Monthly Archive: September 2007

L’shana tova ComicMix!

L’shana tova ComicMix!

Yeah, I’m psyched for this next year as well.  Even though I’m strictly a "Phase One" gal for now, ComicMix‘s next incarnation has me excited over lots of good reading ahead.  But let’s not let the weekly columns get lost in the shuffle:

Are we there yet, Mellifluous Mike Raub?  Almost to one hundred Big ComicMix Broadcasts:

May you all be inscribed in the Book of Much Nachas (that’s nachas, not nachos) for the sweetest and healthiest of years!

RIC MEYERS: Triad Tekkonkinkreet

RIC MEYERS: Triad Tekkonkinkreet

“Sh*t runs d*wnhill.” Those words of wisdom/warning were first spoken to me back in the mid-1980s, at lunch on the first day I started consulting for CBS-TV in California. The statement came back to me several times while watching this week’s offerings (as well as many, many times over the decades as I watched businesses run by productive people flourish, and companies run by “flawed” folk perish). 

In order of release, there’s Triad Election, which arrived in stores last Tuesday. It’s directed and co-produced by Johnnie To, today’s greatest Hong Kong filmmaker, whose eclectic, exceptional ability at a variety of genres has given the international film community some of the greatest movies of the last two decades, including Heroic Trio (superheroes), Lifeline (firefighters), Running Out of Time (cops ‘n’ robbers), The Mission (bodyguards), Fulltime Killer (assassins), Love on a Diet (romantic comedy), Running on Karma (existential mystery), Breaking News (media wars) and Throwdown (judo comedy/drama).

The last few years he’s joined the ranks of Coppola, Scorcese, and Chase (sounds like a law firm, doesn’t it?) by filling cinemas with multiple award-winning Chinese gangster sagas. Election (2005) played like a Hong Kong big-screen version of The Sopranos minus the final scene black-out. Election 2: Harmony is a Virtue (2006) was something else again. To paraphrase To (sic) from “The Making Of doc: Election was the set-up. Election 2 is the pay-off.

So Tartan Asia Extreme Video made a tough decision. Many people who liked Election might see Election 2. But everybody who loved Election 2 would definitely go back to check out Election. So rather than release the two movies in order, they decided to retitle Election 2 “Triad Election,” release it first, and then label Election its “prequel.”* For what it’s worth, I, personally, think they made the right call … although I might have gone a step or two forward in clarifying the issue.

The movie is great – not just for its stylish violence, psychological insight, and filmmaking prowess, but because of the aforementioned pay-off, which seems to be: China’s impersonal desire for order might be more cruel than Triad carnage. This was a bold, brave statement for To to (sic) make, but, as he also says during “The Making Of” featurette, he wanted to acknowledge the dismissive changes made since China’s takeover of Hong Kong’s lease. The city was like a seduced beauty that the government seemed to forget about as soon as its seduction was complete. All signs point to Shanghai now becoming the favored mistress, with Hong Kong the forgotten wife.

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MICHAEL H. PRICE: The folklore-into-fiction connection

MICHAEL H. PRICE: The folklore-into-fiction connection

Recycling-in-action: Herewith, an encore of a presentation I delivered earlier this month at Tarleton State University’s Langdon Weekend arts-and-farces festival at Granbury, Texas.

If it was good enough for Aesop and Shakespeare and Mark Twain, then it should suit the rest of us – as tradition-bound storytellers with roots in the Old World and in early-day Americana, that is – just fine and dandy.

I am speaking of folklore – the oral-tradition narrative medium that encloses and defines any and all cultures and stands poised as a chronic muse (often ill-heeded or, if heeded, ill-acknowledged) for anyone who attempts to relate a tale for popular consumption. This is a self-evident truth so obvious as to go overlooked.

Yes, and the barrier between folklore and commercial fiction is as slender as the upper E-string on a guitar, and just as sensitive. Pluck that string and watch it vibrate, and the blurred image suggests a vivid metaphor. The inspiration, at any rate, is as close within reach as air and water, and often less subject to pollution.

“So! Where do you-all get your ideas, anyhow?” The question, vaguely indignant, crops up every time a published author goes out communing with the readership. Stephen King has long since perfected a suitably snarky reply: “I get mine from an idea-subscription service in Utica.”

King is joking, of course, and even the most cursory reading of the humongous body of work that he represents will find King tapped into a deep lode of rustic folklore. Witness, for example, The Shining, a 1977 novel-become-movie in which a key supporting character takes prompt notice of a precocious child’s thought-projecting abilities: “My grandmother and I could hold conversations … without ever opening our mouths. She called it ‘shining.’”

