Monthly Archive: June 2010

Annie’s Unending Cliffhanger

Damn, the old kid’s gone. And she’s taken the papers with her!

Last Sunday marked the end of the classic comic strip, Little Orphan Annie. That’s sad, but that sort of thing has been going on for a long time now and it was inevitable,
despite some first-rate work on the feature by Jay Maeder,
 Jay Maeder and artists Andrew Pepoy, Alan Kupperberg and Ted Slampyak. Ignobly, the syndicate ended Annie in mid-story.

Newspaper comic strips were invented for one reason and one reason alone: to give the paper a competitive edge. If you were a New Yorker and you preferred Joe Palooka and Li’l Abner to Dick Tracy and Orphan Annie, chances were you bought the New York Daily Mirror instead of the New York Daily News.

The pompous New York Times turned not having comic strips into a virtue, but in fact at the time they could not afford to color presses needed to compete with Pulitzer and Hearst.

Today there is no such thing as newspaper competition:
most towns are lucky to have one daily paper, and most all papers carry the
exact same comics. With circulation zeroing in on zero, publishers are cutting back and, since they no longer need comics to compete, they’re vaporizing.

Ironically, we live in a time when virtually every major, important newspaper comic strip is being anthologized in hardcover and is readily available at the big-box bookstores. Without the newspaper comic strip
we wouldn’t have the comic book, and without the comic book I would have had to get a real job.

So goodbye, Annie and friends. And thank you.

ComicMix
editor-in-Chief Mike Gold performs a weekly two-hour
Weird Sounds Inside The Gold Mind ass-kicking music and blather radio show on The Point every Sunday at 7:00 PM Eastern, replayed three times during the week (check the website for times). Likewise, his Weird Scenes Inside The Gold Mind political and cultural rants pop up each and every day at the same venue.

Review: ‘The Illusionist’

Stagecraft gained special attention in 2005 when Neil Burger adapted Steve Millahuser’s story as The Illusionist, and weeks later Christopher Nolan brought us [[[The Prestige]]]. Both were engaging, entertaining movies as much about the characters as it was about nineteenth century magic.

Millhauser, a Pulitzer Prize winner, wrote “Eisenheim the Illusionist” in 1989 and explored an ever-growing fascination with stage magic in Vienna, prompting competitors to try and top one another to satisfy an eager and demanding audience. It was an era when people still believed more often than not in the supernatural, and took the magical feats at face value.

Eisenheim (Edward Norton) is a man jealously guarding his past from the world around him, but has also gained a fascinated fan in the form of police chief Inspector Uhl (Paul Giamatti). Uhl was also ordered to expose the man as a fraud by Crown Prince Leopold (Rufus Sewell). When Eisenheim is introduced to the Duchess Sophie (Jessica Biel), he recognizes her as the true love of his childhood, complicating his life in new and exciting ways. The infatuation infuriates the jealous prince who wants Eisenheim destroyed.

The story was a terrific road map for Burger, who had previously made a documentary, to enter feature film making. He nicely visualizes the Vienna of the past (thank you Prague), creating an atmosphere appropriate to the mystic world of the [[[Illusionist]]]. The screen adaptation nicely works with multiple themes such as one’s place in society, faith versus reality, order versus lawlessness.

Burger also seems to have a nice handle on actors, coaxing nuanced performances from his talented cast. At first, you could have trouble with Biel as a gentle upper crust woman, but she gives what may be her best work to date. Giamatti is superb, bordering on the obsessive while Norton is steely. All mix together nicely, with Sewell proving to be the straw that stirs the drink and keeps things moving.

Nolan’s offering gained more notice and had bigger stars attached but this is the far more satisfying movie and well worth seeing again or a first time if you missed it.

The movie transfers nicely to Blu-ray and given the dim lighting and moody set pieces, it sharpens up well, accompanied by a nice audio track. We’re lucky the new edition is offered as a combo set since the only extras can be found on the standard DVD, all intact from its initial release.

There is a nine minute Making Of featurette which is far less interesting than its subject matter and a perfunctory Jessica Biel Interview. Instead, the best part is Burger’s commentary, talking of how he expanded Millhauser’s story for the film which meant adding in romance and a murder mystery.  Burger has made only one film since, [[[The Lucky Ones]]], and I wish he were more productive.

The set is definitely worth watching and probably owning since it holds up to repeated viewing.

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Peter Keefe, 1953-2010

voltron-6618519Peter Keefe, creator of the 80’s hit sensation Voltron, passed away May 27th, 2010. His brother Chris Keefe had said his brother passed away due to complications from throat cancer. In additional to his brothers Chris and Tony, Mr. Keefe is survived
by his wife, Pamela Mills Keefe, a stepson, James Mills; his mother, Anne Keefe,and three sisters, Lisa Keefe Updaw, Mollie Keefe
Jones, and Kitty Keefe of Cleveland.

