The Mix : What are people talking about today?

Announcing Mix March Madness!

comicmixmarchmadness550x681-1353231It’s that time of year, where bracketology reigns supreme and the cry around the nation is “Win or Go Home!” And we here at ComicMix are not immune to that siren call– although we’re putting our own spin on it.

We’ve taken sixty-four popular webcomics and are putting them head to head in a single-elimination tournament. The winners of each matchup will be determined by your votes and move on to the next round. Vote for your favorites– or use this as an excuse to discover great new webcomics!

The contenders are:

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Dinosaur ComicsGame 1 DetailsSinfest
Axe CopGame 17 DetailsDiesel Sweeties
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SinfestGame 33 DetailsPenny Arcade
Axe CopGame 41 DetailsDr. McNinja
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Penny ArcadeGame 49 DetailsCyanide and Happiness
Axe CopGame 53 DetailsErfworld
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Penny ArcadeGame 2 DetailsHark! A Vagrant!
Dr. McNinjaGame 18 DetailsAlien Loves Predator
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The GuttersGame 3 DetailsSaturday Morning Breakfast Cereal
PvPGame 19 DetailsLet’s Be Friends Again
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The GuttersGame 34 DetailsCyanide and Happiness
PvPGame 42 DetailsErfworld
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Cyanide and HappinessGame 4 DetailsFull Frontal Nerdity
MaakiesGame 20 DetailsErfworld
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Penny ArcadeGame 57 DetailsKawaii Not
ErfworldGame 59 DetailsWondermark
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Least I Could DoGame 5 Detailsxkcd
Nedroid Picture DiaryGame 21 DetailsOvercompensating
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xkcdGame 35 DetailsKawaii Not
Nedroid Picture DiaryGame 43 DetailsWondermark
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Kawaii NotGame 50 DetailsVG Cats
WondermarkGame 54 DetailsThe Dreamer
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Kawaii NotGame 6 DetailsGarfield Minus Garfield
Pictures for Sad ChildrenGame 22 DetailsWondermark
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KindergothGame 7 DetailsFreakAngels
Max OveractsGame 23 DetailsGunnerkrigg Court
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KindergothGame 36 DetailsVG Cats
Gunnerkrigg CourtGame 44 DetailsThe Dreamer
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MegaTokyoGame 8 DetailsVG Cats
The DreamerGame 24 DetailsFlipside
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Kawaii NotGame 61 DetailsGronk
Winner of 61
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Winner of 62
ErfworldGame 62 DetailsQuestionable Content
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Virtual ShacklesGame 9 DetailsDueling Analogs
The Dreamland ChroniclesGame 25 DetailsGirls With Slingshots
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Dueling AnalogsGame 37 DetailsEvil Inc.
Girls With SlingshotsGame 45 DetailsThe K Chronicles
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Evil Inc.Game 51 DetailsA Distant Soil
Girls With SlingshotsGame 55 DetailsDork Tower
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Awkward ZombieGame 10 DetailsEvil Inc.
The K ChroniclesGame 26 DetailsMedium Large
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Ctrl-Alt-DelGame 11 DetailsRatfist
Savage ChickensGame 27 DetailsUnshelved
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Ctrl-Alt-DelGame 38 DetailsA Distant Soil
Savage ChickensGame 46 DetailsDork Tower
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A Distant SoilGame 12 DetailsDresden Codak
American ElfGame 28 DetailsDork Tower
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A Distant SoilGame 58 DetailsGronk
Girls With SlingshotsGame 60 DetailsQuestionable Content
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Girl GeniusGame 13 DetailsMy Sister the FREAK
MultiplexGame 29 DetailsKevin & Kell
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My Sister the FREAKGame 39 DetailsGronk
MultiplexGame 47 DetailsQuestionable Content
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GronkGame 52 DetailsHyperbole and a Half
Questionable ContentGame 56 DetailsTheater Hopper
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GronkGame 14 DetailsZeke Is Hungry
LackadaisyGame 30 DetailsQuestionable Content
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AchewoodGame 15 DetailsHyperbole and a Half
ShortpackedGame 31 DetailsGoats
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Hyperbole and a HalfGame 40 DetailsSheldon
ShortpackedGame 48 DetailsTheater Hopper
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Amazing Super PowersGame 16 DetailsSheldon
PibgornGame 32 DetailsTheater Hopper

Follow the links to see the strips. And keep watching ComicMix to see the voting rounds going live!

