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Review: ‘The Burning Plain’ on Blu-ray

19889-burningplain3dhirzrgb2-7330555Screenwriter Guillermo Arriaga ([[[21 Grams]]], [[[Babel]]]) was determined to take greater control over his stories by directing and made his debut in the well-intentioned [[[The Burning Plain]]]. The movie, out now on DVD from Magnolia Home Entertainment, played at various festivals before receiving an unsuccessful theatrical release. Starring Charlize Theron and Kim Basinger, the movie is told in Arriaga’s patented nonlinear manner, but keeps us at arm’s distance from the characters.

In short, the story is told in three parallel timelines that eventually begin to converge. Basinger plays Gina, an unhappy mother who is having an affair with Nick (Joaquim de Almeida) and doing a poor job of hiding it from her eldest daughter, Mariana (Jennifer Lawrence). In attempting to keep her family together, Mariana trails them to the trailer they use for their trysts, setting the gas line on fire, hoping to flush them out. Things don’t go well and later, at the funeral for the former lovers, Mariana catches the eye of Nick’s oldest, Santiago (Danny Pino) and the two teens begin an affair.

Years later, Mariana now calls herself Sylvia (Theron) and is a self-destructive, near-suicidal restaurateur in Portland. Her precarious life is thrown into turmoil when the daughter she abandoned is brought to her after Santiago is injured in a crop dusting accident.

Structurally, the movie is well crafted and fascinating to see things fall into place. On the other hand, because two of the three timelines are close in setting, there needed to be more visual cues which storyline we were watching. This is a strong drama about people engaging in happy pursuits but none take any pleasure in their acts and guilt is an overriding undercurrent to all the major players.

The greatest failing, though, is to explore any of the characters. Why was Nick so attractive Gina couldn’t resist? Why was Gina so unhappy at home? What prompted Mariana/Sylvia to abandon Santiago and her daughter? All the characters are there but none of them are deeply written to allow us to really feel for them.

This is a shame because the three main women – Theron, Basinger, and Lawrence – give riveting performances.  In fact, Lawrence justly earned the Marcello Mastroianni prize, for the best young emerging actor/actress at the Venice Film Festival. You want to know more about them, their worlds, and what drives them all but Arriaga lets us and them down. The film is rounded out with many other familiar faces in smaller roles including John Corbett, Robin Tunney, Rachel Ticotin, and Brett Cullen.

Beautifully photographed, it features a haunting soundtrack from Omar Rodríguez-López and Hans Zimmer. All the elements were there for a stronger film.

The Blu-ray comes complete with a 43 minute Making Of featurette where Arriaga goes to great pains to introduce us to all the major players behind the camera. Along the way, we see how the film was shot and the themes of earth, wind, fire, and water that he subtly assigned his characters. A 15 minute piece shows us the unusual collaboration between Rodríguez-López and Zimmer and there’s a four minute puff piece from HD Net.

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The Future of Media… Again

 

apple-itablet1-2454626After years of rumors, I finally understood what the playing field was going to look like when ComicBookLover released their viewer
for the iPhone yesterday. I knew that Apple’s new iPad would run on the iPhone OS, that it would be high-resolution enough to read comic books on a 10” screen. I knew it was going to become the cool platform of choice for newspapers and magazines and books that need color and graphics support.

All stuff that had been generally predicted, along with a lot of other stuff. But what I didn’t know was the price. And I don’t know if people are even interested in reading newspapers any longer, although Apple chief Steve Jobs doesn’t know that either.

If the iPad price was too high, a whole lotta people in the media racket would be out of jobs. Magazines and newspapers, and to a slightly lesser extent book publishers, cannot survive with the present distribution models. Textbook publishers would be marginally more secure. So if
I heard a figure with five nines in it, I knew there’s be quite a number of
people on Sixth Avenue selling their pencils.

Apple always prices their products high under the belief
that a BMW is worth more than a Toyota. But this time they took a turn. Pricing between $500 and $830 – the difference is in 3G connectivity and the amount of memory you get – even the high-end model is reasonably priced. AT&T’s service is low-priced; $15 a month for 250 MB of service, and only $30 for unlimited service. This includes full access to AT&T’s Wi-Fi hotspots, providing even faster service than 3G. And the iPad promises 10 hours of video use on a single charge.