Keefe created Voltron by way of licensing Japanese cartoons “Beast King Go-Lion” and “Armored Fleet Dairugger
XV,” which he discovered in 1983 at a merchandise licensing convention
in Japan. Give credit where it’s due kiddos. Keefe’s splicing of show content, and creating “western friendly” plot helped Americanize Voltron as the predecessor to the eventual “Power Rangers” empire in the 1990s. Keefe was said to “live and breathe Voltron”, taking over the reigns for several other iterations of the lion-led animated super-team after the well of Japanese stock footage ran dry.

After “Voltron,” Mr. Keefe continued to create television shows, including Saber Rider and the Star Sheriffs, Denver the Last Dinosaur, Widget the World Watcher, and The Mr. Bogus Show. He was working on “Z-Force”, another cartoon at the time of his passing. Sadly, he wasn’t part of the production team for the forthcoming “Voltron Force” set to debut on Nicktoons later in the fall.

I’ll add on a personal note that Voltron was easily the first cartoon that resonated with me as a child growing up in the 80’s. While the plot was thin and repetitive (we get it, just form the giant robot already, and save the day already!) the show holds a soft spot in my heart. And at only 57 years old, it would seem Mr. Keefe should have had more time to help bring his vision to the airwaves. Another loss to the community of creators. Fellow Voltron lovers, place your lions at half attack mode in honor of the man who gave us the Defender of the Universe.

Review: ‘Showgirls’

When you say [[[Showgirls]]], everyone snickers knowingly, usually making some joke about it being one of the worst movies since the invention of sound recording or how it’s evolved into a midnight cult classic. With the movie’s release on Blu-ray from MGM Home Entertainment today, it seemed appropriate to see how well the 1995 film has aged in 15 years.

OK, it’s still a bad movie. And yes, the transfer to high def makes the nudity all the more entertaining (look for[[[Dancing with the Stars]]]’ Carrie Ann Inaba as a Goddess dancer).

When Joe Eszterhas gained notoriety with his sexually provocative screenplays in the 1990s, he parlayed that into a $2 million payday for this story of Las Vegas showgirls. Coupled with director Paul Verhoeven, who liked to push the sexuality in his films, it was a match seemingly made in heaven for the studios. As a result, it was allowed to run as an NC-17 release complete with full-frontal nudity and many nearly explicit sex scenes that also featured graphic language and rape.

The movie was reviled for its poor structure, gratuitous sexuality, and bad acting but it was seen as so bad as to be good and became the subject of midnight screenings and private parties where mocking it became obligatory. MGM Home Entertainment has fueled this with various box sets, notably The V.I.P. Edition which came complete with two shot glasses, movie cards with drinking games on the back, a deck of playing cards, and a nude poster of Berkley with a pair of suction-cup pasties.

But let’s look at the movie itself. In the course of the 2:11 running time, we’re given a jaundiced view of the showgirl life, the cut-throat world of topless dancers and strippers willing to permanently injure rivals in order to move up the ladder towards fame and fortune. Some have charitably called this a satire but frankly, it smacks of being a setting for Eszter has to lazily find new ways to show naked people. Everyone in the story is a jerk or a detestable example of humanity with the exception of Molly (Gina Rivera) whose innocence is rewarded with a brutal gang rape.

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Women Is NOT Losers

 

 

davis-women-of-marvel-celebrating-seven-decades-1-variant-21-1564691Marvel Comics is a couple months into their “Women of Marvel” promotion, and that raises an issue or two. The whole idea is fine – honor… well… promote the several hundred female characters that toil in the Marvel Universe. Remind the readers
that many are among Marvel’s best. After all, women-starring superhero comics generally don’t sell very well and women-starring superhero movies are, without fail, failures.

I realize there’s a reason why the movies flop. Most of them really suck. Supergirl, Elektra, and Catwoman deserved better. But they stunk up the box office so badly I doubt they’d make a Black Widow solo movie
right now even if Scarlett Johansson had a half-dozen nude scenes.

Well… I could be wrong about that last point.

But the fact is, these are just made-up characters. It is
not intrinsically harder to write, draw, direct and/or act as a woman superhero as it is a man. I understand avoiding crappy movies, but a lot of the women superhero comics are as good as anything on the racks. Given the growing percentage of women readers, you’d think there would be a chance here.

So kudos to Marvel for their promotion. And go to your friendly neighborhood comic book shop and take a super-heroine out to lunch.

