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Movies?
I know where to find them.
In the paragraph below.
One which lists the more famous ones released in February 1986.
And those movies are F/X, Hannah and Her Sisters, 9½ Weeks, The Hitcher, House and Pretty in Pink.
I think F/X, 9½ Weeks and House are the only ones of those that I've seen and I think House was the one I enjoyed the most. That is, therefore, the official Steve Does Comics Movie of the Month.
After 75 issues, has Rom reached the end of his space road?
He truly has because this is his very last issue and, to be fair, as his mag was launched purely to promote a toy, the lad's done well for himself.
In fact, he's done exceptionally well, as I can sensationally reveal that this is the issue in which he regains his humanity!
And I haven't a clue what it's about.
If that cover's to be believed, I've been demanding the dramatic return of the original X-Men!
Granted, I have no recall of ever demanding such a thing, having always found them almost as uncompelling as Nick Fury's Agents of SHIELD. However, the gang discovers Jean's still alive, and this calls for a reunion that leads them to re-brand themselves as, "X-Factor!"
I don't know much of what goes on in this one but I do know the gang's fangy foe is none other than Jack Russell himself who it's hard to see giving an offshoot of the mighty Avengers much trouble.
Rather more menacingly, however, it would seem that Ultron's also involved...
Mostly, you don't see it because one of them lives on Earth and the other lives in space, and one lives in the present and the other in the future.
I suspect such minor obstacles will not be enough to get in the way of a tale called Home.
Somehow, this leads to the all-powerful alien losing his temper and deciding to destroy the multiverse!
But can the Molecule's Man's unique skill-set thwart that drastic plan?
I know little of this but can reveal it's written and drawn by Herb Trimpe and, after crash-landing on the planet Skalorr, the crew of a spaceship team up with a band of nice robots to fight a band of nasty robots.
Sadly, despite providing us with all the robot-on-robot violence we could ask for, this appears to be the only issue ever published.
Longshot's mini-series draws to a double-length conclusion when its protagonist, Dr Strange and Quark discover that someone called Rita's been turned into a mere husk, by Mojo who then sets up a church on Earth and begins to brainwash its followers.










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