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hellstromknight · 2 years
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Fantastic Four #278.
For the people that thought comics back then weren’t political and it’s a just now thing.
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The sun rises over a grand arena, where 32 ships prepare to use the power of love, incredible violence and whatever else they may have to battle for the right to be named the ultimate battle couple
The Bracket (UPDATED!)
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(Thanks to feedback, I swapped out Narumitsu with Catradora from SPOP)
Surprisingly few ships got more than one submission, so who got in was mostly based on how excited the submitter felt. If you believe a ship doesn’t count or if I messed up a ship name or whatever, send in an ask! Also if you have a better picture for any of them (but I don’t want to use fanart without the artists’s permission)
matchups
Percy Jackson & Annabeth Chase (Percy Jackson) VS Nicolò “Nicky” di Genova & Yusuf “Joe” al-Kaysani (The Old Guard)
Nagisa Misumi/Cure Black & Honoka Yukishiro/Cure White (Futari Wa Precure) VS Steven Universe & Connie Maheswaran (Steven Universe)
Will Turner & Elizabeth Swann (Pirates of the Carribean) VS Patroclus & Achilles (Hades)
Sora & Riku (Kingdom Hearts) VS Haruka Tenoh/Sailor Uranus & Michiru Kaioh/Sailor Neptune (Sailor Moon)
Suki & Sokka (Avatar: The Last Airbender) VS Kinn & Porsche (Kinnporsche: The Series)
Oliver Queen & Dinah Lance (DC Comics) VS Alphen & Shionne (Tales of Arise)
Yuri Lowell & Flynn Scifo (Tales of Vesperia) VS Flint & Volkner (Pokémon)
Roy Mustang & Riza Hawkeye (Fullmetal Alchemist) VS Zakuro Fujiwara and Mint Aizawa (Tokyo Mew Mew New)
Luz Noceda & Amity Blight (The Owl House) VS Vi & Caitlyn (Arcane)
Madame Vastra & Jenny Flint (Doctor Who) VS Percy de Rolo & Vex’ahlia (Critical Role)
Lancelot, Guinevere & Arthur Pendragon (High Noon Over Camelot) VS Beauregard Lionett & Yasha Nydoorin (Critical Role)
Eleventh Doctor & River Song (Doctor Who) VS Captain Marvelous, Joe Gibken, Luka Millfy, Don Dogoier, Ahim de Famille & Gai Ikari (Kaizoku Sentai Gokaiger)
Gideon Nav & Harrowhark Nonagesimus (The Locked Tomb) VS Drift & Ratchet (Transformers)
Catra & Adora (She-Ra and the Princesses of Power) VS Karen Aijou & Hikari Kagura (Shoujo Kageki Revue Starlight)
Yang Xiao Long & Blake Belladonna (RWBY) VS Kirishima Eijirou & Bakugou Katsuki (My Hero Academia)
King Dedede & Meta Knight (Kirby) VS MC & Amalia de León (It Lives Within)
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ljones41 · 1 year
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Favorite DISNEY STUDIOS Live Action Movies
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Below is a list of my favorite live-action movies from the Walt Disney Studios.  This list is in chronological order:
FAVORITE DISNEY STUDIOS LIVE ACTION MOVIES
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“Treasure Island (1950) - This adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1883 adventure novel starred Robert Newton and Bobby Driscoll.  Byron Haskin directed.
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“Davy Crockett and the River Pirates” (1956) - Fess Parker and Buddy Ebsen starred in this prequel to the 1955 movie, “Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier”.  Norman Foster directed.
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“The Parent Trap (1961) - Hayley Mills starred in this first version of Disney’s film about long-lost twins who scheme to reconcile their divorced parents.  Co-starring Maureen O’Hara and Brian Keith, the movie was written and directed by David Swift.
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“Mary Poppins” (1964) - Oscar winner Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke starred in this award-winning musical adaptation of P.L. Travers series of novellas about a magical British nanny.  Robert Stevenson directed.
