Author: Mike Gold

Broadway gets its click-click on

addams_family-7398155In a neighborhood largely berift of new ideas or courage, those creepy. kookie, mysterious and spooky folks from The Addams Family are going to set up house on Times Square, courtesy of  Chicago-based production company Elephant Eye Theatrical.

The Addams Family will be coming to Broadway – in a musical of course, courtesy of writers Marshall Brickman (Sleeper, Annie Hall, The Muppet Show) and Rick Elice (Jersey Boys) and songster Andrew Lippa. The show is expected to open on Times Square in 2009 after debuting in Chicago.

Artwork copyright The Charles and Tee Addams Foundation. All Rights Reserved. Hat tip: Lisa Sullivan, who pointed us to Variety.

Robert Rodriguez on Barbarella

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Director Robert Rodriguez will be directing the remake of Barbarella.

The director of such hits as Sin City and From Dusk To Dawn, well-known for his low budget on-time green screen work, has put Babs on his schedule alongside The Jetsons (live action) and Sin City 2, which has been in pre-production for a while. Casino Royale writers Neal Pervis and Robert Wade will be scripting, and Dino De Laurentiis will be repeating his duties as producer. Production is scheduled to start next year. Jane Fonda is not expected to be cast as the lead once again, although a villain role has not been ruled out.

 

To tie into the movie, the original Barbarella comics stories by Jean Claude Forest will be re-released in two volumes; material that had never been published in English will be included.

 

MIKE GOLD: Sometimes the good guys win

stagger_intro_small-5471695As our Elayne Riggs reported this weekend, Derek McCulloch and Shepherd Hendrix earned themselves four Glyph Comic Awards at this weekend’s East Coast Black Age of Comics Convention for their ground-breaking graphic novel, Stagger Lee. They won Story of the Year, Best Writer, Best Male Character, and Best Cover.

Their efforts have also received an Eisner Awards nomination (“Best Reality-Based Work,” which is slicing the onion rather thin) and a British Eagle nomination (“Best Original Graphic Novel). The Eisners will be announced at the San Diego Comic Con this July; the guys lost the Eagle last week to Pride of Baghdad. But, as the old saying goes, it’s an honor to be nominated, particularly against Fables, Lost Girls, and Five Fists of Science.

As the headline says, sometimes the good guys win. However, I take their success as a personal vindication. Anybody who had come within 20 feet of me during the last year heard me proselytize about Stagger Lee. And, lucky devil that you are, now it’s your turn.

If comics are ever going to escape from the Retard Ghetto, and we are slowly doing so, it will be because of the reach of graphic novels. Outsiders and an increasing number of insiders simply do not see very much in the way of sophisticated storytelling in literature that consists of bizarrely enhanced people dressing up in even more bizarre costumes in order to beat the shit out of one another. Actually, there are more “sophisticated” superhero stories than one might think, but they’re farts in the blizzard of such product.

In order to reach out successfully, we have to reach out in all directions. Here’s what Derek and Shep did in Stagger Lee.

They painstakingly searched out dozens, maybe hundreds, of versions of this classic folk song. They painstakingly researched the reality of the story, or realities, actually, as lots of folks have lots of different opinions. They got their reference straight, they lined up all the different versions, and then sculpted a story that contains its own multiverse of alternate realities, investigating the story from a great many of its folklore roots.

Then they did it as one solid novel. A graphic novel that will appeal to comics fans, to music fans (blues, roots, rock and folk in particular – although that pretty much covers it all), to those with a passion for American history, to those with a passion for black American history, and to people who are interested in a damn good story told in an entertaining and seductive manner.

That’s no small achievement, believe me. You try it.

In fact, I really wish you would. The future of the medium depends upon it.

Congratulations, guys.

Mike Gold is editor-in-chief of ComicMix.com

Artwork copyright 2006 Derek McCulloch and Shepherd Hendrix. All Rights Reserved.

Doohan, Cooper found at last

The ashes of astronaut Gordon Cooper and Star Trek actor James "Scotty" Doohan were recovered today in New Mexico in the designated recovery zone, 20 days after they were shot into space for their brief post-mortum flight. Generally speaking, UP Aerospace of Connecticut doesn’t have such a hard time finding the payload, but, generally speaking, the payload is rarely this ironic. It’s not quite like losing the car keys.

Nonetheless, it’s good to have these two heroes back on Earth.

 

 

Ben Turpin gawks at Hillbilly Loves Slaves

test-salt-lick-alb-2948762If you’ve been wondering what happened to the visage of late comedian Ben Turpin, who briefly graced our Big ComicMix Broadcast announcements, well, it turns out he’s got a new job.