Oh, and it weighs 1.5 pounds. Check out Marc Fishman’s excellent piece with all the details here.

It’s got a large on-screen keyboard and it can use Apple’s Bluetooth keyboard. You can get Apple’s word processing, spreadsheet and
presentation software – fully comparable with Microsoft Office – for $10 a
module. Doubtlessly, Microsoft will offer their far more expensive versions of the same stuff before too long.

Lots of publishers have already signed up: Penguin, Harper-Collins, Hachette, Simon & Schuster, Gameloft, Electronic Arts, the New York Times, and Major League Baseball. And the iPad will run most all iPhone and iPod apps as well.

So. Will the media thrive? Maybe. Is this a lifeline?
Absolutely. Will it be the cool thing to own? Probably. Will it save the comic book format? It will if I have anything to say about it. Will the streets of
midtown Manhattan be splattered with mediaworkers’ blood?

No more than usual.

Apple unveils iPad, prescribed newest tablet

Once again, the mighty Steve Jobs took the stage in front of scads of Mac-o-philes to present them another device they need so bad it hurts. The iPad debuted to the standard “ooohs” and “oys”, and we here at ComicMix feel no need to wax poetic. We know you don’t care about our awesome alliteration adeptness. How about a little meat n’ potatoes:

  • It’s meant to bridge the gap between a smart phone (like that iPhone already collecting dust in your pocket) and a laptop (that horrendously underpowered Macbook Pro heating up your desk).
  • It operates on a hybrid OS from the iPhone, on it’s Apple A44 1ghz processor. Meaning you can use all 14.4 bajillion iPhone apps on it, right out of the box.
  • iPhone apps will run at a pixel to pixel representation, or you can “double” the size at the same resolution for a faux-full screen effect.
  • The aspect ratio is closer to 4:3 than 16:9… A 9.7″ IPS Display.
  • Has already won this season’s American Idol (unconfirmed).
  • The keyboard pops up like on an iPhone, though it’s now close to lifesize (as in your normal keyboard.)

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Review: ‘Copper’

[[[Copper]]]
By Kazu Kibuishi
96 pages, Scholastic Graphix, $16.99

copper-5605294It’s often illuminating to look at a creator’s earlier works to see how they inspire and influence the later, better known works. Such is the case with Kazu Kibuishi’s Copper, now in a single volume collection from Scholastic. This webcomic, launched in 2002, was the first serious work the artist produced on a sustained basis and in his introduction; he talks about how this helped put him on a career path.

Copper is a young boy, accompanied by his dog Fred who is his best friend and constant companion. The classic duo, unlike [[[Red & Rover]]], go on fantastical adventures that in reading them reminded me of [[[Calvin & Hobbes]]] mixed with [[[Little Nemo’s]]] inventive page design. I was pleased to see that Kibuishi cites both in a recent Newsarama interview. There are few recurring characters beyond these two, other than the girl in the bubble, who appears as Cooper’s unreachable object of desire (think Little Red-haired Girl).

The artist began producing the feature as a large format comic strip with numerous panels and designs which The New York Times criticized as forcing the reader to scroll up and down to follow each strip. The 9”x 9” book solves that problem and collects every strip and story. He worked on the feature sporadically as his career began to take off and he began his [[[Amulet]]] series (which we reviewed here) and edited the [[[Flight]]] anthologies to showcase his friends’ work and where longer Copper stories ran.

The strip has been largely placed on hiatus while Kibuishi focused on the Amulet series and other projects. Reading this book, though, shows his growing sense of pacing and storytelling, without losing the sense of whimsy. Often the strips feature one or the complaining about the journey until the goal is reached and the real fun begins. The longer stories, including the 18-page “[[[Maiden Voyage]]]” show a wonderful sense of design and detail, along with a strong command of composition and color.

Copper is all about warmth and friendship, taking the universal theme of a boy and his dog and unleashing them into a borderless world of imagination. Taken as a whole, these are entertaining stories that demonstrate that if you apply yourself, and create from the heart, magic can happen.

The book concludes with a detailed feature on how Kibuishi creates a Copper strip which is a marvelous How To for would-be real world Coppers just now discovering comics.

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DC Rings in the Brightest Day with More Rings!

