Author: Tommy Hancock

MIKE BULLOCK, Writer/Creator

AP:  Mike, welcome back to ALL PULP.

Mike Bullock: Thanks! [looks at the new blinds] I love what you’ve
done with the place.

AP: Ha! Catch everyone up on what you’ve been up to and what you’re working on.

MB: Well, I have a lot of irons in the fire, but the ones that AP’s
readers are most likely interested in include putting the finishing
touches on the first Black Bat/Death Angel graphic novel, which heads
to the printer this week.

AP:  You’ve been involved heavily in Moonstone’s pulp comic line,
including bringing your own character, Death Angel into the mix as
well as working with well known characters from Pulp’s Golden Age. In
general, what appeals to you about these types of characters as a
creator?

MB: Since the first moment I saw the Michael Whelan cover on A
Princess of Mars back in the ‘70s, I’ve been a pulp fan. There’s just
something about speculative fiction created in the early 20th century
that’s always captivated my imagination. I think it has something to
do with the sheer sense of wonder many of those tales possess. Those
stories were also more clear-cut, in that you always knew the hero,
always knew the villain and were never bogged down in the “shades of
grey” trends and anti-hero shtick that’s so prevalent these days. I’ve
since become greatly intrigued by the creation process many pulp
writers went through back then and how they combined elements from the
real world with what we now call “fringe science,” melding both into a
bubbling concoction of imaginative zeal.

AP:  Let’s narrow the scope here. You are the writer behind
Moonstone’s BLACK BAT. This iconic character is credited for being the
inspiration for many heroes that followed him, most notably Batman and
Daredevil. Who/what is THE BLACK BAT?

MB: He is a DA, a hero, a man who burns with a desire to use
everything at his disposal to bring the guilty to justice. In his
pre-Bat life, Anthony Quinn was nearly single-minded in his pursuit of
justice through the legal system. I’ve often found that those who
truly excel at what they do share this trait, and sometimes it takes
them to heights those of us who tend to multi-task can never hope to
achieve. That was true of Anthony Quinn, which put him directly in the
crosshairs of organized crime. After an attempt to destroy evidence
goes horribly wrong, blinding Quinn in the courtroom that was his
battlefield, he learns to adapt, (with that same single-mindedness)
and move outside the confines of the system he so diligently defends
by taking on the persona of the Black Bat.

AP:  When you were given the BLACK BAT to write, what sort of feelings
went through your head, how did you feel about taking on a character
that, although not well known, had a definite established history,
personality, and a loyal fan base?

MB: Whether I like it or not, I’m no stranger to dealing with a
character with a decades-old, passionate, vocal fan-base. I mean, you
can’t write a character like The Phantom and not have that ghost
hanging over you every time you work on a story. So, that part of
taking on Black Bat didn’t faze me much. I’m cognizant of the fact
that some people will love what I’ve done, some will hate it and some
will find themselves indifferent. The only group I really fret over is
the last one.

AP:  What’s the creative process you used when you started working on
BLACK BAT?  Any special techniques, rituals, etc. that you go through
when writing a character for the first time and/or when developing a
story line?

MB: First, I dig around and read as much as I can about the character
such as past stories, online bios, information by knowledgeable fans,
etc. Then I sit down and try to imagine what was going through the
original creator’s mind when coming at the character for the first
time. Once I have a handle on how I feel the character will react to
certain situations and themes, I then turn around and try to concoct a
series of events I can transform into a story based on how the
character will interact with them.

AP:  As you considered the directions you might go with the character,
what stood out to you the most from the BLACK BAT’s story? What
aspects hooked you as a fan that you then wanted to bring out to the
readers?

MB: As I mentioned upstream, it’s the single-mindedness of Quinn. I’ve
been fascinated with people many consider “game changers” for years
now, studying how they approach things. One commonality I’ve seen in
such people, from sports icons, to filmmakers, to inventors, is their
single-mindedness. Men such as Robert E. Howard, Bruce Lee, Dale
Earnhardt, Steve Jobs, Michael Jordan and George Lucas all embody this
trait and it’s something that jumped out at me about Black Bat; a
laser-like focus on the task at hand. While none of these men are
striving to be the absolute best at what they do as an end game, their
dedication to the craft brings that about as a by-product.

AP: A major discussion that goes on all the time in various media, but
particularly it seems where pulp characters are concerned, is why
modern creators change the classic characters in some way when they
write them. Did you come to BLACK BAT intending to change it, to
update it, to make it fit with modern stories? Or was that more of an
organic process, change happening as you put the idea together?

MB: I certainly didn’t set out to do that, but somewhere along the
line I think I did re-imagine him to a certain extent, or possibly a
more accurate way to say it would be ‘re-create’ him. My fascination
with the old pulp writers, combined with the study of game-changing
men made me stop and take a hard look at just what I thought a man
like Norman Daniels might do with Black Bat were he to create the
character now instead of the 1930s. He’d have the backdrop of the
early 21st century mindset to work from, with our lessened societal
moral code: what was considered “R” rated in the 20th century is “PG”
these days. He’d also have a solid working knowledge of post-traumatic
stress disorder and how it can ‘cause personality fragmentation. He’d
know how personality fragmentation works and how it manifests. He’d
also know that rarely is a man who is so driven justified with what
most consider normal.

