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Fox Prepares Plethora of Holiday Gift Items Plus a Major Sale

Fox Prepares Plethora of Holiday Gift Items Plus a Major Sale

20th Century Fox Home Entertainment has made their list and are checking it twice to prepare DVD gift sets for every conceivable taste and special interest. We’ll be exploring some of those options when ComicMix launches its Holiday Gift Guide in the coming days.

With Black Friday imminent, we want to tip you off that FoxConnect is having a Black Friday Sale that runs from November 22nd to December 5th.  Savvy shoppers can save up to 70% off on favorite Movies and TV shows on Blu-ray and DVD – Some favorites for as little as $4 for select titles!

The new release we’re most looking forward to is the studio’s 75ht Anniversary Gift Set, coming December 7. Check out the formal release:

Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment paints the town diamond white with the release of the TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX 75TH ANNIVERSARY GIFT SET, a 75-film, three-volume set, highlighting a remarkable, rich and unparalleled heritage of classic films, Academy Award® winners and box office smashes.  Debuting on DVD December 7, each volume covers 25 years of the studio’s legacy along with an exclusive hard cover companion book highlighting the historic significance of Fox’s 75th anniversary featuring legendary stars, compelling stories, timeless music and unforgettable images.

The massive DVD set features a variety of genres and some of the finest films of all time from South Pacific to Star Wars, Alien to Avatar and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes to The Devil Wears Prada.  Among its 46 Academy Award®-winning features, the collection highlights seven Best Picture winners including the DVD debut of Cavalcade, How Green Was My Valley, All About Eve, The Sound of Music, Patton, The French Connection, and Slumdog Millionaire.

Just in time for the holiday season, the TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX 75TH ANNIVERSARY GIFT SET will be available for the suggested retail price of $499.98 U.S.

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MOONSTONE MONDAY-NOTED PULP ARTIST MARK MADDOX INTERVIEW!

MARK MADDOX AWARD WINNING ARTIST & HUMORIST

AP – Hi Mark, and thanks so much for stopping by All Pulp HQ. In the past few years you’ve made quite a name for yourself in the pulp field and it is a pleasure to finally be able to sit and talk with you about your art career. Why don’t we start with a little informal background. Where were you born and raised? Where do you live now? And do you have a “day” job with doing pulp art?

MM – I was born on Tyndall Air Force Base in Panama City, Florida to Don and Joann Maddox. I have one brother, Mike and three sisters, Elise, Carole and Jeanne . Being a military brat had us moving around a lot. We lived in Germany, South Dakota, Maryland and North Carolina. After my dad retired we moved to Tallahassee, Florida. Later, when I got married my wife Carlyn and I moved to Thomasville, Georgia, had two incredible kids and are now settled in Athens, about an hour east of Atlanta. We really like it here.
At present the only work I am doing is freelance… the fun kind: Book covers (some which are pulp), illustrations, comic book covers, monster magazine covers, private commissions, game design, concept designs, logos, etc. It isn’t at the financial level I would like yet but I’m fairly new to this type work. Before that I did straight corporate graphics which isn’t terrible but it’s not nearly as much fun as my current endeavors.
 
AP – Mark, what kind of art education do you have? Did you always want to be a professional artist or was it something that came to you later in life?

MM – My parents were very supportive of my abilities which started around the age of ten. In high school I took art classes but the teacher was a joke. Some of the interns that came in were a lot more beneficial to my creative advancement. My dad saw my talent as a possible life long career and pushed me to go to take the commercial art course at Lively Vo-Tech school in Tallahassee. I had a great teacher by the name of Oral Ledbetter. He was an old school commercial artist/ illustrator and he taught us things that are all but lost today with computers and such. I also went to the local community college and Florida State University which had good art programs.
 
AP – Were you a comic book or sci-fi fan growing up? And did either of these genres influence your taste in art?

MM – Comics, movies, monster magazines, television…I ate it all up. My particular favorite reads were Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Doc Savage reprints, Edgar Rice Burroughs sci-fi, etc. Comics included Fantastic Four, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby Monster comics, Thor, Hulk, Captain America. Chester Gould’s Dick Tracy is easily my favorite comic strip. I’m actually one of those fans who likes Dick Tracy during his sci-fi period.
 

AP – Which artists, past and present, do you admire and did their styles have an effect on your own work as it developed?

