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ALL PULP INTERVIEWS MIKE FYLES, PULP ARTIST!

Mike Fyles-Artist

AP: Mike, thanks for stopping by All Pulp for an interview! Before we get to the nitty gritty, tell us a bit about yourself, personal background type stuff.

MF: My working week (of four days) takes place with students in a local College here in Staffordshire UK. My job is to provide them with further opportunities outside of the classroom. I used to teach more formally across a wide spectrum of subjects but I like the fact that I can now introduce students to more than the specified aspects of a syllabus. Around this job and a typical family life I get to pursue my artistic interests. I have been drawing and making things for as long as I remember, and what I remember best about doing it was how it has always been a motivation. I played out a lot as a child, walked to school, climbed trees, collected insects, and when it was rainy, stayed in and played with scale model figures and tanks, built nearly every evil hideout and spaceship I could with household items, and drew and traced a lot of pictures. Two comics came to our house every Saturday with the newspaper boy, one for me and one for my brother and together we read our way through The Beano, The Dandy, Topper, and Smash, and then we graduated to the Victor, the Valiant, and finally Look and Learn and TV21. We also used to revel in the old films and serials that were screened at our local cinema for children. When the first wave of American comics came to our local newsagents in the 60’s it was overwhelming. I just couldn’t get enough of them, but between friends we were able to collect different titles and then swap them to read. Nowadays my leisure time is more eclectic but does still involve comics, watching old films, swimming, and watching and playing cricket.

AP: How long have you been a working artist? Where can readers see some of your work as far as published things go?

MF: I’m far from being what I would call a ‘working artist’, still having to pay the bills with a day job, but I’ve been much more in demand in the last five years or so. It would be nice to spend more time producing artwork for other people’s projects and to be sometimes paid for it, but I’m a little too old in the tooth, at 55, to do anything now other than enjoy each opportunity as it arises. A friend once said that I was a good proponent of the view that at the point you get better at what you like doing, someone will notice!. The most prominent examples of published work are the Marvel cover commissions. There were four for an Iron Man Noir mini-series in the Marvel Noir collection and four for The Grim Hunt story arc in the long running The Amazing Spiderman comic. I’ve two covers and nine interior illustrations published for Airship 27/Cornerstone’s Green Lama and Green Lama: Unbound, with a comic and new GL novel to come this year. There are some very nice bookmarks that previewed ant the New York Comic Con last year and I’ve some pulp art in the three downloadable Commander X Christmas specials by Jay Piscopo. I’ve also a cover gracing a fine Elastic Press short story collection by Mat Coward called So Far, So Near.

AP: You definitely have an affinity for pulp style art. Are you a pulp fan? Who are your major artistic influences?

MF: I don’t count myself as a ‘pulp fan’, in the strict sense. I’m not a collector or for that matter an avid reader of pulp fiction – although I’m really enjoying some of the reworking of pulp characters going on at the moment. I began exploring the genre initially for the cover art work on old pulp magazines and paperbacks. I particularly liked the images that had more than just a basic illustrative aspect, the ones that really implied a compelling story or narrative. I also really began to appreciate the context of their production, and the skills of the commercial artists producing them. The whole idea of producing ‘faux’ covers was so that I could pretend to be working to similar constraints and schedules. I have a soft spot for the commercial illustration of the mid 20th Century that was made to promote ‘popular’ fiction and non fiction (especially children’s annuals, pulp magazines, paperbacks and comics). There is so much creativity and artistic competence to be found on the covers and within the pages of even the most mundane examples that it is difficult to credit any artist in particular as an influence – so my answer is, all the artists I’ve liked enough to ask, “How did they do that?”I have a soft spot for the commercial illustration of the mid 20th Century that was made to promote ‘popular’ fiction and non fiction (especially children’s annuals, pulp magazines, paperbacks and comics). There is so much creativity and artistic competence to be found on the covers and within the pages of even the most mundane examples that it is difficult to credit any artist in particular as an influence – so my answer is, all the artists I’ve liked enough to ask, “How did they do that?”

AP: Does pulp art have a place in modern times? There’s this obvious renewed interest, some even say ‘renaissance’ in pulp fiction. Do you agree that pulp is making a comeback and, if so, is art a relevant part of that?

MF: I think that for most ‘revivals’ to be successful, or long lasting, they require a certain authenticity, otherwise people just won’t be able to sustain their interest.

