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George Lucas has sold Lucasfilm Ltd. to the Walt Disney Company. Disney announced plans for new Star Wars movies to premiere beginning 2015.
Global leader in high-quality family entertainment agrees to acquire world-renowned Lucasfilm Ltd, including legendary STAR WARS franchise.
Acquisition continues Disney’s strategic focus on creating and monetizing the world’s best branded content, innovative technology and global growth to drive long-term shareholder value.
Lucasfilm to join company’s global portfolio of world class brands including Disney, ESPN, Pixar, Marvel Comics, and ABC.
STAR WARS: EPISODE 7 feature film targeted for release in 2015.
Kathleen Kennedy, current Co-Chairman of Lucasfilm, will become President of Lucasfilm, reporting to Walt Disney Studios Chairman Alan Horn.
You can read the full (lengthy) press release at http://thewaltdisneycompany.com/disney-news/press-releases/2012/10/disney-acquire-lucasfilm-ltd.
There has been no news as yet regarding the future of LucasfilmâÂÂs beloved pulp adventurer, Indiana Jones.

In a deal that rivals the size of its Marvel purchase, Disney has just confirmed that it has agreed to acquire George Lucasâ Lucasfilm Ltd, including all rights to the Star Wars franchise. The companies have also announced a 2015 release for Star Wars: Episode VII. The stock and cash transaction is worth an estimated $4.05 billion, and a conference call is going on right now to discuss the deal.
âLucasfilm reflects the extraordinary passion, vision, and storytelling of its founder, George Lucas,â said Disney chairman and CEO Bob Iger in a release announcing the deal. âThis transaction combines a world-class portfolio of content including Star Wars, one of the greatest family entertainment franchises of all time, with Disneyâs unique and unparalleled creativity across multiple platforms, businesses, and markets to generate sustained growth and drive significant long-term value.â
But Disney is paying approximately half of the consideration in cash and issuing approximately 40 million shares at closing based on Disneyâs stock price on October 26. Lucasfilm is 100% owned by Lucasfilm chairman and founder Lucas.
via UPDATE: BREAKING: ‘Star Wars 7’ Slated For 2015 Release As Disney Buys Lucasfilm – Deadline.com.
We’ll note that this deal is happening on a day that the New York Stock Exchange is closed, so the impact of such a huge announcement on Disney’s stock price is minimized.
A quick note: Avengers 2 is also scheduled for 2015. One wonders how scheduling for these two mega-blockbusters is going to shake out.
We’ll have more news as we know about it.
Episode 2 of The Shadow Fan Podcast is now live at http://theshadowfan.libsyn.com/the-case-of-the-shrieking-skeletons.
This episode Barry Reese takes a look at Dynamite’s upcoming Shadow comics, reviews the Dark Horse crossover between The Shadow & Doc Savage, talks about the 1994 movie novelization, and gets into some listener feedback.
Marvel Now! A new beginning for the Marvel Universe!
Those words are the title and tag line for Marvelâs latest universe direction and marketing approach. Seems a bit like the DC reboot to me, I could be wrong. I was⦠once.
Full discloser. I donât spend a great deal of time following the comic book industry. That is to say I donât make it a point to go to comic book websites, publishers websites or any of the zillion forums where people talk about what goes on in the industry. So, I donât know how much press or hype surrounds the Marvel Now agenda. If Iâm late to the party itâs because I simply donât pay attention to press or hype.
Given the stuff Iâve been able to pull off in my career you may find it strange that I donât follow the industry closely at all. I wonât bore you with my résumé but trust me, itâs impressive. Iâm mostly clueless as to trends or news in the industry and I plan to stay that way. My way of doing business works best for me if Iâm not influenced by what or who is hot.
As an example just about every mainstream publisher does comics these days. I put Simon & Schuster in the comic book businessâ¦in 1996. One of the reasons I was able to do that deal was because I donât pay attention to trends, I pay attention to the idea and where would be the beat place to exploit that idea.
