Showing results for: superman (page 28)
Beyond the Multiplex
Andrew O'Hehir
A few final words about the cheap wine and sexy uniforms at Cannes -- and a look at summer movies ahead.
Hooray for spandex!
Douglas Wolk
In honor of Free Comic Book Day, we get cozy with Captain America, Superboy and a host of other powerhouses to assess the state of the superhero.
“Don’t call it the nerd Oscars”
Scott Kirsner
There's no bling, no limo gridlock and only one famous face -- but one night celebrates the techies who make our movies better.
The sweet stink of success
Sam Boykin
A growing number of "entre-manures" are turning piles of doo-doo into piles of dough.
The Fix
Salon Staff
Kazakhstan cybermuzzles Borat. Nancy Grace sues alleged stalker. Paris Hilton named worst dressed. Plus: Just how big is Superman's package?
The (really scary) soldier of the future
Alan H. Goldstein
Thanks to nanotechnology, he'll be a lethal superman who can heal himself.
King Kaufman’s Sports Daily
Salon Staff
NFL Week 6: Vikings hope to draw inspiration from team orgy. Plus: Fox hates baseball, exhibit 3,442.
The inimitable Chris Ware
Douglas Wolk
The author of "Jimmy Corrigan" explores a fallen world in this new installment of breathtakingly intricate comic strips.
How to make a superhero movie that doesn’t suck
Christopher Orr
Five simple rules to make sure future flicks about caped crusaders fly.
TV’s leading men need to get laid
Peter Birkenhead
Recently divorced, I turned to the tube for some good, Andy Sipowicz-style company -- but all the male stars have lives even more pathetic than my own.
Letters
Salon Staff
Heather Havrilesky's "Meet the Smoothies!" prompts male readers to debate waxing, sparks fear of a "mini-race of tween angels," and angers those who find stories about hairless hunks disgraceful in a time of war.
Loving the masked man
Dan Glaister
Chilean novelist Isabel Allende explains the origins of her new novel, "Zorro," and why her bodice-ripping tale has little to do with "magical realism."
Letters
Salon Staff
Readers share their opinions on Richard Dawkins, Charles Darwin and Salon's radical reenvisioning of the Sistine Chapel.
The myth of media violence
Andrew O'Hehir
Contrary to the moralistic claims of Hillary Clinton and others, bloody video games and movies are not a major cause of crime. But they are a powerful drug we don't understand.
In the spotlight again
Gary Younge
An election in Topeka pitting supporters of gay rights against avowed homophobes recalls the city's civil rights struggles of 50 years ago.
Happy housewife
Dan Glaister
Teri Hatcher has not enjoyed the smoothest of careers, but the realization that she'll never be Meg Ryan has its consolations.
Turn da music up!
Thomas Bartlett
A brilliant remix of 2004's best hip-hop album, drunken elation from a Macedonian brass band and an intriguing tune from a latter-day U2 -- free.
Writing in the Margins
Scott Thill
Our author learns: Don't mess with Texas! Feel the Lone Star love, and grab this last-minute shopping list of the year's best comics and graphic novels for all the mods, rockers, punks and Texans on your list.
If Betty and Veronica were Latina punk lesbians
Scott Thill
Jaime Hernandez talks about his massive new comics collection "Locas," the 20-year odyssey of two L.A. rock 'n' roll chicks looking for love (and rockets).
“Wolf! Wolf!”
Salon Staff
Our readers are not suckered in by the empty cries of the big bad Bush-Cheney wolf TV ad -- and so write their own smart, savvy and much better scripts.
“The Distance Between Us”
Masha Hamilton
Caddie has covered the Middle East for years -- but this trip into the Lebanese desert with a driver who never speaks is starting to feel ominous.
Daring to hope
Ed Guiton
Christopher Reeve was an inspiration to many as he confronted his own paralysis and advanced the cause of stem cell research.
Liza’s horrible so-called life
Cintra Wilson
Mean boys. Badass girls. Your worst first-day-of-high-school nightmare, to the millionth power ... and in Marin County, Calif.
Real simple
Thomas Geoghegan
To win the election and, once in power, to create new jobs, Democrats need a big plan everyone can understand: Have the government pay the first $1,000 in healthcare costs for every man, woman and child.
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