Category: News

Marvel Axes Friendly Neighborhood and Sensational Spider-Man

According to our friends at Publisher’s Weekly, this November Marvel is cancelling Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man and Sensational Spider-Man. They’re replacing both titles with… Amazing Spider-Man.

Yep, Amazing will be coming out three times a month. This one-ups the original Captain Marvel’s twice-a-month release schedule, back in the 40s. But it does beg the question of whether Marvel will follow Mad Magazine‘s lead back in the 1960s by publishing three annuals each year.

An announcement will be made at next month’s San Diego Comic-Con as to how they’re going to juggle the talent workload.

One wonders why Marvel doesn’t just bite the bullet and make Amazing Spider-Man a weekly.

Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved. Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved. Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved.

LICENSING SHOW: Day One

LICENSING SHOW: Day One

The Licensing Show in New York City is a three-day orgy of consumerism.  I don’t mean like Las Vegas is an orgy of consumerism, or like Christmas has been debased into an orgy of consumerism.  No, the Licensing Show is an entire Javitz Convention Center full of companies large and small, looking to expand their properties onto more properties.

Of course, Marvel and DC are there.  So are MGM, Paramount, Disney, Nickelodeon and NASCAR.  If you want to make a toy, a lunchbox, a videogame, a paper plate or a cell phone, and you don’t quite trust yourself with your own ideas, you can buy yourself some help from a brand with a proven track record.  I can understand why you want a license for Batman: The Dark Knight if you make toys or Halloween costumes.  I don’t understand why you want a license for Pledge or Crisco.

As with most conventions, the most interesting stuff is not always the biggest.  Yarto Licensing, for example, is a British company there to promote Hackman: A Dog in a Bucket, a comic strip created by Bill Houston (recently collected into a book by Harper Collins).  Hackman is a spaniel who is so anxious, so paranoid, so stressed out that he scratches himself into one of those over-sized collars.  Naturally, he lives in Manhattan.

There were lots and lots of Asian companies trying to be the next Sanrio (there was also Sanrio, for that matter).  I was especially pleased to discover Aska Studio, a Taiwanese company with lots of properties.  The best, IMO, was the Mouchoir Club, about a box of tissues and a roll of toilet paper that have adventures.  As the handout says, "They bring hapapiness to people; heal them of broken heart.  Moreover, at the same time, they found the meaning of life."  I’d buy a pillowcase that could do that for me.

 

(more…)

Smallville / Buffy Star Goes To Torchwood

Smallville / Buffy Star Goes To Torchwood

James Marsters will be guest-starring in an episode of the R-rated Doctor Who spin-off, Torchwood.

Perhaps best known as Spike in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel teevee series and as well as Dr. Milton Fine in Smallville, Marsters has also voiced the role of Lex Luthor in the upcoming D2DVD Superman: Doomsday. He is also a musician and singer, playing solo and as lead singer of Ghost of the Robot.

The second season of Torchwood goes up in the U.K. after the first of the year; the first season goes up on BBC America in September.

Veronica Mars Goes Wild

Veronica Mars Goes Wild

 Over at www.eonline.com/gossip/kristin someone on DC’s staff spilled the beans about the fate of the beloved Veronica Mars.

During a chat this week : "Jonathan in New York: I work at DC Comics, and you’ve got some big love here. There’s a bunch of us who take your word for gospel, and though it’s already sorta out there, we just wanted to send some info your way on the Veronica Mars comic books. They’ll be published by our WildStorm imprint, which is based in San Diego, and R.T. [series creartor rob Thomas] is looking to be firmly on board. We’re even hoping for a late fall release of the first issue. Hopefully, more to come…Keep up the good work!Jonathan, we love you. Tubers, buy DC Comics."

No doubt there will be more about this at San Diego next month.

Spider-Man Gets Spectacular On Your TeeVee

According to a press release, the new animated teevee series The Spectacular Spider-Man will be coming to the Kids’ WB! on The CW early next year.

Kids’ WB! Senior Vice President and General Manager Betsy McGowen states “The use of the ‘Spectacular’ title is an homage to Marvel’s wildly popular series of Spider-Man comics, and is very reflective of the enthusiasm and high regard we have for the production. This promises to be a stand-out animated series.”

Former DC Comics’ staffer Greg Weisman, who moved on to television to do Gargoyles, The Batman, and others, will be the show’s supervising producer and Victor Cook (Hellboy: Blood and Iron) will be producer/supervising director.

Logo trademark and copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved.

New stuff to come from Aardman

New stuff to come from Aardman

This is a story that has something for everyone at ComicMix.  According to Variety, Aardman Feataures (creators of Wallace & Gromit, Chicken Run, and currently part of Sony) has announced a bunch of new features.

Life on Mars fans will be psyched to hear that writers Matthew Graham and Aashley Pharoah are penning The Cat Burglars.  Described by Variety as a film about "milk-thieving stray cats," it will be directed by Steve Box in the stop-motion sculpture style us hard-core animation buffs love.

