Poltergeist (1982) might be the first movie I saw as a child that frightened me and kept me coming back for more, because of the wondrous, supernatural elements and the unknown. As an adult with two kids, there are fewer times that I relive or think about moments from my youth, and the passing of Tobe Hooper, director of Poltergeist, makes me instantly remember the impact this particular film had on the following years of my childhood.
On behalf of everyone at Fanbase Press, I want to offer a sincere congratulations to our printing partner, James River Press, on their recent rebranding and renaming to BambooInk. Since 1995, James River Press has been serving its clients' print needs in central Virginia and beyond with quality and craftsmanship of the highest caliber. After more than 20 years, the company continues to deliver the same excellence collaborates with their clients to provide savvy solutions.
Forget the Battle of the Bastards, the Battle of the Loot Train is my new favorite thing. In fact, let’s take this episode in reverse order, because the last twenty minutes was the second best fight scene in the series. (And damn, the best fight scene in the series was in the middle twenty minutes, but more on that!) This episode was not only in the top five of episodes EVER, topping the three that preceded it in the season, but contained so many beautiful moments. Let’s look at this episode, end to beginning.
To commemorate the cinematic premiere of The Dark Tower in theaters today, Fanbase Press is excited to celebrate its fandom through an editorial series that focuses on aspects of Stephen King’s series of books, collectively known as The Dark Tower series.
“It seemed that even the dead would run from Blaine if they could.”
Stephen King - The Waste Lands
To commemorate the cinematic premiere of The Dark Tower in theaters today, Fanbase Press is excited to celebrate its fandom through an editorial series that focuses on aspects of Stephen King’s series of books, collectively known as The Dark Tower series.
“…All is forgotten in the stone halls of the dead. Behold the stairways which stand in darkness; behold the rooms of ruin. These are the halls of the dead, where the spiders spin and the great circuits fall quiet, one by one”. —Eddie Dean, The Wastelands, The Dark Tower III