Tagged: Disney

Hugo Award Winners 2009: Gaiman wins Best Novel, ‘Girl Genius’ wins Best Graphic Story

Hugo Award Winners 2009: Gaiman wins Best Novel, ‘Girl Genius’ wins Best Graphic Story

Last night, the annual Hugo awards, given for excellence in the field of science fiction and fantasy and voted on by the fans, were presented at Anticipation in Montreal, Canada. I could bore you with the history of the awards, notable past winners (and losers), famous acceptance speeches, and so on and so forth. But you know all that (And if you don’t, their website is pretty informative).

What you’re waiting for are the winners, and here they are, straight from the horse’s mouth:

  • Best Novel: The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman (HarperCollins; Bloomsbury UK)
  • Best Novella: “The Erdmann Nexus”, Nancy Kress (Asimov’s Oct/Nov 2008)
  • Best Novelette: “Shoggoths in Bloom”, Elizabeth Bear (Asimov’s Mar 2008)
  • Best Short Story: “Exhalation”, Ted Chiang (Eclipse Two)
  • Best Graphic Story: Girl Genius, Volume 8: Agatha Heterodyne and the Chapel of Bones, Written by Kaja & Phil Foglio, art by Phil Foglio, colors by Cheyenne Wright (Airship Entertainment)
  • Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form: WALL-E
    Andrew Stanton & Pete Docter, story; Andrew Stanton & Jim
    Reardon, screenplay; Andrew Stanton, director (Pixar/Walt Disney)
  • Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form: Doctor Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, Joss Whedon, & Zack Whedon, & Jed Whedon, & Maurissa Tancharoen, writers; Joss Whedon, director (Mutant Enemy)

More awards after the jump. A very hearty congratulations to all the winners! (more…)

Review: ‘Race to Witch Mountain’ on DVD

Review: ‘Race to Witch Mountain’ on DVD

When the opportunity presented itself, I could not help but wait to screen the DVD of Race to Witch Mountain until my niece Corinne, 11, arrived for a visit. After all, family-friendly films should be seen by all aspects of its target audience. The film, going on sale Tuesday, is based on Alexander H. Key’s 1968 novel [[[Escape to Witch]]] Mountain and is an updated remake with little connecting it to the 1975 Disney film or the 1995 sequel.

Much as the recent [[[Taking of Pelham 123]]] had to update itself to reflect today’s technology and storytelling, this film works in many modern touches so some credit goes to screenwriters Andy Fickman, Mark Bomback, and Matt Lopez. The two orphan children from the book are seen here as aliens in human form, escaping from their crashed flying saucer, trying to obtain a device they need to not only save their ecologically challenged home planet but prevent a deadly invasion of Earth. How they got separated from their ship and why it didn’t have better security, allowing it to be taken by the military is glossed over.

Instead, they use their powers to obtain cash then hire cabbie Dwayne Johnson to take them to where their object is located. Black-suited government agents are chasing them along with an assassin from home that has followed them. Atop that, needlessly complicating the story and never fully explained are goons from Johnson’s criminal past who try to apprehend him for their boss.

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#SDCC: Disney: 3D Panel ‘Alice In Wonderland’ with Johnny Depp, ‘Tron’, & ‘Christmas Carol’

#SDCC: Disney: 3D Panel ‘Alice In Wonderland’ with Johnny Depp, ‘Tron’, & ‘Christmas Carol’

Johnny Depp made an unannounced appearance at the 3D Disney panel at Comic-Con 2009, generating a roar of approval from the crowd. Depp will be playing the Mad Hatter in Tim Burton’s upcoming film, Alice in Wonderland, due out in March 2010. Burton himself made his Comic-Con debut as a panel guest. The panel also featured footage from the Alice film, as well as from A Christmas Carol (November 2009), and images from the new Tron film that just wrapped filming, whose official title will be Tron Legacy. Jeff Bridges and other cast members were there to answer questions.

Also on hand were director Robert Zemeckis (A Christmas Carol) and panel moderator Patton Oswalt (voice of Remy in Ratatouille).

Here are more details about what went on at the panel — including tantalizing remarks from Zemeckis about Who Framed Roger Rabbit?.

Review: ‘Up’, Pixar and Storytelling

Review: ‘Up’, Pixar and Storytelling

One of the things that I love about Pixar is that they
remember what a lot of filmmakers – and sadly, particularly those working in
the CG medium – have forgotten:


A film needs a story.