MM – Dr. Seuss was awesome for a little kid. To this day I look at his work when I’m reading to my kids and marvel at it. Jack Kirby is, to me, far and away the greatest comic book artist. I am also a big fan of Will Eisner, Moebius, Frank Bellamy, Sergio Toppi, Joe Kubert, John Severin, Herge, Jose Gonzlez, Geoff Darrow, artists on the Jonny Quest TV show and so many more. I am a huge fan of illustrators like N. C. Wyeth, Dean Cornwell, Virgil Finlay, Franklin Booth, James Montgomery Flagg, Charles Dana Gibson, Basil Gogos, Sanjulian, etc. Fine artists include the impressionists, John Singer Sargent, Anders Zorn, Vermeer, Edward Hopper, Chuck Close and the Photorealists,

AP – Much of your early work is clearly inspired by horror and sci-fi movies. I take it you a movie fan? What is your favorite movie of all time?

MM – That’s not a fair question! I have so many favorites it’s impossible to pick just one. Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago are two of my classic favorites. Raiders of the Lost Ark, Aliens and Universal monster movies are some of my genre favorites. Popcorn munchers include: Dracula A.D. 1972, Japanese monster movies, Omega Man, Hell Drivers. The list is so huge a ten gig hard drive couldn’t hold it.
 
AP – Okay, so how did you get involved with pulps?

MM – A guy named Blake Wilkie introduced me to Ron Fortier who was with Wildcat books at the time. We did a few tiny comic projects together and one day he dropped me a line saying he needed a cover for his book Captain Hazzard and the Curse of the Red Maggot. I think the artist that was to do it had to drop out at the last second. It was a dream come true for me. He needed it quick and I was willing to burn the midnight oil to get it ready.
 
AP – You seem to have a natural affinity for pulps. What is it about the genre that appeals to you?

MM – I was born in the early sixties and came back to the United States when the big thing was the campy batman TV show (I preferred The Green Hornet). I later found out about pulps, radio plays and cliffhanger serials (Tom Tyler as Captain Marvel, yay!) and realized there was a huge amount of this great entertainment from a long time ago where fantastic adventures were treated seriously. Doc Savage, The Shadow, John Carter, Weird Tales, etc. That’s just great stuff! Plus it fit right in with my love of comics and old Hollywood.

AP – You were the recipient of the first Pulp Factory Award for Best Pulp Cover of 2009.
Tell us about that and how it all came about? What piece did you win it for?

MM – The piece I won for was Airship27’s Sherlock Holmes: Consulting Detective. It was actually a piece that I resisted doing. I am a big fan of Holmes but in his original Strand Magazine form. When I was told I could do the art and design based on the original look and typography I was all for it. I was also allowed to dedicate the book to my late mother-in-law. She was a big Holmes fan and it would have pleased her so. I was very happy with the way that piece turned out because it was my take on Holmes and Watson the way they look in my mind’s eye. Most people don’t realize that Watson was a handsome, fit man.

AP – Weren’t you actually nominated for two covers that year and how did it feel to compete against yourself? Did you prefer one piece over the other?

MM – It felt great and strange! I was hoping they didn’t cancel each other out. The other cover was Captain Hazzard and the Python Men of the Lost City. And I really like them both equally. That’s a good feeling to have.

AP – Since your work for Airship 27, you’ve expanded your pulp career by working for other companies in the field. Tell us about your projects for Bill Cunningham’s Pulp 2.0 Press?

MM – I heard that Bill was going to be reprinting Don Glut’s Frankenstein books he had written in the sixties. Frankenstein is one of my all time favorite subjects and I had been reading Don Glut’s work since I was ten and I had been looking for those books for a long time. I wrote Bill and begged him to consider me for the covers.

I’ve completed the first cover in the series called Frankenstein Returns! I am very pleased with the way it turned out and Bills graphics look great on it. I’m getting ready to start volume two’s cover in the next month or so. I’m pretty excited about it.

AP – You also contributed covers to Win Scott Eckert’s CROSSOVER books, right?

MM – Yes, there are two of those so far and it was a lot of fun featuring all these classic characters together in the same image.

AP – You recently started doing covers for Moonstone Comics. Tells us about that and did the experience vary much from doing pulp covers?