GUEST COLUMNIST MARKS AN IMPORTANT DATE…THE SHADOW KNOWS…

BY HOWARD HOPKINS

The Shadow’s 80th Anniversary

Eighty years ago, on March 6, 1931, the famous cloaked avenger of crime made his debut on newsstands across America. The first of 325 pulp novels, The Living Shadow, written by newspaperman/magician Walter B. Gibson under the house name of Maxwell Grant, brought the mysterious crime fighter to life on a bridge in New York, saving the life of a young suicidal man named Harry Vincent, who would become The Shadow’s first aide in his never-ending fight against crime. Based on a the voice of an eerie radio announcer for Detective Story Magazine Hour, The Shadow quickly took on a life of his own under Gibson’s often ingenious plots. The Shadow novels, published bi-weekly, ran the gamut from mystery to horror and he soon became the most popular “dark” hero of the 1930s. And unlike many other characters, he transcended his media to become an enormously popular radio show running from 1937 to 1954, embedding the phase, The Shadow knows! into the public lexicon. In the radio version, The Shadow was millionaire man-about-town Lamont Cranston with the “mysterious ability to cloud men’s minds so they cannot see him,” but in the novels his identify was not quite so concrete, and in fact later was revealed to be somebody other than Cranston, plus he did not become invisible, but blended with the shadows. And carried a brace of .45s and a chilling laugh that sent terror into the heart of the underworld.

The Shadow pretty much rescued the hero pulp genre from obscurity, soon spawning a slew of imitators such as The Spider and Phantom Detective, as well as paving the way for Doc Savage and The Avenger and every other pulp hero. Sanctum Books, who are currently reprinting the entire run of Shadow novels in double novel volumes each month is issuing a special restored version of The Living Shadow this month, #47, teaming it with one of his best adventures, The Black Hush, and its iconic original cover.

So remember, the weed of crime bears bitter fruit…crime does not pay…The Shadow knows…

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND NIGHTHAWK EDITION 3/6/11

ALL PULP NEWSSTAND
NIGHTHAWK EDITION
3/6/11
PUBLISHER OFFERS FREE E-BOOK!
From KHP Press-
Subscribers to the KHP Press newsletter can get a free ebook of my latest novel THE MIDNIGHT EYE FILES: THE SKIN GAME.

1/ First thing to do subscribe here: http://khpbooks.com/newsletter/

2/ Then get the book.

KHP Press say —

To celebrate the release of William Meikle’s The Midnight Eye Files: The Skin Game in both print and e-book form, we’d like to give our subscribers the e-book – no strings attached!

All you have to do is send an email to:

mail@khpbooks.com

In the subject heading, type:

“Gimme Some Skin!”

And in the body of the email, let us know which file type you’d prefer:

pdf, mobi (for Kindle), or epub (for Sony Reader, Nook, etc)

We’ll respond with the desired file attached. That’s it!

The Small Print: This is a limited promotion. Any emails received after midnight of March 31, 2011, US Central time, will not be honored. While free, the e-book is copyrighted by the author and may not be shared or duplicated.

COVERING ALL THE NEWS THAT IS NASH-
NASH HAPPENINGS!!!
From Bobby Nash-

Nash Happenings. I like that.

