Monthly Archive: September 2007

Defenders of Freedom Are Coming

Defenders of Freedom Are Coming

From the day we did our first Big ComicMix Broadcast, we told you that there were big things planned here at ComicMix, and now you will finally see for yourself in a little over a full day. Phase Two is about ready to fly, but in the meantime here are some things to surf two while you are waiting….

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has launched their graphic novel project, Defenders of Freedom which is comprised of two original stories: "Blue Collar," written by Jimmy Palmiotti and inked by Rick Burchett, about a man and a racist police officer, and "A Question of Obligation," drawn by Mark Badger and written by Matthew Manning, a story about a clash between government involvement and civil liberties. The back cover art is by Art Spiegelman. The ACLU has released the limited edition graphic novel in print via "guerilla marketing" teams in seven US cities, as well as in digital format on its youth-targeted website here.

If you want to be sure to get a copy of Okko: The Cycle of Water #1 from ASP Comics go to their site here. It also might be available from some comic book retailers, but there is no guarantee how long the "few hundred" copies AP turned up will last.

You can see that "Sopranos-like-remix" of CBS’ How I Met Your Mother here. It’s a three minute version of the first two seasons. Meanwhile, if you are on Facebook, you’re invited create their own recap, in hopes of being selected to air in a November episode. And if you are a fan, you also probably know the SlapBetWebsite is here.

Things are gearing up for 24 Hour Comics Day, the annual around-the-globe, around-the-clock festival of comics creation coming on Saturday, October 20th. Amateur and professional cartoonists will gather at event locations worldwide, each person aiming to create a 24 page comic book in 24 hours. Right now, 70 official local events have been announced with the latest list here and if you would still like to organize your own, get information here.

Finally, if you want to get a quick Heroes fix, Adrian Pasdar has some video he shot on the set of the NBC show here.

Join us here Tuesday for what we’ve all been waiting for, but in the meantime, here’s a question. Do you know someone who might be thrilled to hear that GrimJack, Simone & Ajax, Jon Sable, Freelance, or Munden’s Bar are back, or that might enjoy Fishhead, Black Ice or EZ Street? Do them a favor and shoot them a link to ComicMix this week – and while you are at it – be SURE to tell them it is (and will be) 100% FREE. We’ll be back in a couple of days with your personal audio guided tour of the New Stuff complements of ComicMix chairman Brian Alvey.

Everything old is new again

Everything old is new again

Only two days and counting until the next exciting phase of ComicMix debuts!  Lots of familiar names with brand-new comics work, a couple of whom also double as regular columnists.  Speaking of which, here are our contributions from the last week of September:

Mellifluous Mike Raub is smoothly into triple digits with his Big ComicMix Broadcasts; here’s what he’s had for us this past week:

And Media Queen Martha Thomases has been previewing our comics offerings for the last couple of weeks; here’s a compendium to get you up to speed:

Hope you’ll join us this coming Tuesday as we debut our free comics content by some of the industry’s greatest luminaries!  Did I mention free yet?

RIC MEYERS: Bram Stoker’s Ninja

RIC MEYERS: Bram Stoker’s Ninja

I’m sure you’ve noticed that the holidays are getting earlier every year. As an ex-mall Santa, I know that I had to report earlier and earlier every season, to the point I was in my big red throne practically the day after Halloween.

And speaking of Halloween, Rob Zombie’s needless remake of John Carpenter’s movie of that name showed up in theaters more than a month before the holiday arrived this year. So is it any wonder that it’s not even close to all hallow’s eve and the horror DVDs are already beginning to haunt shelves?

Thankfully, one of my favorites so far is the two-disc Collector’s Edition of Francis Ford Coppola’s Bram Stoker’s Dracula – a very cool package for the very theatrical 1992 movie. One of the reasons so many people liked it (and so many other people didn’t) is encapsulated by one of the very first things the famed director says in the first of four new behind-the-scenes docs. It also stands as one of cinema’s great Freudian slips.

“The whole question of ego…I mean, evil…,” Coppola says, trying to explain the attraction of the much-adapted, much filmed bloodsucker. That sets the stage for the whole ego-driven enterprise, which can be really enjoyed in retrospect once you see how many ideas and creativity they bathed it in. Following the half-hour “making of,” there’s fun ‘n’ interesting docs on Eiko Ishioka’s bold costumes, Roman Coppola’s imaginative special effects, and the entire production’s striking visual approach. You ever notice that the best Dracula movies have the strongest Van Helsings (my favorite’s being Hammer’s Peter Cushing and the BBC’s Frank Finlay)?

