Ru1977
The Irishman
Ah man... That is the show about which I could say what cmoney said above. I have binged that show twice and still not finished the last season. I get so close and just lose steam altogether.That's ok, that's why Fringe was made![]()
Ah man... That is the show about which I could say what cmoney said above. I have binged that show twice and still not finished the last season. I get so close and just lose steam altogether.That's ok, that's why Fringe was made![]()
The last season is a hard switch, but I do think it manages to turn out ok. At least, that's what I recall. I think I've only done that series twice all the way through.Ah man... That is the show about which I could say what cmoney said above. I have binged that show twice and still not finished the last season. I get so close and just lose steam altogether.
My boyfriend actually showed me Fringe a couple years back for the first time. He loved it growing up, and it was his turn to pick what series we watched together. I quite liked it for the most part- John Noble and Michael Cerveris were great in it, though the whole cast was quite strong. A few plot holes or dropped storylines that bummed me out a bit (JJ's gonna JJ), but overall quite a strong series. I'd gladly take figures of it too!That's ok, that's why Fringe was made![]()
Buffy and X-Files are my favourite Cell Phones Negate This Plot game shows.I'm not sure I ever loved a show so much and then cared so little by the time it was over as X-FIles.
It's WILD to me how hard McFarlane dropped the ball on the Game of Thrones line. That and the Harry Potter lines were guaranteed moneymakers that could've lasted for years if done right due to the huge roster of characters in both franchises.
Harry Potter did get a pretty extensive line over in the UK, it seems, from the company Cards Inc./PopCo. Obviously, there's even more of an appeal to British kids than to American ones, so it makes sense they'd have a bigger toy market, but still. Such a shame that things became what they did with that property; don't think I could ever in good conscience buy anything related to that franchise ever again.Not that McFarlane doesn't mismanage lines all the time, but I really have to wonder if there's something in the appeal or audience of both GoT and Harry Potter that action figures never get off the ground for long with either. Traditional fantasy stuff seems to have a ceiling at big box retail, so there's an immediate hurdle; the last time a line like that really hit with general audiences feels like ToyBiz LotR, which was bolstered by then-relevant movies and came out under much friendlier market conditions. It feels like both franchises are missing components that you'd want in a fantasy toyline at retai: either colorful designs and monsters (GoT), or literally anything cool (HP). And the Hasbro D&D line had all of that and sunk anyway.
Both franchises seem to do well in tulip-bulb presentations like POPs, so maybe it's just the audiences. GoT skews older and less fun, which puts you in the realm of Maybe One or Two Things for My Work Desk, while the core HP audience before the mold spoke to Joanne used to be kids, ladies, and the LGBTQ community, which screams blind box collectibles and cute hyperstylized formats more than figures to me.