But as a graphic novel, it works very well. Reginald Hudlin (not-so-incidentially, a producer of the film) proves here that his decade learning how to write comics was well spent: he keeps the level of dark humor and irony throughout. (The line “Who was that nigger?” was a wincingly funny take on the well-known Lone Ranger catchphrase.) Using Tarantino’s original screenplay, Hudlin allows us more backstory of how Django found himself trapped in that chain gang and how his wife, Broomhilda, reached Candyland, the plantation that Django and his white mentor invade to rescue her. It’s the scenes that didn’t make the movie–the killing of Broomhilda’s lovestruck, naive master/rapist/”boyfriend” by plantation owner Calvin Candie, and the conflict between Django and Stephen, Candie’s houseslave–that establish character and conflict well. Had Denys Cowan’s art lasted the entire book, it would not have had the uneven quality it unfortunately possesses. (The collection of variant covers almost makes up for it.) Still, it’s a great Western comic–it’s slow, gritty, deliberate, and sketchy, but in a slick way; it matches the characters and creates the right mood.
And of course I liked this!
DECEMBER 15th UPDATE: So Marvel’s plan is to keep me in the movies for the rest of my life! LOL!