All those factors lead to a perfect storm of sorts, ignited by the
acid that hit Quinn in the face and brought the genesis of the Black
Bat.

AP: One change, subtle to some, glaring to others, is that your BLACK
BAT is a killer. Even though BLACK BAT did sometimes use maximum force
in the original stories, your take on Tony Quinn is definitely more
savage, more ruthless. What was the motivation behind this? Was it
because these types of characters sell or was it more to do with the
character itself?

MB: I don’t do anything because I think it will sell, because honestly
I have no clue what will or won’t sell. If I did know, I wouldn’t need
to write anymore, except to sign my name to royalty checks at the bank
[laughing]. The decision to go there with this incarnation of Black
Bat was nothing more than the logical progression of what I mentioned
above: A single-minded, traumatized, fractured man who views criminals
as a disease that needs to be cured. Or, maybe it’s all part of a
larger campaign to strike fear in the powerful men behind those Black
Bat encounters? Since the original Black Bat vowed to use fear as a
weapon, it makes sense that he would communicate that fear in a
language his adversaries speak. In the interests of not spoiling
what’s to come, I don’t want to say which way it’s really going…

AP:  Is your version of BLACK BAT more relevant today than the
original version? Does relevance even matter?

MB: I have no idea. Relevance is in the eye of the beholder. Some
might only find it relevant if I adhere exactly to what’s come before,
others might see it as me doing something that fits into modern times,
others might only consider it relevant if they’re entertained. That’s
another one of those questions, like “what sells” that I’m just not
smart enough to answer.

AP: One of the arguments many of the pulp purists have when discussing
changing existing characters is “If you want to make him different
than what he was, give him a different name and create a new
character!” What are your thoughts on that? Why are creators looking
at these old, largely forgotten properties and tweaking and changing
them instead of creating whole new characters from top to bottom?

MB: I couldn’t speak for why anyone else does that other than creators
create, it’s in our DNA. For me, I acknowledge that no one will ever
write a Black Bat story as good as the ones already in print written
by the Bat’s creator. No one will ever write Conan as well as Howard,
no one will ever write Doc Savage as well as Lester Dent and I never
wrote a Phantom story that measures up to one from Lee Falk. So,
instead of trying to do the impossible, I felt led to try and sit in
Daniels’ seat, think inside his parameters, but include what we know
these days in regards to the psychology of fear.

All the old tales, and all the news ones as well, always have a
certain degree of social commentary, a certain amount of the writer’s
worldview and life experience built into them, sometimes overtly, but
more often than not subconsciously. I think we have to acknowledge the
age old adage: Life imitates art. It’s hard to imitate certain aspects
of a life we’ve never led, while striving to remove aspects of the one
we do lead.

There’s also the real possibility I’m simply off my rocker…

And, to touch on the other point, I did create my own pulp character
from top to bottom with Death Angel.

AP: To follow that tangent, tell us about that. What makes Death Angel
fit into the pulp world?

MB: Death Angel is a combination of unquenchable drive, righteous
anger and fringe science all balled into one package of “night
stalking” vigilante. ‘Angel is my tip of the hat to the great writers
who heralded the golden age of speculative fiction from the 20th
century. My chance to create my own take, do with it as I want, and
tell the sorts of stories that have no place in my other creator-owned
properties like Lions, Tigers and Bears or Timothy and the
Transgalactic Towel. So far, reader feedback has been very positive,
so I think I’m doing something right… for once [laughing]

AP:  All right, soapbox time. You have as long as you want to pitch
BLACK BAT to the purists, to the readers and fans who feel like you
should have left BLACK BAT as is. Why should they read what you’re
doing with the character? What will they find that they can connect to
in your take on this character?

MB: All I’d ask is that everyone waits for the story to unfold before
jumping to any conclusions. I know it falls under the “not your
Father’s” cliché, but I love the character and really tried to imbue
that into the stories. I really want to show people who never read
Black Bat stories why he’s such a great character, and hopefully, that
will lead them back to the source material. Unlike some people who
have taken on older characters of late, I truly love the pulp “genre”,
truly love the characters and want them to regain the spotlight they
deserve. If you disagree, then by all means, speak your mind, but I’d
ask that you give it a fair shake before deciding it is or isn’t for
you. That’s all I can ask.

AP:  What else do you have cooking, pulp wise and beyond, in the future?

MB: Well, I’m looking forward to doing more with Black Bat and Death
Angel, as well as Captain Future and a few other things. Joe Gentile
and I are slowly laying the ground work for a Return of the Originals:
Battle for LA sequel, of sorts (not really a continuation of what CJ
Henderson wrote, but just another epic tale featuring a multitude of
pulp heroes). On the pulp event-horizon you’ll find Savage Beauty, our
new jungle girl book, and Air Vixens, featuring a new tale with Bald
Eagle, Black Angel and Jasmine LaForge of Iron Ace fame.

