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Review: All Good Things

Kirsten Dunst is a strong actress in need of a breakthrough part to live up to the promise she showed in her earlier work. [[[All Good Things]]] should have been that production, but the troubled film, out on Blu-ray this week from Magnolia Home Entertainment, failed her and the audience thanks to director Andrew Jarecki staying on the surface throughout the story of a marriage gone wrong. Jarecki is a documentarian best known for [[[Capturing the Friedmans]]] and he intended this movie to be based on the true life story of Robert and Kathleen Durst.

Robert Durst was the second son of the powerful Seymour Durst who ran the Durst Organization, which own lucrative, if shady, real estate in Times Square. In fact, the film suggests the Dursts were the reason the center of midtown remained squalid for so long was because they were resistant to change, butting heads with City Hall. Durst married dental hygienist Kathleen when she was just 19 and knew little about her husband’s tortured past. In 1982, she vanished and the manhunt sent Robert running. He has been implicated in several killings and his clear psychological issues made ripe fodder for a storyteller.

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Lois Lane, Girl Reporter

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This may be one of the best proposals I’ve heard in a while– which of course means that DC will have to be shamed into actually doing it.

Here a pitch for Lois Lane, Girl Reporter illustrated young adult novels written by Dean Trippe, with art by Daniel Krall.

Growing up with two younger sisters, I’ve often found myself attracted to cool female leads whose stories I could share with them (Nancy Drew, Veronica Mars, etc.), but while the superhero industry has always done good by me in providing excellent male heroes (chief among them, Batman and Superman), its treatment of their similarly iconic female heroes like Wonder Woman, Supergirl, and Batgirl has always been mixed at best. Too often these spandex-clad heroines have been marketed towards post-adolescent men rather than to their own gender. There’s room for this in the spectrum of superhero fiction, of course, but without a positive female role model for me to share with my sisters, that they could see themselves in, they both grew up with only a portion of my comics fandom. (Don’t get me wrong, they both still dig Batman!)

But then I found a secret window into the DCU that I don’t think anyone else knows about: Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, Lois Lane…at eleven years old.

At eleven years old, Lois has discovered her calling: investigative journalism. She sets out to right wrongs and help out her friends. This series explores Lois’s character, reveals her surprising early influence on the future Man of Steel, and introduces fun new elements into this enduring character’s back story.

In each book, Lois will tackle a problem or mystery affecting the members of the community she finds herself in as she travels around the country. The investigations in this series will not be mystical or supernatural (though some characters may suspect such sources), but real world problems that Lois works to set right.

Read the entire proposal. Then ask why DC isn’t doing this one. Somehow, I don’t think Zack Snyder will find a way to work it into the next movie.

Mix March Madness, Round 4: Quarter-Finals Play-by-Play! Polls close in Four Hours!

comicmixmarchmadness550x681-8822691This month we took sixty-four popular webcomics and put them head to head in a single-elimination tournament. We’re now in round four– the Quarter-Finals!

We’re down to the Elite Eight… Penny Arcade, Kawaii Not, A Distant Soil, Gronk, Erfworld, Wondermark, Girls With Slingshots, and Questionable Content! Erfworld is continuing to clobber all comers, and the closest contest is between A Distant Soil and Gronk, with Gronk ahead by a 3-2 margin.

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Remember– polling closes at 11:59 Eastern Standard Time Saturday, March 26! That’s four hours from now, so get those votes in!

20th Promotes Black Swan DVD With Screenings

20th Century Fox is going all out to promote the Tuesday release of their hit Black Swan on DVD and Blu-ray. First, you can see what sort of Swan you are by checking out the Black Swan Experience, a fun interactive website.

On April 2, there will be interactive midnight screenings, The Black Swan Experience, April 2nd in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco and Chicago. Those living in these cities and interested, can find details here, which will redirect you to a dedicated RSVP site to print their free passes.

We salute the film and its star, who genre fans can next see this spring first in the comedy Your Highness and then May’s Thor.

