It may be more accurate to call The Outrage an adaptation of the Broadway play than a remake of Kurosawa’s film, as the dialogue is virtually identical to the play script’s, only with a few tweaks to better suit the American West. The expanded backstory for the married couple adds an...
I know that it is first-hand – without being Jennifer Aniston – because every time I have to vocalise (when prompted) that I won’t ever be getting married, the reactions I usually get make me feel like I’m either the bearded-woman at the Victorian freak show, or I’m accidentally...
The Last Mechanical Monster.Brian Fies’slatest graphic novel will show up here in a couple of places. This is a funny and touching story about heroes, villains, and the nature of connection. I thought hard about putting it here, because there is quite a bit of sadness near the end… ...
This one’s an odd one for me, because on paper, it should be everything I like: post-apocalyptic, superheroes, first-person shooting, driving in an open world, but for some reason it just never attracted me. I even really liked Avalanche’s Mad Max game that preceded this one. It ...
The whole point of the Loving Hero Paradox is that it’s created to make the heroes look, and feel, good. They aresacrificingsomething, you see. They are giving up the thing that makes them who they are, and distinguishes from the loveless villain. And they’re doing this so unselfishly...
You could also disrupt the momentum of the racer on the top platform and time it so they fall, forcing them on the same track as their rival. Should you manage to disrupt them momentum of the latter racer, you can make it so they block off their rival and take damage from them in...