ComicMix
editor-in-Chief
Mike
Gold performs a weekly two-hour Weird
Sounds Inside The Gold Mind
ass-kicking music and blather radio show on The Point
every Sunday at 7:00 PM Eastern,
replayed three times during the week (check the website for times). Likewise,
his Weird Scenes Inside The Gold Mind political
and cultural rants pop up each and
every day at the
same
venue. Thanks to Janis Joplin for the headline.

 

Review: ‘The Book of Eli’

Those of us who make their living using words can fully understand how a good book can motivate people. Some of the worst fictional scenarios have involved totalitarian societies banning or burning books so the notion that The Good Book was blamed for global annihilation is a powerful notion. The burning of all bibles in the wake of some near-future event is the spark that propels the compelling [[[The Book of Eli]]]. Out tomorrow from Warner Home Video, the movie is available as a combo pack (Blu-ray, Standard, digital copies).

Written by Gary Whitta, we’re never given much detail about life before the war but we pick up 30 years later and see rural American society struggle to survive. There’s nothing about an American government let alone any sense of what is happening beyond the borders since everyone is worried about that most precious of commodities: water. People have resorted to scavenging and bartering under the bleak skies, while modern day highwaymen prey on the weak.

Strolling through all this is Eli (Denzel Washington), a man on a mission. For years now, he has been headed west because he heard a voice telling him to head there, protecting his precious cargo: the last known copy of the Bible. When he arrives in a small town, trading KFC handwipes for a battery recharge and a pair of winter gloves for a refilled canteen, Eli comes to the attention of Carnegie (Gary Oldman). They are men of a certain age, elders compared to so many others, able to read and are literate. Carnegie has forged a small government, using brute force to keep the peace and try to restore some semblance of society. All along, he has roving bands of brigands seeking a Bible, so when it becomes clear Eli is carrying a copy; he wants it at any cost.

He tries bribery, even sending Solara (Mila Kunis), daughter of Claudia (Jennifer Beals), the blind lover to Carnegie, to bed Eli, who rebuffs her advances. Solara finds him fascinating and begs to learn of life before the “Flash”. When Eli manages to leave town, she follows and in time he accepts her as his companion, recognizing his job is to protect and teach her.

Eli is a quiet man, but cross him and he becomes a tornado of violence, using hands, feet and a large knife to dispatch any physical threat. How he was trained and what made him such a deadly accurate shot and archer is never addressed. Given that he was on “a mission from God” it could be chalked up to divine intervention.

The play between Eli and Carnegie which forms the spine of the film is well handled by both Whitta and the directors, The Hughes Brothers. Carnegie is driven to obtain the Bible so he could harness its power to restore some semblance of society while Eli is out to protect it at all costs. Both remain convinced of the correctness of their actions making both men interesting figures. There are some twists in the final act which I won’t discuss but was pleased with them and felt they added something mythic to the overall story.

The world was envisioned by comic book artist Tommy Lee Edwards, Chris Weston and Rodolfo DiMaggio and successfully brought to life. Washington, Oldman, and Kunis give lovely performances while Beals and an uncredited Malcolm McDowell deserved more development.

The disc comes with about an hour’s worth of extras including talking heads on what it would mean for American society to be Starting Over. Eli’s Journey is a production featurette that shows how the story evolved and how the comic art was rendered for the film. A useless featurette was a look at The Book of Eli Soundtrack. Edwards provided the art to [[[A Lost Tale: Billy]]], a motion comic of sorts exploring Carnegie’s childhood. There are just a few deleted scenes which don’t add much to the film itself.

Overall, this is a thought-provoking tale that could have used a few less repetitive fight scenes and just a tad more character and backstory. By all means, you should be checking this out.

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Al Williamson: A Personal Reflection

When I was a kid, I met Al Williamson on the cover of the King Comics first issue of their Flash Gordon comic book. The elegant romance of the drawing simply stood out from every other comic book cover I had seen. The entire comic book, drawn by Al was a masterpiece that made an impression on me that I never managed to let go of to this very day. And because Al’s work was directly influenced by the creator of Flash Gordon, Alex Raymond, Al’s work on that comic book served to introduce me to all the great comic artists of the past. And from those artists I discovered the great illustrators of the past as well. I’ve become something of an expert on early comics and illustration as a direct result of my picking up one single comic book by Al Williamson.

I was insanely happy to have dinner with Al Williamson and Robert Bloch in the mid-1980s. I didn’t say much, I just listened as these two incredibly talented and influential men talked. I suspect that since Robert Bloch was also someone that Al held in high regard, that is the reason that my first meal with Al didn’t give me any clue to his true personality. At that dinner, Al was polite, intelligent and somewhat reserved in his comments.