Art (and Design) were important factors for the original pulps, and it already seems they are just as important this time around. The constituency and context might be different now, but an interest and demand for the characteristics (and stylings) we associate with the genre is very evident. What I like most in what I’ve seen to date, is that some writers and some artists are trying to ‘reframe’ these elements for a more modern audience and sensibility. It would be nice to see that enterprise grow both commercially and artistically.

AP: You’ve done some work for the comics recently, including Marvel’s IRON MAN: NOIR. Is working for a comic company different than putting together a piece for a novel or magazine?

MF: Very different indeed! The work I’ve produced for Marvel has so far all been cover art. All the briefs started with background/scenario and usually some visual reference material. It was then a case of submitting ideas, which it is sensible not to over work (and which of course I did), because of the changes you might have to make to your artwork. Once a decision has been made by the series editor, and I think they have to pass it by a higher authority (known as Joe Q), you can concentrate on the final art work. The main difference for me was deadline, which was always sooner and stricter than I had bargained for. If you were working full time to produce work for the company I think you would have to be well organized and fix on your ideas and concepts quickly. What was particularly nice about the editors I worked for, Jeanine Schaefer and Stephen Whacker, was how pleasant and encouraging they were. There’s some talk about producing some more work for Jeanine in the near future.

AP: The NOIR concept definitely has pulp overtones. Do you think comics and pulps are taking full advantage of the ties they have to each other or could there be more pulpy comics, more interaction between the two genres?

MF: That’s an interesting question and maybe, yes, more could be achieved. My overview is far from extensive but I have noticed that it’s comic creators, rather than pulp writers, who tend to try and address the issue most. I’m thinking Mike Mignola, and more recently Darwyn Cooke, particularly his, ”The Outfit”, which retells one of Richard Stark’s Parker novels in various pulpy/retro styles and combinations. I would quite like to be involved with a prose and illustration story that took equal shares of the narrative but that didn’t just revert to comic book format for the storytelling.

AP: You’re also the artist on Airship 27’s/Cornerstone Books’ THE GREEN LAMA: UNBOUND as well as upcoming Green Lama projects. Is this just another gig for you or do you have particular interest in bringing the Green Lama to life?

MF: No, it’s not a commercial commitment anymore; I do genuinely want to contribute to the development of all the Green Lama characters. I actually enjoy making pictures which are not directly tied to any preconceived narrative, precisely because it’s a fictitious world I like to explore. Infact, while I was awaiting Adam Garcia’s draft of Green Lama: Unbound, and for Airship 27’s decision on what scenes they wanted me to illustrate, I kept on producing pictures. I’m not sure how exactly but Adam has said repeatedly that some of them directly influenced the content and direction of his story. It’s a very nice relationship to have with a writer, when your contribution extends to that kind of creative development. In fact my working relationship with Adam is very special.

AP: This goes back a bit to the comics/pulp discussion before. You’re working on a Green Lama comic story for Airship 27. Is there any difficulty in translating the Lama from pulp to comics for you? Does the character lend himself to both?

MF: I didn’t think about that too much, mainly because Adam has already done such a good job moving The Green Lama, and his friends, away from shallow characterization. I like to think that good characterization, with characters we grow to care about, balanced within a plot that keeps us interested, should be workable with most formats. My initial thoughts were actually concerned with my lack of experience of the comic book format, knowing full well how challenging it can be. Fortunately, Adam and Ben Granoff, passed over a very good script to work from, and which, interestingly, further developed two of The Green Lama’s lesser known associates, Gary Brown and Evangal Stewart. I think it works, especially because the comic has been designed to bridge the gap between Green Lama Unbound and the forthcoming Crimson Circle.

AP: Walk us through your process. When you start working on an art piece, what goes into preparation and such? Are there any special techniques you use?

MF: Once I’ve made important decisions in a sketch book I use the 3D computer programmes Poser and Vue to set up scenes/scenarios, incorporating costume designs and poses, just like a stage director/architect might ‘dress rehearse’ with models for visualization. I like to experiment with viewpoints and lighting, and both applications provide this function as a basic given. In all honesty I don’t really need many of the higher functions they have grown to incorporate over the years – most of which are devoted to the ever elusive search for realism. The result of this process is always a ‘rendered’ image that is either used as a reference, like photographs were used by commercial artists for traditional painting, or has been optimized in some way for digital painting in Photoshop/Painter. The best solution is when the ‘rendered’ image can function something like ‘under painting’ in traditional work, where the basic elements of the picture are available and can be refined. It is stating the obvious to those who choose to work digitally but a ‘digital toolset’, as they call it, really does provide a ‘working process’, and I state ‘process’, that cannot be equaled by traditional methods. I find it acts as a spur to my ‘creativity’ as well as improving the opportunities of working commercially. In a modest way illustration again becomes fairly cost effective so there must be some other reason why the popular print media still opts for an almost default use of photography to illustrate it’s pages.