I’m working on another “brought back to life” property that I can’t
talk about just yet, but I can say the last time the character was in
comics, he was one of the five most popular comic characters on Earth.

For anyone into all-ages comics, my own Lions, Tigers and Bears is
roaring back into book stores in May, with the debut of volume III,
followed soon thereafter by re-issues of volume I & II. I also have
another all-ages property I’m creating right now that will hopefully
hit stores in 2012.

AP:  Thanks, Mike!

MOONSTONE MONDAY-Preview of AIRBOY PRESENTS: AIR VIXENS!

FROM MOONSTONE IN MAY!
Airboy Presents: AIR VIXENS #1

Written by Mike Bullock

Art: Ben Hansen
Cover:Franchesco!
32 pages, Black and White

More story pages than ever before!

From the pages of Air Fighters comes the first issue of Air Vixens starring Black Angel, Bald Eagle and Valkyrie. When Der Furher sent Valkyrie to smuggle secret weapons and intelligence across Europe in a zeppelin, he didn’t expect Black Angel and Bald Eagle to crash the party, and neither did they.

Tune in for the first issue featuring the high flying femme fatales of the Air Fighters in this oversized, bombastic first issue!


EIGHT PAGE PREVIEW OF AIRBOY PRESENTS: AIR VIXENS #1
 FROM MOONSTONE!

ALL PULP NEEDS TO HEAR FROM YOU!

A message from Tommy Hancock, EIC of All Pulp and Member of the Spectacled Seven-

First, I want to thank each and every one of you who have visited ALL PULP for your interest, support, and comments over the last few months.  It’s hard to believe how many people have viewed the site and hopefully enjoyed our content over the last seven, almost eight months.  It has truly been a pleasure to not only post news, reviews, interviews, etc., but it has been an honor to become, according to comments many of you have made, a vital part of the Pulp world, a major force in the Pulp Renaissance we are all currently enjoying.

ALL PULP definitely wants to and will continue to be a driving contributor and beacon for All The News that is Pulp and to do that, ALL PULP needs your help.  Now I have posted comments like this before, here and in other places, and those of you who listen to THE BOOK CAVE, ALL PULP’s official podcast, have heard me say this sort of thing there as well.  But I write this to you now to stress how important YOU are to what we do.

ALL PULP needs to know some things from you.

 What do you want to see more of, both generally and specifically? 
What are we doing that you don’t really care for? 
What features would you like to see added?
What companies that you love are we not even aware of?
What creators that you love need to be featured on ALL PULP that aren’t?
What creators and companies that are regulars on ALL PULP do you want to see more from?
Is news all you want?  Do you enjoy fiction, art, and the other things ALL PULP has done?
Do you want more ‘out of the box’ stuff from ALL PULP and if so, what?
If you’re a creator or a publisher, please sound off on those things as well, but also-What can we do to make sure you are sending us all your news, information, and special features you’d like to have on ALL PULP on a regular basis? I would love it if the ALL PULP staff had the time to track down every scrap of news and come to you and ask what you have going on, but the reality is we don’t.  No one gets paid at ALL PULP and most of us are struggling writers and publishers ourselves, which means time is something we don’t have a ton of  What can we do to get into a regular conversation of sorts with you as creators to get your stuff out there and content for the site?
Please answer these questions.  You can either click the COMMENTS tabe on the ALL PULP page and leave your answers there OR you can email me directly at allpulp@yahoo.com.   Now, most of the time when these types of questions are asked, no one replies or maybe one or two do.  If that happens, this time, that’s fine, but that means that things may continue as status quo at ALL PULP until I and others find a magic treasure chest full of time to focus on doing different things with the site.   I encourage and ask each of you to send me your thoughts and suggestions.  
ALL PULP is the site for all the news that is Pulp.  And we want to do even more of that the way YOU LIKE IT.
Thank you,
Tommy 

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION, 4/1/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND
BULLDOG EDITION 
4/1/11 
1128 South State Street
Lockport, Illinois, 60441
815-834-1658
http://www.moonstonebooks.com/
Tommy Hancock, Marketing and Promotions
THancock@moonstonebooks.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE-
4/1/11, Lockport Illinois-