Also, Peter Lord will direct a comedy based on the Pirate series by Gideon Defoe.  Lord gave us Chicken Run, maybe the last time Mel Gibson was any fun.

Peter Banham is wowrking on Operation Rudolph, a Christmas movie.  He’s one of the writers of Borat.  We’re psyched.

Garth Ennis Talks To ComicMix

Garth Ennis Talks To ComicMix

The new week means a new Big ComicMix Broadcast of course, flanked by our regular Tuesday look at the newest comics and DVDs, plus news on Marvel’s Big Con announcements and we talk to Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson about how they brought The Boys back bigger than ever. Top it all off with a visit from one of the most beloved ladies in soul music, and you got 13 minutes of pop culture bliss!!

Press The Button or we will have to tell Garth. Trust us – you DON’T want us to tell Garth!

Grand Theft Auto IV Content Goes Exclusive

Take Two Interactive announced recently that the first two packages of episodic content for their upcoming Grand Theft Auto IV would be exclusive to Microsoft’s Xbox 360 console. Microsoft will pay a total of $50 million for this privilege.

Take Two plans to release GTA IV this fall for both the Xbox 360 and the Playstation 3.  With this move Microsoft hopes to attract the legions of GTA fans when they make their next-generation console decision.  The last game in the series, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas sold 14 million copies on the Playstation 2 console.

Who knows, maybe this is the kind of thing Microsoft needs to stop the momentum of the Wii.

DENNIS O’NEIL: Continued stories (continued)…

DENNIS O’NEIL: Continued stories (continued)…

(If) you’re…young; you don’t remember a time when continued stories were rare. But until Stan Lee made them standard procedure at Marvel in the 1960s, they were next to unheard-of.

Those words seem familiar to you? Certainly not, unless you read this department’s blather three weeks ago, when I began a discussion of continued stories in comics, where they – the words – appeared in a slightly different form. And in reprinting them, in a column which is – let’s face it – a continuation of a previous one, I’ve tried to deal with a paramount problem writers face when doing continued narratives: clueing in readers who either don’t remember the earlier stuff or are new to the series.

There is a difference between continuing characters and continuing stories. Continuing characters have been with us a very long time. Even if you ignore the many tales of the various gods and goddesses, those rascals, you can find a continuing character as early as 428 BC, give or take a few years, when Sophocles followed up his smash hit Oedipus Rex with a sequel featuring the same poor bastard, Oedipus at Colonus. Then, over the centuries, there have been various adventures of King Arthur’s knights and other heroes. But these were not continued stories, not exactly. An adventure or episode ended and the characters went into Limbo and reappeared to solve new problems and encounter new hassles. That kind of storytelling continued through the invention of high speed printing, which made books relatively cheap and accessible at about the same time that a lot of people were learning to read.

Which brings us to the pulp magazines, a publishing form that began about 1910 and was one with the dinosaurs by the middle 50s. A lot of these cheaply produced entertainments featured continuing heroes. (We’ve discussed perhaps the greatest of them, The Shadow, in this department earlier, and I won’t be surprised if he gets mentioned here again.) Meanwhile, over in another medium, movies were also featuring continuing heroes, ranging from that loveable scamp Andy Hardy to a legion of bad guy quellers, including noble cowpokes and suave detectives. And…in yet another medium, that newfangled radio was presenting weekly dramas about cowboys and detectives and police officers and even federal agents, like the movies only more often. And…here might be an appropriate place to mention comic strips, which began doing stories, as opposed to daily jokes, in 1929 with Burne Hogarth’s comic’s adaptations of Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan, and since the introduction of Chester Gould’s Dick Tracy in 1931, were sometimes stretching plots over many weeks.

Those were continued stories featuring, of course, continuing characters. But there were others…Oh my goodness, look! We’re almost at the limit of our allotted word count and we have so much more to discuss. I suppose I could go on for a couple of paragraphs more, but that wouldn’t begin to exhaust the topic, so I guess we’ll just have to – yes! – continue this next week.

RECOMMENDED READING: The Creators, by Daniel J. Boorstin

Dennis O’Neil is an award-winning editor and writer of comic books like Batman, The Question, Iron Man, Green Lantern and/or Green Arrow, and The Shadow, as well as all kinds of novels, stories and articles.

Artwork copyright Tribune Media Services. All Rights Reserved.

Next Trek Script Finished

Next Trek Script Finished

Roberto Orci told SCI FI Wire that he and writing partner Alex Kurtzman have finished the script to the 11th Star Trek movie, which director J.J. Abrams will start filming in November. "We’re still casting," Orci said, and there will be "some kind of Kirk" in the movie. One recalls Star Trek OS featured "some kind of Captain Pike" in the episode "The Menagerie."

Orci also acknowledged he is "sure" CBS is thinking about using the new movie as a kick-off for a new teevee series, but his only concern is the upcoming movie.

Photograph copyright Paramount