AP: There’s a lot of talk within the pulp community about whether or not pulp characters should be fitted into the molds we all identify them with and/or left in the past, in more ‘pulpier’ times or if the envelope should be pushed and pulp characters should hop into the modern era. As an artist and a fan, what are your thoughts on this?

MF: That’s another very interesting question. I certainly think there is still a place for heroic characters, toughing it out in light plot orientated fiction, but I think that they should now become something more than just a collection of personality traits. What I’m not so sure about is whether they can do this in modern times, because of how close we are to the actual events that might be portrayed. A late nineteenth or early twentieth setting, beside the wonderfully varied content it tends to provide writer and artist, also allows the reader the opportunity to sit back and enjoy the ride, without ‘real’ life interfering too much.

AP: What work do you have coming up that would interest pulp fans in say, the next year?

MF: Well, I’ll be producing a cover and interior illustrations for Adam Garcia’s second Green Lama Novel: Crimson Circle, from Airship 27/Cornerstone, which is a sequel to Unbound as well as a sequel to the very first Green Lama story in the original pulps. The comic short, “Green Lama and the Dealers of Death,” should also be available soon from Airship 27. And an original short by Adam Garcia, called “Final Column”, which I’m producing the cover for, will be included in Vol. 3 of Altus Press’s Green Lama reprints release. I’ve also been creating some pulp illustrations for Peter Miller of docsavagetales blogspot who plans to release some e-book stories featuring his Clark Tyler character. I also think it’s about time I started to make some original art and prints available for purchase.

AP: Mike, thanks so much for your time!

MF: Well, thank you for the opportunity. Best wishes. Mike Fyles.

PULP ARK ANNOUNCES FIRST LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD RECIPIENT!

PULP ARK ANNOUNCES FIRST LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD RECIPIENT!

PULP ARK LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD RECIPIENT SELECTED!
From Tommy Hancock, Pulp Ark Coordinator/Pro Se Press Editor in Chief-
PULP ARK,  a pulp convention/creators’ conference scheduled for its inaugural  weekend  May 13-15, 2011 in Batesville, Arkansas, is also host to the First Annual PULP ARK AWARDS.  These awards cover ten categories related to the Pulp field and nine of these are chosen by nominations from anyone interested in participating in the vote (Nominations open until 11:59 PM January 31st, 2011.).  The tenth one, however, was chosen in a different manner.
The PULP ARK Lifetime Achievement Award will be selected each year by an invited committee of ten people representing various areas within Pulp.  These ten committee members will nominate a maximum of three contenders for this award.  To qualify, a person must have been involved actively in the Pulp field for at least ten consecutive years and must have made considerable contributions to the genre either through creating, promoting, supporting, or a combination of those and other ways.  The three most nominated names through that process will then be put on a ballot and that ballot sent to the committee.  The one of those three receiving the most votes from the committee will receive The 2011 PULP ARK Lifetime Achievement Award.
Twenty seven initial nominations were made.   The numbers were tallied and the three who received the most nominations were determined. The ballot was formed and sent to the committee members who included-
                                                           Wayne Skiver (Age of Adventure)
                                                           Michael Brown (Reviewer)
                                                           Ron Hanna (Wild Cat Books)
                                                           Bill Cunningham (Pulp 2.0 Press)
                                                           Ron Fortier (Airship 27 Productions)
                                                           Ric Croxton (The Book Cave)
                                                           Barry Reese (Noted Pulp Author and Editor)
                                                           Derrick Ferguson (Pulpwork Press)
                                                           Win Scott Eckert (Noted Pulp Author/Historian)
                                                           Tommy Hancock (Pro Se Productions/Pulp Ark)
Following the above process, the 2011 PULP ARK LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD is awarded to Tom and Ginger Johnson.  Both authors within the field, The Johnsons have contributed a great amount of support, effort, and research to the Pulp genre.  Publishers in their own right, Tom and Ginger were the force behind the ECHOES magazine, noted as a pivotal publication by many creators today.   A more extensive biography will follow in the coming days.
Congratulations to Tom and Ginger Johnson, recipients of the 2011 PULP ARK LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD!
And then we have Heavy Ink, who thought the shooting was a good idea

And then we have Heavy Ink, who thought the shooting was a good idea


The shooting in Tucson, Arizona over the weekend, which left Rep. Gabrielle Giffords
in a coma and six others dead, has been universally condemned by almost every sane person. On the not-so-sane side, Travis Corcoran, the
president of Heavy Ink, an online comic book retailer based in Arlington, Massachusetts, had a different message:
1 down, 534 to go.”

