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Kids’ comics celebrated

Kids’ comics celebrated

Via Randi Mason, on Sunday, April 22 the fabulous and still-going-strong Books of Wonder store in NYC’s West Village will be hosting Graphic Sunday! with ten graphic novelists on hand to sign their children’s and young adult graphic novels.  Creator names and their works (all of which will be available for purchase at the store) are displayed prominently on the site.  Come on out and support comics for kids and teens as well as independent bookstores!

One of the Graphic Sunday! participants, Dave Roman, has a nice post about the event, as well as cluing us into another kid-oriented comics event put together by our neighbor Alex Simmons, called the Kids’ Comic Con.  This event will take place on Saturday, April 28 at the Bronx Community College, and lots of our friends will be there, so since I don’t live that far away it’s a pretty sure bet I’ll be there as well to represent ComicMix!

Convention reports collected

Convention reports collected

Seek and ye shall find!  Yesterday we talked about Heidi Meeley’s efforts at consolidating links to reports about the recent Emerald City Con.  Today we find two more comprehensive ECC link posts, from Laura Gjovaag and Tom Spurgeon, Tom calling his contribution "Collective Memory" which was just what we were hoping someone would start.  We’re sure somewhere on CR Tom has gathered all his Collective Memory posts, but we can’t find them in a cursory glance at his resources page.  Then again, we couldn’t find ComicMix listed either.

Yet.

There’s no need to fear

There’s no need to fear

Forget that god awful looking CGI pup we’ve seen in the movie trailers.  The one, true Underdog will be collected on a three volume DVD box set this summer.  Released by Genius Products, under license from Classic Media, the $29.98 collection will feature digitally re-mastered episodes with Wally Cox (the voice of Underdog) sounding better than ever.  Not only that, the DVDs will collect the 1960s television series as originally broadcast so fans can delight in the additional escapades of Hunter, Go Go Gophers, Klondike Kat, Tennessee Tuxedo, King and Odie, Tootie Turtle and Commander McBragg.  The release date has been listed as both July 24 and August 6 while the god awful-looking CGI movie opens on August 4.

Trivia point: did you know that the meek, sheepish Wally Cox once was Marlon Brando’s roommate? Underdog, indeed!

Paper v pixels examined again

Paper v pixels examined again

Amid the "it’s been three days, is Johnny Hart still dead?" cracks elsewhere in the blogosphere, over at the Huffington Post student Frankie Thomas remembers Hart by placing his comics firmly in her childhood, then continues, "Let’s face it: when it comes to comics, print media is dead." She goes on to talk about the webcomics which excite her nowadays, which is a good thing for webcomics as HuffPo is an extremely popular group blog, but a bad thing when she confuses form with venue by referring to comic strips themselves as "a lost art" after she’s just extolled them.  (I think what she meant to say was that newspapers were a lost cause as far as comic strips are concerned.)

Seems to me it’s always more enjoyable to read people who don’t feel they have to put down one thing (print) in order to appreciate the other (pixels), so I much preferred Wil Wheaton’s short list of the webcomics that have made him laugh lately (including, of course, one featuring him).

DENNIS O’NEIL: No evil lurks this week

DENNIS O’NEIL: No evil lurks this week

Okay, okay, I’m sorry. I know I promised, at least implicitly, to deliver Who Knows What Evil Lurks – Part 2 this week. But that will take some time and maybe digging, to write and, honestly, I have the luxury of neither. By the time you read this, I’ll either be at or returning from Juaniata, Pennsylvania, where I’ve been invited to be the guest of Jay Hosler and maybe shoot off my mouth in public a bit. I’ve been busy doodling notes for said mouth-shooting; hence no dissertation on lurking evil.

I thought about just blowing off this whole column thing, or delaying it until I was back here in scenic Upper Nyack, and rested. But… I promised editor Mike Gold and PR goddess Martha Thomases that I would deliver a minimum of 500 words each and every week. And I made the same promise to myself. Sternly, I said to myself that I had to respect the deadline, even if the deadline in question is largely of my own making.