CATCH MOONSTONE MADNESS
AND GET THE BEST FICTION FOR THE BEST PRICE EVER! 
Moonstone Entertainment, Inc announces a sale unlike any other the company has offered before ore will likely offer again to online customers!   According to Joe Gentile, CEO of Moonstone-
MOONSTONE MADNESS is here!
We would like to just say thanks to all of our faithful readers everywhere!
**For the first time ever, we are offering just you online customers a  25% off sale bonanza!**
That is 25% off everything on the site…no matter if it’s on sale already…
if it’s a new item…if it’s an old item…doesn’t matter. Everything is on sale!
We have never done anything like this before,  and may not do so again,
 so get while the getting’s good!
Until April 14th, use this code…once, twice…as many times as you want: “Mad11”.
So again, a big thank you to everyone for your support!
And keep an eye out for our new stuff on the horizon:
SHEENA,
The JUSTICE MACHINE,
The SAINT,
FLINT,
and many more!
Joe,
Your Man in the Moon’
DO NOT MISS OUT ON THIS ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY! 
CATCH THE MADNESS AT MOONSTONE
AND SAVE TODAY!
Moonstone Entertainment Inc. publishes comics and illustrated fiction designed to “awaken your sense of adventure”, featuring classic and new heroes in thrilling tales of adventure, mystery, and horror. For more than a decade, Moonstone Entertainment Inc. has created fine and distinct comic books, Graphic Novels and prose…books that are meant to be read. Awaken your sense of adventure at http://www.moonstonebooks.com/
RELEASES FROM KEVIN PAUL SHAW BRODEN!

The latest chapter of REVENGE OF THE MASKED GHOST has been posted.

Donald Raymond wants nothing to do with the Masked Ghost, but where ever he turns new clues appears from the world of the vigilante. So he has sent his wife off to her family to be safe, but even there the memory of her dead brother dredges up more questions.
Find out some of the answers in “Away From a Ghost” Chapter 17 of
REVENGE OF THE MASKED GHOST.

  http://revengeofthemaskedghost.blogspot.com//

FINAL CHAPTER OF RIVETING PULP SAGA AVAILABLE!
Story by Phil Bledsoe, winner of the Pulp Ark Award for Best Short Story
THE FINAL CHAPTER!
ALL YOUR QUESTIONS WILL BE ANSWERED!!
THE WORLD WILL DIE SCREAMING
Starring Darwin Flynn, the Scarlet Saint
by Phil Bledsoe
Chapter Five: Zeppelins of Gomorrah!
available now at -http://hubpages.com/hub/The-Final-Chapter-of-the-Riveting-Pulp-Saga
THE BOOK CAVE GOES TO MARS WITH MCCOY AND FORTIER!!
Ron Fortier joins Art and Ric to introduce the newest book from Airship27.
Airship27.com
GoPulpsInfo
Airship27Hangar.com
RJCroxton1@yahoo.com
Store: http://www.cafepress.com/thebookcave
PayPal: RJCroxton1@yahoo.com
Coming Attractions – http://members.cox.net/comingattractions/index.html
All Pulp –  http://allpulp.blogspot.com/

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION 4/1/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION 4/1/11

1128 South State Street
Lockport, Illinois, 60441
815-834-1658
http://www.moonstonebooks.com/
Tommy Hancock, Marketing and Promotions
THancock@moonstonebooks.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE-
4/1/11, Lockport Illinois-


 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE-
1/31/11, Lockport Illinois-

Hello Moonstone readers!
MOONSTONE MADNESS is here!
We would like to just say thanks to all of our faithful readers everywhere!
**For the first time ever, we are offering just you online customers a 25% off sale bonanza!**
That is 25% off everything on the site…no matter if it’s on sale already…if it’s a new item…if it’s an old item…doesn’t matter…everything is on sale!
We have never done anything like this before,  and may not do so again, so get while the getting’s good!
Until April 14th, use this code…once, twice…as many times as you want: “Mad11”.
So again, a big thank you to everyone for your support!
And keep an eye out for our new stuff on the horizon: SHEENA, The JUSTICE MACHINE, The SAINT, FLINT, and many more!
Joe,
Your Man in the Moon




 


Moonstone Entertainment Inc. publishes comics and illustrated fiction designed to “awaken your sense of adventure”, featuring classic and new heroes in thrilling tales of adventure, mystery, and horror. For more than a decade, Moonstone Entertainment Inc. has created fine and distinct comic books, Graphic Novels and prose…books that are meant to be read. Awaken your sense of adventure at http://www.moonstonebooks.com/



Moonstone Entertainment Inc. publishes comics and illustrated fiction designed to “awaken your sense of adventure”, featuring classic and new heroes in thrilling tales of adventure, mystery, and horror. For more than a decade, Moonstone Entertainment Inc. has created fine and distinct comic books, Graphic Novels and prose…books that are meant to be read. Awaken your sense of adventure at http://www.moonstonebooks.com/

 

ALL PULP’S SITE SPOTLIGHT-CTHULHU CHICK!

This site stands out for a couple of reasons.  One, it’s a great blog type site recording Chick’s interest in all things Lovecraftian, plus is a good resource for just what is out there!  And you can order your own personal crocheted Cthulhu!  AND she has collected all of Lovecraft’s works into an EBOOK that is ready for Kindle, Nook, and other readers!!!  If you’re a Cthulhu fan or love Lovecraft, this is the Chick and the site for you!

