While the new
Dredd film didn't set the box office charts on fire, it was still certainly better received than the Stallone summer blockbuster attempt from 1995. There is still a talk of a sequel, if they can get the budgeting to work and if they can get star Karl Urban to shoot it while he isn't busy with his new TV series. I hope this comes to pass because I liked the Clint Eastwood type of attitude he brought to the role.
Think it would work better with Spider-Man 2099. Still always a treat to see these in my blog roll.
ReplyDeleteHow about Dredd and The Punisher? (Unless you've already)
ReplyDeleteYup, that one's on here...
ReplyDeleteWhy is it Super-Team Family? Shouldn't it be Marvel Two-In-One? Dredd does have DC connections but they are rather tenuous.
ReplyDeleteThe main concept of the blog is "What if Super-team Family ran forever and DC had access to any character ever published?"... on Earth-STF, everyone's a DC character.
ReplyDeleteC'mon, let Ross have his fun. Marvel Two In One would sound like a porno to today's kids. Judge Jonah Jameson eh? I woulda thought it would be the Kingpin, but who knew? This is as good as the Dredd/Flash one you recently did. Unexpected and offbeat. That's why I love this site. Now if you can pair Dredd with Teen Titan's version of Vigilante ... sweet!
ReplyDeleteYeah, I could see how Marvel Two-In-One could sound like a porno, but it's better than "Giant-Size Man-Thing." Boy, somebody sure wasn't paying attention over there when they came up with that one.
ReplyDeleteStill, I think Super-Team Family is a good title. It was a sort-of okay D.C. comic from the late 70's that assured all of us that Aquaman was still alive.
Besides, Anonymous - if you dig into the archives, you'll see that I did do a couple hundred issue run of Marvel Two-In-One... Not to mention Brave and the Bold, where it all started...
ReplyDeleteYou think "Giant-Size Man-Thing" sounds rude? At least the target audience was teens and adults. I'm still trying to find Gil Kane's toy-based "Monster In My Pocket" in stores. Circa 1990, it was something no retailer wanted to be seen offering to small children.
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