In a post on his blog, Corcoran asked that while you are in the process of
assassinating those 534 political leaders, it is important to aim very
carefully so that you do not kill random people around them, as that
would be bad.

Reading his rant and the various commenters that follow him, I begin to wonder if there are cases where Dr. Fredric Wertham was right.

I also wonder, with many comic creators including Warren Ellis, Gail Simone, Nick Spencer, and Paul Cornell calling for a boycott of his store, how long he’s going to stay in business.

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND BULLDOG EDITION 1/11/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND
BULLDOG EDITION
1/11/10
ALL PULP BREAKS 50,000!!!
ALL PULP, a news site focused on bringing readers All the Pulp News Possible all the time, has in the space of about four months and a few days, had over 50,000 views!  In less than a half year, The work of the Spectacled Seven (Ron Fortier, Van Plexico, Barry Reese, Derrick Ferguson, Sarge Portera, Bobby Nash, and Tommy Hancock) has been viewed to date more than 50,000 times by fans, writers, passers by, artists, publishers, etc.   The reviews, interviews, panels, columns, news stories, our affiliation with THE BOOK CAVE as ALL PULP’s official podcast, and  fiction excerpts that ALL PULP provides from the myriad of publishers of Pulp today have been read and viewed by a major number of people.  ALL PULP would like to thank all the readers and fans and truly appreciates the support of all those who send news, request interviews, and help in other ways!! Keep comin’ back to where All The Pulp News is…ALL PULP!
SNEAK PEEK AT UPCOMING PRO SE COLLECTION COVER!
Barry Reese, writer and Editor for Pro Se Productions, has announced that the cover for his upcoming LAZARUS GRAY collection from Pro Se has been completed.  Brilliantly drawn by Anthony Castrillo and wonderfully colored by Tom Smith, this cover hints at the various adventures of Gray and clearly shows this new creation’s roots in classic pulp!  
Lazarus Gray is one of three characters that are a part of the TALES OF SOVEREIGN CITY universe at Pro Se Productions.  Sovereign City is so named because it is the ultimate city in many ways, including location, technology…and crime and corruption.   Out of this paradoxical mire of advancement and depravity must rise heroes to maintain the balance.  Lazarus Gray is one of those heroes.
The LAZARUS GRAY collection will debut in 2011 from Pro Se Productions and will collect his earliest adventures, all penned by Reese! Stay tuned to ALL PULP for further details.
NASH INTERVIEWED…AGAIN!!!
Bobby Nash, noted pulp author and one of ALL PULP’s Spectacled Seven, as well as self marketer extraordinaire has added another interview to his belt.   Bobby has been interviewed by the Kitty’s Pride website.  Read all about it at http://www.kittyspryde.com/?p=6654

MOONSTONE MONDAY-MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION FEATURING A NEW HERO-DEATH ANGEL!


Moonstone Books and ALL PULP are proud to present the first half of this thrilling tale from MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION featuring DEATH ANGEL, a character created by Mike Bullock!!!!

Let ALL PULP know what you think of MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION on the Comments Page!!!
Want more Moonstone??? http://www.moonstonebooks.com/ !   And stay tuned at the end of this week’s chapter for a link to purchase the collection this story is featured in!
THIS WEEK ON MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION-
HUNG JURY
BY MIKE BULLOCK
Character created by Mike Bullock
from Moonstone Books

Lester Ginn’s vision swam in crimson swirls as his eyes tried unsuccessfully to focus on what he saw.

“W-where am I-?” he groaned, struggling to fight off the dull pain-induced haze that shrouded his mind.

He slowly lifted his head upward. He could barely make out several people standing over him. Light blazed between them as they moved, blinding Lester for a moment before their shadows fell on him again, menacingly; making the pit of his stomach ache as he tried in vain to gulp down the dry patch in his throat.

Who were they? What did they want with him? Where was he? The thoughts assailed his mind one after another as he slowly climbed back to consciousness.

The more he awakened, the more Lester became sure of one fact: something was very wrong.

Lester allowed his head to fall limp again as he tried to raise his right hand to his face. However, no amount of effort would bring his hand up from the arm of the chair. The reality sunk in, Lester was tied down like an animal. But how? How had this happened?

He fought off the mental fog and unpacked his memories. Where had he been before this? There was the school, the store, the sidewalk outside his row house.

But no, that was before.