MM – I’ve completed two covers and am working on a third. The first one was for Kolchak: The Night Stalker Files written by Christopher Mills . I was in front of the TV the night The Night Stalker film premiered in the early seventies and have been a fan ever since. It was another dream come true. The second cover was for the first issue of The Heap written by Charles Knauf (Iron Man and Captain America: Theater of War), featuring the creature from the Airboy comics of the forties. What could be better than a monster tearing the heads off of Nazis? The latest cover is for the great superspy Derrick Flint written by Gary Phillips (Vertigo Crime’s COWBOYS). I’m doing this piece with a nod to sixities design styles and having a blast. Moonstone publisher, Joe Gentile has been really great to work with.

AP – People who have met you personally all comment on your dry, acerbic wit. Have you always had this humorist bent and do you like looking at the world in a slightly skewered way?

MM – I don’t know. I come from a family smart mouths. Everything had to have a comeback. It’s a way for me to keep things lively and it’s nice to see people laugh.

AP – Is there any single genre you have yet to work in that you would really like tackle?

MM – Adventure, 60’s period Marvel heroes, monsters, drama, crime, sci-fi. I’d even like to tackle a western some time. In the seventies, Thrilling Adventures Magazine did a short comic about Lawrence of Arabia. I would love to work on something like that. A sort of adding on to the legend. Like the Daniel Boone TV show.

AP – So, wrapping this all up here. What’s on the horizon for you project wise? Can you give our readers some preview as to where your marvelous art is going to pop up next?

MM – Well besides the work for Moonstone I’ve got two new Hammer film books that are coming out. One called The Last Bus to Bray: The Unfilmed Hammer. It’s about many of the films that Hammer almost got produced but didn’t see the light of a projector for one reason or another. This includes the infamous Vampirella, a movie about Prince Vlad starring Yul Brunner, another about the Loch Ness Monster with backing by David Frost and many others. The other book is from Hemlock called Hammers Fantasy & Sci-Fi dealing with films outside of the Dracula and Frankenstein realm (One Million Years B.C., Quatermass, etc.). There are also one or two projects I’ve been sworn to secrecy on although I can say they are sci-fi and monster related… plus more artwork for Little Shoppe of Horrors.

AP – Mark, this has been a blast. Thanks so much.

MM – Thank you.
 
 

Win a Digital Download of Tim Burton’s ‘Willy Wonka’

Win a Digital Download of Tim Burton’s ‘Willy Wonka’

Tim Burton’s Charlie and The Chocolate Factory arrives exclusively for Download on iTunes for the first time with Bonus Content. The extra content Includes interviews with Johnny Depp and Tim Burton. For the curious you can check out a preview here.

The film, adapting Roald Dhal’s marvelous novel, starred Johnny Depp and was a visual delight which we here at ComicMix highly recommend.

Thanks to Warner Digital, we have a free digital download to give away. Since this is Thanksgiving week, please tell us what you are most thankful for. The entry that moves us to laugh, sagely nod in agreement or wipe away a tear will be declared the winner. You have until 11:59 on Wednesday November 24 to tell us. One entry per e-mail address and the judgment of ComicMix is final.

Win a BBC America Gift Set!

Win a BBC America Gift Set!

Great Gifts with a British Accent!

This Holiday season, discover the perfect holiday gift from BBC films and TV series to unique British collectibles now available at the BBC America Shop.

For him find TV favorites on DVD like Dr. Who, Top Gear; for her find holiday collectibles for the home; and for the kids animated favorites, music, books and more.

Plus this holiday season WIN $1,000 (two $500 Gift Cards for you and a friend) redeemable toward purchases on the BBC America Shop with the annual Holiday Sweepstakes.

ComicMix readers now have a chance to win a BBC Gift Set!

All we’d like you to do is name your favorite BBC America series and why. We’ll judge the responses and select the winning entry. One submission per e-mail address and all entries must be posted in the comments section here no later than 11:59 pm. November 23.

Hancock Tips His Hat to RABBIT HEART!!

TIPPIN’ HANCOCK’S HAT-Reviews by Tommy Hancock
RABBIT HEART by Barry Reese

Published by Wild Cat Books

Sometimes even pulp writers forget that the Pulp genre has levels like an ogre…er..uh…an onion.   And granted, we love to write the high powered action, the over the top adventure, the weird villains, and larger than life heroes.  But we sometimes forget that pulp just isn’t a style of literature.  Like any written work, pulp can explore the basic concepts that drive people to do what they do.  

Rabbit Heart does that.  Wow, does it do that.