You can find about Chick at her site, http://www.cthulhuchick.com/    Here’s a bit about the object of her affections, taken directly from her site-

Who is Cthulhu?

Cthulhu is a creature dreamed up by H.P. Lovecraft in his tale “Call of Cthulhu.” From the story:

If I say that my somewhat extravagant imagination yielded simultaneous pictures of an octopus, a dragon, and a human caricature, I shall not be unfaithful to the spirit of the thing. A pulpy, tentacled head surmounted a grotesque and scaly body with rudimentary wings; but it was the general outline of the whole which made it most shockingly frightful.

Cthulhu is High Priest to the Elder Gods, and some people also class him as an Elder God himself. He is foreign to this planet like most of the other eldritch beings of Lovecraft’s works. (Neil Gaiman explores his history in the short story I, Cthulhu (full-text)).
Because the stars are not properly aligned, Cthulhu sleeps in the sunken city of R’lyeh (Latitude 47° 9′ S, Longitude 126° 43′ W), waiting until they day they do align and he can rise again. During the spring of 1925, from March 22nd to April 2nd, “sensitive persons” dreamed deliriously of an eldritch and non-Euclidean city and of the strange words Cthulhu fhtagn. (Indeed, some more sensitive individuals had begun their dreams on March 1st, though the delirium did not begin until the night of the 22nd.) These words come from a saying of Cthulhu cultists “Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn.” Roughly-translated, this means “In his house at R’lyeh dead Cthulhu waits dreaming.” Indeed, the dreams of Cthulhu had touched the minds of humans.
It was later discovered that the stars had come into alignment and Cthulhu had risen. But fortune had not smiled on him and his cultists were unable to meet him. Instead, he was run through by an intrepid, though terrified, Swede. While Cthulhu survived and re-congealed, he was unable to wreak further madness and both he and the island-city sunk beneath the waves to await a more auspicious hour.
Had he risen, he would have brought about madness and destruction and probably opened the way for the Great Old Ones to return to Earth. One’s greatest hope for survival would have been as a willing sacrifice. At least you get deranged first.
Such is the lore from “The Call of Cthulhu.” Lovecraft’s mythos of monstrous evil beings is often termed the “Cthulhu mythos” or “Cthulhu cycle” to contrast with his “Dream cycle” stories. It includes many other such beings, some far more menacing or terrifying.
Unlike many of the other monsters, however, Cthulhu caught on in cultural consciousness, especially among geeks and gamers. The Call of Cthulhu RPG has become particularly popular as has the Cthulhu Munchkin game and the Call of Cthulhu and Cthulhu Saves the World video games.
The crocheted Cthulhus you’ll see on this site and in my Cthulhu store are extremely cute avatars of the dread Cthulhu and thus are less likely to induce madness than Cthulhu himself. Just pray that the stars don’t align and doom us all.

FERGUSON SUCKER PUNCHES ALL PULP!