He pictured the wooden steps leading down into his basement, around the corner to his secret place, where he brought them. No one knew, not even that nosy neighbor, although she had started asking far too many questions… questions that would now remain unanswered forever.

Lester remembered he was in his basement, but what was he doing? Oh yes, he was cleaning up his newest plaything. He’d had his eye on this one for several months. She was such a precious little one, walking to school each morning, singing her sweet little songs over and over as she skipped along to catch up with her friends, past Lester’s store. He felt the fog lift as adrenalin coursed through his veins at the thought of her. Oh what fun he would have with her. Lester remembered he was in his basement, but what was he doing? Oh yes, he was cleaning up his newest plaything. He’d had his eye on this one for several months. She was such a precious little one, walking to school each morning, singing her sweet little songs over and over as she skipped along to catch up with her friends, past Lester’s store. He felt the fog lift as adrenalin coursed through his veins at the thought of her. Oh what fun he would have with her.

But wait- why did she stop?

He remembered her songs had gone silent. She had been singing, but not happy songs, no. They were songs of terror, she cried out for help, begged Lester to let her go. But why would he let her go? Didn’t she know how much he loved her? And why had she stopped singing?

Lester’s jaw tightened as he recalled his anger with her. She was his pet, his plaything; he had never given her permission to stop singing. Who did she think she was, anyway? The little tramp! And what was that damn humming noise?

Lester winced reflexively as he recalled what happened next.

He had spun around, rage cruelly twisting his lips, as he sought to punish her as she and all her little friends had punished him all those years ago. But there it stood, between Lester and his toy.

Something horrific…

Something unimaginable…

It towered over him, sharp teeth glimmering, black wings unfolding…

And then there was darkness.

As the memories replayed in his mind, Lester’s vision cleared and he looked at those who stood before him as if in judgment. But, this must be some sort of trick, he thought. These people weren’t here for Lester. They couldn’t be.

They were all dead.

Hanging from the ceiling in the dingy basement, illuminated only by the murky light that shone in through the lone window behind them, Lester saw them all. They danced slowly, moving to and fro almost imperceptibly. Their weight pulled at the ropes around their necks, making the knots groan as they dragged minutely over the rafters. The sound reminded Lester of an old Erol Flynn movie he’d watched as a boy. 

Lester looked around, trying to determine where he was. He was certain this wasn’t his basement, his secret place. No, no, this was too light, yes. Lester preferred darkness, wrapped around him like a cloak of protection. He guessed, by the tone of the light seeping in through the window that it was near midday. How long he had been here was a mystery, but it had interrupted him just before dinner. Was that last night or the night before? Lester had no idea. Lester looked around, trying to determine where he was. He was certain this wasn’t his basement, his secret place. No, no, this was too light, yes. Lester preferred darkness, wrapped around him like a cloak of protection. He guessed, by the tone of the light seeping in through the window that it was near midday. How long he had been here was a mystery, but it had interrupted him just before dinner. Was that last night or the night before? Lester had no idea.

The room was very dusty, as evidenced by the thick gray air roiling through the beams of unobstructed light that shone between the bodies. As he looked around further, he noted what appeared to be three large statues, covered up with sheets, perhaps to protect them from the sea of particles floating in the air. Beside them, he saw what appeared to be a pulpit, and beyond that, a large ornate cross sat, propped against the wall.

A thought struck Lester that moment like a bolt of lightning, bringing him upward to full alertness. Where was his toy? Had someone taken her? She was his!

Lester began to snarl in anger and strained at his bonds, gnashing his teeth as a trickle of saliva escaped the corner of his mouth.

“Let me out of here!” he bellowed, as if the dead bodies would do his bidding.

“I say unto you-,” a guttural voice replied from one of the bodies.

Lester went wide eyed as it continued.

“Inasmuch as you have done unto one of the least of these, you have done unto me.”

“Who are you?” Lester snarled voraciously. “Show yourself!”

Silence mocked Lester’s command, as the bodies continued their slow dance while dust floated uncaringly through the room.

“Answer me!” he roared again, as his eyes darted from one body to the next. “I know you can talk!”

Several seconds passed with no reply. Lester’s agitation reached a fever pitch as he began bouncing up and down in the chair spasmodically, trying in vain to break loose from his bonds.

“Once I get free, I’ll kill you, I swear, I’ll kill you! RAAAAAHHHH!!” Lester raged at the bodies, which hung limply, as they paid no heed to his frantic gyrations.