Barry Reese’s horror/supernatural pulp novel isn’t just about a young lady who is attacked by a serial killer horror movie reject as a child and then later finds out that she’s actual a spirit given life to continue The Wild Hunt.  Oh, it’s definitely about that and Fiona, the central character, is a fully realized individual, but not just because she wields a machete and has an eye patch.  Reese effectively works in the angst any young adult woman would feel into who Fiona becomes, including sexual awkwardness, desire, worry about her future, all of the things that make DeGrassi DeGrassi fits right into this.  Along with demon like creatures, a cosmically overactive libido, and a fantastic rendition of a public domain Pulp hero backing up Fiona.  Characterization is top notch throughout this book.

Now, let’s talk about the sex.  And the violence.  Yes, both are in here from the beginning and this isn’t for your kids to read in any stretch of the imagination.  Let Doc Savage and The Rook bring in kid readers, this one’s for Mom and Dad.  What Reese does, though, isn’t arbitrary.  Each of the characters in this story are driven by their basest desires and due to the Hunt, those desires rise to the surface like lava in a volcano.   They are sexual creatures, they are violent creatures, and those very things make the story live and breathe and move the story along.  It’s not gratuitous sex and violence.  They are characters all by themselves.

The only issue I had at all with RABBIT HEART was an issue of exposition at the beginning of the book.  Reese is introducing a heavy concept as the center of the novel and basically did a large, somewhat jarring information dump in the first twenty or so pages.  It all evens out very quickly and by the end of the book, I was glad he had done it, but it was a little bit cumbersome initially.

Overall, I can’t recommend RABBIT HEART enough.  And I am tickled that Wild Cat just announced two sequels to this awesome work.

Four out of Five Tips of Hancock’s Hat (usually reserved for heads of state, arresting officers, and little old ladies, which is pretty darn good.)

PULP ARTISTS’ WEEKEND BECOMING PULP ARTISTS SPOTLIGHT!!

PULP ARTISTS’ WEEKEND BECOMING PULP ARTISTS SPOTLIGHT!!

The Pulp Artists’ Weekends have been fantastic here at ALL PULP, but the wonderful artists within the Pulp genre need to be shared anytime ALL PULP has enough to spotlight them, not just the weekends. So, PAW will now be Pulp Artists’ Spotlight!  The format won’t change, an interview and gallery will go up when any artist is spotlighted any day of the week!  Thanks to all those who have participated so far and ALL PULP can’t wait to see more artists and their works shared with the world!

‘Warehouse 13’ Opens its Doors for Dynamite Entertainment

‘Warehouse 13’ Opens its Doors for Dynamite Entertainment

While no creative talent has been named, we think this is a pretty cool announcement.

November 18, 2010, Runnemede, NJ – Dynamite Entertainment has signed a comprehensive license agreement with NBC Universal Television, DVD, Music and Consumer Products Group for comic books based on Syfy’s hit dramedy series, Warehouse 13. Warehouse 13 premiered on July 7, 2009 on Syfy as the most successful series in Syfy’s history and will return for a 3rd season in the Summer of 2011. A holiday-themed episode will air next month.

“We’re very excited to be working with our friends at Dynamite Entertainment, again,” said Chris Lucero, Director of Global Licensing, NBC Universal Television Consumer Products Group.  “With Dynamite’s stable of thrilling storytellers and talented artists, we’re confident that Warehouse 13 will stand side-by-side with some of the best comics in the industry today.”

“It is a fantastic opportunity for Dynamite to bring a popular TV Show such as Warehouse 13 to the comics market,” said Dynamite President Nick Barrucci.  “Dynamite’s Warehouse 13 comic books will be an excellent companion to the TV Show, and I am excited for fans to see what we have up our sleeves!”

Warehouse 13 follows two Secret Service agents who find themselves abruptly transferred to a massive, top-secret storage facility in windswept South Dakota which houses every strange artifact, mysterious relic, fantastical object and preternatural souvenir ever collected by the U.S. government. The Warehouse’s caretaker Artie Nielsen (Saul Rubinek) charges Agents Pete Lattimer (Eddie McClintock) and Myka Bering (Joanne Kelly) with chasing down reports of supernatural and paranormal activity in search of new objects to cache at the Warehouse, as well as helping him to control the Warehouse itself. Allison Scagliotti plays Claudia, Artie’s apprentice.

Warehouse 13 is produced for Syfy by Universal Cable Productions. Jack Kenny (The Book of Daniel) is Executive Producer and Showrunner.

