All because I made an otherwise boring Q&A, with dead ideological philosophers, humorous and informative with my interpretation of the K-Man himself.
Hence, my nick-name is now “Karl Marx.”
Hey guys: I wrote a new article up right now on Dorkly: 8 Real & Fictional Addresses of New York City Superheroes. Click through to see photos & more!
Marvel likes to set their superheroics in real world locations. Mostly New York City. Which is where I live now! So I walked around town, took some pictures, and compared the real locations with how they look in the comics. Did you know Dr. Strange shares his address with a Pinkberry? You do now.
If you love comic book trivia, or if you just like learning about the real places fake people don’t live, this article goes out to you.
YES. Owen made an article for me and all of you!
(Source: owenparsons)
All because I made an otherwise boring Q&A, with dead ideological philosophers, humorous and informative with my interpretation of the K-Man himself.
Hence, my nick-name is now “Karl Marx.”
Oh, Laurence Fishburne, you amuse me so.
This photo deals with the idea of character acting. Photographer Howard Schatz placed various actors in a series of roles and dramatic situations to reveal the essence of their characters.
Laurence’s roles included:
Left: You’re a broke, struggling screenwriter emerging from a pitch lunch at a Beverly Hills restaurant, just in time to see a landscaper’s pickup back into your borrowed Lamborghini.
Center: You’re a stoned, purely mercenary substitute teacher telling your third-graders, “Anyone who makes any noise while I’m resting will be sent home to Mommy in several little boxes.”
Right: You’re a nerdy 11-year-old video gamer surrounded by BlizzCon posters and fellow nerds, and you’re taking this particular session of World of Warcraft waaay too seriously
Read Full Article At: http://www.mediadump.com/hosted-id176-actors-in-character-now-that-is-acting.html#ixzz1FDy9V74P
This is a very real concern.
I love X-Men. I read the comics from 1992 until 2009. I really liked X-Men 1 and 2, I thought Bryan Singer did an amazing job because I understand that the best way to make an X-Men movie is to take the characters and just totally ignore their ages and origin from the comic books. I get that. But I can’t stand including characters just to include them.
X-Men: The Last Stand came out 5 years ago (not long enough for people to forget how bad it was) and it suffered from the too-many-characters-trying-to-do-fan-service problem. It makes me worry that X-Men First Class is going to have the same problem. Don’t get me wrong, it looks great, and I’ll probably go see it opening day, but I’m going into this one cautiously.
[via bryanwashere]