So many films today focus on technological dazzle, shock value, making pretty
pictures, or cleverness. None of these are bad things; any and all of them can
add enjoyment, but for me a good story is more important than anything else. I’ll
enjoy the spectacle, the beauty, the wit, but what stays with me is the story.
If story is absent, everything else fades quickly. Pixar’s films have had
consistently strong storytelling, letting the characters carry the viewer along
on their adventures, and this summer’s offering, [[[Up]]], is no exception.

Up doesn’t come near to matching the sheer dazzling brilliance of last
summer’s [[[Wall-E]]], but it is a sweet and charming movie in its own right,
and like Wall-E, it remembered to have a story.
Not only that, but Up takes a startling number of storytelling risks,
particularly for a movie aimed at children.

First there was the absolutely heartbreaking montage of Carl
and Ellie trying to save for their dream trip, and having their dream
constantly derailed by crisis after crisis, only to have Ellie fall ill and die
just as the trip was finally in their reach. This montage is also a rare
instance of a wedding being the beginning of a couple’s story rather than the
“happily ever after.” Seeing Carl lose the legal battle to stay in his home was
also painful.

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The Point – Ryan Reynolds & Cheap Ducks

The Point – Ryan Reynolds & Cheap Ducks

It’s the “lull before the ‘bots” at the box office, and Ryan cashes in plus a great new source for Classic Comic History, American Originals takes it’s place as a publisher and Disney Comics find a new (and more affordable) home!

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Review: ‘Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection’ on DVD

Review: ‘Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection’ on DVD

I have to laugh when I watch old [[[Tom and Jerry]]] cartoons. First, of course, because they’re funny. The original series of 114 theatrical cartoons by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s Hollywood cartoon studio were produced between 1940 and 1957, seven of them winning the Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoons)…a tie for most awards, one should note for the animation snobs out there, with Walt Disney’s [[[Silly Symphonies]]] animated series. A series of perfectly dreadful and too-often released cartoons followed, produced in Eastern Europe (cheap labor, I would imagine, and worth what they paid for it), produced by Gene Deitch at Rembrandt Films in 1960 before, thank the animation heavens, there came Chuck Jones in 1963.

Which brings us to Tom and Jerry: The Chuck Jones Collection, hitting stores on Tuesday. Jones was one of the handful of master animators to influence the entire look and feel of the Warner Bros. animated line with his Bugs Bunny, Road Runner, Tweety and Sylvester and countless other cartoons. But after 30 years, the studio closed its animation section and Jones set up his own shop, Sib Tower 12 Productions, with partner Les Goldman. MGM came knocking, and the 34 madcap adventures included in this collection was the result.

The second reason I find to laugh at these, or any classic animated shorts is because of how the reality of these characters clashes with the perception that has grown up around them since the 1950s when they began appearing as Saturday morning children’s programming. These cartoons were not created, originally, as children’s fare. They were, instead, part of a program of entertainment shown to adult movie audiences in a day and age when theaters routinely ran double features and the bill changed twice a week. Before, between and after the movies, however, came a variety of subjects: a newsreel, a short feature (usually humorous), a cartoon, and coming attractions, at the minimum. Look at a World War II era Bugs Bunny cartoon; that was not kid’s stuff!

Because as I watch these cartoons—and they are a lot of fun, have no doubt of that—I’m struck at how mercilessly violent they are. Heavy objects routinely fall and crush their victims (Tom), explosives blow in hand or in the victim’s (Tom’s) mouth, an axe used to chop open a mouse hole chops a victim’s (Tom’s) tail like a chef chops a carrot. The network censors chopped a lot of that material out of the cartoons when they went to TV in the 1960s, and, by the 1980s, the original essence of these little seven minute masterpieces was corrupted beyond redemption, to the point that as the writer of the Tom and Jerry syndicated newspaper strip for Editor’s Syndicate around 1990, I was told Tom could chase Jerry, but if he caught him, he could do him no harm. No hitting, no smashing, no slamming, certainly no chopping of tails. These guys were pals they just chased one another for fun.

Bugs Bunny has suffered a similar fate in the modern world: A friend working on a Bugs Bunny promotional comic book project was told by WB to change a gag because “Bugs would never produce a mallet out of nowhere and whack someone like that!”

But thanks to home video and DVD and the demand of the marketplace for original and uncut material, the truth is coming out. Tom and Jerry is funny and it’s funny because it’s violent. Take away the psychedelic randomness and well-constructed but mean-spirited violence of a situation like Tom and Jerry or the Road Runner and Wiley E. Coyote and all you’re left with is the existential angst of the eternal loser pursuing that well-known definition of insanity: doing the same thing over and over again in expectation of a different result.