I grew up in close quarters with two grandmothers like that – not in Stephen King’s sense of “shining,” as such, although with each I felt a communicative bond that ran deeper than articulated speech. Each, that is, seemed to sense what might be burdening my thoughts at any given moment, whether or not I might care to put any such thoughts into words. And each grandmother, too, was a prolific and spontaneous storyteller, dispensing colorful family-history tales, fables in the Aesopic tradition, and hair-raising horrors divided more-or-less equally between waking-life ordeals and dreamlike supernatural hauntings. With such living-history resources at hand, who needed Little Golden Books?

My maternal-side grandmother, Lillian Beatrice Ralston Wilson Lomen (1895–1982), characterized her ghostlier yarns as “haint stories” – haint being a back-country variant of haunt. She knew by heart James Whitcomb Riley’s famous moral-lesson poem of 1885, “Little Orphant Annie, (sic)” with its recurring admonition that “the Gobble: ’Uns’ll git you ef [if] you don’t watch out!” And she could concoct – or recollect, or fabricate from combined experience and imagination – stories and verses every bit as horrific, and as absurd and uproarious.

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BIG BROADCAST: GrimJack Comes To ComicMix!

BIG BROADCAST: GrimJack Comes To ComicMix!

The giant ticking clock on the wall here at ComicMix tells us that a mere 17 days remain until we launch Phase Two, but before then there are a lot of questions to be answered!  For example, how will co-creators Timothy Truman and John Ostrander bring their GrimJack series to a huge new audience as well as their scores of established fans? They tell The Big ComicMix Broadcast just how it will all work – and get us geared up for brand-new WEEKLY visits with the Man From Cynosure, FREE OF CHARGE!

Plus THE DARKNESS comes to your cel phone and Michael J goes back in time…..

PRESS THE BUTTON and get 10% off your tab at MUNDEN’S BAR!

ANDREW’S LINKS: Lactose Intolerant

ANDREW’S LINKS: Lactose Intolerant

As I type this, it’s still Friday, which was New Comics Day back in my own misspent youth.  Very vaguely in honor of that, enjoy this picture of a Milk & Cheese magnet.

Comics Links

Jonathan Ross, British TV personality and famous snogger of Neil Gaiman, has an article in the Guardian about why he loved Steve Ditko. It also serves as a teaser for Ross’s documentary, In Search of Steve Ditko, appearing on BBC4 Sunday night at 9.

Comic Book Resources reprints Diamond’s charts for market share and sales for August in the direct market.

CBR interviews Andrea Offerman.

And CBR also interviews Billy Tucci.

The Small Press Expo has announced the nominees for this year’s Ignatz Awards.

Newsarama interviews Garth Ennis.

Cracked.com lists the ten funniest webcomics.

Omar Karindu, at Comics Should Be Good, argues that it was always stupid when comic-book superheroes fought real-world dictators, terrorists, and the like.

Mike Sterling ponders the state of Spider-Man’s marriage, and whether anyone but Joe Quesada was every strongly against it.

Nerds with Kids interviews Evan Dorkin and Sarah Dyer about their work on the kids’ show Yo Gabba Gabba.

The Washington Post looks at comics designed to be viewed on cellphones.

Comics Reviews

The Joplin Independent checks out the New Look Betty & Veronica.

PopMatters reviews the last ten issues of Strangers in Paradise.

The Onion’s A.V. Club reviews a bunch of comics.

The Christian Science Monitor reviews the new graphic novel biography of Ronald Reagan.

Warren Peace Sings the Blues reviews Osamu Tezuka’s bizarrely brilliant Apollo’s Song.

Chris’s Invincible Super-Blog covers this week’s comics, starting with B.P.R.D.: Killing Ground #2.

Jog of The Savage Critics reviews two old Vertigo comics: Kill Your Boyfriend and Girl.

Occasional Superheroine really likes the new Thor series.

Yes But No But Yes has its eyes on this week’s comics.

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MARTHA THOMASES: Everyday I Write the Book

MARTHA THOMASES: Everyday I Write the Book

These are the Days of Awe.  While that sounds like a World Wrestling event, it is, in fact, the ten-day period between Rosh Hashonah (New Year) and Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement).  It’s a time to consider the previous twelve months, make amends, and resolve to do better in the year ahead.

It’s a good thing that it lasts ten days.  In my case, not only do I have the usual apologies to make, but I need a little extra time to get over myself.  This has been a good year.  I have a job I love with people who are really fun, and we’re going to bring happiness to billions.  I must be fabulous!

The Jewish God, whatever else S/He may be, is one heck of a storyteller.  There is the part in the service where one prays to be inscribed for another year in the book of life. We all want to be characters in that book. 

And that’s why I must resist the temptation to consider myself too fabulous.  It’s not dramatically interesting to have a character achieve success and/or happiness in the middle of the story, then coast along to the end.  If there is a Book of Life, I want to be around to find out what happens next.

