Since nobody likes Inara, and I know who Gina Torres is, I assume Jewel was the mechanic whose name I can't remember?
Olaf the Troll ,'Showtime'
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
yup. Kaylee.
Aha. I have very little Firefly knowledge.
I tried, people. I really, really tried.
Since nobody likes Inara, and I know who Gina Torres is, I assume Jewel was the mechanic whose name I can't remember?
Yep.
As opposed to Summer, who played the lovely and woobiefiriffic Crazy!Brunette!Girl, River.
(As well as the ballerina in that episode with the seriously gross Cordy/Angel action. Eww.)
I tried, people. I really, really tried.
Zero credit for effort.
I know my comic book in my head (about vampirism being a rare, sexually-transmitted blood disease)
David, what was that movie that was kind of like this?
I know my comic book in my head (about vampirism being a rare, sexually-transmitted blood disease)
David, what was that movie that was kind of like this?
Are you talking about Near Dark? It certainly played with blood tainting what with the transfusions and all, but I don't think it was that explicitly stated.
In Blade the lady doctor actually refered to vampirism as a sexually-transmitted disease. (Underscoring what I perceived to be a less than idyllic slashy undertone to Deacon Frost's relationship with the Udo Kier character.) Was that what you're thinking of?
(I still chortle at the Blade II writer's attempt to explain vampirism away as the effects of a parvovirus on the human system. Yeah, a virus that apparently causes its hosts to disintegrate into burning embers upon contact with sunlight or upon having silver rammed through the heart. Suuuuure, sounds like the effects of a viral infection to me.)
OK. Just saw "Hellboy."
I post this here, because it struck Thessaly and me, on are way home, that there needs to be a Hellboy/Buffy crossover comic book, written by Joss Whedon, with art by Mike Mignola.
Are you talking about Near Dark? It certainly played with blood tainting what with the transfusions and all, but I don't think it was that explicitly stated.
Yeah, that's it. Or at least what came to mind.
In Blade the lady doctor actually refered to vampirism as a sexually-transmitted disease. (Underscoring what I perceived to be a less than idyllic slashy undertone to Deacon Frost's relationship with the Udo Kier character.) Was that what you're thinking of?
No, it was Near Dark, but that's good to know.
'Nother random question: how did Xavier lose the ability to utilise his legs? Or rather, why is he in a wheelchair?