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Photosynth Hulk Demo

 

001-4224723I love tech. Especially new technology. Twitter, iPhone, Media Centers, etc. So I was reading about Photosynth from Microsoft Live Labs. It’s a new way of displaying photos.

Photosynth analyzes each photo for similarities to the others, and uses that data to build a model of where the photos were taken. It then re-creates the environment and uses that as a canvas on which to display the photos.

Basically, it creates a 3D model of a room or a subject from multiple photos of the same subject. An easy way to give a virtual tour or show a piece of merchandise from any angle a buyer could imagine.

Of course my first thought was, ‘This would rock if someone had a ton of pictures of the Watchmen Owlship from San Diego Comic Con.’ Sadly, I didn’t. But I could imagine it being a great tool to show off your action figure. So I grabbed my Smart Hulk action figure and tried it out.

Editor’s note: Evidently, this stuff won’t run on a Mac. It’s Microsoft; go figure. Anyway, you PC guys should follow the above link and Hulk-out.

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Manga Friday: As Different As Possible

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I’ve generally tried to organize the weekly columns around some sort of theme, but sometimes themes just serve to hide the variety and depth of the comics world (whatever country it might be from). So, this week, I picked three books with nothing at all in common (except a Japanese origin), just because:

Nightmares for Sale, Vol. 1
By Kaoru Ohashi
Aurora, November 2007, $10.95

Nightmares for Sale is an old-fashioned kind of horror story, with two enigmatic characters – they appear to be a grown man (Shadow) and a young girl (Maria), but she’s older than he is – who run a store that’s usually a pawnshop. Nothing at all good can happen when they enter your life, though they usually don’t seem to be directly responsible.

Each story in this volume has a different set of characters – usually teenage girls, or the kind of adults that teenage girls want to become – who meet the pawnshop owners, and then come to nasty ends. A bullied girl triggers a curse on the friendship rings her tormentors made her buy for all of them, and nastiness follows. A model wants to appear beautiful in photographs, and gets exactly what she asked for…but no more and no less. A young woman meets an abused boy in the street, and learns that their connection is much deeper than she imagined. A young boy tries to pawn his baby sister. And so on.

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Superman, Disney, Family Guy DVDs Coming

superman-doomsday-dvd-1416192Several additional DVDs have been announced of late and here are some of the highlights we suspect you’ll appreciate:

In time for the holidays, Warner Home Video will offer Superman: Doomsday as a special 2-disc edition on November 25, 2008. Offered in standard and Blu-ray editions, the set will include the original animated adaptation of the first Doomsday comic story plus bonus features including four episodes from Superman: The Animated Series personally selected by producer Bruce Timm.  The Blu-ray version will also offer new featurettes: "Clash of the Juggernauts", and "When Heroes Die: The Making of Superman: Doomsday". Both discs will have a new look at 2009’s forthcoming Wonder Woman animated feature.

Family Guy: The Total World Domination Collection, coming October 21 exclusively from Amazon, will contain 22 discs featuring every Family Guy DVD released, including Family Guy Presents: Stewie Griffin – The Untold Story and the Star Wars spoof Blue Harvest. As a bonus, American Dad volume one will be included.  The entire collection will be in a box shaped like Stewie’s head so good luck finding shelf space for it. Family Guy: Volume 6 and the Family Guy – Freakin’ Sweet Party Pack will be released everywhere the same date.
 

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Smallville Almost Begat Supergirl

At the Toronto FanExpo this past weekend, Laura Vandervoort confirmed she would appear in a single episode of the eighth and final season of the CW’s Smallville. Television’s Supergirl also made mention that there had been talk of her character once being considered for a spinoff series.  She merely said it didn’t pan out without providing any details.

She did admit to being a huge Buffy the Vampire Slayer fan so working alongside Spike, James Marsters, was a thrill.  When she was just beginning her career, she wrote series creator Joss Whedon about wanting to audition for the show, something he remembered when they finally met.

Smallville, with new villains and the same old romantic triangles will return September 18.

If You’re Not There, You Just Won’t Get It – Conclusion, by Michael Davis

This is the last segment in this month long saga. If you are anything like me, you are sick of this. I mean four weeks of me reliving history is a bit much even for a guy who LOVES history. To that point, all I watch on TV is All My Children (the greatest show ever!), news, and The History Channel. I don’t even watch the shows I write or have created. I’m not kidding. I have never watched an episode of any show that I have been involved in.

I love history and I thought when I started writing this it would fill me with a wonderful sense of nostalgia.

Wrong. Now I’m just pissed.

Don’t get me wrong, Milestone is and will always be a BIG part of my life and career and I’m very happy to clear up some misconceptions about Milestone… particularly my involvement. Take a look at the previous installments to read about some of those misconceptions surrounding Milestone, Christopher Priest and DC’s “ownership” to name but a few.