THE LONG MATINEE-Movie Reviews by Derrick Ferguson
SUCKER PUNCH
2011
Warner Bros.
Directed by Zack Snyder
Produced by Deborah Snyder
Screenplay by Zack Snyder and Steve Shibuya
Based on a story by Zack Snyder
Zack Snyder has provided me with two of my favorite movie watching experiences of recent years.  “300” which I fell so in love with the first time I saw it, I wanted to marry it and take it home to meet my mother.  And “Watchman” which I thought was a brilliant adaptation of the graphic novel and actually improved upon it in certain areas, particularly the ending.  Upon hearing that his new movie SUCKER PUNCH was based on an original story by Zack Snyder I was really pumped to see it as I could imagine what his extraordinary visual style could do when applied to characters of his own creation. 
I should have listened more closely to my friend Jason who upon seeing the trailers opinioned that any movie with trailers that kick-ass couldn’t live up to the promise they were making.  Know what?  Jason was totally correct.  SUCKER PUNCH isn’t as kick-ass as those trailers promised.  But neither is it the complete and total disaster some would have you believe.  At most, it’s an interesting experiment by a still young filmmaker who I think was trying to tell a story too ambitious for his still growing talents.  But we’ll get back to that in a bit, okay?  Right now, the obligatory story synopsis…
Baby Doll’s (Emily Browning) life is about as bad as it can get.  Her mother has died, her sister killed in a tragic accident and her stepfather has had her committed to a mental asylum.  The stepfather has bribed the head orderly Blue Jones (Oscar Isacc) to arraign for Baby Doll to be lobotomized.  This way, he can keep control of the vast fortune left to Baby Doll by her mother and she will unable to tell anybody the true circumstances of the death of Baby Doll’s sister.
To cope with her horrific situation, Baby Doll’s mind creates an elaborate fantasy world where the asylum is now a strip club/brothel where Blue is the owner.  The asylum’s chief therapist Dr. Gorski (Carla Gugino) is now the madam.  Baby Doll becomes friends with the club’s top dancers; Amber (Jamie Chung) Blondie (Vaneesa Hudgens) Rocket (Jena Malone) and her older sister Sweet Pea (Abbie Cornish).  Baby Doll is informed that in five days she is to be given to ‘The High Roller’ which is paralleled in the real world by The Doctor (Jon Hamm) coming to give her a lobotomy.  Baby Doll plans to use those five days to escape and enlists the aid of the other dancers to do so.  This involves Baby Doll creating yet another fantasy world where she and her friends, guided by The Wise Man (Scott Glenn) have to collect five objects to aid in their escape. 
That sounds pretty simple and straightforward, right?  Well, it isn’t.  There’s an added dimension to this in that apparently Baby Doll can mesmerize everybody in a room when she dances.  We never see what the dance is but when she does, she and her friends are transported to the world where they have to gather the objects.  That’s at around the point you’ll probably start scratching your head.  I know I did.
Let’s get the good out of the way: I liked most of the performances.  Scott Glenn looks as if he’s having so much fun I was having fun watching him.  Jon Hamm is only in the movie for a few minutes but he really makes the most of his brief screen time to really bring an added note of horror and pathos to the movie’s bleakest moment.  And Carla Gugino is amazing as always.  Why this woman doesn’t have a bigger career infuriates me to no end.  Jena Malone I really liked in this one.  She’s got an 80’s Meg Ryan vibe going here I found appealing.  Abbie Cornish I don’t recall seeing in anything but I’m going to be looking for more from her. 
The best part of the movie?  Undoubtedly the absolutely incredible action sequences where Baby Doll and crew acquire the objects they need.  I especially loved the World War I sequence with automatic weapons, steampunk battle armor, great big honkin’ zepplins porcupined with weapons and clockwork German soldiers.  You see those sequences and you mightily wish that Zack Snyder had built a better story around them.  He’s got an astounding eye for detail that is truly gifted and visually, SUCKER PUNCH is a treat.
The bad?  There was one too many realities to deal with.  Unlike “Inception” which was painstakingly clear about the rules concerning dream worlds, SUCKER PUNCH isn’t.  I took the movie to be an homage to “The Wizard of Oz” more than anything else since it starts off with a very dull gray look to everything but once Baby Doll starts her fantasy in the brothel, the movie switches to vibrant, eye-popping color.
But once I realized that the action sequences were little more than glorified cut scenes from a videogame, I got bored.  Because I knew they weren’t going to last.  And what I wanted to see was a whole movie with these five fightin’ females boppin’ around these incredible worlds kicking every ass in sight.  And I was frustrated because I wasn’t getting it.  I did find it amusing that Baby Doll apparently has learned Jim Kelly’s trick of switching footwear in mid-fight and that kept me active looking for when she would switch from high heels to flats and back. 
So should you see SUCKER PUNCH?  See, that’s a tough one for me to call.  Let me put it to you from both sides of my movie persona:
The cheap-ass, misery, grinchy Derrick Ferguson says: If you don’t want your time or money wasted, wait until SUCKER PUNCH drops on DVD/Blu-Ray or Netflix.  I’m a Zack Snyder fan and there were parts where I was bored so if you’re not a fan, I can’t see where you’d want to see this.
On the other hand…
The artistic, compassionate, film nerd Derrick Ferguson says Zack Snyder has given us something interesting that isn’t a remake or a reboot or dragging out some moldy old franchise, slapping a new coat of paint on it and going “Ta-da!”  He’s done his best to give us something original and he’s to be commended for that.  He stretched himself and didn’t play it safe and I like that.  I’m willing to give him a Not Guilty for SUCKER PUNCH because this is only his fifth film and he’s still growing as a filmmaker.  This one got away from him because I don’t believe he’s built up enough directorial muscle to successfully pull off telling a story like this.  If SUCKER PUNCH is a failure it’s an honest one motivated by creativity and a desire to communicate with a unique storytelling style. 
109 minutes
Rated PG-13

IDEAS LIKE BULLETS FIRES ONE OFF AT YOU!

Designed by Ali

Ideas end up in my gun in many styles, many calibers, let’s say.   Some are fully formed, can’t wait to pull the trigger explosions of scene, pathos, action, adventure, beginning, middle, and end.  Others are skeletal, the primary characters are there, the macguffin, if there is one, is there, too, and there’s a general flow of where things will go.   But sometimes, not often, mind you, but sometimes there’s just one thing.   A name or an object someone would desire.  No bells and whistles, no grand plans unfolding in the always sold out movie theater of my mind.  Just one thing.

That’s what I’m armed with today.

