itt: animated musicals with no bad songs
>>90888101
>animated musicals with live-action remakes that did better than the original animated musical
feelsbadman.jpg
>>90888101
>>90888137
>live action beauty&the beast was better
No fucking way especially with Man-Face Watson as Belle. They literally raped people's childhoods.
Seriously, guys, this Ping guy is suspicious as hell.
>always talks about how he's a man who enjoys manly things
>weird voice
>can't spit
>wants a weird girl
>talks to a disembodied black man's voice
>Name is "Fapping"
Something is up. What do you guys think?
What is a "Black" man?
>>90887930
reverse-traps thread then?
>>90887981
Go right ahead.
What independents animated films are you waiting?
More importantly, PYMTRON IS BACK
>CBR: Nick, I wanted to start by rewinding back a little bit to “Civil War II: The Oath” for some clarification, because there’s a scene towards the end of that book that suggests to me that Steve Rogers is even more dangerous than we’d realized. At the end of “The Oath,” is Steve revealing to an essentially comatose Tony Stark that he has the memories of the Steve that existed before the entity Kobik altered his history? Does he know how to appear to be the exact kind of hero he needs people to think he is?
Nick Spencer: That’s right. “The Oath” certainly provided a little hint that helps to explain why Steve still believes what he believes despite the world around him being very different than the one we obviously see in the flashbacks. “The Oath” was the first place we started tipping our hand on that, and you’ll see a further explanation of that over the course of the next few issues of “Steve Rogers: Captain America.” In “Secret Empire” #0, you’ll get sort of a final answer on that front. By the time you get to that phase of the story, you’ll really understand everything there is to know about Hydra Steve’s background and why he believes what he believes in the face of all evidence.
And, yes, it certainly does appear that Steve is operating with all the memories and experiences of the Steve that we all know and love.
>http://www.cbr.com/interview-nick-spencer-secret-empire-marvel/
>>90887733
>Talking about how dangerous Hydra Steve is has me thinking about this larger story as whole. Essentially, this is long form tale that that’s coming to a culmination with “Secret Empire” a way of exploring Steve Rogers by showing how dangerous he could be and how compassionate he was.
That was always a facet of the story. In many ways, Steve Rogers is the most effective leader, strategist and planner in the Marvel Universe. He’s an incredibly effective guy. As a hero, he’s rarely come up short. He’s successfully led the Avengers against impossible odds countless times.
The fact that he did all that as a force for good means, if you’re trying to do an accurate mirror inversion of the character, he needs to be equally effective. And yes, because he’s freed from constraints, compassion, mercy and goodness that opens up a lot of possibilities in terms of what he can do in order to achieve his goals.
This Steve is only driven by what is necessary and what makes Hydra strongest. Those are things that guide his moral compass. So that makes him an incredibly dangerous figure.
I did “Avengers: Standoff,” last year’s spring Avengers line event, but the genesis of that was a little different. That was a story that we already had planned as an arc of “Captain America: Sam Wilson” to coincide with the 75th Anniversary of Cap, and Tom Brevoort came to me and said, “We’re looking to do an Avengers family event in the spring and you’ve been building this story at the exact same time. Would you be interested in involving a range of other titles and making this event a little bigger?”
>>90887764
It was a natural fit, and worked better as a story that way. It helped us launch the “Captain America: Steve Rogers” book in a more high profile way, so I was certainly eager to do that, but this is obviously a very different thing. This is a line-wide summer event. This is the big marquee event that we do each year. So to get to head one of those is a huge thrill and a huge honor for me because it’s a lot of trust and faith to put in me as a writer.
I have a soft spot for these kinds of stories. I like events. I like big stories. I like stories about the interconnected universe and that draw from as many different facets from the Marvel Universe as possible. I have faith that when these things are done right audiences really respond.
I was certainly eager to do this. When I pitched the entire Hydra Cap story, I immediately told Tom Brevoort that this should be an event, that I didn’t think there was any other way to do this story justice. The genesis of all of it came from me.
I think that’s where a lot of the best events start; they stem from a writer’s belief that you need a bigger canvas to tell a story, rather than trying to retrofit or come up with an event in the room. This is very much just a natural extension of what we’ve been building from “Captain America: Sam Wilson,” to “Avengers: Standoff,” to “Captain America: Steve Rogers,” to this. This is really the logical conclusion.
>>90887779
>“Secret Empire” is a big superhero action thriller, but what I’ve read and seen in the “Captain America” books suggests that it will have some science fiction and space opera elements to it as well in the form of an alien invasion by the Chitauri. Is that correct?
It’s a Marvel event and you want to involve as much of the Marvel Universe as you can. It’s fun to bring in unlikely elements and throw some things into the mix that you maybe wouldn’t in an issue of “Captain America.” So letting it outgrow the initial motifs and letting it become something broader was one of the things that I enjoy about this kind of story.
