Review: ‘Twilight Zone’ Graphic Novels
Rod Serling’s [[[Twilight Zone]]] remains one of the brightest spots of television history. The teleplays were inventive, occasionally funny, often thrilling and always thought-provoking. In thirty minutes, he managed to tell a story with relatable characters and situations then twist things and entertain you through surprise.
Most attempts to revisit the zone have met with mixed results. There was the prose magazine that was quite good but the 1980s revival, not so much. And of course, there was the cursed feature film version which was all right, but not worth losing Vic Morrow for.
The latest people to visit are the students at the Savannah College of Art & Design. The faculty there has licensed from the estate of famed TV writer Rod Serling the rights to adapt the original scripts. The school then partnered with Walker & Co. to release eight graphic novels between now and 2009. The first four are currently out,, adapted by Mark Kneece, who has written for DC Comics and elsewhere. The art, lettering and coloring are handled by the student body, one team per book.
They wisely led off with “[[[Walking Distance]]]”, the most personal of Serling’s scripts, inspired by growing up in Binghamton, NY. A man mysteriously finds himself transported back to the days of his childhood and he seeks out his younger self to warn him of the perils of being an office drone. Things happen and lessons are learned.

KBS TV, a South Korean network has reported that SSD has signed an agreement with Fox TV Studios to co-produce and distribute a live action TV series based on Tsukasa Hojo’s City Hunter manga.
Director JJ Abrams posted a brief note on the Star Trek movie’s Facebook
The Spirit earned a mere $6.5 million during the three day holiday weekend, good for just ninth place on the top ten. Based on numbers from Box Office Mojo, the Lionsgate film earned an average of $2595 per screen compared with the number one film’s $10.632.
As 2008 winds down, the future looms large and one of the murkiest predictions regards the future of newspapers. With people increasingly getting their news from the Internet, newspapers seem to serve readers with advertising circulars, classifieds and the comics. As various papers struggle with declining advertising revenue, they have shrunk newsrooms, dropped pages, reduced their size and trimmed features. Newspapers that carried two or three pages of comic strips are half that size and it gets harder for new cartoonists to gain a toehold.
Looking for something to do before school or work begins again? Well,
SAN DIEGO — Comic-Con International, the largest comic book and popular arts event in the United States, announced today that submissions are now being accepted for consideration by the judges for the 2009 Will Eisner Comics Industry Awards. Publishers wanting to submit entries should send one copy each of the comics or books they wish to nominate and include a cover letter indicating what is being submitted and in what categories. There are no entry fees for any submissions.
Paul W.S. Anderson updated
Women in Trouble. The very title catches your eye and automatically steers you to the B-List Exploitation movies that Sybil Danning made famous in the 1970s and 1980s. But, this is a new film with a B+/A- cast complete with Carla Gugino (Watchmen), Adrianne Palicki (Friday Night Lights), Connie Britton (Spin City), Marley Shelton (Eleventh Hour), Cameron Richardson (12 Miles of Bar Road), Garcelle Beauvais (NYPD Blue), Caitlin Keats (Kill Bill Vol. 2), Paul Cassell (Brothers & Sisters), and Elizabeth Berkley (Showgirls).
Sylvester Stallone is assembling an all-star cast for his latest adventure film, The Expendables. Already he lined up Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Forest Whitaker and Randy Couture as the team of mercenaries hired to dethrone a dictator. The film has been written and will be directed by Stallone with production slated to begin in March for a 2010 release. While Lionsgate will distribute in the UK, no word on who will release this in the states.