Disco was a trend, Hip-Hop was a movement created by ignoring what was popular at the time and which music now dominates the planet?
Hereâs a hint, KC and The Sunshine band are not represented.
I visit ComicMix a few times a week but just to read the columns; any news I get is because I see something on the site that just screams to be read. ComicMix is how I learned about the DC reboot, Before Watchmen and Marvel Now.
Incidentally, I thought I would hate Before Watchmen and love the DC reboot. I actually like some of the Watchmen books and the DC reboot was for the most part cool, but did I love it?
Nah.
Regardless of what I thought of the books I knew and I said the reboot would be a success and it was, big time. I was sure it would be effective because of the buildup which, after I was aware of the reboot, I noticed everywhere and the originality of the concept didnât hurt either.
But, hereâs the thing, it wasnât original, far from it. That particular kind of event has been being done for â all DC did was changed the âhook.â
Marvel is not ripping off DC vis-Ã -vis a universe reset; they are following DC with a new hook for their books.
I write for television as well as mainstream publishers. Hereâs a little of what Iâve learned as a television creator.
Very few things are new.
Consider these classic TV shows: Father Knows Best, Eight is Enough, The Partridge Family, The Brady Bunch, Charles in Charge, Home Improvement, Modern Family, The New Normal, The Cosby Show.
All of the above are based on the same premise essentially they are the same show, to produce a ânewâ idea the creators simply changed the hook.
The Cosby Show was pitched like this, âitâs Father Knows Best except the family is black.â They changed the hook. Now you can take any of the above shows and do the same thing.
Some require changing more than one hook but you get the idea.
The Partridge Family is the Brady Bunch except they sing. Home Improvement is The Cosby Show except the family is white. Etc, etc, etc.
Marvel Now is DCâs new 52 except itâs Marvelâ¦Now!
Look, redoing comic book universes is not new. Publishers have been doing it for decades on a smaller scale usually just rebooting a character. DC and Marvel did universe overhauls in the 80s and have been doing it ever since. DC with the Crisis series and Marvel with Secret Wars.
DC came out of Crisis with one earth and Marvel came out of Secret Wars with a black Spider-man, sort off.
DCâs New 52 was a brilliant move because they changed the hook on everything. Universe overhauls staring with a mini-series or one title were always implied to span the entire universe but DC went ahead and said it out loud and kept saying it so the age old universe overhaul was now something bold, new and that seemed to never have been done before.
Why?
Because of the way DC presented it. You call something ânewâ enough times and even if you have seen it a million times after a while you start believing the hype.
I have no dog in the fight between the New 52 and Marvel Now. Neither company is writing me a check these days so speaking as just a fan I hope the Marvel Now stuff is great.
A lot of people are going to think Marvel ripped off DC with this idea, they didnât. The idea is not new. Rather or not Marvel was motivated by the success of the New 52 Iâm sure that played a part in it but that is just par for the course in comics and in a few years it will happen again on some level.
Meantime, Dark Horse, Image and IDW are not thinking about âuniverse overhauls,â they are thinking about original content. Those publishers are doing some great work, or as we say in the hood, those publishers are off the hook.
WEDNESDAY: Mike Gold Wants You Off Your Ass
Okay, if you can read this message, post in comments and let us know you’re okay. We know various ComicMix people from Maryland to Michigan to Manhattan are without power, and we want to hear from you.
Even if you’re not a regular poster here, check in so that your friends and/or fans know you’re okay. If you’re a comic store in the affected area, feel free to post and tell us how your store is holding out. (Jim Hanley, I’m looking at you.)
Never let it be said that I wonât change my mind if circumstances change. In that vein, Iâm starting todayâs column with a little addition to last weekâs thoughts on Arrow.
 (Warning: Spoilers ahead!)