Steve talked a little bit about what he’s doing with the Chitauri wave in “Captain America: Steve Rogers” — that it’s a plan to wreak havoc and chaos and use that to his advantage. It will also allow him to put more pressure on people to give him more authority and power. The Chitauri are a very effective boogeymen in that regard. The question is, what happens when they arrive?
>You’re also laying the groundwork to bring Maria Hill and Captain Marvel into that story with the talk of the planetary shield in “Captain America: Steve Rogers.”
Yeah, the shield is something we’ve been setting up all through “Captain America: Steve Rogers” and “The Oath.” Maria Hill had given this technology to Carol Danvers that she believes can stem the invasion. It’s an impenetrable shield around the planet.
That’s something that Steve is very much determined to prevent. It’s something he’s racing the clock to beat, so it’s a nice face off between him and Carol Danvers in that regard. He’s trying to prevent this thing from going up while also trying not to blow his cover, and Carol is threatening to pull the rug out from everything that he’s planned.
Do fans of Batman '66 like this movie?
>>90887698
No one liked it.
Forever on the other hand was fairly popular and as the years pass its getting a more possitive vibes. Val kilmer's bruce was great
>>90887698
I don't know (never really watched enough Batman 66 to consider myself a fan), but it's clearly similar tonally. Which doesn't necessarily mean it's doing a good job of capturing what people liked about the show.
>>90887854
>No one liked it.
I did as a kid, haven't watched it since then aside from excerpts. I certainly preferred Forever though.
Yes, yes I do.
What are some GOOD vidya comic books?
The Mortal Kombat X comic was much better than the game's story mode.
Super Mario Adventures, which ran in Nintendo Power.
Late Archie Sonic is good too.
Mega Man has interesting ideas, but got canned before the payoffs could happen.
>>90888406
This
>Sword fell down a hole
Why doesn't jack just jump down, and jump good out of it?
>>90887687
Because whatever is needed to serve the set-up of the plot
Or if you want a satisfying answer, he maybe tried that but still couldn't find it
>>90887687
maybe the sword wanted to be lost
Probably some sort of legendary bottomless abyss.
Jumping down would be pointless because he'd never catch up with the falling sword and they both would be lost down there forever.
Why was he going here?
>>90887356
He was clearly at a disadvantage - his best option was a change of venue.
>>90887356
Better question - why did Genndy choose an Indian Temple for the action segment, and was there supposed to be any symbolism or metaphorical meaning behind the tomb room scene with the dead king sitting at his throne?
How did Jack explode the temple after he killed one of the ninja girls?
I was so confused from that. Did his sonic dagger somehow explode the place?
https://youtu.be/KYniUCGPGLs
>2 billion views
>9 million subscribers
Samourai Jack, Loud house and Spongebob BLOWN THE FUCK OUT
>>90887259
But will it surpass gangman style?
>>90887259
I've never seen this video in my life.
Who watches this shit?
Thoughts on Life With Loopy?
I hated it when I was a kid but watching it as an adult I kinda like it. I admire its unique style and how much effort must have gone into animating it.
I remember seeing a special on how they made that show when I was younger but I can't find it anywhere.
The episode where they go into the world under the couch cushions made me afraid of falling into couches.
I was a dumb kid.
Love it, and KaBlam in general. Was looking at the website of the creators (of Loopy) awhile back.
http://www.wholesomeproductsfilms.com/
Are they gonna fuck?
Is Pyra Magna just a bitch?
No, Optimus's heart belongs to Elita 1. They just have to goddamn meet first!
And Pyra just wants to be Cybetron's lord and savior. Hardly the demeanor of a bitch!
>>90887521
But current IDW Elita 1 is a fucking psychopath
>>90886978
Pyra is shit. Aileron is shit. Barber is shit and he's turned Optimus into shit. Fuck this series, fuck RID, and fuck IDW for allowing this fucking garbage to go 5 years without cancellation.
Why did the Nu52 reboot hate them so much?
>>90886854
>dat Kon pose
>>90886870
He's a strong independent clone
Weren't around in the early 80's when the people in charge were first reading comics.
That's really it.
Is there a better Batman film?
>>90886731
Batman Begins
>>90886731
TDK 2008 is a flawless film beyond superficial nitpicks like Maggie being ugly so no.
http://www.vox.com/culture/2017/3/19/14961738/iron-fist-marvel-review
Agree or disagree, /co/?
>>90886587
>Vox
Disagree>After actually reading the reviewDisagree
>>90886587
I'm not clicking that.
>>90886587
Get an archive page ya dingus.
Battleground is a random rocky planetoid in deep space. No ships, no minions.
Who wins?
>>90886377
Aku.
>>90886377
I feel like hater has been more demonstrably destructive with his powers (Besides ordering minions around, all I can really remember Aku doing is shape-shifting into animals and like, heat eyes or something. Maybe fire generation?) But Aku is the literal personification of evil and can only be hurt by the gods or a weapon imbued with human righteousness (possibly also with godly power thrown in since they were the ones who forged Jacks sword). Hater doesn't have that so Aku wins
h8's gr8, best villain.