ComicMix’s Glenn Hauman at PhilCon this weekend

ComicMix’s Glenn Hauman at PhilCon this weekend

Yep, on the road again. PhilCon lasts for three days, I’ll be there tonight and Saturday. Here’s my schedule:

Fri 7:00 PM in Plaza V (Five) (1 hour)
UNSTOPPABLE FORCE SUPERHEROES (455)

   [Panelists: Glenn Hauman (mod), Jonathan Maberry, Alexis Gilliland, Andre Lieven]

   The Silver Age Superman could juggle planets. Sufficiently enraged, the Hulk has no upper strength limit. How can such invincible characters be given sufficient challenges and obstacles to make satisfying stories without de-powering them? Is this merely an enlarged version of the eternal ‘how can there be tension if we know the main character will survive’ quandary?

Fri 9:00 PM in Plaza IV (Four) (1 hour)
WEIRD SCIENCE COMICS! (512)

   [Panelists: Bill Spangler (mod), Stephanie Burke, Glenn Hauman, J. Andrew World]

   The Influence of EC Comics on Science Fiction

Sat 11:00 AM in Plaza II (Two) (1 hour)
OFF THE SCREEN: MOVIE/TV TIE-IN COMIC (424)

   [Panelists: Keith R.A. DeCandido (mod), Glenn Hauman, Bill Spangler]

   For years, TV shows and movies have had comic-book adaptations, and sometimes even long-running titles.  These days, however, it’s been taken to a whole other level, with comics like “Buffy” and “Firefly” actually being written or overseen by the show’s creator.  Can comics act as way to tell stories that can’t be told on the screen

Sat 1:00 PM in Plaza III (Three) (1 hour)
BUT THAT’S NOT SCIENCE FICTION (462)

   [Panelists: Michael J. Walsh (mod), Diane Weinstein, Carl Fink, Glenn Hauman, Barbara Barnett]

   Certain types of non-Science Fiction works such as the Sherlock Holmes series, the Regency Romances of Georgette Heyer, much of Kipling and  the Hornblower series are widely read by many science fiction fans and writers. Is there something these works have in common with science Fiction? If so, what is it?

Sat 2:00 PM in Plaza III (Three) (1 hour)
MARVEL/DISNEY: A MATCH MADE IN HOLLYWOOD (419)

   [Panelists: Andre Lieven (mod), Phil Kahn, Glenn Hauman, J. Andrew World]

   Earlier this year, The Walt Disney Company purchased Marvel Comics and Marvel Studios.  What is this going to mean for some of Marvel’s popular characters, like Spiderman, the Xmen, or Capt. America? What about films based on some of Marvel characters?  And what effect, if any, will this have on DC Comics and it’s corporate parent, Time-Warner?

Sat 4:00 PM in Plaza III (Three) (1 hour)
HOW REAL WORLD INVENTIONS HAVE INFLUENCED SCIENCE FICTION (513)

   [Panelists: Glenn Hauman (mod), Tom Purdom, Andre Lieven, Bernie Mojzes, Linda Bushyager]

   Science fiction has not always had a great track record of anticipating technological advances. Sometimes an invention has to show up in the real world before science fiction writers begin to write about it.
   Then what happens?

Sat 6:00 PM in Plaza I (One) (1 hour)
NOT JUST CAPES: THE BEST IN NON-SUPERHERO COMICS (427)

   [Panelists: Tony DiGerolamo (mod), Glenn Hauman, Jared Axelrod, James Chambers]

   Not every comic book features spandex and superpowers.  Some of them are about everyday people.  Some are about… other things.  But what are the best comics out there without superhero characters?
   Come and find out!

Sat 8:00 PM in Plaza VII (Seven) (1 hour)
WHY THE THEME ANTHOLOGY? (517)

   [Panelists: Eric Kotani (mod), Lawrence M. Schoen, Mike McPhail, Glenn Hauman, Danielle Ackley-McPhail]

   Why do we see so many anthologies on pre-chosen subjects?

The Point Radio: It’s Time To Watch THE EVENT

The Point Radio: It’s Time To Watch THE EVENT


Have you been avoiding THE EVENT in fear that it would be yet another “unfinished” story? Now might be the time to change that. NBC has extended the show into 2011 and the cast joins us to speculate where things are headed on the show. Plus Dennis Leary as Gwen Stacy’s pop?  And War Of The Green Lanterns? Really?

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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