But I digress. Anyway, the real revelation for me were the more than half-hour of extended and deleted scenes, which I think improved the film mightily, especially the alternate opening, closing, and excised travails of the abundantly criticized Keanu Reeves. Although his limited acting is the film’s soft core – in a great cast which included Gary Oldman, Anthony Hopkins, Cary Elwes, Winona Ryder, Bill Campbell, Richard E. Grant, Tom Waits, and Sadie Frost – his character’s struggles add an important weight to the tale.

The other major criticism at the time of the film’s release was that Bram Stoker’s Dracula clearly wasn’t, as Coppola and company folded in all sorts of other influences, not to mention his historical inspiration, Vlad the Impaler. Virtually every member of the cast and crew tries to rationalize the title, while, within minutes, admitting how many other sources they were cribbing from.

Finally, Coppola himself puts it to rest with a neat variation on the audio commentary the DVD calls: “Watch Bram Stoker’s Dracula with Francis Coppola.” He simply states that he liked putting the original author’s name above the title, no matter what he wound up doing with the script. That’s part of his filmed intro, which leads seamlessly into his entertaining and informative commentary that weaves Hollywood history, world history, and his encyclopedic knowledge of filmmaking.

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MICHAEL H. PRICE: The folklore-into-fiction cycle persists

MICHAEL H. PRICE: The folklore-into-fiction cycle persists

Continued from last week

An Arlington, Texas-based songwriting and guitar-building partner of mine named Greg Jackson tells of the time when, as a schoolboy intent upon advancing his family’s music-making traditions, he brought home a just-learned story-song called “Five Nights Drunk” and demonstrated it to his folk-singing father as a fresh revelation. Manny Jackson listened long enough for the verses to open the floodgates of memory, then burst out laughing: “Why, I learned that song back when I was just a boy, and it was old even then! Here: Let me show you how it really goes!”

I suspect that that communal dream-stream, rippling with the waves and the undertow of ancient Ideas That Wouldn’t, and Will Not, Stay Dead (like the Man Who Wouldn’t Stay Dead of my Grandmother Lillian’s cycle of folk-tales) is the truer basis of the fabled Unbroken Circle of Southern non-sectarian gospel-singing tradition. Our shared notions and perceptions bind our generations, one to another – more so, even, than blood kinship – if only we will bother to heed the interests in common and build upon them. The past is ever-present.

Greg Jackson and I, both natives of the Texas Panhandle with immigrant and native-tribal ancestral ties to Kansas and Oklahoma and points eastward, have enjoyed the good fortune to be involved since around 1980 with a music-making and storytelling ensemble called the Salt Lick Foundation. East Texan by origin but long based in Dallas and Fort Worth, Salt Lick is ostensibly a bluegrass band that nonetheless reserves the right to indulge in blues and honky-tonk forms, with the occasional forays into rock ’n’ roll, Latinate and Cajun idioms, and free-form jazz.

An immersion in folklore is a foregone conclusion with Salt Lick – from fiddler Earnie Taft’s (above) devotion to Irish traditionalism, to bassist Ron Green’s eerie ability to channel the presence of some 19th-century circuit-riding revivalist preacher. We deepened the connections in a stroke when we teamed in 1984 with the Wimberley-based novelist and playwright Elithe Hamilton Kirkland (1907–1992) to develop a musical stage revue called Precious Memories.

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BIG BROADCAST: Fishhead Talks!

BIG BROADCAST: Fishhead Talks!

ComicMix Phase II is mere hours away and one part of it is a story that dates back close to 100 years and will finally get the audience it deserves – FREE here at ComicMix. Fishhead is a classic horror tale as fresh as anything you see on the big screen and we cover the whole Secret Origin right here.

Also on The Big ComicMix Broadcast Weekend Edition: Fangoria Comics crashes and burns, Kingdom Hearts gets some fresh updates, Knight Rider may get retooled, and the TV networks have their back-up shows waiting in the wings.

After week you’ve had you need a break – PRESS THE BUTTON!

A Box Full Of Who

A Box Full Of Who

If you’re a Doctor Who fan given to long drives half-way across the continent (well, hey, I am), here’s a way to pass the time that’s a lot more entertaining that counting cars on the New Jersey turnpike.

Next week, the BBC’s audiobooks division will be releasing a box set of six audiobooks based upon recent novels starring the 10th and current Doctor.