Here’s my BIGGEST problem and the misconception that burns me to this day. There have been many, MANY articles and or books that have featured Milestone. A lot of them have said that I left Milestone quick, fast and in a hurry.

That, like the promise that Bush would be a good president, was a compete and utter lie. There’s more truth in the belief that the world is flat and women in L.A. don’t care about what you drive.

I was there the moment Milestone was created. I did not leave until two and an half YEARS after that. The writer Les Daniels (who’s books I enjoy, by the way) wrote in his book, DC Comics Sixty Years Of The World’s Favorite Comic Book Heroes (1995) “A fourth partner, Michael Davis, quickly left to run Motown Animation.” (more…)

No Heroics: Not Warrriors, either

Our pal, Charlie Jane Anders, has a story up at i09 about a couple of sitcoms with a super-hero premise. One (the one we know for sure will be funny, at least based on <a href=”

clip) is from the BBC, titled No Heroics. The claim is that it’s based on Friends, but with a bar instead of a coffee house. The other, Boldly Going Nowhere, sounds a bit more sci-fi, and is the brain-child of the folks who bring you Sunny in Philadelphia.  

Alas, there is no discussion as to the person tending bar.  We have our own suggestion.

 

Paramount to use Mobile Comics

Paramount Pictures is embracing the mobile content aspect of movie marketing by hiring Singapore-based Omnitoons to craft comic stories based on current films.  According to Variety, the first film will be Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging, a British feature from Gurinder Chadha (Bend it Like Beckham). The movie is currently in release throughout Europe but lacks a domestic release date.

The Manga-style stories will appear on enabled phones in single panel manner with each strips taking up to four screens and short stories up to 20 screens. The next release to receive this treatment will be the Shia LaBeouf actioner Eagle Eye. Mission: Impossible, not currently an active film franchise, was also mentioned in the story indicating Paramount is examining their library for appropriate series to work with.

The mobile comics are now available in MMS and J2ME formats in the U.S., Australia, Europe and India. The phone companies will likely treat these promotional comics as premium content and will charge users for downloading each installment.

"By adapting movies to the mobile comics format, we believe fans will be able to extend their entertainment experience at their own pace, with the privacy of their phone," Karen New, CEO of Omnitoons, told the trade. "Omnitoons aims to continue our pursuit of bridging the mobile and movie industries by creating even more comics based on popular film titles through innovative and cost-efficient techniques.”
 

Diesel Wants to be Riddick Twice More

Vin Diesel told MTV News that he fully expects to reprise his role of Riddick in two more feature films, possibly filming them back-to-back.

“David Twohy right now is writing the scripts. The only question is whether we take a page from the Lord of the Rings guys and try to shoot the two chapters at the same time. There are two more in mind,” Diesel told the network. “Everyone knows I love the Riddick character and I’m always working on it. It just takes five years to make another one because David Twohy and I are so precious about it.”

He first portrayed Richard B. Riddick in the well-received 2000 feature film Pitch Black. In 2004, he, along with Judi Dench, appeared in The Chronicles of Riddick, which received poor reviews and so-so box office.

If he’s correct, the next Riddick chapter would be out in 2009 but it has yet to be mounted at a studio so 2010 is the earliest a film with this scope could be released. The storyline would follow Riddick, having taken the throne of the Necromonger King and would finally bring audiences to the Underverse.
 

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‘The WB’ Returns With Smallville

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Remember The WB? Time-Warner’s attempt to copy Fox’s entry into network television. It birthed some of our favorite shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Smallville, and Supernatural. Then they merged with Paramount’s UPN network to create The CW. The history gives me a headache.

Well, The WB is back. This time it’s Time-Warner’s answer to NBC and Fox’s Hulu online network. Before I get another headache explaining that, let’s just say we can watch some of our favorite shows online for free and leave it like that.

The big one for comic book fans is Smallville, the hit show that depicts Clark Kent’s life before becoming Superman. You can even share episodes, like the pilot episode I added to the bottom of this page.

I could also mention that Buffy is on there as well, but it’s also on Hulu. Here comes that media business headache again. Owww.

 

 

Will Eisner’s Final Book Out This Week

Will Eisner’s final book, Expressive Anatomy For Comics and Narrative, was released this week from W.W. Norton without a lot of fanfare. It would have slipped our notice had James Vance not discussed it at his blog.

Among his comments, Vance wrote, “But the reward was being allowed to pore over decades’ worth of Eisner work, concentrating on it as never before, and learning all over again just what a terrific craftsman he was. Even the pieces which I’d dismissed as lesser work revealed lovely little nuggets of compassion in the characterizations, brilliance in construction and masterful shorthand in the staging. Old school or not, at its best Will’s stuff is still among the few examples in the graphic storytelling field that’s truly for grownups.”

The book completes a series of text books by the acknowledged master of the artform and supplements his 1985 volume Comics and Sequential Art and 1996’s Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative.

Eisner, 1917-2005, was at work on the book when he had the heart surgery that surprisingly led to his death.