Posted in: Comics, Recent Updates | Tagged: enterprise, film, las vegas, star trek
Saturday Trending Topics: Vegas, The Final Frontier
This would have been quite a voyage: "My concept was to do something so large and so epic, it would fire the imaginations of people around the world. After looking at how difficult it would be to bring people to the downtown core (from the Strip), I knew we had to have something really exciting, dynamic, and without equal. We kicked around a few ideas, and then I came up with something really unique" Read the rest.
Most-Read Comic Stories Today:
Tony Harris Would Like You To Ask About War Heroes
On the Bleeding Cool forums, in response to an ECCC interview with Tony Harris, a number of readers wanted to know why Tony was creating new work for Image when he hadn't finished the long-delayed War Heroes series with Mark Millar.
David Hine On Biting The Hand That Fed Him
Over at Broken Frontier, David Hine seems to have done a rather good job at burning his bridges.
What If Batman And Superman Were Two Sixteen Year Old Girls?
Welcome to Starfall City. A new novel for the Kindle for one dollar from Kirby Moore. Hmm, what an interesting name for an author…
Most-Read TV/Film Stories Today:
The Time They Almost Built A Full-Sized, Permanent Replica Of The Starship Enterprise In Las Vegas
Back in the early 90s, when downtown Las Vegas was playing a distant second fiddle to the strip, the city were looking for a new attraction to draw people in. Ultimately, something called the Fremont Experience was built, complete with super loud speakers and the biggest screen on the planet. I'm not too clear about what it is, this "Experience", and what it does. I would, however, have understood the other candidate, the other attraction, the one that so nearly got built instead.
Another Avengers TV Spot – Tony Stark Does The Roll Call
Not long now, people. Not long at all.
Here's What A Snow White And The Huntsman Sequel Would Be About – Does It Spoil The First Film?
The last big interview with Universal's president and COO Ron Meyer saw him trash a number of the studio's movies, saving specific slurs for The Wolfman, Cowboy and Aliens and – most unfairly – Babe 2: Pig in the City. How silly.