The outcome of a poorly written subject line would be that the reader wouldn't understand what he/she was reading about. This would in turn, keep the reader confused the rest of the literature and wouldn't be able to focus.
Answer:
"Spider-Man 2" is the best superhero movie since the modern genre was launched with "Superman" (1978). It succeeds by being true to the insight that allowed Marvel Comics to upturn decades of comic-book tradition: Readers could identify more completely with heroes like themselves than with remote godlike paragons. Peter Parker was an insecure high school student, in grade trouble, inarticulate in love, unready to assume the responsibilities that came with his unexpected superpowers. It wasn't that Spider-Man could swing from skyscrapers that won over his readers; it was that he fretted about personal problems in the thought balloons above his Spidey face mask.
Parker (Tobey Maguire) is in college now, studying physics at Columbia, more helplessly in love than ever with Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst). He's on the edge of a breakdown: He's lost his job as a pizza deliveryman, Aunt May faces foreclosure on her mortgage, he's missing classes, the colors run together when he washes his Spider-Man suit at the Laundromat, and after his web-spinning ability inexplicably seems to fade, he throws away his beloved uniform in despair. When a bum tries to sell the discarded Spidey suit to Jonah Jameson, editor of the Daily Bugle, Jameson offers him $50. The bum says he could do better on eBay. Has it come to this?
I was disappointed by the original "Spider-Man" (2002), and surprised to find this film working from the first frame. Sam Raimi, the director of both pictures, this time seems to know exactly what he should do, and never steps wrong in a film that effortlessly combines special effects and a human story, keeping its parallel plots alive and moving. One of the keys to the movie's success must be the contribution of novelist Michael Chabon to the screenplay; Chabon understands in his bones what comic books are, and why. His inspired 2000 novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay chronicles the birth of a 1940s comic book superhero and the young men who created him; he worked on the screen story that fed into Alvin Sargent's screenplay.
Answer: Not coming in contact with other people, or staying at lest six feet apart when out of your home
Explanation:
i watch the news
Answer:
Tashtego is the one who tells Captain Ahab the whale's name.
Explanation:
In Herman Melville's <em>MobyDick</em> Tashtego, also described as Gay Head, is a Native American harpooneer who is part of the crew of Captain Ahab. After the singular whale was spotted by the crew, Tashtego told Ahab that the whale must be that one called "MobyDick", that is how Ahab discovers its name.
Answer:
You would need to answer more questions. The popularity is I think how many thanks you get. In order to be popular, you need to answer questions and have people say thanks, mark you brainliest, or rate your answer well.
You are not doing anything wrong.
My popularity increases or decreases based on the average questions I answer. If I miss a day, it drops, if I answer about, lets say, 12 questions in a day, then then next day would be if I answered more or less than 12 questions on this day. I haven't answered that many questions right now, so mine is -32%
Hope this helps!
--Applepi101