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Review: ‘Lost’ Seasons 1 & 2 on Blu-ray

Review: ‘Lost’ Seasons 1 & 2 on Blu-ray

ABC’s Lloyd Berman had a nifty idea: turn [[[Survivor]]] into a drama. He handed the notion off to producer J.J. Abrams, who at the time was riding the critical wave of success with the network’s [[[Alias]]]. Abrams, in turn, sat with Damon Lindeolf and Carleton Cuse and they brainstormed a concept and characters.  From there, they shot an expensive, moody, intriguing pilot that got everyone’s attention. And suddenly, Wednesday nights were appointment television evening as everyone wanted to watch [[[Lost]]] and dissect it the following morning.

In the hands of these three, they took a high concept and turned it into one of the most layered and nuanced television programs ever attempted that demanded the audience pay attention. Not just to the dialogue or performances, but the little details in the backgrounds. Was that really Hurley winning the lottery being broadcast on Korean television? By concentrating on the show, by demanding our attention, the producers delivered with surprise after surprise, twists and turns that you couldn’t possibly see coming.

They hired an ensemble and told them all they were expendable. And wisely, they used flashbacks to make us care about these unfortunate survivors. We learned about them, and their odd connections with one another, while propelling the storylines forward as the island itself came to life. Before that first season ended, it became clear the island was going to be as important a character as Jack or Claire or Charlie or Locke. Nothing may have surprised as much as learning that Locke was wheelchair bound before the crash. The island was magical in some way.

And the names. The names demanded attention to find their sources and understand what that also told us about the characters.  There was nothing like it and we were enchanted.

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Chris Hemsworth cast as Thor?

Chris Hemsworth cast as Thor?

Nikki Finke breaks the rumor:

Chris Hemsworth, a virtual unknown to American audiences, had just been approved to play the lead role in Thor
by Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige and the film’s director Kenneth
Branagh. Hemsworth can currently be seen as “George Kirk” in J.J.
Abrams’ Star Trek reboot and also just snagged the lead in Red Dawn for United Artists last Thursday. (He’s currently filming Joss Whedon’s horror flick Cabin In The Woods
for UA, and I heard the studio was so hot on him that’s why it cast
Hemsworth in the action pic.) The 25-year-old hunk played “Kim Hyde” on
171 episodes of Home and Away, the successful Oz TV series where Heath Ledger started. Marvel Studios has scheduled Thor
for a May 20, 2011, release. The way Chris Hemsworth got the part of
Thor is one of those great Hollywood stories that happens only once in
a blue moon.

She goes on to explain how he (allegedly) got the part:

[ROAR Management partner William Ward] had
found Chris during one of the manager’s many scouting trips to
Australia. Ward brought him to Los Angeles and really put him out there
to casting directors and production executives. As for the major
agencies, I hear CAA passed on the meeting, Endeavor took it but passed
on repping him, and ICM was interested but dragged their feet. But
Ilene Feldman understood his appeal immediately. 

Chris
had read for the part of Thor but wasn’t given a test because a casting
director had nixed him early on. I’m told Chris’ younger brother Liam
(who’s also a ROAR client) then tested for the role of Thor, but Marvel
Studios President Kevin Feige passed. Then, after a conversation with
Ward (“You’ve got to reconsider Chris, he’s your guy”), Feige decided
to let Chris read again. And once Marvel put him on tape, it was “Oh my
god”. Branagh came to town last week and saw the Chris test and made
the final casting decision today.

What a week for Chris since, on Thursday, UA picked him as the Red Dawn
lead. Brother Liam, who’s only been in Los Angeles for 3 weeks and
doesn’t even have an agent yet, just got cast the male lead in Last Song
opposite Miley Cyrus in the Disney film based on the Nicholas Sparks
novel. Both brothers live in William Ward’s guest house. Unreal!

I thought he was great as George Kirk in Star Trek— short scene, but very powerful.

Anime for Comics Fans; Comics for Anime Fans: Rebels with a cause

Anime for Comics Fans; Comics for Anime Fans: Rebels with a cause

Have you ever overheard (or gotten caught in the middle of) an argument between a certain type of fan of mainstream English-language comics and a similar type of fan of Japanese anime and manga? Many of us know a Comic Book Guy who dismisses all anime and manga as nothing more than giant robot fights and salacious encounters of big-eyed schoolgirls with tentacle monsters. Then there’s Mr. Otaku, who dismisses the majority of comics and cartoons (especially American ones) as empty slugfests between over-muscled thugs in spandex.

