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Oct. 12th, 2010 05:51 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Feeling lonely, friendless and bummed out today, so if anyone has any spare cyber hugs? I could really use them. [The risk of asking for hugs...is what if you don't get them? Then you feel even lonilier than when you asked.]
Made the mistake of giving into a craving for reeses peanut butter cups - which really did not agree with me. Not sure why. They aren't supposed to have gluten in them. Could also be the weather that's affecting me. We had a brutal storm last night and today, the clouds are hanging heaving, like dead weights in the air, wanting to pop open and playing havoc with my head (dull throb behind the right temple. Does however make for a decent sunset.
Read the Angel comic last night - issue 37 or 38, plotted by Bill Willingham, but written by Mariah Huegher and David something or other. It wasn't bad, but I couldn't help but laugh at the cheesy plot. The Angel comics make the Buffy ones look like they were written and plotted by Shakespeare in comparison (okay Shakespeare by way of Samuel Beckett, but whatever). Although, at least Angel is more or less as I remember him and not a lobotomized douchebag, Spike however...is a bit too, I'm not sure what the word is? Whiny? Snark granted is hard to do well, but it's not that hard.
Here's the plot, as far as I can figure: Spike still has his soul, but a parasite that attaches itself to souls attached itself to Spike's when he came back from being a ghost. It got activated after Spike was in hell - something about being in hell activated the parasite - which affected his moral judgment and is the reason he's been acting out of character. It's easy enough to fix. Now how's that for an imaginative explanation for out of character behavior? Also does have a nifty bit of dialogue, where Spike tells a judgmental Angel - that he hasn't exactly done anything horribly evil - like kill someone's girlfriend or stalk little blond girls. LOL! The art is sort of cartoonish (reminds me of a Saturday morning cartoon at any rate), and they have these thought boxes that get confusing, because it's not clear except through context which character is talking. (ie. there's no visual clues, just textual ones.) Other than that? I was entertained. Found it hilarious in places. Also quite campy and ludicrious. Shame it's not better - because it reminded me of how much I missed the Spike/Angel relationship - which remains amongst my favorite bro-romances of all time. (Although shouldn't be too critical - I have a feeling I'd feel the same way about the X-men comics sitting in my bedroom should I ever choose to re-read them.)
Made the mistake of giving into a craving for reeses peanut butter cups - which really did not agree with me. Not sure why. They aren't supposed to have gluten in them. Could also be the weather that's affecting me. We had a brutal storm last night and today, the clouds are hanging heaving, like dead weights in the air, wanting to pop open and playing havoc with my head (dull throb behind the right temple. Does however make for a decent sunset.
Read the Angel comic last night - issue 37 or 38, plotted by Bill Willingham, but written by Mariah Huegher and David something or other. It wasn't bad, but I couldn't help but laugh at the cheesy plot. The Angel comics make the Buffy ones look like they were written and plotted by Shakespeare in comparison (okay Shakespeare by way of Samuel Beckett, but whatever). Although, at least Angel is more or less as I remember him and not a lobotomized douchebag, Spike however...is a bit too, I'm not sure what the word is? Whiny? Snark granted is hard to do well, but it's not that hard.
Here's the plot, as far as I can figure: Spike still has his soul, but a parasite that attaches itself to souls attached itself to Spike's when he came back from being a ghost. It got activated after Spike was in hell - something about being in hell activated the parasite - which affected his moral judgment and is the reason he's been acting out of character. It's easy enough to fix. Now how's that for an imaginative explanation for out of character behavior? Also does have a nifty bit of dialogue, where Spike tells a judgmental Angel - that he hasn't exactly done anything horribly evil - like kill someone's girlfriend or stalk little blond girls. LOL! The art is sort of cartoonish (reminds me of a Saturday morning cartoon at any rate), and they have these thought boxes that get confusing, because it's not clear except through context which character is talking. (ie. there's no visual clues, just textual ones.) Other than that? I was entertained. Found it hilarious in places. Also quite campy and ludicrious. Shame it's not better - because it reminded me of how much I missed the Spike/Angel relationship - which remains amongst my favorite bro-romances of all time. (Although shouldn't be too critical - I have a feeling I'd feel the same way about the X-men comics sitting in my bedroom should I ever choose to re-read them.)