When did that start?S4 of Only Murders in the Building is arguably the best one yet so far
We’re up to episode five out of ten as of today, so if you’re hoping to scoop it all up inside a month’s membership, I’d say wait until mid-October before rejoining.When did that start?
Have they dumped the whole lot at once or are they drip feeding it.
Probably worth doing the £1.99 for three months.
offer ends 27th. . . but it's for three months anyway so plenty of time.We’re up to episode five out of ten as of today, so if you’re hoping to scoop it all up inside a month’s membership, I’d say wait until mid-October before rejoining.
Yeah, while I didn't think it was the greatest piece of TV, I really liked that it just felt very different from pretty much all their other stuff.Werewolf by night was ok, maybe just not my bag, but I applaud it for being something in the marvel cannon that looks and feels different. This is really what I want from Marvel films and TV. Different series and genres. Some could be murder mystery, some space sci fi, sitcom, horror, tense drama . . . but they all look mostly the same and it's boring.
I'll give it a go. It does seem that Marvel make attempts to take risks and do something different (Wanda, Loki, She Hulk etc) but then just cave in (to studio pressure?) and turn everything into that same old marvel CGI snooze fest.Certainly the most interesting thing Marvel have done on screen for a while.
Alan Moore also did a stint on Marvel's Captain Britain, which crossed over with Marvel's Doctor Who... or rather the Special ExecutiveI'll give it a go. It does seem that Marvel make attempts to take risks and do something different (Wanda, Loki, She Hulk etc) but then just cave in (to studio pressure?) and turn everything into that same old marvel CGI snooze fest.
I don't know much about actual marvel comics so I can't comment, but I really really really enjoyed Alan Moores Americas Best universe. Different stories and characters had totally different genres and styles, (borrowing ideas from 100 years of comic books) but stories and could still cross over in a natural and interesting way. It was vibrant exciting, engaging and fun. Not just a continuing boys own onslaught of dashing do gooder Tom Strong. TV and film has had just as much of a rich history of adventure genres to riff on.
Are you doing a funny? That was ‘V For Vengeance’, and was in Hornet, Hotspur and Victor, not Warlord. ‘V For Vendetta’ was in Warrior.Probably sacrilegious to say so, but I didn't really enjoy Warlords V for Vendetta.
I am unfamiliar with all of Moores Marvel and DC output minus watchmen.
I wonder now if it is too late for me to be enthralled with his earlier works. Did he do some Swapthing? I think I might have read that and not been very interested. Probably sacrilegious to say so, but I didn't really enjoy Warlords V for Vendetta.
I think his complete Americas Best output is his very best, the way it all mixes together, even with other writers (inc Veitch). . . and even concludes all the 'stories' at the end of Promethia. I think my personal favorite was Top 10 which was not directly connected to the Tom Strong universe like LOEG. . . but as a O'Neil super fan, I can't ignore the brilliance of The League if Extraordinary Gentlemen.I tend to prefer Moore's output from that era, before he became a grump but there were occasional comics like The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen that were worth a read.
Sorry I meant Warrior.Are you doing a funny? That was ‘V For Vengeance’, and was in Hornet, Hotspur and Victor, not Warlord. ‘V For Vendetta’ was in Warrior.
Have read very little of ABC, didn't get into Promethea at the time because of the dense prose (at least in the issue I picked up) ... maybe give it a go again, one day.I think his complete Americas Best output is his very best, the way it all mixes together, even with other writers (inc Veitch). . . and even concludes all the 'stories' at the end of Promethia. I think my personal favorite was Top 10 which was not directly connected to the Tom Strong universe like LOEG. . . but as a O'Neil super fan, I can't ignore the brilliance of The League if Extraordinary Gentlemen.