In reality, both art forms actually have a lot of threads in common. The word “anime” is simply the Japanese word for “animation” (or “cartoons”). The word “manga” is simply the Japanese word used to describe what we usually call “comic books” or “graphic novels.” There’s really no fundamental value judgment inherent in any of these words, which simply describe a type of medium, not a genre, and they’re certainly not in and of themselves a measure of quality.

In fact, the art forms have influenced each other back and forth over the years. For all that some otaku rag on Western culture, the art style that we commonly associate with anime and manga was largely inspired by the cartoons of Walt Disney, brought to Japan by American soldiers after World War II. Osamu Tezuka, often referred to as the "god of manga,” spoke reverentially of Disney (the "Kimba the White Lion" controversy is a whole other matter we won’t go into here). In more recent times, Western artists have been increasingly inspired by anime and manga, to the point where we have things like the Teen Titans cartoon series, which is based on a long-running American comics series, but uses the character design and visual symbols of Japanese anime. Cross-cultural collaborations are becoming increasingly common. A few years ago, Korean-American animation artist Peter Chung, who brought us the Aeon Flux animated series for MTV, was called upon to do the character design for the anime series Reign the Conqueror from Madhouse studios. More recently, Marvel’s Stan Lee has been working with Hiroyuki Takei on the manga Ultimo in Japan, and manga artists have been drawing comics  (e.g. Kia Asamiya worked on Batman) for the English-speaking market.

This article is the first of many, based on a panel given at the recent New York Comic Con by Summer Mullins, editor, and Angela Hanson, managing editor, at Anime Insider magazine.  Mullins said she is a fan of "old-school" stuff like Ranma 1/2, and also likes Bleach as a "guilty pleasure.” Hanson said her "all-time favorite” is Trigun. Both said they were fans of English-language comics before they were into anime and manga. "The world is shrinking, especially in the digital era," said Hanson. The theme of their panel was how to introduce fans of English-language (especially American) comics to Japanese manga and and anime, and vice versa. To do this, the panelists discussed several match-ups of Japanese series with a Western title that resembles it artistically, thematically, or would otherwise appeal to a common fandom. 

In this article, we’ll begin the discussion with some works by very prominent creators in their fields that have been getting a lot of attention in the mainstream media lately. If you are a fan of either Japanese or English-language titles, and are looking to try something new, or if there’s someone you know whose horizons you’d like to expand, why not check some of these out?

REBELS WITH A CAUSE — BUT LITTLE CONSCIENCE

Anime/Manga series: Code Geass
Anime series directed by Goro Taniguchi/ written by Ichiro Okouchi.
Manga adaptations illustrated by various artists.

In an alternate high-tech future, the British Empire has never fallen. In fact, it’s added Japan to its conquests, subjugating it and stripping it of its cultural identity by calling it “Area 11” and treating the Japanese as second-class citizens. A teenaged prince of the Empire, Lelouche, is attending boarding school in anonymous exile in Japan when he receives a mysterious psychic power known as the “geass.” Using the code name “Zero,” he uses the power to start a rebellion for Japan’s independence, motivated not so much by sympathy for its people, but more by his own desire for personal revenge against the Empire that wronged him. He is not averse to using ruthless tactics to achieve his goals.

Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion originated as an anime TV series in 2006. The character design, significantly, was done by the superstar shojo manga and anime studio CLAMP. (They’re known for such series as X, Cardcaptor Sakura, Magic Knight Rayearth and Tsubasa.) There is some giant robot mayhem in Code Geass but there are also strong threads of character development, high school drama, family dynamics, and even romance.

Four short manga series have been created so far from the anime series. Each one presents aspects of the plot from the point of view of one of the major characters, though also with differences in certain elements from the anime (this is not uncommon with manga adaptations of anime series). Three of the manga series have been licensed for release in the US so far (issues from two series are currently available).

