The Mix : What are people talking about today?

Frank McCourt, Mentor to Generations of NY Geeks, Dead at 78

frank-mccourt-5092229Frank McCourt, the Pulitzer-Prize-winning author of Angela’s Ashes, died on Sunday, July 19, of metastatic melanoma. Though his loss is undoubtedly felt acutely in literary circles, it is also felt among the thousands of students to whom he taught English and Creative Writing, first at McKee Vocational High School in Staten Island, NY and then from 1967 to 1987 at Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan .

What does this have to do with comics, you may ask? Well, a couple of things.

Number one, among his students was Paul Levitz, current president and publisher of DC Comics, writer of The Legion of Super Heroes and Justice Society of America, and the former editor of Batman comics. Whether you can thank or condemn any of McCourt’s influence for this, I leave to the individual reader to decide. 

Number two, this reporter, speaking as a Stuyvesant alumna (class of 1986) and former student of his, can tell you, McCourt reached out to two generations of young geeks. (I say this with love, as a professed geek myself.)

Stuyvesant is one of several specialized high schools in New York City — a type of magnet school. It’s a public school, but to get in you have to take a competitive entrance exam. The main emphasis of the curriculum is on science and math, and the student body regularly wins kudos in national science competitions (like the Intel Science Talent Search) and has a crack robotics team.

Despite its reputation for left-brain subjects, “Stuy’s” academic curriculum is quite varied, with electives in languages, social studies, and the arts. In the 80’s, I remember that McCourt’s class was extremely popular (and not always easy to get into).

I was not a big fan of English literature in high school. I loathed having to read Moby Dick and The House of the Seven Gables. I was a science fiction and comic book geek. Why, I asked, didn’t we get to read cool stuff like Isaac Asimov in English class? (Even I couldn’t dare hope we’d get to read a comic book in English class — folks, this was before they’d even released Watchmen. As individual issues coming out….well theoretically monthly, at least.)

At the same time, though, I loved to write. Stuyvesant had a ton of student publications, and of course a school like ours had a science fiction magazine. It was called Antares, and I got a couple of things printed up in it. I was reading the classic SF authors at the time. I wanted to grow up to be Ray Bradbury or Arthur C. Clarke or Ursula LeGuin.

So, I thought it would be perfect if, as a student at a science and math high school, I could take a creative writing course, and thus learn science+fiction = science fiction! I signed up for McCourt’s class — an elective — and managed to get in.

His teaching style was, shall we say, unconventional. It was informal, perhaps seeming at times even disorganized and
rambling, but it felt like a safe haven from our high-pressure
academic environment. He encouraged us to use our right brains, to take
a risk and tell a story without having to worry about “is this the right answer?” or, the classic refrain of the Stuyvesant student, “Is
this going to be ON THE TEST?” He didn’t pile on the homework
assignments or problem sets. He encouraged us to write — not always a
formal assignment, just anything, and bring it to class and read it to
the room.

Once I read something that was pretty much just a first draft… and not a very good one. He said, quite bluntly, that it was terrible. As a Hermione-Granger-type straight-A nerd, I don’t think any teacher had ever told me I had done crappy work. It upset me for days…then I realized, he was right. I’d just vomited silliness onto the page, without really working on it or making it something someone else would want to read. It was kind of an epiphany to me. 

I will say, I took this lesson to heart. McCourt didn’t give a lot of formal assignments, but for our final projects, he asked us to write a children’s book. I actually put quite a bit of effort into mine — I even gave it full-color illustrations and bound it myself. This is in the days before desktop publishing, mind you — I did it all with paper and scissors and glue. It got an A — in fact, it got high praise. I can be taught! (Years later I even actually got some short stories and children’s books commercially published.)

McCourt would often sit in front of the room and regale us with stories about his now famously-miserable Irish childhood. By the time I got to hear them, he had already honed them with impeccable comic timing and a dry wit. He also would make crusty observations about life in general. At the time, the movie Purple Rain had just come out and he had taken his daughter to see it. He went on, crankily, for days afterward about how motorcycles and guitars were “phallic symbols.” I thought it was hilarious.

