Monthly Archive: August 2014

Watch a Deleted Scene from Divergent

0612176BTr1Divergent is arriving on home video next Tuesday and in anticipation of the Digital HD, Blu-ray, DVD, and OnDemand release, Summit Entertainment has released a deleted scene.

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SANTA MONICA, CA (May 20, 2014) –  Lionsgate (NYSE: LGF), the premier next generation global content leader, will release the electrifying first installment of the blockbuster action adventure franchise Divergent  on Blu-ray Combo Pack (plus DVD and Digital HD), DVD (plus Digital), Video on Demand and Pay-Per-View on August 5, the Company announced today.   The film will be available on Digital HD two weeks early on July 22.

Based on Veronica Roth’s #1 New York Times best-selling book series which has sold nearly 22 million copies worldwide, the film features an all-star cast including Shailene Woodley, Theo James, Academy Award® winner Kate Winslet and Ashley Judd. To date, Divergent has grossed nearly $150 million at the domestic box office and more than $250 million worldwide in its theatrical release on Lionsgate’s Summit Entertainment label, getting the ?new franchise off to a fast start.  The next three installments — Insurgent and Allegiant Parts 1 & 2 — will be released theatrically on March 20, 2015, March 18, 2016 and March 24, 2017, respectively.

Packed with bonus material, the Blu-ray Combo Pack includes the documentary “Bringing Divergent to Life,” an in-depth look at the making of the film plus the exclusive featurette “Faction Before Blood,” detailing the film’s future world. The Blu-ray Combo Pack and DVD both feature deleted scenes and two audio commentaries – one with director Neil Burger and one with producers Douglas Wick and Lucy Fisher. The Divergent Blu-ray Combo Pack will be available for the suggested retail price of $39.99 and the DVD for $29.95.

Divergent stars Shailene Woodley (upcoming The Fault in Our Stars), Theo James (Underworld: Awakening), Ashley Judd (Double Jeopardy), Jai Courtney (A Good Day to Die Hard), Ray Stevenson (Thor), Zoё Kravitz (X-Men: First Class), Miles Teller (The Spectacular Now), Tony Goldwyn (TV’s “Scandal”), Ansel Elgort (upcoming The Fault in Our Stars), Maggie Q (TV’s “Nikita”), Mekhi Phifer (ShowTime’s “House of Lies”) and Academy Award® winner Kate Winslet (Best Actress, The Reader, 2008). The film is directed by Neil Burger (The Illusionist, Limitless) from a screenplay by Evan Daugherty (Snow White and the Huntsman) and Vanessa Taylor (HBO’s “Game of Thrones”).

Divergent is a thrilling action adventure set in a future world where society has been divided into five distinct factions. But Tris will never fit into any one group-she is Divergent, and what makes her different makes her dangerous. Targeted by a faction leader determined to eliminate all Divergents, Tris turns to the one person she believes she can trust: Four, an instructor for the militant Dauntless faction, and a man full of dark secrets. Together, Tris and Four uncover a mind-bending conspiracy that will put their courage to the ultimate test…and forever link their destinies.

BLU-RAY COMBO PACK SPECIAL FEATURES*

  • “Bringing Divergent to Life” Documentary
  • “Faction Before Blood” Featurette
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Ellie Goulding – “Beating Heart” music video
  • Audio Commentary with Director Neil Burger
  • Audio Commentary with Producers Douglas Wick and Lucy Fisher
  • Temporary tattoo sheet
    *Subject to change

DVD SPECIAL FEATURES*

  • Deleted Scenes
  • Ellie Goulding – “Beating Heart” music video
  • Audio Commentary with Director Neil Burger
  • Audio Commentary with Producers Douglas Wick and Lucy Fisher
  • Temporary tattoo sheet
    *Subject to change

PROGRAM INFORMATION

Street Date: August 5, 2014

Price: $39.99 Blu-ray / $29.95 DVD
Title Copyright: Divergent © 2014, Artwork & Supplementary Materials ™ & © 2014 Summit Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved
Rating: PG-13 for Intense Violence and Action, Thematic Elements and Some Sensuality
Feature Run Time: 139 Minutes
Type: Theatrical Release
Genre: Action/Adventure
Closed Captioned: NA
Subtitles: English SDH and Spanish
Blu-ray Format: 1080P High Definition 16×9 Widescreen (2.40:1)
DVD Format: 16×9 Widescreen (2.40:1)
Blu-ray Audio Status: English 7.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital, English 2.0 Dolby Digital Optimized for Late-Night Listening and English Descriptive Audio
DVD Audio Status: English and Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital, English Descriptive Audio