“What was her name?” a rasping voice growled in Lester’s ear. His head jerked to the left, trying to see the speaker. However, nothing was behind him but more bodies. “What was her name?” a rasping voice growled in Lester’s ear. His head jerked to the left, trying to see the speaker. However, nothing was behind him but more bodies.

“Who? Whose name? What the #@*$& are you talking about?”

“The last little girl you murdered, Lester. The child in this picture,” grated the voice as a clawed hand jutted out in front of him, holding a photograph of his last plaything, as she sat upon a see-saw. Lester recoiled unconsciously, more at the site of the crosses adorning the thing’s claws than the sight of the little girl or the words “my favorite” he had scrawled across the picture in her dried blood.

“Where did you get that? It’s mine! Give it back!” Lester spat, as if he could command the speaker to do his bidding by sheer force of will.

“Her name was Arianna, Lester. Her parents still pray for her safe return, but she isn’t coming back to them, is she?”

Lester’s eyes glazed over for a moment as he remembered the last seconds of Arianna’s life, her cries for mercy, her last gurgling gasps of breath…

“IS SHE?!” the voice demanded, snapping Lester from his reverie.

“N-no… no she isn’t,” Lester mumbled, more to himself than his inquisitor.

“What of her?” the voice demanded, shoving another picture in front of him. A girl, about eight years old was jumping rope in this one, her blond curls bouncing innocently in the air. “Where is she?”

A disgusting grin played across Lester’s face as he looked at the photo. He knew where she was and once he was free, he would go enjoy her once more.

WHAM!

The backhand across his face drew blood from his left orbital socket, where the tiny crosses had cut him deeply, like scratches from a tiger.

“Tell me where she is, Lester, or I shall cast you into the pit…”

“W-who are you?” sobbed Lester, as the pain from the side of his face intensified. “Why me? Why can’t you just leave me be?”

“Tell me where she is Lester.”

Lester tossed his head back and stared full into the face of his adversary. The skull shaped visage shook him for but a moment, as the gaping maw seemed to draw him in hypnotically. This was the face he had seen at home, before everything went black.

 

Stay tuned to www.moonstonebooks.com for upcoming tales of DEATH ANGEL
And tune in next week for the conclusion of ‘HUNG JURY’ from MOONSTONE CLIFFHANGER FICTION!

A brief aside about Christina Green and the Tuscon shootings

For Mark Meckler, Sal Russo, and all the other people who claim that the
shooting death of nine-year-old Christina Green and others in Tuscon, Arizona on
January 7, 2011 is being exploited for political advantage, we present
this clip from The West Wing episode, “War Crimes” which aired November 7, 2001.

HOYNES
Mr. President, we’re not gonna get anywhere by treating gun owners like psychopaths, and particularly in the South, where guns are a tradition and a heritage that’s passed on from father to son. You can’t…

BARTLET
That’s not good enough.

HOYNES
Sir?

BARTLET
A tradition that’s passed on from father to son? We tamed the frontier, John. We did that already.

HOYNES
The NRA is gonna say you’re taking advantage of the shooting in Abilene. That you like it when these things happen, ’cause it gives you a chance…

BARTLET
Let them stand in this room and say that. On this day. Let them stand in this room.
I like it?! She was nine years old!

MOONSTONE MONDAY- A & E Entertainment announces ZORRO Series on DVD This Month

This doesn’t have to do with Moonstone, you say??   Well, you’d be wrong.  Although Moonstone has no ties to the series necessarily, Moonstone has printed TALES OF ZORRO, an anthology of swashbuckling tales of the Swordsman! http://www.moonstonebooks.com/

 

 

 

 

 

 THIS JANUARY, JOIN A&E HOME ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE DVD DEBUT OF A LEGENDARY HERO’S LONG SOUGHT-AFTER TV SERIES

ZORRO: THE COMPLETE SERIESAll 88 Episodes of the Fan-Favorite Series – Not Seen Since Their Family Channel Airing in the Early `90s – Finally Arrive in an Extras Laden Collection, Featuring The Original, Swashbuckling Douglas Fairbanks Film, The Mark of Zorro, Chapter 1 of the 1939 Theatrical Serial, Zorro’s Fighting Legion, Never-Before-Seen Footage from the TV Series and Much, Much More!

IN STORES JANUARY 25

NEW YORK, NY — “Out of the night a hero must rise with courage that even a mask can’t disguise!” So begins the celebrated adventures of Zorro — swordsman, scientist and relentless defender of the oppressed. Beginning in 1919, with the publication of Johnston McCulley’s story, “The Curse of Capistrano”, the legend of Zorro was further cemented a year later when Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford produced The Mark of Zorro — with Fairbanks as the title character — as the inaugural film for United Artists. Since then, the swashbuckling hero has inspired more than 40 films and nearly a dozen TV series – one of which has been eagerly awaited by legions of fans for years. And, this January, the wait ends as A&E Home Entertainment unleashes ZORRO: THE COMPLETE SERIES in a heroic collector’s set!