Rabid DC fans flocked to their local android dungeons to get their pudgy fingers on the infinitely collectable ‘Blackest Night’ promo rings. Soon thereafter the DC Nationites (Nationals? Nation-Zombies?) could create their very own rainbow brigade, all for the price of a new comic. Sure not every DC loyalist subscribed to every book that came with a ring… but hey, who doesn’t need an extra copy of Superman/Batman? I used mine to sop up a glass of water I let slip at lunch the other day!

Not to be outdone by their own promotion, DC decided it wasn’t too short a time to go right back to the well. Coming in April, packed with ‘Brightest Day’ bannered Green Lantern #53 and The Flash #1 comes … more promo rings! The Flash comes with a newly minted in plastic Barry Allen ring. Green Lantern comes packed with yet another promo Green Lantern ring. Seriously… did they mint one for every living, dead, and legacy GL Corpsmen?

Your local comic emporium will have to order a minimum of 10 issues of each of the crimson and ivy hued heroes with the February previews issue. So, make sure to start whining now, so you can have yet another hunk of plastic to show off to your girlfriend mother.

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Review: ‘Defying Gravity’ on DVD

02454364372280-defyin-packagingdvd-src3909faqq1-9638419A prime time summer series launched during the dog days of August is never a good show of faith on the part of the network. Last August, ABC presented Defying Gravity
, a thirteen episode science fiction series which lasted a mere eight weeks.

A noble effort, it failed to garner much interest and even fewer ratings. The series was said to be inspired by the BBC series [[[Space Odyssey: Voyage to the Planets]]], and became an international effort co-produced by the BBC, Fox Television Studios, and Omni Film Productions in association with Canadian broadcasters CTV Television Network, SPACE, and German broadcaster ProSieben.

This misfire is now available as a complete season set on Fox Home Entertainment and you can decide for yourself what went wrong. The premise begins in 2052 with the launch of a six year mission throughout the solar system, making the first visits to several planets. Along the way, the eight-person crew is told the real secret behind the mission, then you add in the “[[[Grey’s Anatomy]]] in space” aspect and you have a sprawling tale that truly lacked a compelling focus.

We’re introduced to the eight astronauts, an appealing cast led by Ron Livingston and Laura Harris plus the team at ground control and then other recurring figures including the dogged and totally dispensable reporter. Being a global production, the cast is international in background, which introduces us to new and unfamiliar performers in addition to showing us that reaching the stars will be one way to unite our cultures.

In attempting to make the characters more complex and available for the soap opera elements, many of them come across as people NASA would never accept as astronaut candidates. There was a reason the original seven were chosen, not only did they have the right stuff to handle a spacecraft, but they were dedicated career men who put mission and country first, making them a little less colorful and a lot more trustworthy.

Series creator James Parriott covered this flaw, though, by introducing an extraterrestrial, almost mystical, element that eventually reveals to us that they were chosen to be on this mission. And right there is the series’ greatest problem.

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Review: ‘Smile’

smile-cover-scan-web1-9036381Smile

By Raina Telgemeier
Scholastic Graphix, 214 pages, $10.99

The adage says that you should write what you know and Raina Telgemeier knows more than a little about the awkwardness of adolescence, compounded by a dental problem. While in sixth grade, Raina fell and knocked out her two front teeth which meant surgery, braces, appliances, and feeling utterly weird while maneuvering through the ninth circle of hell that is middle school followed by the eighth circle, high school.

She channeled those feelings and experiences into [[[Smile]]], a charming memoir coming out now from Scholastic’s Graphix imprint. The San Francisco-native bravely shared her fears and frustrations in this lively and heartfelt story that is perfectly aimed at 9-13 year old readers who just may be having image issues of their own.

Telgemeier is no stranger to the artform, having justly earned a following with her graphic stories featuring the enduring [[[Baby-sitters Club]]]. With her husband Dave Roman, she also cowrote [[[X-Men: Misfits]]], a Manga-style story from DelRey. This is a woman who knows and understands the form and uses it with authority.

What’s interesting in this story is that Raina was not comforted when others turned up with braces, something that was all too common when my kids went through these years. The story uses her dental issues as the spine but you can see that she is also somewhat withdrawn, haunted by the harsh teasing of her social circle, all of whom appear clueless to her personal concerns. On more than one occasion, she is the butt of jokes and pranks and she endures them stoically, with no one but her supportive parents noticing how brave she has been throughout all this.