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“That Darn Cat” (1965) - Hayley Mills and Dean Jones starred in this comedic adaptation of Gordon and Mildred Gordon’s 1963 novel, “Undercover Cat”.  Robert Stevenson directed.
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“The Adventures of Bullwhip Griffin” (1967) - Roddy McDowall, Suzanne Pleshette and Bryan Russell starred in this adaptation of Lowell S. Hawley‘s 1963 novel, “By the Great Horn Spoon!“.  James Neilson directed.
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“Blackbeard’s Ghost” (1968) - Peter Ustinov, Dean Jones and Suzanne Pleshette starred in this comedy adaptation of Ben Stahl’s 1965 novel.  Robert Stevenson directed.
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“The Love Bug” (1968-69) - Dean Jones, Michele Lee, David Tomlinson and Buddy Hackett starred in an adaptation of “Car, Boy, Girl", Gordon Buford’s story about a magical Volkswagen.  Robert Stevenson directed.
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“Bedknobs and Broomsticks” (1971) - Angela Landsbury and David Tomlinson starred in this musical adaptation of Mary Norton’s children books, 1944′s “The Magic Bedknob; or, How to Become a Witch in Ten Easy Lessons” and 1947′s “Bonfires and Broomsticks”.  Robert Stevenson directed.
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“The Million Dollar Dixie Deliverance” (1978) - Brock Peters starred in this Civil War adventure about a black Union soldier and escaped prisoner of war, who helps five wealthy Northern children being held hostage from Confederate soldiers escape from their captors.  Russ Mayberry directed.
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“Dick Tracy” (1990) - Warren Beatty directed and starred in this adaptation of the 1930s comic strip created by Chester Gould.  Oscar nominee Al Pacino, Glenne Headly and Madonna co-starred.
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“The Rocketeer” (1991) - Bill Campbell starred in this adaptation of the superhero comic book series created by Dave Stevens.  Directed by Joe Johnston, the movie co-starred Jennifer Connelly, Timothy Dalton and Alan Arkin.
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“The Adventures of Huck Finn” (1993) - Elijah Wood and Courtney B. Vance starred in this adaptation of Mark Twain’s 1884 novel, “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”.  The movie was written and directed by Stephen Sommers.
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“The Three Musketeers” (1993) - Kiefer Sutherland, Chris O’Donnell, Charlie Sheen and Oliver Platt starred in this loose adaptation of Alexandre Dumas père‘s 1844 novel.  Stephen Herek directed.
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“Pirates of the Caribbean:  The Curse of the Black Pearl” (2003) - Johnny Depp starred in the first film of the supernatural swashbuckler film series that was based on a Disney Park attraction.  Directed by Gore Verbinski, the movie co-starred Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley and Geoffrey Rush.
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“National Treasure” (2004) - Nicholas Cage starred in the first adventure movie in this film series about a historian and treasure hunter.  Directed by Jon Turtelbaub, the movie co-starred Justin Bartha, Diane Kruger, Sean Bean and Jon Voight.
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“Pirates of the Caribbean:  Dead Man’s Chest” (2006) - Johnny Depp starred in the second movie of the supernatural swashbuckler film series that was based on the Disney Park attraction.  Directed by Gore Verbinski, the movie co-starred Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley and Bill Nighy.
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“National Treasure 2:  Book of Secrets” (2007) - Nicholas Cage starred in the second adventure movie in this film series about a historian and treasure hunter.  Directed by Jon Turtelbaub, the movie co-starred Justin Bartha, Diane Kruger, Jon Voight, Ed Harris and Helen Mirren.
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“Prince of Persia:  The Sands of Time” (2010) - Jake Gyllenhaal, Gemma Arterton and Ben Kingsley starred in this action-adventure adaptation of Jordan Mechner’s video game series.  Mike Newell directed.
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“Saving Mr. Banks” (2013) - Emma Thompson and Tom Hanks starred in this biopic about conflict between author P.L. Travers and filmmaker Walt Disney over the development of the 1964 movie, “Mary Poppins”.  John Lee Hancock directed.