Horror Lovers’ Bobby Timony Talks Zuda, Digital, Comics

creator009031-2623278Bobby Timony is an artist who’s co-creator of the popular comic strip The Night Owls, published by DC Comics’ Zuda imprint. He has been nominated for multiple Harvey Awards, including Best New Series, Best Online Series, and Best New Talent. His newest project, The Horror Lovers, is currently seeking funding via Kickstarter.

Bobby took the time to talk to us about Horror Lovers, Zuda Comics, and more in this exclusive interview.

ComicMix: Good morning, Bobby.  For starters, how did you start drawing comic books?

Bobby Timony: I can’t remember when it started. It seems I’ve been doing it all my life. My brother and I had school desks in our bedroom we would draw at. We had a hollowed out speaker flu of pens, pencils and magic markers. We would spend hours at a time sitting in our room making comics.

CM: What were your favorite comics growing up, and other influences on your work?

BT: The first comics I ever subscribed to were the Disney Duck comics that Gladstone was putting out. I loved Carl Barks and Don Rosa. I remember I set an envelope stuffed with $1 bills and my subscription form. I’m actually surprised the guy in the mailroom didn’t just steal my money.

nightowls

CM: Tell me about your experience with Zuda and “The Night Owls.”

BT: The Night Owls at Zuda was my first professional comics work. I had been setting up at small press shows with self published books before then, but this was the first time I actually got paid to do it.
I remember catching some flack from other web comics people who claimed I sold out and didn’t value my work as an artist. There were a lot of soapboxes and pedestals about how they could never give up their rights!

Well, I can’t speak for them, but I can say it worked out for me. In addition to getting paid for my work, I made valuable industry contacts, made some great personal friends, got nominated for several awards, grew my fan base exponentially, and in the end I even got all my rights back. So yeah, I think I won that one.

CM: You’ve created a lot of original comics and characters, both with your brother Peter and by yourself. Why is doing creator-owned work so important to you?

BT: I guess it has to do with why you get into comics in the first place. Some people just love the art and want to draw. Some love the characters and want to build on the stories they grew up with. Peter and I loved the medium as a means of unleashing our imaginations. We started by drawing our plushy stuffed toys into comics, giving them personalities. Then we moved on to our own made up characters. Although we had favorite characters we’d revisit, we never really settled on one that was going to be our signature achievement. We’d just say, “That was fun!” and then start something new. It’s just the way our brains work, I guess. By the time we were teens we had a whole rolodex of characters and ideas we had developed. We had fun organizing them on index cards and pulling a couple out at random.

Detectobot_00-11

CM: In some ways, Zuda was a pioneer in digital comics. Now you’re working with Monkeybrain and Thrillbent. Can you tell us about these new projects, and how it feels being a part of this second great wave of digital comic books?

BT: Both Chris Roberson at Monkeybrain and Mark Waid at Thrillbent have told me that they really liked the work I did at Zuda. They probably wouldn’t have been aware of me without that, so I guess it does feel like the next logical step in my weird career path. I wouldn’t say I’m a digital comics pioneer. I think its more like I’m a guy whose been lucky enough to recognize and take advantage of a few great opportunities.

My Monkeybrain Comic is called Detectobot, and its about a robot Detective (obviously). I’m collaborating with Peter Timony again on that one. My Thrillbent comic is called Long Ago and Far Away, with Chris Mancini as the writer. It’s about a guy who saved a magical realm from evil as a child. Years later, the magical realm needs his help again, but he’s grown up to be kind of a schmuck.

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CM: What attracted you to the Horror Lovers project?

BT: I had been talking with Valerie D’Orazio about collaborating off and on for years. When she pitched the idea to me, it seemed like a good solid idea that had some legs, so I said, “What the heck, lets go for it.”

CM: What specific stylistic approach have you taken with Horror Lovers, in comparison with your previous work?

BT: With this project, I wanted to try something looser, more animated, more cartoony. I asked Val how cartoony she wanted to go with it, and she gave me the ok to do it however I wanted. So I did. The Horror Lovers is more rubbery and exaggerated than the Night Owls or Detectobot.