By the way, I don’t hate deadlines the way a lot of writers and artists seem to. Maybe that’s just because I lived with them for so long – for over 40 years, they were a constant part of my life. What can be said against them is that they can be a pain in the ass. What can be said for them is that they can impart focus to a project and they can be an impetus to stop kvetching and worrying about your ability to leave civilization breathlessly in your debt (and maybe sit on David Letterman’s couch) and just, please, get the damn thing done.

A couple of paragraphs back – I’ll wait while you check – I mentioned Jay Hosler. Doctor Hosler teaches biology at Juaniata College, is a proponent of evolution, a comics enthusiast, a writer, and a cartoonist. He’s done two graphic novels which I found educational and very entertaining. You’ll find the titles below.

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Sacco on Iraq

Sacco on Iraq

Via Jessa at Bookslut, the good news is that comic artist and journalist Joe Sacco has a 16-page piece in the latest Harper‘s entitled Down! Up! You’re in the Iraqi army now.  You can see the thumbnails (like the one at right) here

The bad news is, you can’t see the full-size art to actually read the piece unless you buy the issue. Joe’s worth it.

Maximum villainousness

Maximum villainousness

Wizard is reporting that writer David Goyer has sold an idea to Warner Bros. for a movie focusing on DCU supervillains.

In Goyer’s vision, which he’s developing with fellow writer Justin Marx, Super Max would take place in a maximum security prison housing supervillains where a wrongly convicted Green Arrow has been sent and where he faces a number of inmates he helped put there in the first place.

Goyer tells Wizard, “He’s Green Arrow for the first 10 minutes of the movie, and then he’s arrested and his secret identity is revealed… Of course, tons of people try to kill him while he’s in there. We’ve populated the prison with all sorts of B and C villains from the DC Universe.” Goyer promises fans will recognize plenty of names.

Goyer is also planning a miniseries or graphic novel tie-in with the film.

Spidey 3 gets sneaked for MySpace members

Spidey 3 gets sneaked for MySpace members

MySpace will host a "Black Curtain Screening" for Spider-Man 3 on April 30, 2007, exclusively for its members, several days prior to Sony’s release of the movie on May 4.  Where the screening will be held is entirely up to MySpace members, who can cast their vote now for one of ten cities at http://www.myspace.com/blackcurtain . The choices are Cleveland, OH; Cincinnati, OH; Honolulu, HI; Indianapolis, IN; Kansas City, MO; Louisville, KY; Salt Lake City, UT; San Jose, CA; Savannah, GA; Tampa/St. Petersburg, FL.

And their continued assault on ComicSpace continues…

Honolulu?

 

Emerald City Con reports

Emerald City Con reports

Heidi Meeley at Comics Fairplay, which had a booth at this year’s Emerald City Con, is collecting everyone’s ECC reports to put all in one place.  If you wrote about the con and your report isn’t included in her listing, please let her know.

A link post like Heidi’s is one of the best ways to record for posterity everyone’s memories of their participation in the yearly comicon circuit, and it’s hoped that other con-goers can put something like this in place for other upcoming gatherings.  Although we suspect a San Diego report link post would be a near impossibility…

Big Iron Man screw-up

Big Iron Man screw-up

Newsstand distributors have released some misprinted copies of Iron Man #16, wherein pages are printed out of order. Expect to see these on eBay shortly going for far more than their worth by any objective measure.

Reports of copies of Iron Man #16 printed with their pages out of order appearing in various Borders bookstores in the midwest started surfacing over a week ago, but it must be stressed that  not all newsstand copies are the misprints.

The direct sale version of Iron Man #16 has been delayed for this very reason. The "correct" version will be in comics shops this Wednesday.

The question that leaps to mind isn’t "how could this have gotten through?" as the printers are, like anyone else along the assembly line, only human; but, "there’s still newsstand distribution?"  In fact, most towns have their central newsstand outlets, big-box bookstores like Borders, supermarket spinner racks, and convenience store shelves. However, only a fraction of the comic book titles published are distributed outside of the comic book shop network.

Artwork copyright 2007 Marvel; All Rights Reserved.