I remember in the early 90’s, just after Angela’s Ashes came out, I went to see McCourt at one of his early book readings and signings at a Barnes and Noble on the Upper West Side. He wasn’t famous yet — the audience was a Stuyvesant High School reunion — former students and some other teachers. (In fact, I sat behind another one of my former English teachers.) He read from the book in that same cranky dry tone he’d used all those years ago. I recognized some of the stories. I got my book signed. He didn’t really remember me very well — though he did ask if I’d ever gotten published the children’s book I’d written for his class. (Alas, I never did sell that particular manuscript, and this was before my other stuff was published

So, speaking as one New York Geek, I can definitely say that he influenced me. Whether you can thank him or condemn him for that…well, I leave that up to you, the individual reader.

Review: ‘The Hunter’ by Darwyn Cooke from IDW

Let’s get the disclaimer out of the way first: Yes, ComicMix is publishing lots of stuff with IDW Publishing. Doesn’t matter, The Hunter
would still be on the short list for the best book of the year if it came out from Chick Publications.

I’ve had a preview copy of the entire book for a few months now, and I’ve held off on reviewing it because I didn’t want to tease you, even though previews of the first pages were up and about. You just would have wanted more. I certainly did.

The backstory is simple: it’s an adaptation of The Hunter
by Donald Westlake, writing as Richard Stark. It’s the first novel featuring his protaganist Parker. In this book he’s been betrayed by his wife and fellow criminals in the aftermath of a heist, and he hammers his way through New York circa 1962 to get revenge. A lot of it. With guns and fists and… you get the idea.

The book’s been adapted into film a number of times with varying degrees of quality, the two best known adaptions are [[[Point Blank]]] with Lee Marvin:

…and [[[Payback]]] with Mel Gibson:

(And before you ask, [[[The Hunter]]] with Steve McQueen has nothing to do with this book.) But this may be the closest adaptation of the source material, as evidenced by the fact that this is the first adaption that Westlake let use the name Parker.

It’s certainly faithful in (duo) tone. This is the time period Darwyn Cooke was born to draw, in the same way that Dave Stevens was born to draw the era of the Rocketeer. The book feels like 1962, and yet modern at the same time. If you know Cooke’s other projects– New Frontier, Selina’s Big Score, the Batman animated series, you don’t need the sell, if you don’t, picture here a blend of Jack Cole and Bernie Kriegstein, and you’ve almost got it. This book is clean and compact and accessible in ways that no other comic has, and should take the mainstream by storm. The preview almost makes reviewing redundant, let’s just say that Cooke keeps control of the pace all the way through.

I got my review copy early that I was able to call IDW and natter at them about a few production glitches, if the book hadn’t gone to press yet. When they said it hadn’t, I told them to save time in the future and just print “Eisner nominee” on the cover now.

Really. It’s that good. Buy copies for friends.

Win a free ‘Coraline’ DVD!

The nice folks releasing the Coraline DVD today (based on the award winning book by Neil Gaiman, doncha know) have given us a free copy of the DVD to give to a ComicMix reader.

As we’re too dang busy between now and San Diego to grade essays on “why I should get the free DVD of Coraline“, we’ll just make it simple: Comment in this thread, using a real email address when you log in (because that’s how we’ll contact you if you win). Contest open only to people living in the United States. Don’t forget to check out the film’s current site.

In the meantime, here’s a little clip from the DVD extras…

Review: ‘Dollhouse’ Season One on DVD

There are television creators who are placed under the microscope every time they produce something new, hoping it will generate the same pop buzz and ratings success of their previous series. While a Jerry Bruckheimer can churn out cookie cutter series, the ones with more unique and distinctive voices tend to be more hit or miss. In Joss Whedon’s case, he followed [[[Buffy the Vampire Slayer]]] and[[[ Angel]]] with [[[Firefly]]]. While a cult favorite, the series and its feature film incarnation failed to win the wide audience required to remain viable. As a result, all eyes were on him to see what his next trick would be and most were cautious given that the new series [[[Dollhouse]]] would appear on Fox, where a previous regime sabotaged Firefly through ineptness.

