Jurassic Park is better than the book. Also, and I know this may sound weird given how much the movie is panned, the Lost World movie is also better than the book it's based on.
As they made an adaptation of the first book already, they were considering using the same lead in Die Hard. That would have been Frank Sinatra, who would have been about 5 years older than Bruce Willis is now.Die Hard is slightly superior to Nothing Last Forever. Keep in mind, the latter is a sequel to another novel called The Detective. So NLF has a much older protagonist that is in his early 60s. The novel does have an advantage of having a more detailed plot, and the terrorist are motivated by more than just money. They are terrorists with a cause. I won't spoil anything, but there is a lot of grey, the further you get into the novel.
Pretty much all AvP games are better than the movies, simply because they deliver way more of what their title promises: aliens fighting predators, or vice versa. Tho imo, if a AvP games has a colonial marine campaign, that's usually the best one.Alien vs. Predator (Capcom) is far surperior to both AVP films from the 2000s.
As in added bonus in AVP Capcom's favor, the arcade game was based off the original script. Which was going to have Arnie in it. I think the only thing not in the original script was Linn Kurasawa herself. You are correct though.Pretty much all AvP games are better than the movies, simply because they deliver way more of what their title promises: aliens fighting predators, or vice versa. Tho imo, if a AvP games has a colonial marine campaign, that's usually the best one.
And they also had to write in a lot fewer contortions for "only magic can fix this" than "bullet wound that somehow can't be fixed by literally the best doctors and sorcerers in the world".Since the first example of this thread was a Spider-Man example, I feel it appropriate to say Spider-Man: No Way Home did the plot of Peter having to erase his identity being exposed to the public far better than the One More Day comic did. The fact it stemmed from the need to tell a compelling story as opposed to being an excuse to reset Peter back to the status quo of being unmarried and living with Aunt May.
And all that to adhere to the conceit that comic-book readers couldn't relate to someone who actually scored with a woman.Since the first example of this thread was a Spider-Man example, I feel it appropriate to say Spider-Man: No Way Home did the plot of Peter having to erase his identity being exposed to the public far better than the One More Day comic did. The fact it stemmed from the need to tell a compelling story as opposed to being an excuse to reset Peter back to the status quo of being unmarried and living with Aunt May.
I thought the issue was that him getting married would make him too far removed/too old to be relatable to a child audience.And all that to adhere to the conceit that comic-book readers couldn't relate to someone who actually scored with a woman.
Could also be that!I thought the issue was that him getting married would make him too far removed/too old to be relatable to a child audience.
I remember reading that Quesada didn't want two teenagers having sex with each other, so he had one of them have sex with Harry Osborne...?And getting a divorce was out of the question, because it went against Joe Quesada's religious beliefs.
As opposed to doing a deal with the devil?And getting a divorce was out of the question, because it went against Joe Quesada's religious beliefs.
OK, I misremembered why Quesada was opposed to the divorce idea. To quote Wikipedia (I know, but there is a primary source for this quote, so it's legitimate)As opposed to doing a deal with the devil?
Joe Quesada is a fuckin' moron.OK, I misremembered why Quesada was opposed to the divorce idea. To quote Wikipedia (I know, but there is a primary source for this quote, so it's legitimate)
Quesada sees Peter's making a "deal with the devil" as a villain (Mephisto) taking advantage of someone at his weakest moment. This, he feels, is a better resolution than Peter and Mary Jane getting divorced, which would indicate "they gave up on their love, that their life in love together was so awful, so stressful, so unfulfilling that they had to raise a red flag and walk away from it. They quit on their marriage and even more tragic, (they) quit on each other. Instead, we had them make a deal with the devil. 'Cause that isn't as bad." Quesada went on to say "Peter and MJ didn't quit on their love, they sacrificed it to save a life, that to me is a pretty heroic story."