Filmed entirely in Madrid, Spain, ZORRO aired on The Family Channel for four seasons, from 1990-1993, and, for the very first time, this spectacular DVD MegaSet™ collects all 88 episodes from the classic ’90s series that brought Zorro to life for a whole new generation of fans. The legend of Zorro begins in the early 1800’s, when Los Angeles was a dusty pueblo, the farthest colonial outpost of the Spanish empire. This wild and untamed land was governed by the Alcalde, a corrupt mayor whose word was law and whose law was absolute. Young and dashing Don Diego de la Vega (Duncan Regehr, Monster Squad), pretending to care only for science and study, secretly creates a bold alter-ego: Zorro — the Fox. And aided by his mute servant Felipe, inspired by the faith of the beautiful tavern-keeper Victoria, and carried into battle by the mighty steed Toronado, the masked crusader thwarts the Alcalde’s plots at every turn. With his trademark whip and sword, he is everywhere and nowhere, quick to defend the innocent and attack the guilty. And he always leaves his trademark symbol ‘Z,’ — the mark of Zorro!

Renowned for swashbuckling, edge-of-your-seat adventure as well as its top-notch cast, ZORRO featured Regehr and Emmy® winner Henry Darrow (“The High Chapparal”, “Santa Barbara”) as Zorro’s father, Don Alejandro de la Vega, as well as guest stars such as Daniel Craig (Quantum of Solace) , Pete Postlethwaite (Amistad, The Usual Suspects), Doug McClure (The Land That Time Forgot), Adam West (“Batman”), Warwick Davis (Willow), Andre the Giant, Philip Michael Thomas (“Miami Vice”), Jesse Ventura and many more!

Aside from the 88 remastered episodes on 14 DVDs, ZORRO: THE COMPLETE SERIES also features an exclusive bonus disc presenting some of the masked defender’s most influential appearances as well as rare behind-the-scenes material from the 1990 series. Included is “The Mark of Zorro” starring Douglas Fairbanks — the original, full-length silent film that defined the “swashbuckler” genre; Chapter 1 of the 1939 theatrical serial, Zorro’s Fighting Legion; trailers for the serials Zorro’s Fighting Legion, Zorro’s Black Whip and Zorro Rides Again ; the original, never-before-released pilot for the “New World Zorro” and a photo gallery from “New World Zorro”.

Day-and-date, A&E will also release the four seasons of ZORRO individually. ZORRO: THE COMPLETE SEASONS 1-3 are each comprised of 4 collector’s discs and are priced at $29.95srp. THE COMPLETE SEASON FOUR, which wraps up the series, includes 2 DVDs and is priced at $19.95srp.

Don’t miss out on this fan favorite TV classic in which villains always learn that crime doesn’t pay and that the people of Los Angeles can always count on “one who’s larger than life and defender of all. He’s the one who strikes back for the poor and oppressed. A hero . . . whose name is Zorro!”

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Pulp Reviews by Tommy Hancock

SHERLOCK HOLMES & KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER
in CRY OF THUNDER
Story-Joe Gentile
Art-Andy Bennett and Carlos Magno
TPB Collecting Three Issue Miniseries
2009
http://www.moonstonebooks.com/

A lot of good work has been done in recent years centering around the Great Detective.   Movies, short stories, novels, and most definitely comics.  Moonstone Entertainment, Inc. went one step further a couple of years ago.  Not only did writer (and Moonstone CEO) Joe Gentile work to produce a Holmes tale in comic form, he threw in another well known character to boot.  By no means on the same level as Holmes, Frank Kolchak still stands out as a modern icon of pulp culture, investigating mysteries of the unknown long beyond his short lived tv series, thanks in large part to Moonstone. With CRY OF THUNDER, Gentile and crew threw these two characters into a pot together and stirred vigorously.

And wow, what came out was some great readin’!

After a brief prologue set in Arizona in the 1890s, the story opens with Kolchak being visited by an attractive woman who plops a mystery down in his lap, one centered around a manuscript that is a hundred or so years old.  A manuscript that mentions Kolchak by name.  And one that also details a story of Holmes and Watson working to prove whether or not a Latvian national committed a murder that he admitted to.   This story as a whole quickly blossoms to include anarchy, conspiracies, a mysterious photograph, Tombstone, Arizona, and a legend that may be more real than myth.   The story switches back smoothly between Holmes and Kolchak and balances Holmes’ logical world with Kolchak’s supernatural plane extremely well.