People cringed when the new show, featuring Whedon-alum Eliza Dushku, was given the dreaded Friday night at 9 slot but were also given fewer commercials allowing more show time allowing Whedon’s characters to come to life.

Dollhouse divided critics and fans and the ratings were iffy at best so the real surprise in May was that the show was renewed at all. Now, during the summer, about two months before the series returns, Fox is releasing a four-disc first season set on Tuesday. They provided the first three discs for review, reserving the fourth disc for consumers to discover on their own. That disc contains the unaired thirteenth episode that could well have been a coda to the series had it been canceled and shone the spotlight on Amy Acker’s Active, codenamed Whiskey. Here’s a clip:

(more…)

Blame the Juice for this ‘War’ crime

This LJ post from urbaniak sums it all up:

I’ve enjoyed many a Jamba Juice so I was disappointed to learn that their current marketing campaign features a blatant ripoff of David Rees’s detournement classic Get Your War On.
Rees, of course, is appropriating free stock images but the Jamba Juice
campaign is not doing the same thing. They are appropriating what Rees does with those images,
right down to the way he renders his word balloons. I have no idea how
the case would hold up in intellectual property court and Rees says on his website he’s not interested in legal action (only a boycott). But it’s plain as day: Jamba Juice ripped him off.

Through the miracle of modern googling I learned that the marketing agency behind the Jamba Juice “Summer Bliss is Back” campaign is an LA shop called Neighbor. Their unintentionally hilarious website
positions themselves as paragons of crunchy, earthy, green, do-gooder,
one-world decency. According to their manifesto: “You get conscious,
inspired, ethical, engaged, genuine, positive and purpose-driven work
that grows your business and your people all the while making the world
a better place.” Ad man, heal thyself.

The worst part of it is that people are going to think that David Rees endorses this stuff.

ComicMix Quick Picks – July 20, 2009

http://comicmix.com//wp-content/uploads/2011/09/jerseywarriors.jpgClosing down a lot of windows before the really crazy rush of SDCC coverage begins…

Superman Creator’s Secret S&M Story Heads to Film – ComicsAlliance.com

Miley Cyrus Grows Wings – ComingSoon.net

The 50 Greatest Film Trailers of All Time from IFC.com: What, no Superman Returns or the banned trailer for Spider-Man?

Tolkein Film Trilogy Rings False for His Heirs: You’d think a franchise that grossed over six billion dollars would
be making royalties, wouldn’t you? And you would be wrong. And because
New Line is playing cute with accounting (again), they’re threatening
the making of The Hobbit.

The return of the 90’s from SpaceBooger.com

Goldman Superheroes: Superheroes Rescue Plan “Out of this World!”

And the picture above is from ViewAskew, Clerks meets Warriors.

Anything else? Consider this an open thread.

The Point: Torchwood & A Flash Movie

TORCHWOOD Executive Producer JULIE GARDNER braces us for tonight’s premiere of CHILDREN OF THE EARTH (BBC America) and tells us when we can expect a visit from The Doctor, plus Geoff Johns to guide THE FLASH movie and HARRY POTTER bends the box office, but doesn’t break it.
pt072009-5620128

PRESS THE BUTTON to Get The Point!

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

Follow us now on and !

PROGRAMMING NOTE: There will be no POINT Podcast on Friday (7/24), but we will return for a special ComicCon Wrap-Up on Tuesday (7/28).  Meanwhile, we will post some updates from ComicCon here over the weekend. However, for your full access pass to ComicCon, check into our 24/7 coverage on THE POINT RADIO running from Wednesday through Sunday AND be sure to follow us on Twitter (“ThePointRadio”) for late breaking updates!

