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Post by Doctor Doom on May 1, 2007 11:05:06 GMT -5
Over at apple, the Rise of the Silver Surfer trailer is now online! www.superherohype.com/news/topnews.php?id=5590Pluses: +Doom Visible +Global stuff- London, Tokyo etc +Much more Epic +Smart Use of Fantasticar + Awesome Silver Surfer voice and visuals +Nice use of powers seen Negatives: - No Galactus - No REAL shots of Doom - Johnny-centric - Very poor "power swapping" idea -The Moment usually reserved for "Very very dramatic bit" before music crescendo is instead used for a lame joke. More good than bad, this trailer alone is better than movie one, now watch watch watch!
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Post by dlw66 on May 6, 2007 18:37:57 GMT -5
If this is the same trailer that I saw play in front of Spider-Man 3, I can indeed confirm that Doom's hyperactivity is well-justified!!!
"Whenever this thing turns up, a planet dies within 8 days." Oh, yeah!!!! Bring on the Big G!
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Post by Doctor Doom on May 7, 2007 15:01:01 GMT -5
Same one!
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Post by dlw66 on May 31, 2007 12:37:06 GMT -5
From marvelousnews.com today -- Fantastic Four Coin Illegal by Jay in Marvel at 02:01 PM on 2007.05.31 Source: WENN LATEST: A promotional FANTASTIC FOUR: RISE OF THE SILVER SURFER coin to celebrate the movie's release has been deemed illegal. Marketing bosses collaborated with Franklin Mint to create 40,000 new coins featuring the Silver Surfer's image on one side and George Washington's face on the other, but the commemorative item contravenes tough U.S. laws on producing money. A spokesperson for the U.S. Mint says, "The promotion is in no way approved, authorised, endorsed or sponsored by the United States Mint, nor is it in any way associated with the United States Mint." The coins were distributed in America before Memorial Day weekend (26-27May07) in a bid to encourage fans to log on to the website to win film-related prizes. But it is a federal crime to turn any form of legal tender into advertising, and the makers of the coin are likely to face a fine. Fox alleges it was unaware of any problem with producing the money, and never suggested "that there was any approval from the U.S. Mint or the U.S. government". The Franklin Mint says, "(The coins are) commemorative coins like many the Franklin Mint creates on a regular basis for various properties. We were confident this coin followed the same procedures and guidelines but will certainly take any steps if advised otherwise."
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