Three of the six were read by David Tennant himself: The Feast of the Drowned by Stephen Cole, The Stone Rose by Jacqueline Rayner, and The Resurrection Casket by Justin Richards. Buffy’s Anthony Head (himself a frequent performer on Big Finish’s Doctor Who audio dramas) reads The Nightmare of Black Island by Mike Tucker. Rounding out the set, The Price of Paradise by Colin Brake and The Art of Destruction by Stephen Cole are read by Doctor Who actors Shaun Dingwall (Pete Tyler) and Don Warrington (The President in The Age of Steel), respectively.

According to the BBC, each adaptation will run approximately two hours. The set will cost about $100.00 U.S., plus shipping from your favorite neighborhood science fiction or comics importer. Amazon.com usually gets these things… eventually.

MARTHA THOMASES: If I Could Talk to the Animals

MARTHA THOMASES: If I Could Talk to the Animals

Is there anything more wonderful than a super-pet?  A companion who can do anything you can do, and more.  When I was a kid, there was nothing I wanted more than a super-pet to call my own.

Actually, what I wanted was Krypto.  I lived in a relatively small Ohio town, with a backyard, and I really wanted a dog.  My parents decided I could have one for my tenth birthday, so throughout elementary school I daydreamed about what kind of dog I would get.  If I had Krypto, we could go for romps in space (not that I would have named “romp” as one of my favorite activities at the time, since no one I knew ever had one.  Still, they looked like fun in the comics).  We could play the greatest games of fetch ever.  Krypto could help me hide my toys from my sister.  Krypto could help me in my never-ending efforts to dig a hole to China.

On the other hand, there were leash laws in my neighborhood, and I wasn’t sure that I was strong enough to take Krypto for a walk.  And what did a Kryptonian dog eat?  In the comics, sometimes we’d see him with a massive bone from a dinosaur.  There weren’t a lot of those at Loblaws Supermarket.

Ace, the Bathound, was not as cool.  I couldn’t understand why Batman needed an animal companion.  I didn’t understand how Ace could communicate any information from clues he’d sniffed.  And I didn’t understand how the mask was a fool-proof disguise.

When Supergirl got Streaky, the supercat, I wasn’t as interested.  Streaky didn’t have much of a character.  No one I knew had a cat.  I didn’t understand what the big deal was about an animal that wouldn’t do tricks and wouldn’t play with you in the back yard.  It was only when I moved to college and lived in a dorm room that I understood feline appeal.  A cat may not fetch, but is a good study-mate, keeping to itself or purring in your lap while you got your work done.

Supergirl also had Comet, the super-horse.  The intent, I think, was to appeal to girls who are said to be especially drawn to horses for all kinds of psychosexual reasons.  I like horses okay, but not enough to clean out stalls or braid their tails.  Later, when it was revealed that Comet was sometimes a centaur and sometimes an enchanted man, it got too icky for me.  Still, a flying horse would be big fun.

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Too good to Biel true?

Too good to Biel true?

This is why we’re sometimes reticent to pass along casting call news.  Everyone beleived Variety when they said that Jessica Biel’s talks to play Wonder Woman in the upcoming Justice League movie were solid and the real thing and so on.  We even found you a photo of Biel in a WW t-shirt to seal the deal.

But noooo.  According to Entertainment Weekly‘s Hollywood Insider — and who better to know from things inside Hollywood? I mean, it’s right there in the name — Biel has given the role a pass.

So you know, we state all Obiwan-like, when we reported that she was in talks, it was the truth, from a certain point of view.  It’s like the old joke about prayers being heard: sometimes the answer is no.

But you know, it gives us an excuse to post another photo of Ms. Biel.  This was one of the tamer ones from our Google Image search.  We liked the outfit, reasoning that, if she isn’t interested in Wonder Woman, maybe someone can talk her into Isis?

A new Starz is born in Canada

A new Starz is born in Canada

With all the talk about the Canadian dollar reaching par with its American counterpart, now would seem the perfect time for a US animation studio to branch northward.  Starz Animation Toronto officially opened this past Tuesday and is already billing itself as "ne of Canada’s largest 3D animation, effects and compositing facilities, and Toronto’s leading studio for breakthrough digital production."

The studio’s first major project will be fantasy epic 9, based on an Oscar®-nominated short, co-produced by Tim Burton, directed by Shane Acker, and featuring voice work from Elijah Wood, Jennifer Connelly, Crispin Glover, Martin Landau, Christopher Plummer and John C. Reilly.  As one might expect from Burton, it’s a happy tale "about rag dolls battling for civilization’s survival in a post-apocalyptic parallel world."  It’s slated to be released late next year.

The studio will also generate income through producing content for TV, commercials and live-action visual effects.