“Archibald?”
Methinks you mean Archimedes, named after Merlin’s owl in “The Once and Future King.”
It refers to a famous Bernie Boston photo from 1967.
Huh - I thought he couldn’t have been referring to Kent State in that shot, since even a 5 minute perusal of the wikipedia article would show that it was a totally inaccurate potrayal - the students were around 100 yards away, they were throwing objects, etc. (Not that I am in any way excusing the Nat. Guard firing on them). Of course, Zack Snyder pissed on a decent amount of the comic book as well.
The purpose of that scene was to show the alternative timeline. In our reality, the kids at the Pentagon putting flowers in the barrels were unharmed. In the alternative history, the soldiers opened fire.
I can’t recall, was this the same event at which there was an effort to make the Pentagon levitate using only the power of peace and love?
:smack:
The comic cites The Sword in the Stone, actually.
Okay, so once removed.
Sword in the Stone was based on the first part of The Once and Future King, just as *Camelot *was based on the later sections.
(Of course, all postdate the time line split, so Dreiberg may have seen a very different film than we are familiar with.)
TV Tropes on “Zeppelins From Another World,” a sure sign that you’ve slipped into an alternative universe such as President Nixon’s fifth term: http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld
I don’t remember any of the airships in either the graphic novel or the movie being clearly identified as police.