31 5 / 2012

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

… Slow dancing in a living room as the morning light tells you that you should be going to work…

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29 5 / 2012

Lazy Bones

Sound of Blunder pokes its head out from under the rock where it’s been hiding.

Lazy Bones

Sound of Blunder pokes its head out from under the rock where it’s been hiding.

28 5 / 2012

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Sweet dreams, University of ifer

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25 5 / 2012

appropriatedcomics:

Artwork taken from “Mass Meeting!” in Weird Fantasy, Vol. 1, No. 16. Story by Bill Gaines and Al Feldstein, Art by Joe Orlando.Click to enlarge.
Commentary:
Note: Obviously, the caption in the first panel (“Los Angeles, 2057 A.D.”) is not apart of the original.
Also: the beginning of this one is similar to the “Mentor Bot Aldo” post. I guess I’m developing motifs.

appropriatedcomics:

Artwork taken from “Mass Meeting!” in Weird Fantasy, Vol. 1, No. 16. Story by Bill Gaines and Al Feldstein, Art by Joe Orlando.

Click to enlarge.

Commentary:

Note: Obviously, the caption in the first panel (“Los Angeles, 2057 A.D.”) is not apart of the original.

Also: the beginning of this one is similar to the “Mentor Bot Aldo” post. I guess I’m developing motifs.

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18 5 / 2012

Today is indeed the day!
Tickets may still be available for our screening in LA at the Downtown Independent. Click HERE 

Entrance is also screening in NY!!! It’s playing this week at the IFC Center on Sixth Ave. Cick HERE for showtimes!

I don’t know if I can express how absolutely amazing this whole process has been, but suffice it to say: We couldn’t be more proud of our little film and the fact that we’ve been given the opportunity to show it to the world.

Today is indeed the day!

Tickets may still be available for our screening in LA at the Downtown Independent. Click HERE

Entrance is also screening in NY!!! It’s playing this week at the IFC Center on Sixth Ave. Cick HERE for showtimes!

I don’t know if I can express how absolutely amazing this whole process has been, but suffice it to say: We couldn’t be more proud of our little film and the fact that we’ve been given the opportunity to show it to the world.

18 5 / 2012

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

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14 5 / 2012

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Something that caught me so off guard, I ended up loving a song I’d never thought twice about before.

14 5 / 2012

The countdown begins. Our film is coming out on Friday, May 18th thanks to IFC Midnight!  Check VOD, iTunes, XBox, and Playstation. For those living in the Los Angeles area, come to our screening at the Downtown Independent @ 8pm Friday night!

The countdown begins. Our film is coming out on Friday, May 18th thanks to IFC Midnight! Check VOD, iTunes, XBox, and Playstation. For those living in the Los Angeles area, come to our screening at the Downtown Independent @ 8pm Friday night!

13 5 / 2012

Edward Furlong has been hiding in plain sight.

Splashing on the scene with 1991’s Terminator 2, where he became the envy of every pre-teen American boy who had the secret wish that their father figure was a helicopter-gun-toting cyborg from the future, Mr. Furlong had an awful lot going for him and almost as much going against him as being a young teen with star power in 1990’s LA. To say he reveled in the the limelight may be a bit of an understatement, but time and consequence has managed to catch up with him in a cursory search over his exploits 20-some-odd years later. 

I don’t know what the hell I’m doing writing a post about him other than I (for some morbid reason) decided to watch the inconceivable Pet Semetery 2 earlier today, and now I’m waiting for my laundry to dry.

He’s still out there working away on movies. I imagine he’s learned a life lesson or two along the way. There’s always going to be a part of me that will wonder what the conversations were like between Edward and Tara Reid on set for The Crow: Wicked Prayer (2005). On that film, Edward played Jimmy Cuervo (a.k.a. The crow’s latest incarnation), and I’m pretty sure they had a lot of war stories to swap and a lot of knowing-looks to share. Good night, Edward Furlong, wherever you are in LA. May you rest easy and have your dreams filled with easy decisions.

Edward Furlong has been hiding in plain sight.

Splashing on the scene with 1991’s Terminator 2, where he became the envy of every pre-teen American boy who had the secret wish that their father figure was a helicopter-gun-toting cyborg from the future, Mr. Furlong had an awful lot going for him and almost as much going against him as being a young teen with star power in 1990’s LA. To say he reveled in the the limelight may be a bit of an understatement, but time and consequence has managed to catch up with him in a cursory search over his exploits 20-some-odd years later.

I don’t know what the hell I’m doing writing a post about him other than I (for some morbid reason) decided to watch the inconceivable Pet Semetery 2 earlier today, and now I’m waiting for my laundry to dry.

He’s still out there working away on movies. I imagine he’s learned a life lesson or two along the way. There’s always going to be a part of me that will wonder what the conversations were like between Edward and Tara Reid on set for The Crow: Wicked Prayer (2005). On that film, Edward played Jimmy Cuervo (a.k.a. The crow’s latest incarnation), and I’m pretty sure they had a lot of war stories to swap and a lot of knowing-looks to share. Good night, Edward Furlong, wherever you are in LA. May you rest easy and have your dreams filled with easy decisions.

03 5 / 2012

appropriatedcomics:

Artwork taken from Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis No. 4. Story by Hal Barwood and Noah Falstein. Script by William Messner-Loebs, Dan Barry and Mike Richardson. Art by Dan Berry.
Commentary:
http://youtu.be/fNo4jGKvDzY

appropriatedcomics:

Artwork taken from Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis No. 4. Story by Hal Barwood and Noah Falstein. Script by William Messner-Loebs, Dan Barry and Mike Richardson. Art by Dan Berry.

Commentary:

http://youtu.be/fNo4jGKvDzY

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