Posted in Animation, Comedy on 06/15/2008 11:36 pm by fanboi
Queerty made another great find with “Dial M for Monkey: Barbequor,” a 1996 banned “backup” segment from Dexter’s Laboratory. The episode was removed from broadcast syndication after complaints (supposedly 1) were made about the “effeminate” parody of Silver Spooner. I usually get annoyed at stereotypical depictions of gay characters, but I admit the Silver Spooner cracked me up even more than the Galactus inspired “Barbequor.”
Posted in Gay Porn on 06/15/2008 10:12 pm by fanboi
Falcon’s recent decision to add facial cumshots to their movies garnered them more flak than it was worth. Seen by some as a signal that Falcon was going bareback, the facials received mixed reviews. Well Falcon will “no longer ask their men to perform or receive oral cumshots.” So you won’t be seeing many more like these…
these pictures are of various spandex-clad guys I’ve come across over the past year or so. The majority of them were from the plethora of sexy but safe for work skin shots of longtime fanboi favorite SuperUnderwearPerverts.
I am in NO WAY suggesting that the anyone within the photos is gay. These are just cute boys wearing superhero costumes (or sporting superhero symbols) and looking good. Some may be models, Gay spandex fetishists and some may just be straight comic book geeks dressing up so they can bang that pink-haired anime chick they saw at the last convention. No implications about anyone’s sexuality are implied.
a more comedic post of the guys who look more supersilly than superhot may follow later in the week if anyone would be amused… speak up if you want to see that.
I’ll admit I wasn’t going in with the highest of expectations, but I thoroughly enjoyed the Incredible Hulk. The 2003 angsty Ang Lee debacle officially NEVER happened. Iron Man seems to have heralded a new and welcome trend as comic Book Movies seem to be stepping up their casting to the A-List level. Ed Norton is great as the slender gamma-challenged molecular research scientist with big anger management issues. William Hurt is General Thunderbolt Ross and Liv Tyler is beautiful Betty Ross to Norton’s beastly Hulk. Scroll down for thoughts on the first movie and why this was so much better.
The problems i had with the 2003 movie were apparent from the trailer which looked so bad that even i a die-hard comic book fan OPTED TO SKIP IT. I didn’t like the look of the hulk or how he moved or sounded, he had no rage weight or fury. Well THAT was more than taken care of in this version. First and foremost, this Hulk has POWER. I want to jump out of the way as he throws forklifts and can feel the wind created by his roar. Excellently rendered realistic CG and inspired fight choreography make the action sequences a treat to watch, and the acting from the main 3 does a good job of carrying us through the slower parts.
Also a hand to hand combat sequence between an enhanced but not yet abominable Emil Blonsky shows that the moves necessary for a Captain America movie are VERY possible.
Now I DO have to admit that Iron Man was still the superior film (Tony Stark has a cameo), but Incredible Hulk is a great popcorn movie and another step towards a quality Avengers movie.
There were some spots that felt like holes where scenes had been cut out. The fact that Betty’s boyfriend was psychiatrist Dr. Sampson (first name Leonard?), led me to believe he had more screen time originally – plus there was that psychoanalysis bit from the first trailer that I didn’t see in the movie.
I did have an issue with one of their best fanboy moments. I think they dropped the ball on the Stan Lee cameo. Stan is seen as an old man who drinks a beverage that has been tainted with Bruce Banner’s gamma charged blood and (we assume) hulks out. I say we assume, because they don’t show it. How cool would a CG hulked out Stan Lee have been???? I suppose they couldn’t justify the creating, rigging and animating another 3D model for 5-10 seconds of cameo – but it would have rocked.