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“Tomorrowland” (2015) - George Clooney, Britt Robertson and Hugh Laurie starred in science-fiction adventure about a disillusioned scientist and a teenage science enthusiast embarking on a trip to a futuristic alternate dimension.  Brad Bird directed and co-wrote with Damon Lindelof.
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“Cruella” (2021) - Emma Stone starred as the titular character in this crime comedy about the villainess from Dodie Smith's 1956 novel The Hundred and One Dalmatians”.  Directed by Craig Gillespie, the movie co-starred Emma Thompson, Joel Fry and Paul Walter Hauser.
Do you have any favorite Disney live-action movies?  What are they?
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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gaymickrory · 7 years
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My 100 Favorite DC Characters
1.     Liv Moore (TV: iZombie)
2.     Rip Hunter (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
3.     Starfire (TV: Teen Titans)
4.     Major Lilywhite (TV: iZombie)
5.     Oswald Cobblepot (TV: Gotham)
6.     Oliver Queen (TV: Arrow)
7.     Arthur Curry (TV: Batman: the Brave and the Bold)
8.     Ravi Chakrabarti (TV: iZombie)
9.     Clive Babineaux (TV: iZombie)
10. Harley Quinn (Comics: Batman: Mad Love)
11. Thea Queen (TV: Arrow)
12. Mick Rory (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
13. Sara Lance (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
14. Ray Palmer (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
15. Kara Danvers (TV: Supergirl)
16. Bruce Wayne (TV: Batman: the Brave and the Bold)
17. Robin (TV: Teen Titans)  
18. Selina Kyle (TV: Gotham)
19. Laurel Lance (TV: Arrow)
20. Wally West (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
21. John Diggle (TV: Arrow)
22. Wally West (TV: The Flash)
23. Cisco Ramon (TV: The Flash)
24. Iris West (TV: The Flash)
25. Jefferson Jackson (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
26. Rory Regan (TV: Arrow)
27. Diana (Film: Wonder Woman)
28. Harvey Bullock (TV: Gotham)
29. Curtis Holt (TV: Arrow)
30. James Gordon (TV: Gotham)
31. Kendra Saunders (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
32. Bruce Wayne (TV: Gotham)
33. Leonard Snart (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
34. Felicity Smoak (TV: Arrow)
35. Raven (TV: Teen Titans)
36. Booster Gold (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)  
37. Amaya Jiwe (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
38. Rene Ramirez (TV: Arrow)
39. Joe West (TV: The Flash)
40. Helena Bertinelli (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
41. The Question (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
42. Peyton Charles (TV: iZombie)
43. Roy Harper (TV: Arrow)
44. Alex Danvers (TV: Supergirl)
45. Edward Nygma (TV: Gotham)
46. Diana (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
47. James Olsen (TV: Supergirl)
48. Harley Quinn (TV: Batman: the Animated Series)
49. Tatsu Yamashiro (TV: Batman: the Brave and the Bold)
50. Martian Manhunter (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
51. Robin (Film: The Lego Batman Movie)
52. Nyssa al Ghul (TV: Arrow)
53. Clark Kent (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
54. Eobard Thawne (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
55. Bruce Wayne (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
56. Amanda Waller (TV: Arrow)
57. Cyborg (TV: Teen Titans)
58. Gideon (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
59. Harley Quinn (Film: Suicide Squad)
60. Lowell Tracey (TV: iZombie)
61. Terry McGinnis (TV: Batman Beyond)
62. Bruce Wayne (Film: The Lego Batman Movie)
63. Blaine DeBeers (TV: iZombie)
64. Cat Grant (TV: Supergirl)
65. Martian Manhunter (TV: Supergirl)
66. Floyd Lawton (TV: Arrow)
67. Maggie Sawyer (TV: Supergirl)
68. Gilda (TV: iZombie)
69. Hartley Rathaway (TV: The Flash)
70. Drake Holloway (TV: iZombie)
71. Jesse Wells (TV: The Flash)
72. Quentin Lance (TV: Arrow)
73. Rex Tyler (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
74. Caitlin Snow (TV: The Flash)
75. Lucifer Morningstar (TV: Lucifer)
76. Kara Kent (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
77. Cynthia Reynolds (TV: The Flash)