My convention schedule kicks into gear this weekend as I am a guest at the FandomFest Metropolis Supercon [www.comiccitytn.com] in Metropolis, IL March 6 – 7. After that I have Momocon on March 12 – 13 in Atlanta, GA. [http://momocon.moonfruit.com] and the Charlotte Comicon on March 20 in Charlotte, NC. [www.charlottecomicon.com]. For the rest of my convention schedule, check out www.bobbynash.com.

I’m pretty busy on the writing side of things as well. In addition to working on my next novel, I’m writing a pulp p.i. story based on a character Sean Taylor and I created for Airship 27. After that I’m writing an adventure story for an anthology based on characters also created by Sean Taylor and myself. He and I will be editing this anthology for New Babel Books as well. Still on deck is a story for Frank Dirscerl’s Wraith anthology, a story for iHero Magazine, a story for Pro Se Press, and a few other short tales I can’t quite discuss at this time. Oh, and I still have a couple of novels to finish. The next few months are going to be busy.

I’m also doing promotion and getting ready for the release of The Green Hornet Casefiles prose anthology from Moonstone, I Am Googol: The Great Invasion Book 1 graphic novel from Point G Press, Lance Star: Sky Ranger Vol. 3 pulp anthology from Airship 27 and comic book from BEN Books, plus a few other projects it’s a little too early to talk about.

2011 looks to be off to a great start.

Shadow Magazine #1

Happy 80th Anniversary to ‘The Shadow’ Magazine!

Shadow Magazine #1Eighty years ago, on March 6th, 1931, the first issue of The Shadow Magazine appeared on American newsstands. The Shadow Magazine was the first modern character/hero magazine, reviving a heroic fiction format that had disappeared decades earlier with the demise of dime novels.

In the pages of The Shadow Magazine, magician-turned-journalist Walter B. Gibson refashioned the sinister narrator of CBS-Radio’s Detective Story Magazine Hour into fiction’s first Dark Hero, creating a crimebusting supersleuth who embodied the iconic power of classic melodrama villains like Dracula. Gibson’s novels introduced the concept of super-crooks and super-crime, and became the template for hero pulps and scores of future comic book superheroes, many of which were created by devoted readers of The Shadow Magazine including Jerry Siegel, Jack Kirby, Bill Finger and Bob Kane. In fact, the 1936 Shadow pulp novel “Partners of Peril” was adapted scene-by-scene and character-for-character, as the first Batman story in Detective Comics #27.

In honor of this anniversary, Sanctum Books has just reprinted “The Living Shadow,” the debut Shadow novel, and for the first time has restored the original text as it originally appeared in 1931 in the first issue of The Shadow Magazine. (The text was revised/updated when it was reprinted in a 1934 hardcover which became the source for future annual and paperback reprints.)

The Shadow Volume 47, reprinting “The Living Shadow” and “The Black Hush” with historical articles by Will Murray and Anthony Tollin, will arrive at comic book specialty shops on March 16th.

Will Eisner on Google

Happy 94th birthday, Will Eisner!

Will Eisner on GoogleOn this day in 1917, Will Eisner, American comics pioneer and creator of The Spirit, was born. He would have been 94 today.

To celebrate, Google has devoted its Doodle to him today, and Scott McCloud (his Understanding Comics is the intellectual heir to Eisner’s Comics And Sequential Art) writes up a tribute at the Official Google Blog.

It’s tough to say Eisner is having a renaissance when he’s never been away in the comics world– from the current retrospective at MoCCA complete with a birthday party and film screening tonight (I don’t think they’re showing either adaptation of The Spirit, but I could be surprised) to the Eisner Awards handed out at San Diego– but it’s nice to see the master getting the respect he deserves in wider circles. One hopes that it comes through when the film version of A Contract With God is completed.

As for me, I plan on celebrating by curling up with a Spirit Sunday strip or seventy.

Review: Moonstruck

MoonstruckSome movies offer us incredible performances or great stories and then there are those that combine the elements with the right cast telling the right story for the right audience at the right time. That’s movie magic at its purest and can describe the enduring appeal of [[[Moonstruck]]], The 1987 film is finally out on a bare-bones Blu-ray disc courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment.