A few years later, for a convention in Texas, Al Williamson, Mark Schultz and I were all stay in the same hotel. I believe we had all just attended the Harvey Awards where we had talked together a bit. We then found ourselves sharing the same elevator up to our rooms. On the way up I asked how their rooms were. Mark and Al both said something polite about how they had slept fine. And then Mark asked me how I had slept the night before. I launched into a story about how the people in the room next to me had apparently been having wild, heavy sex all night long, banging the headboard against the wall and keeping me awake.  I finished the story and both Mark and Al were laughing at the way I had told the story.  Honestly – I felt a little out of line telling a slightly off-color tale to one of my heroes. But them we all got off the elevator at the same floor, and walked to the same hall, to find that Mark and AL were sharing the very hotel room that was next to mine. We all stood in the hall with our keys in hand looking at each other for a moment before Al started laughing so hard that soon both Mark and I were also laughing. We couldn’t even speak we were laughing so hard so we just waved at each other as we entered our rooms.  That was my first real introduction to Al Williamson the man.

Al was a funny guy. And he loved to laugh. I came to know him as a slightly more reserved version of Groucho Marx. He could really nail a punch line.

When I visited Al and his lovely wife Cori at his home I came to understand that it was no accident that Al’s artwork had introduced me to the great comic and illustration artists. Al was himself an avid collector and historian. His collection of original ink line illustration and comic art encompassed the cream of both fields. In fact, his collection is unsurpassed for the quality as well as the quantity of material. And Al loved to share the collection with visitors. In fact he was so eager to show me his collection of art that I had to derail him to get him to actually show me some of his own amazing work. But when we would be looking at the classic illustrations and comic art I kept thinking how odd it was that I knew enough to carry on an intelligent conversation with Al about this art precisely because his own work had set me on the path of discovery to go out and learn about it. I tried to tell Al this and explain how important that was – but that was way too serious a subject for Al. He didn’t want to hear it.

I put together a book on Al after that. Al Williamson Adventures collected some of his very best later work. I kept interviewing Al on the phone and in person to try to get some tidbits of interesting background to include in the book. But Al simply didn’t want to get into it. Mark Schultz finally told me that Al didn’t like to examine his process or his inspiration. So I designed a book that would only present Al’s work. And really – his work says it all. His spirit reflected there shows his own eternal youth, romance, adventure, grace and beauty.

When Al Williamson Adventures was published and Al got his copies, he called me to rave about how wonderful the book was. In fact he called three times that first week to tell me! But he seemed to believe I had somehow made his work look good. I kept telling him all I had to do was put his work into one book – he had done everything. So he would change the subject and we would talk about Roy Krenkel or Adolfo Buylla or Gray Morrow or his son or Cori. Because as much as Al loved to talk about art and artists, what he really loved to talk about was his friends and his family.

I would like to believe that Al and Frank Frazetta and Roy Krenkel and Gray Morrow and Wally Wood are all out there somewhere, working on some new and amazing comic, together. But the deadline has finally passed. So I know it is far more likely that they are hanging out, talking art or playing ball – but certainly just goofing off. I know they’ve earned it.

Al Williamson was born in New York on March 21, 1931. While still an infant his family moved to Bogota, Columbia where he spent his formative years. While in South America he discovered his life-long influences of Flash Gordon, Alex Raymond and the movies. In 1943 he and his mother returned to the United States where he began to develop his abilities as an illustrator and comic artist. He studied with Burne Hogarth and was soon working professionally, assisting Hogarth on the Tarzan newspaper comic strip as well as making his first sales to the comic book industry. He has left a trail of spectacular creations wherever he has worked. Beginning with his remarkable stories for fabled EC Comics in the 1950s, then his work on the Rip Kirby comic strip with John Prentice, Big Ben Bolt with John Cullen Murphy, and eventually his own credited work on Secret Agent X-9 in collaboration with writer Archie Goodwin – his works always embodied grace, style, epic scope and a supreme grasp of figure and character. His body of work and his Flash Gordon comic books of the mid-1960s were the direct inspiration for George Lucas to create the Star Wars movies and caused Lucas to spend years in an attempt to have Williamson draw the Star Wars comic books and newspaper comic strips. When Lucas succeeded in convincing Williamson to take on Star Wars, a new, and possibly the last, classic adventure comic strip found its way to the pages of newspapers worldwide and ignited the imaginations of a new generation of readers. Williamson has been honored for his works with a multitude of awards the world over, but his own best reward has been the love and support of his family, his wife Cori and his children.

Crazy Sexy Geeks – Geeky TV Celebrities!

The Point Radio: Back To The WWE For Stone Cold?

In the wrestling world, they say “never say never”. After a new movie on shelves now and the big action flick, THE EXPENDABLES, hitting screens soon, will Stone Cold ever get back in a WWE ring? We asked him for a straight answer and he gave it to us – plus TORCHWOOD is (really) back and THE A-TEAM scores a “C-“.

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