After writing about how things in the first two episodes seemed too crowded and rushed, and how I wish theyâd slow down a bit and also give Arrow a few challenges to the thus-far routine of âOllie targets bad guy, Ollie triumphs over bad guy,â Arrow turned around and gave me exactly what I was asking for. Sure, I still wish theyâd taken more time to mine the experience of the first few days/weeks of his return from nowhere (sort of like how Elementary managed not to pile on every revelation about Holmesâs and Watsonâs pasts and presents right up front, as I mention in my Elementary review here). And I still think the voiceovers are overly melodramatic, and in fact may be the thing thatâs jarred me out of enjoying the show the most so far; but it feels like with episode three, the show is now hitting its stride.
For one thing, they actually gave Arrow an adversary worth a few minutes time, i.e. Deadshot, who throws Ollie off his game and wings his bodyguard, Dig. True, Ollie gets the easy upper hand by using his standing as, apparently, a captain in the Russian mob (eh??) to find Deadshot, and then takes him down reasonably quickly â but at least it wasnât all smooth sailing this week. For another, they introduced a new step in Ollieâs playboy disguise â opening a nightclub to cover his secret base â without resolving it magically in one episode (I was half expecting the final scene to be opening night at the club or something). And finally, theyâve slowed their roll on the character drama to what feels like a more manageable and real life pace, focusing mostly this episode on Arrow beginning to build a bond of trust with Detective Lance (woo!) and Thea being a willful teen headache to everyone around her. Plus there was a bar fight that involved Laurel beating the crap out of a dude, which was killer and by far my favorite scene of the episode.
Happily, it looks like they may also be giving themselves an in to address the voiceover issue, by giving Arrow a confidante in the wounded Dig (and just in time too, as my friends and I were beginning to suggest other possible solutions, such as Arrow getting a new sidekick, Quiver. He would look like this). I hope so, as that could introduce more humor or banter into the show. Iâd like to see the grimness tempered with an occasional sense of adventure and fun, as well as more of an open emotional connection to someone from Ollie, and maybe with Dig knowing his secret, that will come to pass.
Until then, Iâll keep watching, and amusing myself by trying to spot the new extreme form of exercise Ollie does each episode (this time, it was lifting a ridiculous amount of weight via a pulley system-thing). Iâm hoping theyâll keep including those, so I can turn them into a game like spot-the-pineapple in Psych. Iâm also hoping the next Easter egg for comics fans is a character named OâNeil (or possibly Denny?) after ComicMixâs very own Dennis OâNeil. Câmon, writers! Iâm sure an absent-minded Perfesser character would come in handy for exposition and the like. Do it!
 (End of spoilers!)
In other news, Halloween is just around the corner, which brings me great joy and the usual expectation of going to parties where no one recognizes my costume. Just kidding! I guess Iâm still slightly bitter about the time I went out in Georgetown as Black Canary and exactly zero people got it (although there were three votes for Lady Gaga since I wasnât wearing pants. Sigh.) I canât complain too much about that, though, because I had fun with it, and it did inspire this awesome sketch by amazing comics artist John K. Snyder III. Yay!
Despite the Philistine-like character of some mundanes in DC, as an adult and convention costumer I love that Halloween provides an opportunity for all the local geeks to strut their stuff without (much) comment from everyone else. Sure, when I go out tomorrow night, I expect the usual round of gangsters, zombies, “sexy” whatevers, and that guy who always shows up dressed as himself with a nametag. But Friday night on the Metro I ran into a matched pair of Trekkies, and they were swiftly followed by a full-grown Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle. And nobody in this usually stuffy town blinked an eye â or at least, if they did, you could tell by the look in said eye that they were admiring the costumes, not sneering at them.
Given that when I’m on my home turf my life is caught up in my full-time professional job, my professional commitments, and more, I don’t get to do as many local geek things as I’d like – and a lot of my genre friends are folks I’ve met at cons, and live far away. So it’s nice to have the reminder that actually, there are a lot of locals who love the same things I do (and to maybe meet some of them as we’re making the rounds, nerd flags flying high). It makes my geeky little soul happy to be out and about in the neighborhood, shining that geek light with costumes I made for conventions, even if most of the people out there don’t know who Iâm supposed to be because itâs a comic book character donât any of you people at this dance club read comics geeeeez.