Don’t forget that you can now enjoy THE POINT 24/7. Updates on all parts of pop culture, special progarmming by some of your favorite personalities and the biggest variety of contemporary music on the net.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN LIVE FOR FREE or go to GetThePointRadio for more including a connection for mobile phones including iPhone & Blackberrys



Review: Goats: Infinite Typewriters by Jonathan Rosenberg

goats-infinite-typewriters-11-4128403

Goats: Infinite Typewriters
Jonathan Rosenberg
Del Rey, June 2009, $14.00

It’s not true that every webcomic will eventually have a
book, even if it seems that way. There are some projects that even [[[Lulu]]] will
choke on; some things that are too short and obscure and just plain pointless
to be immortalized in cold print. But, with magazines and newspapers running
around like the proverbial head-chopped chickens – all the while conveniently
neglecting to mention the fact that newspapers had the most profitable two
decades of their existence right up to a handful of years ago, and collectively
blew those profits on buying each other out and paying off the families who
were smart enough to take huge wads of cash and toddle off to do something less
glamorous, like badger sexing – webcomics are beginning to look like the only
good game in town, so even staid book publishers – like Del Rey, the science
fiction imprint of Ballantine, which, despite being part of the massive,
serious, Bertelsmann/Random House empire, has made buckets and bushels of money
over the past thirty years from [[[Garfield]]] books and even less likely drawn items – are surfing heavily from work, calling
it research, and drafting up big-boy contracts for cartoonists whose work has
only previously appeared in shining phosphor dots.

(And, now that that
sentence has cleared the riffraff out, let me get down to specifics.)

The house most active in snapping up webcomickers is the
comics publisher Dark Horse; I don’t believe they intended it that way, but
they’ve taken a strong line in signing up nearly all of the webcomic creators
that I read and appreciate on a regular basis. What does that leave for other
publishers? Well, it’s a big web, and God knows – despite my occasional
pretense otherwise – I’m not the Czar of Online Comics (though that would be a great job to have – mental note: give BHO a
call later to see if it’s possible), so there are almost certainly dozens of
damn good comics online that I don’t already read.

Which is a really roundabout way of saying
that I wasn’t familiar with [[[Goats]]] – even though Rosenberg has been doing it since the end of April 1997,
and the entire archives (including the strips reprinted in this book) are all
available online, costing no more than a few cents for electricity and an
attention span unusual in any web-surfer. If you don’t believe me, have a link – that goes back to the very first
strip, which, in usual daily-comics fashion, bears very little resemblance to
the strips reprinted here.

(more…)

Review: ‘Watchmen Director’s Cut’ on Blu-ray

No one can fault Warner Bros. for not giving their best marketing effort to get people to come find out for themselves why the fans and the mass media have been falling over themselves to hail Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen as the greatest graphic novel of all time. Last summer they hooked the geekerati at Comic-Con International and spent the fall and winter making certain the rest of the world knew the film adaptation was coming. When the press reviews began hitting, the mixed commentary all talked about the difficulty of translating the dense, layered narrative into a film regardless of length. Some found it faithful and well-done while others couldn’t follow the story and thought it was too somber for its own good.

While the diehards attended more than once to sop up every nuance, the rest of America seemed not to care anywhere near as much. For those of us familiar with the language of comic books and graphic novels, we easily followed the movie while those less versed found it off-putting despite the brilliant 12-minute opening that set the stage. As a result, the film earned just $107,509,799 domestically and with additional $75,225,483 from international screens, it stands as a commercial disappointment.

As I said in my review last March, the film was not at all a creative disappointment. There are sharp performances, especially Jackie Earl Haley and Jeffrey Dean Morgan, and while there are favorite characters missing or diminished, the movie does a solid job condensing the story. Still, it feels constrained and probably would have worked better as either two films or an extended premium cable miniseries (although that would have been prohibitively expensive to mount). Now we have additional footage in [[[Watchmen Director’s Cut]]] being released tomorrow by Warner Home Video. It’s available in standard and Blu-ray editions, each packed with extras. Here’s a sample:

(more…)