ComicMix columnist (and writer of the forthcoming horror graphic novel Fishhead) Michael H. Price has sent along what has got to be the greatest record album cover since the Mothers of Invention’s Weasels Ripped My Flesh.  Michael says:

Saltlick, Texas’ most notorious bluegrass band strikes again. Yes, and I knew I must have a good reason for hanging on to all those he-man adventure magazines my Dad had accumulated." Hillbilly Love Slaves of the Fourth Reich is a followup to the band’s big debut, Face Only A Mother Could Love.

It’s Rex Morgan vs Doonesbury in Virginia

The world has come to this: The Hampton Roads, Virginia Virginian-Pilot is in the mood to drop some comic strips; Mutts is already on probation. Now they’re asking their readers to choose between Rex Morgan MD and Doonesbury.

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I’ll run that by you again: kill one – Rex Morgan MD, by Woody Wilson and Graham Nolan, or Doonesbury, by Garry Trudeau. Vote now.

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O.K. Now I can understand choosing between any number of mindless talking animal strips (note how I just exempted Mutts). Or any of those mindless "my wife’s a bitch" strips. Or any of those strips that think running a golf gag four times a week is the height of humor. But if you don’t think Rex Morgan MD and Doonesbury is apples and oranges, then I’m not letting you anywhere near my cherry orchard.

Rex Morgan MD copyright 2007 King Features Syndicate. Inc. All Rights Reserved. Doonesbury copyright 2007 G.B. Trudeau. All RIghts Reserved.

 

NYPD watches Rall

ted-rall-soldier-trall050425-2452567They say Iraq War II is nothing like the Vietnam War. I say bull.

Cartoonist / columnist Ted Rall reports the New York City police had been monitoring his website during the Republican National Convention in 2004, siting reports in The New York Times. He notes a "reason they can’t find bin Laden: they’re so worried about the ‘traitors’ in their midst that they’ve lost sight of America’s real enemies.’" 

Well-known for his left-wing views, Ted’s editorial cartoons and newspaper columns are distributed by Universal Press Syndicate, distributor of other radical thinkers as Garfield, Ziggy, Judge Dredd, and, oh yes, Ann Coulter.

Artwork copyright Ted Rall. All Rights Reserved.

Frank Miller’s Will Eisner’s The Spirit picked up

eisner_card-5379167Our good friends at Variety (the outfit that also brings us the New York Comic Con) tell us North American and British distribution rights Frank Miller’s film version of Will Eisner’s The Spirit, produced by Batfilm’s Michael Uslan, has been picked by Lionsgate, distributor of Marvel’s many D2DVD titles.

Frank has written the script and will be directing the movie as soon as he and Robert Rodriguez wrap up Sin City 2.

Wow. Sounds kinda incestuous, doesn’t it?

The producers are out in Cannes with Frank’s script selling international rights, even as you read these words.

Artwork for the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund copyright Will Eisner. All Rights Reserved. Hat tip: Lisa Sullivan.

Woody Allen Who?

0200722049000-4731542Okay, there’s been all kinds of rumors about this year’s Doctor Who Christmas Special. People have been fighting about Australian pop star Kylie Minogue, and nobody’s been able to confirm her appearance. That’s fine; the last pop star (Billie Piper) turned out swell, so what the heck.

But Woody Allen playing Albert Einstein?

That’s what the British newspaper The Sun reports. But we’ll believe it only when writer/producer Russell T. Davies sez so… even though Allen’s "people" did the "neither confirm nor deny" thing.

While we’re at it, Outpost Gallifrey notes SyFyPortal is reporting "new interest" in a Doctor Who movie starring Paul McGann, the eighth Doctor who appeared on screen as the Doctor but once in the made-for-teevee movie, against Eric (Heroes) Roberts as The Master. McGann has also played the part in literally dozens of full-cast original audio productions for the BBC and Big Finish.

Whovians would love the chance to see McGann morph into Christopher Eccleston, although I suspect Mr. McGann would rather squeeze out a few more teevee movies before that happens – if he’s interested at all.

Artwork from The Sun. Copyright BBC, Woody Allen, and Rollins-Joffe Productions.

Fate gets real

4094830691-5473050Steve Gerber reports his Doctor Fate series, already announced, solicited and then rescinded, will be appearing in a new double-length, double-feature book along the lines of DC’s recent Mystery In Space and Tales of the Unexpected titles. It should be coming out in September.

Personally, I think this is good news. It’s quite rare for me to get excited about still another plow-over of an old superhero, and Doctor Fate had some good runs over the decades. But Gerber and Fate seemed like a perfect match, and I look forward to his new series once again.

(Artwork copyright DC Comics. All Rights Reserved.)