I tried a contest sort of thing in this column a while back and no one bit.  But since it’s been a while and especially since ALL PULP’s had a major spike in hits lately, thought it might be a good time to do so again.  What I have in my head is a singular scene, an opening scene.  This short, pithy paragraph you will find below.   The contest is thus-Add to what I have, go as long as you want, but at least a page.  If you don’t write out a complete story, then make sure there’s a synopsis of where you think the idea would go.  The top five will be posted on ALL PULP and then in a manner I have yet to decide on a winner will be chosen from the top five.  That winner will be printed in one of Pro Se Press’s upcoming anthologies and will receive a percentage comparable to other writers in Pro Se’s anthologies.  So, yes, this is a contest for a (albeit paltry, trust me) paying writing gig.   All you have to do is make me love the story you tell starting off with this spark-

She walked into my office, moving like a song of forbidden jazz full of sultry horns, hellishly hot ivory licks, and a rolling drum beat with the cadence of exploding artillery every time she stepped.  A melody that haunts your soul,weakens your spirit, and teases your body in ways that are illegal in most states.


“I know it’s late.”  The melody out of her full, painted lips was as seductive as the accompaniment.  Dusky, but softly tender.  Like silk sheets on a cheap motel bed.  “But your door was open.”


“Never closed.”  I didn’t give her one inch, not moving from my reclined position at my desk, feet up on the corner by the half empty whiskey bottle, my battered fedora pulled down over my face, the shadow of the brim meeting the five o’clock one on my chin.  Didn’t move a bit.  Except for my eyes.


She was fully outfitted, not an ounce of meat and muscle where it shouldn’t be and enough there to be noticed.  Over and Over.  As she flowed across my floor, she seemed to shimmer and glow, caught in the ever changing kaleidoscope of the neon sign just outside my office window.  First red, giving each swish of her hip a devilish hint as if she were tugging a pointed tail behind her.  Then green, a soft green teasing that maybe, just maybe there was enough gentleness in that double barrel body to be nice to someone.  And finally a swirl of blue, turquoise melting into hints of ebony.   And that told the whole story.  Or I thought it did.


“I need someone,” she cooed, leaning across my desk, one hand teasing its scarred top, “to go somewhere for me.”


Still didn’t move.  “Surprised you don’t have a conga line of admirers, suitors, and gadflies behind you everywhere you go.”


“Oh, I do,” she laughed, rippling water running over dried bones, “but none of them will go as far as I want them to.  I need someone to go to-” her words caught, not for effect, but for a moment, the act slipped. “To go to The Epiphany.”


That name brought the shoes off the desk and forced me to push my hat back on my head.  This noirish fantasy just took a turn for the tricky and possibly terminal.  “That’s living that only the dead enjoy.”


“Yes,” her effervescent red lips parted, her tongue carressing the bottom one like a snake on a limb.  “And its where you really learn what androids dream of.”

There you go! send your entries to allpulp@yahoo.com!

ALL PULP REVIEWS DARK VALENTINE!

Review of Dark Valentine Number 4, Spring 2011
http://darkvalentine.net/index.php/2011/03/rites-of-spring/
Review by ALL PULP Staff writer Suzanne Fuller

In a culture obsessed with vampires, werewolves, murder mysteries, apocalyptic predictions and in your face violence (these days in the literal sense, with 3D films fast becoming a popular trend), most of us are no longer afraid to admit we enjoy being scared senseless or at least forced to think about the dark, twisted world around us. Stories of such things have been around for thousands of centuries, maybe growing from paranoia because of unexplained illnesses at the time or tales of demons and the fiery pits of hell. The morbid fascination with such tales has been with us from the very start, and has now grown so large that there is no worry of it going up in a puff of smoke any time soon.
So what do we do when films and TV shows just aren’t hitting the right notes for us? When they don’t branch far enough or stretch the imagination to its full potential? Most turn to fiction, a world without limitations, strict time and explicit guidelines.
Dark Valentine is a literary magazine that releases an issue every season, sticking within the varied category of ‘dark fiction’. They accept short stories ranging from the, “Should I be laughing?” black humor to the brain melting slipstream of the conscious mind. If you, like many others around the world, enjoy the darker side of life, you are in for a mighty fine treat! The Spring issue is jam packed full of fantastic stories, all of which couldn’t be more different than the previous if they’d tried.
It begins with the fantasy story Swallow the Light, by Kristen Davis. A story that pulls you so deep into its mythological world that when it ends, daylight feels as though it may actually kill you and a thirst for knowledge and blood bubbles in the pit of your stomach. Next up is Tonia Brown’s Danny-Boy, a paranormal story set in modern times, written in modern text that if you were in bed would leave you scared and wide awake a lot longer than you’d planned to be, listening carefully for any sort of change in the air. So from the start, although both shares the same dark tone throughout, they are entirely different, therefore both stand firmly on their own two feet. And the rest certainly didn’t disappoint.
Those that stood out seemed to be chock full of detail and description, but not so much that you become bored, nodding off with your kindle or IPhone flat on your face. La Fée Verte, A Roman Dalton Investigation, by Paul D. Brazill, is a story about a retired detective sent on a mission by an exotic and beautiful woman, powered by the full moon and rage from within. It is beautifully descriptive in both forms and there is no shock ending because, frankly, it does not need one. The protagonist, Roman, is often seen inside a bar, and very much feels like the kind of place you’d walk into on the outskirts of any major U.S city, only inhabited by the occasional supernatural and a group of punks you don’t want to give lip to.
The Stalking Rail, by Alejandro Omidsalar is a gritty, urban-noir tale of a young man walking into a world, and even after reading the last word you’re still unsure if it’s fantasy or real, full of graphic violence and unknown purpose. This story is almost definitely split in two, with the start following Tomas through the dark gloomy streets of Los Angeles during a rain storm to meet his oldest friend and lover Enrique, to waiting for the Metro where the world you’d been reading about changes course entirely, throwing him into a situation he neither understands nor knows what to do. Although it is presented in third person you are as clueless as he is, keeping you on the edge of your seat even after it is finished.
Each story is beautifully illustrated with a single picture created solely for that tale. All of which capture the essence of how different each of them really are. The only complaint I have overall is sometimes the illustrations are posted a little early in the story, perhaps giving away any sort of plot point before you’ve read it. Not many people will be able to refrain from looking as our eyes are instantly attracted to the mix of colours, contrasting against the black lettering.
If such stories as The Raven and The Tell Tale Heart, from Edgar Allan Poe, The Tree, from H.P Lovecraft or even Trainspotting, by Irvine Welsh, or Fight Club from the transgressive icon Chuck Palahniuk stand confidently in your collection, then Dark Valentine can’t be recommended enough to you. Your eerie intrigue, your wish to escape to another world and rebel within will be entirely satisfied inside all ninety one pages of the Spring issue. And I for one cannot wait until I can dig my claws into the Summer issue.