Therefore, I plan to keep on representinâ for us comics fans at Halloween this year with the Arkham City Harley Quinn costume I described the construction process for in an earlier column and made for Dragon*Con, which turned out like this, in case anyone was wondering (with bonus Lego Poison Ivy!). And happily, my friend actually discovered that the club we’re planning to go to has the perfect theme – Haunted Mental Ward – so for tomorrow night, I went the extra mile (okay, inch) and also made this. Iâm hoping that this year, at least a few people get my costume; but the funny thing is that, if they donât, I kind of donât care. Because Halloween is a fun time to go out wearing whatever the hell you want and have some fun with it, and that’s exactly what I plan to do.
What about the rest of you? Any exciting Halloween plans? Great costumes? Feel free to share in the comments (with pictures! Pictures are great!) and I hope that everyone has a fun, and safe, and slightly spoooooky Halloween!
And until next time, Servooooooo Lectiooooooo!
TUESDAY AFTERNOON: Michael Davis Pontificates
WEDNESDAY MORNING: Mike Gold Hands Out Marching Orders
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Since the day DOCTOR NO exploded on the screen, the fates and fortunes of James Bond has been in the hands of the Brocceli Family, first with Albert “Cubby” Brocceli and now his daughter Barbara. We sat down with Barbara to talk about the rich history of Bond and how they work out each detail from tone of the story to the  Bond Girls, even before the cameras roll – plus G4 gets overhauled and Arnold is CONAN again – really?
The Point Radio  – 24 hours a day of pop culture fun for FREE. GO HERE and LISTEN FREE on any computer or on any mobile device with the Tune In Radio app - and follow us on Twitter @ThePointRadio.
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| Cover Art: Carter Reid |
Cold Fusion Media has released Space Eldritch as an ebook with a print edition to follow.
Press Release:
Your long wait is over — your nightmare has just begun!
Startling Stories meets Weird Tales in SPACE ELDRITCH, a volume of seven original novelettes and novellas of Lovecraftian pulp space opera. Featuring work by Brad R. Torgersen (Hugo/Nebula/Campbell nominee), Howard Tayler (multiple Hugo nominee), and Michael R. Collings (author of over 100 books), plus a foreword by New York Times bestselling author Larry Correia, SPACE ELDRITCH inhabits the intersection between the eternal adventure of the final frontier and the inhuman darkness between the stars.
Contents:
Foreword – Larry Correia
“Arise Thou Niarlat From Thy Rest” – D.J. Butler
“Space Opera“ – Michael R. Collings
“The Menace Under Mars” – Nathan Shumate
“Gods in Darkness” – David J. West
“The Shadows of Titan” – Carter Reid and Brad R. Torgersen
“The Fury in the Void” – Robert J Defendi
“Flight of the Runewright” – Howard Tayler
Contributors
Cover by Carter Reid.
Story samples for each can be read tale at www.coldfusionmedia.us/space-eldritch.
Space Eldritch is currently available as an ebook from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Smashwords. A print edition is coming soon.
Ron Perlman made one little boy’s wish come true when he showed up in his full Hellboy makeup and costume for a day of hanging out with his big screen hero. Seth Abramovitch reports:
Six-year-old Zachary had expressed to Make-A-Wish his desire “to meet and become Hellboy.” The boy is undergoing treatment for leukemia, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.
Enter Spectral Motion, the creature effects house that brought to life the many fantastical characters in Guillermo del Toro‘s Hellboy (2004) and Hellboy 2 (2008).
They in turn approached Perlman, who “loved the idea and donned the makeup once more,” Spectral Motion said on its Facebook page.
Perlman then underwent the four-hour makeup application procedure it takes to become Hellboy and shocked a delighted Zachary — who later got the opportunity to become a pint-sized Hellboy himself. More photos of the memorable encounter are posted on Facebook.
Now if someone can convince him to dress up as Vincent from Beauty and the Beast again, I’ll be thrilled.