Ongoing collection I’ve been putting together: Golden Age inspired DC heroes and villains rendered as LEGO figures.
The majority are characters who first appeared in the 1930s and 1940s, but I also enjoyed creating versions of modern characters in a pulp adventure style.
@GentleDoofus@tghoneycutt also a memorable guest role on Star Trek Deep Space Nine (voice-only even back then, truly funny how often she only does voice work)
@EnrealidadNoUso In decades past you used to be able to do hacking over the phone by manipulating dial tones, this was called phreaking
This is very in line with this sort of analog approach to hacking
@gncgalactus It’s not dwelt on but the implication is that Han just kept sticking around doing Rebel things and put off settling the debt until the beginning of V. “that bounty hunter on Ord Mantell” convinced him he had to get out from under it right now
@GemOfAmara The Marvel comic series had a flashback to the old republic that had Obi Wan dressed like this
Would be very funny if they’d stuck with this Chanel Flash Gordon look
@KodyKoberstein@fred_beretta Elia Kazan, director of films like On The Waterfront, but to answer your question, he named names to HUAC during the Red Scare and the Hollywood Blacklist. When he was awarded an honorary Academy Award in 1999 something like half of the crowd in the room refused to applaud him
One of the darkest and funniest running jokes in the movie is that the people are completely trusting of, even giddy to help, Dan Stevens' character when they learn he's a veteran. And he just never stops playing that to his advantage.
This guy popped up in a LEGO Batman mission amongst other hostages dressed up like other Jokers over the years (including Romero and Phoenix). Took me a few days to realize who he’s supposed to be: Conrad Veidt as Gwynplaine in THE MAN WHO LAUGHS