MOONSTONE MONDAY-CHICKS IN CAPE INTERVIEW-NANCY HOLDER!

AP: Nancy, first, congratulations for the release of CHICKS IN CAPES!   You have a story included in this fantastic volume that we will talk about, but first, can you tell us something about yourself?
NH:  I’m a native Californian who lives in California.  There are six or seven of us.  I was born in northern California but I’ve spent the majority of my life in southern California.  We call northern Californians “moss eaters” and they call us “bimbos.” It works for us.  I’m a New York Times bestselling author currently specializing (mostly) in young adult dark fantasy.  I have a writing partner named Debbie Viguié and we have three series–Wicked, Crusade, and The Wolf Springs Chronicles.  Crusade is coming out in trade paperback in May, and the next Crusade book, Damned, is coming out in August.  Writing alone, I have a young adult horror series titled Possessions.  The third book, The Screaming Season, just came out.  I watch a horror movie every morning when I write horror. Debbie has a story in CiC, too!
AP:  Your tale is titled BENEATH THE CAPE: A DOMINO LADY STORY.   What, without spoiling it, of course, is your story about?
NH: I’m fascinated by Aimee Semple McPherson, the world’s first mass media evangelist (1920’s and 1930’s.)  Have you seen Elmer Gantry?  That’s Sister Aimee.  She went missing in 1926.  I’ve been past her church up in L.A. and I have always been interested in religious showmanship (Marjoe Gortner is another such.)  She wound up in Mexico.  I live 40 minutes from the Mexican border and I knew a lot of movie stars used to go to the Rosarito Beach Hotel, where I’ve been a few times.  I’ve been to a bullfight in Tijuana (once is enough!)  So it all fell into place.  
AP: The Domino Lady is a character that has her origins in the heyday of pulp magazines.  What appealed to you about her enough to utilize her in your story?

NH: I’m the writer on the Domino Lady comic book for Moonstone, so Lori suggested I give DL a story in the anthology.  I was happy to do it.  I love writing about sassy adventuresses, and DL is about as sassy as they come.  She’s a lot like those “New Woman” heroines of the movies of the 30’s.  I love her to bits.  

AP:  Would you consider Domino Lady a fictional character that could also be a good role model?
NH:  Domino Lady is bold, brassy, and does what she wants.  Hells,  yeah!  She also has a softer side, deep compassion for the downtrodden.  There was an issue of the comic where she deals with the social justice issues surrounding migrant farming in the 1930’s.  Her father, Owen Patrick, was a politician who stood up for the weak and disenfranchised.  So she fights for the right (or the shiny and bright–she’s quite a jewel thief!)–and then she has a nice bubble bath and flirts with polo-playing big game hunters on the phone.
AP: Some might say  that super hero fiction is a man’s genre.  What would you say to that and what do you feel like female creators have to offer to the field?
NH:  I’d say that anyone who says that in 2011 is not reading superhero fiction.  That’s been said about every genre and format I’ve written in except for romance, and in every single case, we dames have proved the cavemen wrong.  I’d also say there’s a lot of joy coming from the female creators because we’re here and we’re loving every minute of it!  Mah bestie, Debbie Viguié, is debuting her creation, Glamour, in CiC and I’m so excited for her!
AP:  Any plans for the names Nancy Holder and Domino Lady to be connected again in the future?
NH:  Oh, yes!  I’m working on another comic book issue right now (I swear it, Lori!)  It’s the second of two parts so I’d better hustle!