78. Jonah Hex (TV: Legends of Tomorrow)
79. Ted Kord (TV: Batman: the Brave and the Bold)
80. Moira Queen (TV: Arrow)
81. Red Tornado (TV: Batman: the Brave and the Bold)
82. Cyborg (TV: Teen Titans Go!)
83. Evan Moore (TV: iZombie)
84. Tess Mercer (TV: Smallville)
85. Abra Kadabra (TV: The Flash)
86. Amanda Waller (Film: Suicide Squad)
87. Lex Luthor (TV: Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)  
88. Floyd Lawton (Film: Suicide Squad)
89. Maseo Yamashiro (TV: Arrow)
90. Tatsu Yamashiro (TV: Arrow)
91. Tala (Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
92. Sin (TV: Arrow)
93. Amanda Waller (Justice League/Justice League Unlimited)
94. Slade Wilson (TV: Arrow)
95. Dale Bozzio (TV: iZombie)
96. Vaughn Du Clark (TV: iZombie)
97. Taiana (TV: Arrow)
98. Jay Garrick  (TV: The Flash)
99. Zatanna (TV: Smallville)
100.                Earth-2 Barry Allen (TV: The Flash)
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mrmichaelchadler · 5 years
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Penny Marshall: 1943-2018
To some, she was the co-star of one of the most popular sitcoms of its era and a familiar face/voice on any number of shows over the years. To others, she was a trailblazing filmmaker who became the first American woman to direct a movie that made over $100 million at the box office, a feat she would repeat for a second time just a few years later. Whichever side of the camera she was working on, Penny Marshall was a consummate entertainer who could handle everything from the broadest slapstick comedy to serious drama, and her passing today at the age of 75 from diabetes complications will hit hard with anyone who encountered her work over the years.
Born Carole Penny Marshall in 1943, she grew up in the Bronx with a father who directed industrial films and a mother who was a tap dancer. After attending the University of New Mexico for a couple of years, marrying and divorcing her first husband Michael Henry and having a daughter, Tracy, Marshall moved out to Los Angeles to try her hand at show business. After doing some commercials, she made her film debut in a bit part in “How Sweet It Is” (1968), a film written and produced by her brother Garry, who had already established himself in the business, working on shows like “The Dick Van Dyke Show.” Over the next few years, she would make appearances in such films as the biker movie “The Savage Seven” (1968), the counterculture drama “The Grasshopper” and the cult comedy classic “Where’s Poppa?” (1970) as well as such TV shows as “Then Came Bronson,” “Love, American Style” and the immortal made-for-TV movie “The Feminist and the Fuzz” (1971). She auditioned for the role of Gloria Stivic on “All in the Family” but lost it to Sally Struthers (her then-husband Rob Reiner, who she married in 1971, did land the part of Mike Stivic).
Marshall's first big break came in 1972 when she was cast in the recurring role of Myrna, the secretary to Oscar Madison, during the last couple of years of the hit sitcom “The Odd Couple.” During and after the run of that show she turned up in any number of programs, including “The Bob Newhart Show,” “Banacek” and “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” and was a regular on the well-reviewed but short-lived comedy “Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers.” In 1975, brother Garry was working on his enormously popular sitcom “Happy Days” and had written an episode involving a couple of Milwaukee brewery workers who served as dates for Fonzie (Henry Winkler) and Richie (Ron Howard); he decided to cast her and Cindy Williams, who had appeared opposite Howard in “American Graffiti” (1973), in the roles. The byplay between the two actresses was so apparent that Garry decided to spin the two characters off into their own series. That show, “Laverne & Shirley,” debuted in 1976 and was an immediate hit that lasted for eight seasons before going off the air in 1983 (with Marshall going it alone during the final season when Williams left due to a pregnancy). Sure, the show was pretty silly and inconsequential but Marshall and Williams threw themselves into the goofball material with such heedless glee, even the sternest of viewers couldn’t help but crack a smile every now and then.