The dental and social issues receive a rude jolt of larger problems when Raina experiences the 1989 earthquake that shattered portions of the city and even postponed the World Series. It really isn’t until she’s in high school that she takes the bold steps necessary to find some measure of happiness.

She has younger siblings at home who find her annoying plus her somewhat cruel friends, but Raina also shares the heartache she felt for one student, something every reader will no doubt identify with. The 214 pages are broken into chapters that cover her school years in a breezy way, keeping the focus on her dental treatment and evolving relationship with friends. Other issues such as academics are merely window-dressing, adding context and flavor but not cluttering the story.

Her drawing is a delight, the storytelling straightforward, and nothing is left ambiguous. She’s frank and honest, using this story as an emotional catharsis of sorts, while letting her readers know that it’s okay to be shy or getting medical work done is just another part of growing up.

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Interview: ‘Farscape’ and ‘Scorpius’ writers David Alan Mack and Keith R.A. DeCandido

BOOM! Studios announced today Farscape: Scorpius, an ongoing series starting in April. Written by series creator Rockne S. O’Bannon and David Alan Mack (the Star Trek novelist, not the artist on Kabuki, just to get it out of the way early) it finds everyone’s favorite black leather clad villain deposed from his throne on Hyneria and making a bold new discovery that could put him back on top of the Uncharted Territories.

We took some time to chat with Dave (with Keith R. A. DeCandido, the scripter for the Farscape ongoing series, throwing in little bot mots because as readers of ComicMix know, he just shows up everywhere) and asked him about the new series, and what it’s like to write a story from the antagonist’s point of view.

ComicMix: There are precious few comics that have been
focused on the bad guy in the story… but is Scorpius a bad guy?

David Alan Mack: He
certainly doesn’t see himself that way. From his point of view, he’s probably
the only rational actor in a universe populated by fools and madmen. Of course,
Scorpius is not going to judge his own actions using our brand of moral
compass. He is, in many respects, an amoral individual.

In my opinion, Scorpius is willing to espouse a sense of
duty and offer his loyalty to whomever appears to be on his side, and in the
moment when he makes such a declaration, it’s possible he even means it. But if
he needs to betray his allies to accomplish what he thinks is the most
desirable outcome for himself, he won’t hesitate to put knives in their backs
and twist the blades.

Keith R.A. DeCandido:
Oh, he’s definitely a bad guy—at least by the standards of the people
reading the comic book (and who watched the show). When we first met him at the
end of the first season, he tortured Crais for no good reason, just to be
absolutely sure about something. Scorpius admitted up front that the accusation
Crichton had made simply had to be false, but Scorpius was still willing to
torture a Peacekeeper captain just to be 100% sure.

ComicMix: And yet
he does it in such a mannered and genteel style. Very precise. Play out a little bit of the Scorpius series for us. Where are we starting from?

DAM: We catch up
to Scorpius while he’s in self-imposed exile. He’s been kicked off Hyneria by
the triumphantly returned monarch Dominar Rygel XVI. Left with nowhere to go,
Scorpius is on what one might consider a contemplative retreat.

Then, as Bogart said in Casablanca,
“destiny takes a hand.” Scorpius finds himself in the right place at
the right time, and he makes the most of a new opportunity.

ComicMix: So this
is a decent place for new readers to jump in and get up to speed?

DAM: Absolutely.
The first four-issue arc of Scorpius is
designed to introduce the character to new readers by interspersing flashbacks
from his past, while detailing the new political situation brewing in the Farscape universe, especially in the
Uncharted Territories. (more…)

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Now you can talk like a Jagermonster from ‘Girl Genius’!

jagermonster-boyz-7188202Hey, hyu!

If hyu are a schmot person, hyu’re probably already readink
Girl Genius by Phil und Kaja Foglio. But hyu might be vonderink, “Hey!
How kan Hy schpeak in de liltink tones uf a Jãgermonster? Iz much betta ten pipple!”

Vell, vonder
no more! Now hyu kan be erudite, vitty, und hendzum too!

Chust klick
here!

The Point Radio: ‘Caprica’ Where Will It Really Go?

By now, just about everyone has had the chance to see the pilot to CAPRICA, the long awaited prequel to BATTLESTAR GALACTICA. Critics called it ‘dark’, but creator Ronald Moore and writer Jane Espenson talk about how the show will be evolving over the next few episodes. Plus week 6 at the top for AVATAR and David Tennant might need another new job.
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