Starring Cher at the height of her film popularity, it also featured Nicholas Cage as her lover and we’re reminded once more that this is a man of strong talent, who has chosen a career path that negates stretching himself as a performer. Bulking up for Con Air may have been the worst choice he ever made.

Directed by Norman Jewison, the story is a romantic comedy when the formula still worked. Cher, who won an Oscar as bookkeeper Loretta Castrorini, and her budding relationship with Cage’s younger and winning Ronny Cammareri forms the core of the story. John Patrick Shanley’s screenplay is a valentine to life in Manhattan and Jewison brings it to life with a strong supporting cast including Olympia Dukakis (who also won a Supporting Actress Oscar), Vincent Gardenia, and Danny Aiello. Shot in Brooklyn and around Little Italy, it is as lush to watch as it is fun to listen to. Scenes set at the Metropolitan Opera House give the city is glitz and grandeur.

The bookkeeper has been unlucky at love – and marriage – but wants to try again with Aiello’s unassuming Johnny Cammareri, until she realizes she can’t take her eyes off the younger brother. Her parents disapprove of their daughter’s choices, thinking she was better on her own. As they plan their wedding, things go awry and the estranged brother comes more into focus and his winning ways melts Loretta’s damaged heart. Cher is at first hard to believe as a nerdy accountant unlucky at love but she makes the character feel real and you can believe Gardenia and Dukakis as her Greek Chorus parents.

The acting is strong, led by Cher but also shows how good Cage can be when he wants to. The transfer was well handled so it looks great and sounds good. Extras include the original commentary from Jewison, Shanley, and Cher. Also carried over from the original DVD release is Moonstruck: At the Heart of an Italian Family, a look at the roots of the culture that led to the film.

There’s also the six-part[[[Pastas to Pastries: The Art of Fine Italian Food]]], which offer us looks at restaurants in Little Italy, including Grotta Azzurra (18:47); Italian Food Center (2:31); Ferrara Pastries (2:28); Piemonte Ravioli Co. (2:07); a gelato stand (1:02) and Florio’s Restaurant (1:24). New and fun to have are recipe cards for spadini Romana, bucatini all’Amatriciana and lamb de Elvino. “[[[The Music of Moonstruck]]]” (6:00) minute featurette that covers how important the score was and how a disastrous screening led to the original music being scrapped.

McDuffie Memento Mori

Dwayne McDuffie Milestone Funeral

We’ve found more things to point to in the wake of the passing of Dwayne McDuffie. First, we have the artwork above by James Mason on Dwayne’s passing. And Michael Davis, Dwayne’s co-founder of Milestone Media, presents what may be the last photo of the Milestone creative founders from the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con. From left to right: Denys Cowan, Dwayne McDuffie, Michael Davis.

Michael also writes about Dwayne:

‘Motherfucker’ was part of the way I used to describe Dwayne. The full description was, Dwayne McDuffie is the smartest motherfucker I’ve ever met.

I’m a smart guy, I’ve been to Ivy League schools and I have a PhD. Dwayne could destroy me without breaking a sweat on any subject.

ANY subject.

How in the world can we go on?

I mean it.

A world without that smartass motherfucker is a world I do not want to think about.  Denys Cowan told me that there is now a giant, GIANT hole in the industry not to mention the hole in our hearts, which we both mentioned because as badass as we act, we are really pussies.

How do we go on?

My best guess is we go on by honoring Dwayne for what he was, a fantastic writer a great friend and one badass motherfucker.

Mike Huckabee Scolds Natalie Portman

Apparently Mike Huckabee, Fox News host and theoretical presidential candidate, thinks that Natalie Portman, star of Thor, Black Swan, V for Vendetta and the Star Wars prequels is actually Murphy Brown.