While working on “Laverne & Shirley” as an actress, Marshall developed an interest in directing, helming four episodes of the series over the years as well as an episode of “Working Stiffs,” a little-seen 1979 sitcom that co-starred then-unknowns Michael Keaton and Jim Belushi. At a time when few women were granted the opportunity to direct major studio films, Marshall caught a break when she was hired to come in and take over the production of “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” (1986) after director Howard Zieff departed shortly after filming began. The film, an action-comedy starring Whoopi Goldberg as an ordinary bank employee who becomes involved in international espionage after accidentally making contact with a British secret agent on the run from the KGB, is not especially memorable (other than the re-recording of the Rolling Stones hit that it was named after, as performed by Aretha Franklin and backed up by Keith Richards). But she managed to squeeze enough laughs out of the tired material (thanks to a game cast of comics like Belushi, Carol Kane, Phil Hartman, Jon Lovitz, her “Laverne & Shirley” co-star Michael McKean and Tracey Ullman, whose breakthrough TV variety series she would direct an episode of the next year), suggesting she might do even better if she lucked into a better script.
As “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” proved to be a moderate box-office hit, Marshall was given another chance to direct: “Big” (1988), the fantasy-comedy about a 13-year-old boy (David Moscow) who makes a wish on a mysterious carnival machine to be big and wakes up the next morning as himself, only in the body of his 30-year-old self (Tom Hanks). At the time that this film was made, there was a weird mini-wave of films in which teenagers inhabited the bodies of grown-ups and vice-versa, most of them focused exclusively on the gimmick in the broadest of comedic terms. The genius of “Big,” however, is that once she established the premise, Marshall took the story in a more realistic direction, as the now-grown kid finds herself thrown into the seemingly unfathomable worlds of corporate politics and adult relationships and reacting to them with a direct openness that was both disarming and charming. Instead of turning into the kind of grotesque or cynical fable it might have been in lesser hands, Marshall created one of the most genuinely winning fantasy films of the decade. She also helped supercharge the career of star Tom Hanks (who received his first Oscar nomination for his work here) and even inspired countless numbers of toy store visitors to emulate its most iconic scene by tapping out “Heart & Soul” on a giant keyboard, as Hanks and co-star Robert Loggia did at FAO Schwarz.
"Big" was a smash, the aforementioned first film directed by a woman to gross over $100 million, and put her in the position where she could pretty much make anything that she wanted. Although she was presumably offered countless comedies, her next film proved to be something entirely different. This was “Awakenings” (1990), a film based on the book by Oliver Sacks that told the story of a doctor (Robin Williams) who successfully administered the drug L-Dopa to a group of patients who had been catatonic for decades, and of one such patient (Robert De Niro) who first had to deal with waking up in a new time in which all of his loved ones are long gone and then with the gradual realization that his seemingly miraculous recovery is only temporary. Again, Marshall took supremely tricky material that might have been unworkable in other hands and found an emotional core that allowed viewers to relate to the story without cheapening it, and showed an increasingly deft hand with actors with the fine performances that she got from her two leads. The film proved to be a surprise success with audiences and received Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actor for De Niro, although she was inexplicably passed over in the Best Director category.
Her next film, and arguably her best, was inspired by a 1987 documentary about the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, a real-life women’s organization that was developed when Major League Baseball was threatened with a complete shutdown after America entered World War II. She put the makers of that film, Kelly Candaele and Kim Wilson, together with screenwriters Babaloo Mandel & Lowell Ganz to write what became "A League of Their Own." 