Writers like to play God, and we like to think we’re clever about the way we move our characters around, putting them in and out of jeopardy.  Comic book, science fiction and fantasy writers can be feel this way especially, as we can not only put our characters through the dramas and adventures humans experience, but we can also put them into space colonies, make them invulnerable to bullets, and magical wonderlands. 

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Friday fun and games

Friday fun and games

One of the more disturbing yet oddly challenging drinking games around comes to us from Home on the Strange, pictured here. The game is called "Celebrity Sex Hunt" and the rules are simple: One person names a celebrity. If the other player or players can find any slash fiction or Photoshopped porn associated with that celebrity, the first player must view it all and then take a drink. And afterwards, you probably need it.

In the interests of being fair, I’ll start: Jimi Hendrix.

If you can find anything, put a link in the comments. And feel free to list your own celebrities there as well.

And no, we’re not encouraging mindless drinking, operating motor vehicles or equipment when impared, or with whom you go to bed  and what may or may not happen there under such circumstances.

ANDREW’S LINKS: Tentacoo Wape!

ANDREW’S LINKS: Tentacoo Wape!

Hey, guess which loathed-by-the-Internets cover came out this week? Yup…that one.

Comics Links

Forbidden Planet International’s Continental Correspondent visits the Brussels Comics Center, and isn’t terribly impressed.

The Seattle Post Intelligencer talks with Douglas Wolk.

The Beat has some serious thoughts about the professionalism – or lack thereof – of the current crop of comic shop owners and management.

ICv2 interviews Viz’s Senior Vice President Liza Coppola.

Silver Bullet Comic Books interviews Umbrella Academy artist Gabriel Ba.

Panels and Pixels awoke to find itself buried under a giant wave of Naruto books.

At Newsarama, Grumpy Old Fan ponders the recent wave of creators returning to the books of their youth at DC.

The Chicago Reader talks to Anders Nilsen, cartoonist of The End. [via Newsarama]

 

Comics Reviews

Inside Pulse reviews Punisher War Journal #11.

Comic Book Resources’s Hannibal Tabu lists his “buy pile” for this week.

Warren Peace Sings the Blues reviews Good As Lily, the Minx graphic novel by Derek Kirk Kim and Jesse Hamm.

Greg Burgas of Comics Should Be Good reviews this week’s comics, starting with Bad Planet #3.

Living Between Wednesdays also reviews this week’s comics, but she starts with Wonder Girl #1.

At The Savage Critics, Graeme McMillan also looks at Wonder Girl #1.

And Occasional Superheroine reviews the Justice League of America Weding Special.

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Cartoonist Phil Frank, 64

Cartoonist Phil Frank, 64

Noted California Bay cartoonist Phil Frank died yesterday at the age of 64. His best-known feature, Farley, has been in national syndication for more than three decades. He was also the artist on Elderberries with writer Joe Troise.

Coincidentially, Frank had retired Farley this past Sunday. Both strips had been in reruns for the past several months; Elderberries will continue under Troise’s management.

MICHAEL DAVIS: The Real World

MICHAEL DAVIS: The Real World

I am lucky enough to know some pretty influential people in the entertainment world. When I say “influential” I mean people who have positions where they can “green light” work. They can give the “yes” to make your idea a reality or hire you to work on an existing project.

I have been fortunate in my career to “green light” some things. I have tried to give as many talented people as I can opportunities to take their ideas or talent to the next level.

We all know that the comic book community is responsible for some of the greatest creative endeavors in the history of the world. That’s right, I’ll say it again, the comic book community is responsible for some of the greatest creative endeavors in the history of the world… of the world.

I am very proud to have contributed in a small part to the industry and even prouder that my mentor program has produced some amazing talent.

But…

What burns me is the lack of foresight and professionalism by some of the best in the industry and what really burns me is the new guard coming up who have this terrible work ethic. One glaring example of that work ethic: lateness in the comic book industry has become a standard practice.

Blowing deadlines has been a staple of comic book business for decades. I have blown a few myself. When I did ETC for Piranha Press DC’s ‘mature reader” imprint (way back when DC liked me) I was so excited that I got that gig that I was determined to do the best work ever! ETC was a five issue 52-page (per book) mini-series that was to be the first thing out from Piranha. You would think in all my excitement I would have taken it a bit more serious.

I thought I did take it serious. I thought. I was wrong. I was stupid.

I spent way too much time doing “research” and such. So after two months I had no finished pages. Oh, I had done something on all 52 pages. But with a week left on my deadline, I had NO finished pages.

I hated the way that book turned out. The funny thing about ETC is it was almost universally hated… except in France. I’m not kidding. I still get fan mail from France on that book.

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