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Post by Phil Maurice on Feb 9, 2017 20:38:50 GMT -5
Comic: ASM #121/122 Boring choices I suppose... That rings a bell. Not boring at all. I think it marks you as a genuine taste-maker!
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Post by Warmonger on Feb 10, 2017 9:23:40 GMT -5
Movie: Jaws
Comic: Moore's Swamp Thing run (re-read it in its entirety once a year on average)
Song: Metallica - For Whom the Bell Tolls
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Post by The Captain on Feb 10, 2017 9:41:23 GMT -5
Movie: In the theater, it's Rocky Horror Picture Show, which I've seen upwards of 35-40 times.
Overall, it's hard to pin down, but it's between Army of Darkness, The Mummy (Brendan Fraser remake) and National Treasure.
Comic: X-Factor #87. Not even close.
Book: The Silence of the Lambs. Used to read it annually, so it's probably around 15 times or so.
Song: Close race between Lips Like Sugar (Echo & The Bunnymen), How Soon Is Now (The Smiths), and Pictures of You (The Cure).
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Post by Batflunkie on Feb 10, 2017 13:57:56 GMT -5
Movie- Knightriders Comic Book- Robin Annual #3 (Elseworlds) Song- Talking Heads: Facts Of Life or Gary Numan: Stormtrooper In Drag
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Post by Deleted on Feb 10, 2017 18:25:32 GMT -5
Movie: Return of the Jedi
Comic Book: The Dark Knight Returns
Song: Rush's La Villa Strangiato
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Post by Phil Maurice on Feb 10, 2017 20:16:22 GMT -5
Song: Rush's La Villa Strangiato Oooo! There's a blast from my prog past. Time to exercise a little self-indulgence and pull out my Hemispheres LP. Nice pick!
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Post by codystarbuck on Feb 12, 2017 12:26:04 GMT -5
Movie: A Christmas Carol, with Alistair Sim. I've watched it every year, since early childhood. It is the best translation of Dickens you will ever find and, by far, one of the best redemption stories ever. Comic book:that's really tough. I've read a lot of them, multiple times. If I was going to be pinned down about it, it would be the Manhunter Special, from Archie Goodwin and Walt Simonson, collecting the story from Detective Comics. Song: again, tough to do. The one band I come back to again and again is Concrete Blonde. "Joey" was their biggest hit; but, my favorite is "Ghost of a Texas Ladies' Man." It marked the return of Harry Rushakoff on drums (after drug issues, though he hadn't conquered them and would depart again), it showcases Johnette Napoltano's voice well, and Jim Mankey plays amazing guitar on it. If Miles Copeland hadn't been such a d-bag and promoted the band, instead of fighting with them constantly, they would have been huge, not a cult favorite.
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