There’s been a whole lot of Transformers news in recent days – all of it shockingly good.
First, there were the quotes from Shia LaBeouf at the Cannes Film Festival, basically admitting that Transformers 2 kinda sucked; saying that it went for big action and in the process forgot all about any notion of humanity.
Good job Shia; …
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Here’s what else is going on in nerd news around the web:
Heavy Rain, The Movie?: The magic eight ball says yes. Apparently, New Line guys Bob Shaye and Michael Lynne are optioning the rights to turn the PS3 game into a feature-length film.
[via Slash Film]
You mean you actually built an Iron Man suit? …
The LA Times is reporting that Google will unveil their Internet TV tomorrow at the I/O conference in San Francisco. It’s unclear what the service will entail but Sony, Intel and Logitech are expected to join Google on stage to announce Smart TV.
Like any Google product, Smart TV is probably half cooked and Google will release dev …
This has nothing to do with tech, comics, or video games but it’s not every day that I get to meet folks like Judah Friedlander. You know, the guy from 30 Rock. Actually, I’ll be interviewing Judah in the near future, so consider this a precursor to that.
The fine folks from pop culture publisher Buzzmedia put on this little event …
Well that was … boring.
As far as season finales are go, V‘s was an absolute dud. (I laughed. I cried. I fell asleep briefly.)
Plot threads that seemingly led up to Red Sky‘s supposed season pinnacle, played out without so much as a hiccup. Though I wasn’t necessarily sad to see Val go, I did expect her death to have more …
It’s taken a decade, but it looks like Clark Kent is finally ready to assume his destiny as a man who wears his underwear on the outside with the news that Smallville‘s tenth season is to be its last.
The CW series has been on the bubble since creators Al Gough and Miles Millar left at the end of its seventh season along with …
Save the date: Sunday May 23rd 2010 isn’t just the day that Lost ends, it’ll also mark an end of a larger era: The era of successful serialized mysteries on network television. And Lost deserves a lot of credit for making that happen.
When Daniel Dae Kim says, somewhat self-congratulatory, “I don’t think you can have a conversation …