Here’s Mike Huckabee, in 2011, on Natalie Portman having a child with her fiancee before they’re actually married:

“One of the most troubling things is that people see a Natalie Portman or some other Hollywood starlet that boasts of, hey look, we’re having children, we’re not married, but we’re having children and they’re doing just fine.”

“There aren’t really a lot of single moms out there that are making millions of dollars each year by being in a movie.”

“I think it gives a distorted image that not everybody hires nannies and caretakers and nurses. Most single moms are very poor, uneducated, can’t get a job, and if it weren’t for government assistance, their kids would be starving to death and would not get healthcare.”

However, it seems that Gov. Huckabee has a short and/or selective memory.

Here’s Mike Huckabee, in 2008, on Bristol Palin having a child with her fiancee before they’re actually married:

“It ought to be a reminder that here is a family that loves one another. They stuck with each other though the tough times and that’s what families do.” … Huckabee said the surprise pregnancy announcement should not affect vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s support in the conservative and religious right communities. … “I’m grateful for the way she’s being supported by her family.”

I presume the difference here is that Natalie Portman is Jewish, or Huckabee thinks the father of Portman’s child really is Darth Vader. It makes as much sense as any other reason he can come up with for his double standard.

Hat tip: Ta-Nehisi Coates at The Atlantic.

Review: Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind

NausiccaI will stipulate upfront that I am a casual, at best, reader of [[[Manga]]] and barely watch any anime. It does not mean, though, that I am unaware of the essential titles and creators. As a result, I have been aware of [[[Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind]]] and the work of the legendary Hayao Miyazaki. When the Blu-ray edition of the 1984 animated version of this post-apocalyptic became available to review, I seized the opportunity to immerse myself in this classic world. I was not disappointed. It certainly beat trying to read the lengthy Manga that began in 1982 and wrapped finally in 1994. Obviously, the film is based on the earliest chapters and no other anime adaptation has been attempted to complete the tale.

In short, we’re on another world that is more fantasy than science fiction. We open a millennium after the Seven Days of Fire which destroyed the ecosystem. There’s a gas mask-wearing princess (the air is poisoned) and a village being encroached on by something called the [[[Toxic Jungle]]], making this an eco-fable or cautionary tale. And of course, mutated giant insects – every story like this has to have some of those. When an alien craft lands, the story ignites as the new arrivals stir things up for Princess Nausicaa and her neighbors.

The story is a familiar one as people struggle to survive in a world that has turned against them in protest. We get a lot of explication in the early (narrated by Tony Jay) going but once we get past that, things pick up speed. All along, though, the visuals are stunning.

This, I’m told, is old school anime but to a newcomer, it remains a visual feast with strong character designs and imagery. The story is also a struggle in that it’s so on-the-nose with its themes and actions that moments intended to be iconic are just short of laughable. There’s plenty of action and many scenes are set in the skies above the village. Nausicaa loves to fly and tools around in her jet-powered glider called a Möwe. The aerial sequences are most impressive.

The score leaves much to be desired and we’ll leave it at that.

The English language voices are form the 2005 home video release with a cast that includes Alison Lohman, Patrick Stewart, Edward James Olmos, Chris Sarandon, Uma Thurman, Jodi Benson, the immortal Frank Welker, and a young Shia LaBeouf. All give good, solid performances, not overwhelming the story or animation. The high-definition transfer is not perfect but certainly a step up from previous editions according to technical reports.

The disc’s special features offer up the original Japanese storyboards and  a featurette on the production studio, “[[[World of Ghibli]]]”. This includes a subtitled interview with Miyazaki, whose influence is missed, and we learn that the film was pitched first and when rejected, he started the Manga which proved successful enough to get the feature greenlit. There’s another subtitled 30 minute offering from Japan called “The Birth Story of Studio Ghibli” which is a little self-congratulatory. “Behind the Microphone” is eight minutes spotlighting the voice cast.

On the set’s second disc is a lengthy, two hour step-by-step of the film’s storyboards which are a textbook for storytellers and would-be animators.