Availability Current Numbers English-Language publisher
Original Japanese

2 seasons with 25 episodes apiece (total of 50) have aired so far
A third season is planned in the near future

4 manga miniseries adaptations so far

 
US Manga

Code Geass: Lelouche of the Rebellion
3 volumes of 5 total currently available

Code Geass: Suzaku of the Counterattack
 2 volumes of 2 total currently available

Code Geass: Nightmare of Nunally
No volumes of 5 total available yet

Code Geass: Tales of an Alternate Shogunate
Not  released in English yet 

Bandai Entertainment

US Anime

Currently airing on cable television, dubbed into English

Check out also www.codegeass.bandai-ent.com for official video streams

Cartoon Network


Official streaming video sites

US DVDs

5 of 6 volumes of Season 1 have been released in US so far (also in boxed sets)

Bandai

English-Language Comic Series: V for Vendetta
Written by Alan Moore
Art by David Lloyd

In an alternate near-future where Britain is a fascist dictatorship, a mysterious masked figure, known only as V, performs acts of terror in rebellion against the government and recruits another to his ideology.

Alan Moore has been one of the major players in the English-language comic book scene for about 20 years. This is one of his major early works, which debuted in a British magazine starting in 1982, though the magazine folded in the U.K. before reaching the end of the narrative. DC Comics picked it up and re-released the complete story in the U.S. as 10-issue miniseries ending in 1988. It has since been collected into a trade paperback by DC’s Vertigo imprint that is still available.

The story was very much a product of its time. It was a future history, based on the idea of a nuclear war taking place in the late 1980’s, and its subtext critiqued British politics in the Cold War era. In 2006, the Wachowski brothers, (producers of The Matrix movies) released a movie version of V for Vendetta, updating some of the political themes to resonate more with the post-9/11/Bush/Blair era. Moore publicly voiced his opposition to the film adaptation, saying it distorted his intended themes and politics. However, you may want to decide for yourself and see and compare both versions.

If Moore’s name sounds familiar to you lately, it’s because he is also the writer of the original comic miniseries upon which the Watchmen film is based. Yes, Moore has come out publicly against this film as well. However, if you like V for Vendetta, especially the comic version, you should definitely check out the Watchmen graphic novel collection now also available from DC Comics – even if you have already seen the movie.

Availability   US Publisher
Comics
Full story released originally in 10 issues in late 1980’s
Now available in Trade Paperback

DC Comics

(DC) Vertigo Comics
Movie
2006 movie adaptation available on DVD
Warner Bros Home Video
 
Common elements of both series:
  • Dystopian futures with oppressive governments
  • Disturbed geniuses are rebels who are "sticking it to the man”
  • Ambiguous protagonists – are they heroes, terrorists, psychopaths? Are their tactics justified?
  • Stories with political intrigue, spies, double-crossing
  • Parallels can be drawn with real-world political issues

Scribe nominees announced; DeCandido gets IAMTW GrandMaster

Scribe nominees announced; DeCandido gets IAMTW GrandMaster

The International Association of Media Tie-In Writers is pleased to announce this year’s nominees for the 2009 Scribe Awards, which honor excellence in licensed tie-in writing—novels based on TV shows, movies, comics, and games. In addition, Keith R.A. DeCandido, whose Farscape series for BOOM! has just gone to third printings on the first two issues and a second printing on #3, will be awarded the IAMTW Grandmaster Award at the awards ceremony at the San Diego Comic-Con– assuming he can get a hotel room.

The nominees for this year’s awards are:

Best General Fiction Original

Burn Notice: The Fix by Tod Goldberg
Criminal Minds: Finishing School by Max Allan Collins
CSI: Headhunter by Greg Cox

Best General Fiction Adapted

Death Defying Acts by Greg Cox
Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull by James Rollins
The Tudors: King Takes Queen by Elizabeth Massie
The Wackness by Dale C. Phillips
X-Files: I Want To Believe by Max Allan Collins

Best Speculative Fiction Original

Ghost Whisperer: Revenge by Doranna Durgin
Ravenloft: The Covenant, Heaven’s Bones by Samantha Henderson
Stargate SG-1: Hydra by Holly Scott & Jamie Duncan
Star Trek: Terok Nor, Day Of The Vipers by James Swallow

Best Speculative Fiction Adapted

Hellboy II: The Golden Army by Bob Greenberger
The Mutant Chronicles by Matt Forbeck
Star Wars – The Clone Wars: Wild Space by Karen Miller
Underworld: Rise Of The Lycans by Greg Cox

Best Young Adult Original

Dr. Who: The Eyeless by Lance Parkin
Primeval: Shadow Of The Jaguar by Steven Savile
Disney Club Penguin: Stowaway! Adventures At Sea by Tracey West

Best Young Adult Adapted

Iron Man: The Junior Novel by Stephen D. Sullivan
The Dark Knight: The Junior Novel by Stacia Deutsch and Rhody Cohen
Journey To The Center Of The Earth 3D by Tracey West