I’m pretty much expecting it, too.You KNOW they're going to make a joke like that at some point.
—Patrick
I’m pretty much expecting it, too.You KNOW they're going to make a joke like that at some point.
Amazon Renews Invincible for 2 More Bloody SeasonsInvincible episode 7 was good shit and now I'm totally onboard to watch Jason Mantzoukas handle the voices he has to now.
If this post I found is real, it was an error in the model sheet.Why did they fuck up the symbol on Atom Eve's costume to make it look like an anti-feminist symbol instead of electrons?
AND a Metalocalypse movie finale. My Jaw DROPPED.Venture Brothers movie.
We’re getting The Venture Bros. movie
Plus new Aqua Teen Hunger Force and Metalocalypsewww.polygon.com
AND Aqua Teen Hunger Force.AND a Metalocalypse movie finale. My Jaw DROPPED.
I'm confused why everyone looks so angry. "Angry" was not a word I'd ever associate with the original He-Man, despite each episode containing fighting.Kevin Smith (and Netflix) posted some pictures of the new He-Man show.
To be honest, I was really worried but this looks not bad.
Maybe it's an homage to Dolph LundgrenI'm confused why everyone looks so angry. "Angry" was not a word I'd ever associate with the original He-Man, despite each episode containing fighting.
He's smiling for like, 85% of these credits. He's practically smiling when he throws a punch. He-Man was beautiful, himbo cheese. I'm going to be so annoyed if this becomes some super-serious, man-pain drama from a DUDE WEARING A FUR BIKINI.
I swear to god, Kevin, don't make me come over the the 'Stash and yell at you. I have 15 minutes to kill.
Facebook embeds don't work for me, so I'm assuming they don't work for others. Here's an alternate link:Kevin Smith (and Netflix) posted some pictures of the new He-Man show.
To be honest, I was really worried but this looks not bad.
Hall is right, but on reflection I think he perhaps underestimates the commercial value of that audience and its ability to knock this show. By the time Noelle Stevenson made something new and wonderful from it, She-Ra was but a warm memory for its audience. But He Man, like all the other 80s boy-marketed stuff, is forever alive with its audience's cold grip on everything from their childhoods. [...] the backlash against the new She-Ra came from old men who never watched it then and would never watch it now. But the backlash against a significantly rebooted He-man would come from old men who never stopped watching it and are the only people who would ever watch it now.
If this ends up being pure cheese, then it will be exactly what I expect.He-Man was beautiful, himbo cheese. I'm going to be so annoyed if this becomes some super-serious, man-pain drama from a DUDE WEARING A FUR BIKINI.
It was, but oddly enough for a half-hour toy commercial made in the 80's, it was probably the least toxic of many "boys" shows when it came to tropes. Sure, most of the female cast was wearing bathing suits and go-go boots for...reasons... but they also were usually some of the most powerful characters besides He-Man. Teela was captain of the palace guards, and not there to be He-Man/Adam's girlfriend. The Sorceress was the most powerful figure in Eternia. Evil-Lyn was second-banana to Skeletor, but she was also his most powerful and reliable ally. The villains were usually more comical than diabolical. And He-Man himself was usually so genial, even as Adam, marching around in his little pink-and-purple onsie. He always had a sense of humor, and would more often try to diffuse a situation before he pulled out the Power Sword. I was a huge He-Man fan in the 80's because it was one of the shows were the cast seemed to be happy more often than not. (And I do own the dvds, which, eeesh, that writing does NOT hold up, so this isn't just nostaliga talking.)He-Man is, at its heart, an action-oriented show that appeals to the (stereotypically male) power fantasy, so it's no wonder they're courting the same sort of viewers that made the first one such a success.
Don't know if it's the case here, but from what I understand Japan can sometimes be oddly unreasonable about licensing various assets.I don't understand why a show that's packed to the gills with little easter eggs (shelves in season 2 were laid out in the order of enemy number from the Symphony of the Night bestiary, having both a high potion and regular potion on Isaac's conquered library shelf, etc) was so terrified of using any of the iconic game music. Bloody Tears in season 2 was it.
Case in point:Don't know if it's the case here, but from what I understand Japan can sometimes be oddly unreasonable about licensing various assets.
I don't feel like that's the case with Konami. They seem happy to have other people keep their IPs alive. Lets them continue to rerelease half-assed collections of old games as their sole video game output.Don't know if it's the case here, but from what I understand Japan can sometimes be oddly unreasonable about licensing various assets.
How would that work with that "perfect being" ending?As for more... Netflix has said they might do a spin-off set during a different time period, with different characters.
To me it felt like they knew they were wrapping up the main story with Dracula, Trevor, Sypha, Alucard, etc. and for some reason felt that they had to wrap up all the other storylines they had started, so they rushed endings for everyone else. They could have just left the tension hanging. They didn't have to answer "What did Lenore do with Carmilla gone?", they could have just left it.The whole Forgemasters/Vampire Conquest part felt like an aborted storyline.