There's been, count 'em, 29 Marvel Cinematic universe films. Iron Man introduced us to this great world. The Avengers showed us a team-up we never thought was possible. Black Panther impacted our lives in a way the superhero genre never had before. Avengers: Endgame was so long that we nearly peed our pants. But it was worth it. And now, we're fully back in theaters, with another superhero event: Thor: Love and Thunder. Read on to see where it lands in our ranking of every film Marvel has put on the big screen.
There's been, count 'em, 29 Marvel Cinematic universe films. Iron Man introduced us to this great world. The Avengers showed us a team-up we never thought was possible. Black Panther impacted our lives in a way the superhero genre never had before. Avengers: Endgame was so long that we nearly peed our pants. But it was worth it. And now, we're fully back in theaters, with another superhero event: Thor: Love and Thunder. Read on to see where it lands in our ranking of every film Marvel has put on the big screen. |
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Casper's cooling, breathable Hyperlite sheets are what sweet dreams are made of. |
| Your rubber sport band needs the evening off. |
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The 77-page report on the massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, released by the Texas House over the weekend satisfied almost nobody. It blamed video games more than the ready availability of weapons of war, gave the city fathers another chance to embarrass themselves with further tantrums about media coverage, and was generally one more tragic episode in an event already overladen with tragedy. The first thing that stuck in my mind was the revelation of how many law enforcement personnel had been on the scene. |
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Featuring exclusive Greats sneakers, Truff hot sauce, a quick-drying towel, and more. |
| These books will change you and challenge you, but above all entertain you. |
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For all the rambling and rocking, the strangest milieu in which the Grateful Dead ever found themselves may have been near the top of the Billboard Hot 100 charts. The week of September 26, 1987, their song "Touch of Grey" released that July and in heavy radio rotation all summer, peaked at No. 9, keeping unlikely company with the likes of Whitney Houston, Whitesnake, and the dance-pop atrocity Bananarama. Even now, 35 years on, it seems odd. This, after all, was a band singularly famous for eschewing the conventions of the music business; for whom touring was the primary point, not a means to promote the studio records they came to regard as little more than raw meat tossed to distract the industry crocodiles. |
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