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CM: How do you make the humor and horror aspects of the comic work together?

BT: Humor and Horror go together like Peanut Butter and Jelly. The two styles seem to be made to work together. They’re complimentary opposites. They highlight their own strengths by contrast and comparison, like black on white.

CM: What has been your experience with Kickstarter so far? Have your backed a lot of kickstarters previously?

BT: I have backed a few kick starters, mostly comics, one video game. I’ve been a contributing artist to two kickstarter anthologies. Monster Elementary by Nick Doan, and Schmuck by Seth Kushner. I helped promote them both, and they were both successfully funded. This is the first project where I’m the sole story artist, so although Val is the one running the campaign, it really feels like its my Kickstarter.

And it’s been a lot harder than I thought it’d be. I guess I was hoping it’d go viral and take on a life of it’s own, but no. I really have to work to promote it.

I’d been planning to launch a Kickstarter in October to fund a deck of Monster Pin Up Girl playing cards, and this campaign has given me a lot to think about.

frankie

CM: What does your ideal future in comics look like?
My ideal future in comics is one where I have enough clout that publishers want to publish my dream projects without me even having to ask!

Seriously, though. I’ve been wanting to do an original Laurel & Hardy graphic novel for ages. I’ve talked to the license holders and I’ve talked to some publishers, but I don’t think it’ll ever happen unless I can raise up my professional profile enough where I can get someone somewhere to take a chance on Laurel and Hardy and me.
And that’s it, really. Yes I want money and prestige, and its all because those things enable me to work on the projects I love most. What I want is the freedom to do that.

 

Martha Thomases: Where’s My Batman?

Ever since I moved to New York in 1977, I wondered what it would be like if there was really a Batman.

Sure, Superman lived in a version of New York as well. So did the entire Marvel Universe. But Batman is the one who felt most like the way I lived, in my tenement apartment. Batman belonged in a city with fifth floor walk-ups.

I don’t mean that I looked up at rooftops for someone to fight crime. Even then, I didn’t normally feel physically threatened on the streets. And Batman was not going to stop the men who made disgusting comments to me as I went to work, did my chores, or met with friends. I might have been in my naïve 20s, but I knew that Batman wasn’t real.

My 20s were not only naïve, but pretentious. I hung out at CBGBs and The Mudd Club. I went to art openings at downtown galleries because I knew the artists. I stayed up all night and wore black, even though I had to be properly dressed at my very proper day-job at 8:30 AM. I knew the kinds of people who could help me stay up all night and get to work on time.

This was a different New York. There were local banks. There were local stores. There were local donut shops. Everything wasn’t part of a chain. Rents were, if not reasonable, at least affordable for someone working an entry-level job. There were bands forming and breaking up and reforming. There were alternative weekly newspapers, alternatives to the alternative weekly newspapers, poetry ‘zines and underground comix. There were community gardens and the beginning of the Green Markets.

In short, it was the kind of city where Batman would be noticed. Even the version of Batman that was then current, the urban legend thought to be a myth by most, known only to Commissioner Gordon and a few others.

I mean, this was a city where punk bands wrote songs about Bernhard Goetz and <a href=”

Gilmore. Certainly, rumors of a giant bat (or a man dressed like a giant bat) would capture the creative imagination. Patti Smith was writing songs about Rimbaud and Verlaine; of course she would have comments on what flew through the streets at night.

As would the <a href=”

Boys. I bet if I look closely, I can find myself in that video somewhere.

And then there is Bruce Wayne, reclusive billionaire. He’s like the opposite of Donald Trump. What would Spy Magazine have made of him? Would they send someone to dig into his affairs the way they did with Trump? Would he have a Spy nickname, like Trump did (“short-fingered vulgarian”)?

I like to imagine that New York-based fashion designers would include a lot more capes in their collections.

It’s more difficult to imagine Batman in present-day New York. While we have gang-related crime, it’s a much smaller part of our lawlessness than you’ll find in corporate boardrooms. The artists and musicians have been gentrified out of town by the international trust fund kids and their investment-minded parents. We have lots of problems, but they aren’t the kind can be fixed by someone bursting through a skylight.

We need a new kind of hero. Has anyone ever seen Elizabeth Warren and Batman in the same place?