Overall, CRY OF THUNDER is an excellent read.   Gentile seems to know how to tell a story in tandem centering around two extremely strong characters and still maintain the integrity of each one.   Kolchak brims with so much life that you can actually envision Darren McGavin in the panels.  Gentile imbues him with a bit of an edge as well, making him a bit more boiled than usual and this only adds to the tale. 

Holmes may not evoke Rathbone, Brett, et al in the same way Kolchak evokes McGavin, but there’s a reason for that.  Within his version of Holmes, Gentile has woven all the intricacies and delicacies that other authors have either focused on heavily or left out.  This Holmes is cerebral, caustic, guarded, defensive, physical, somewhat violent in a couple of ways, driven, and protective of what little he holds dear.  In other words, this may very well be one of hte most interesting takes on Sherlock I have read or seen in a while.

Overall the art in this book fits the tale being told.  Having said that, there’s a bump or two within the story, around what would have been the second issue in singles, that I can’t really put my finger on.  I don’t know that its the change in styles or if its the coloring, but there was something a tad distracting that fixed itself by the final part.  That coupled with a spot or two where word balloons were backwards are really the only negatives I found with this book.

CRY OF THUNDER is a satisfying mystery with an ending that not only ties up loose ends ala Holmes but also leaves just enough open to suit Kolchak fans.   The overall presentation and design of the TPB compliments the tale being told well.  Gentile and company took disparate parts, not just the two main protagonists, but Arizona and London, murder and mysticism, and others, and turned them into an incredible rousing experience.

FOUR OUT FIVE TIPS OF THE HAT-This one should be read by Holmesians, Kolchakians, and even regular types!!

The Point Radio: MERLIN Hits Season Three

The Point Radio: MERLIN Hits Season Three


MERLIN might be the best show you’re missing. Season 3 just kicked off on The SyFy Channel and series stars Colin Morgan and Bradley James talk about what makes the show so cool, plus a change At The Top over at Marvel Comics and the Spidey musical finally gets a (good) break!

And be sure to stay on The Point via iTunes - ComicMix, RSS, MyPodcast.Comor Podbean!

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Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24 hours a Day – 7 Days a week!. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special programming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net – plus there is a great round of new programs on the air including classic radio each night at 12mid (Eastern) on RETRO RADIO COMICMIX’s Mark Wheatley hitting the FREQUENCY every Saturday at 9pm and even the Editor-In-Chief of COMICMIX, Mike Gold, with his daily WEIRD SCENES and two full hours of insanity every Sunday (7pm ET) with WEIRD SOUNDS!

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Michael Moorcock To Be Defeated

Considering he’s about to lose a leg, author Michael Moorcock certainly is in good spirits.

The creator of Elric, Hawkmoon, Count Brass, and Jerry Cornelius, the author of such award-winning books as Behold The Man and Gloriana, singer/songwriter for Hawkwind and the Heavy Metal movie, former editor of the British Tarzan comics, screenwriter of The Land That Time Forgot, and, by the way, author of the latest Doctor Who novel, Michael Moorcock is facing the amputation of a leg. As he stated on his blog: I apologize for being a bad correspondent with many over the last couple of months. All efforts to save my wounded foot without resort to surgery have been made and now, somewhat inconveniently, I’m seeing a surgeon tomorrow (Monday) re. amputation. Shouldn’t be too serious, though, as I said somewhere, I feel a bit fed up with constantly supplying Mrs Lovett for tidbits for her bloody pies… I AM a little nervous but it’s mostly to do with more things going wrong (caused by medical staff) than anything else.”

As our pal Rich Johnston notes at his Bleeding Cool site: “Michael seems to be taking this, as much as everything in his life, with good humour, if a touch on the gallows’ side. All at Bleeding Cool wish him well tomorrow and in the days to come.” We’ll toss in the staff and friends of ComicMix as well, Rich.

As a Moorcock fan of 40 years standing, I’m not the least bit surprised about his attitude. The man virtually invented steampunk, the man who virtually invented the “grim and gritty” hero (Elric; and I should know, having coined the term for GrimJack), the British Jew who moved to Texas and espoused radical thought, and cosmic rocker extraordinaire, the 70 year-old writer is expected to make a complete recovers… except for one of those legs of his.

Hey, look. At least it’s not one of his arms. Take care, Michael.