"A League of Their Own": Columbia Pictures
The film told of the league through the eyes of two sisters (Geena Davis and Lori Petty) who find themselves playing for the Rockford Peaches under the dubious managerial eye of Jimmy Dugan (Tom Hanks), a former star and current drunk who is nevertheless inspired by the team (whose players include the likes of Madonna and Rosie O’Donnell) to straighten up and lead them to the World Series in which the two sisters now find themselves playing on opposite teams. In telling a story that simultaneously serves as a comedy, an emotional drama about the conflict between sisters and a peek into history that had until then been all but forgotten, Marshall found herself spinning a number of narrative and emotional plates throughout and pretty much managed to make them all pay off in a movie that inspired plenty of laughs. And despite the fact that, to quote the most famous line, “There’s no crying in baseball,” the film earned its tears. Although a period film about women’s baseball might not have seemed like the basis for box-office success, the movie was one of the surprise hits of the summer of 1992, once again allowing Marshall to break the $100-million barrier. To cement its reputation as an instant classic, the movie was entered into the United States National Film Registry—ensuring its continued preservation—in 2012.
After the triumph of “A League of Her Own,” Marshall’s subsequent screen output proved to be somewhat less successful, both commercially and artistically, but she still had some interesting moments here and there: “Renaissance Man” (1994) told the story of a recently unemployed advertising executive (Danny DeVito) who found himself teaching basic literacy classes to a group of semi-literate recruits at a local Army base. The film is little more than a rehash of “Dead Poets Society,” but is perhaps somewhat notable for featuring the big screen dramatic debut from Mark Wahlberg; “The Preacher’s Wife” (1996) was a theoretically unnecessary remake of the holiday classic “The Bishop’s Wife” (1947) that featured Denzel Washington as a suave angel who appeared in New York to help a struggling pastor (Courtney B. Vance) and his wife (Whitney Houston) make a go of their church in the face of personal and financial difficulties. Although not a patch on the original, it proved to be reasonably entertaining thanks to the charming performances from the three leads (with Houston delivering arguably the best performance as an actress). Her final directorial effort, “Riding in Cars with Boys” (2001), told the inspirational true story of a woman who went from being a teen mother to eventually earning her master’s degree. The film contained performances from the likes of Drew Barrymore, Brittany Murphy, and James Woods that were engaging enough to make you forget how formulaic it all was.
Although her career in front of the camera during this time was largely limited to small roles, two appearances stand out: In “Hocus Pocus” (1993), the weird Halloween kids movie that has gone on to become a cult favorite for reasons that continue to elude me, she turns up alongside brother Garry as a married couple (see what I mean about it being weird) who are visited by the three witches who assume that he is the Devil and she is Medusa in one of the few scenes that demonstrates any real comedic invention. In Albert Brooks’s underrated satire “Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World,” she plays herself in a hilarious opening scene where she perfunctorily interviews Brooks (playing himself) for the lead role in a remake of “Harvey” and cannot quite disguise her complete lack of interest in him. Perhaps most notably, she has gone down in the history books as the first celebrity to lend their voice to a character on “The Simpsons,” playing the nefarious Babysitter Bandit in an episode meant to serve as the show’s premiere until technical difficulties caused it to run as the finale of that first season.
Besides her success as a filmmaker and as an actress, Marshall received a number of other accolades over the years. She received three Golden Globe nominations for her work on “Laverne & Shirley,” was one of the recipients of the Elle Women in Hollywood Icon Awards in 1997 alongside Meryl Streep, Jane Campion and Laura Ziskin and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2004. In 2012, she published her memoir My Mother Was Nuts, in which she recounted her long and groundbreaking career as an actress and a filmmaker, thoughtfully filling that book with plenty of amusing anecdotes about the people she met along the way. It's a work that's as funny, charming, unpretentious, and entertaining as the woman who wrote it. 
from All Content https://ift.tt/2Sa12cy
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“A Rose” from Spooky Space
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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New comic coming soon!
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“Homeward” from Spooky Space
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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Spooky Space updates this Wednesday!
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“Friends Part 2” from A Day in the Life of the Mundane
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“I'm Gay” from A Day in the Life of the Mundane
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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A while back, I drew pictures of what some of the important people in my life would like as cats. So, I decided to make a short comic with some of them.
This is Tripp the cat and Hershey the cat!
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“I’m an Adult I Swear”
A Day in the Life of the Mundane
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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oliverlowellcomics · 4 years
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“Way Too Warm”
from A Day in the Life of the Mundane
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