VAN ALLEN PLEXICO AVENGED…ER…INTERVIEWED!

VAN PLEXICO-Writer/Creator/Publisher
by Chuck Miller, ALL PULP Staff Writer

AP:  Van, it’s good to have you in the interviewee’s seat at ALL PULP again!  In your view, are superhero comics a linear descendant of pulp adventure magazines, or do they represent different evolutionary tracks?

Van: Same genus, different species, maybe?  I think that a lot of the comics writers that came along and made superheroes (and superhero comics) big again in the 1960s and beyond would have been pulp adventure writers if they had been born a few years earlier.  The two have similar appeal, and (for the most part) similar audiences, but maybe slightly different flavors. And I also think comics have been able to go into a lot of different areas that the pulps weren’t, such as the whole “cosmic” phenomenon of guys like Kirby and Starlin and now Abnett and Lanning.  With a few notable exceptions, pulps tended to be more grounded in the real world, or in history, for the most part.


AP: Your affection for Marvel’s Avengers series is well known, and your own “Sentinels” series features a super-team. What is it about the team dynamic that appeals to you, both as a fan and as a writer? What are your thoughts on other teams, like DC’s Justice league or even Doc Savage’s Fabulous Five?

I like big casts.  I like lots of different characters rotating in and out of a story.  You tend to get the potential for lots of fireworks that way.  Of course, it’s nice to have a well-defined set of “core characters”– the few that pretty much always hang around the Mansion or the Satellite or Hall of Justice or what-have-you.  But beyond that core, it’s neat to see how other, diverse individuals interact with them–and with each other.  How will Character X get along with… the android?  the mutant witch?  the Amazon?  the dark loner?  the god?

As a writer, a big cast gives you a lot to work with, in terms of various powers as well as various personalities.  And it’s simply not as boring.  Get tired of writing the acrobat guy? Focus on the super-scientist or the armored guy or the radioactive lady–or bring in someone new. 

There’s plenty to appreciate about the Justice League, but–at least for me– the DC characters have always worked better individually than as a team.  They just don’t fit together well, at least for me.  I’d make an exception for the Legion of Super-Heroes, of course, because they were mostly created as a team and have always had that dynamic.

The Avengers are my favorites and always have been, partly because they seem to mesh together, story-wise, so well– even when the characters themselves are squabbling (or especially when they’re squabbling, because that’s when their real personalities come roaring out!).

AP: You’ve also tackled Sherlock Holmes. How far back does your interest in the Great Detective reach? Do you see Holmes as a sort of forerunner to the pulp heroes of the 1930s, and even the modern superhero?

Absolutely, because the one thing that Holmes and all of those later characters share is some sort of special ability that sets them apart from the average man and woman.  I think that’s one reason why things like “League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” have broad appeal within the comics community.  It’s not just the novelty of “Victorian super heroes”—it’s recognizing that these characters share that one key element with modern superheroes:  the “Extraordinary.” 

Watson really is the perfect foil, because he’s a normal guy (not a buffoon, as so many later interpretations made of him).  You need someone like Watson to relate the stories to the reader, because Holmes himself is so antisocial.  He’s not a likeable guy personally, but he’s terrific fun to follow as he does his thing.  He’s the original anti-hero superhero—you may not like him, but he’s the best there is at what he does!

When a couple of years ago Airship 27 offered  me the chance to write Holmes stories, it was one of those strange twists of timing where I had just the previous month or so finished reading the entire original Holmes collection, just for fun.  My brain was fully saturated with the style and structure of those stories.  Even so, they were extremely difficult to write, but enormously satisfying.


AP: Obviously, pulp in the 21st century isn’t going to be exactly like pulp in the 1930s. There’s a whole different perspective, and more than half a century of scientific and cultural progress. There was a certain simplicity and innocence to those early stories that one cannot really take seriously today, as a reader or a writer. What are your thoughts on that?

I think that as modern pulp writers, we have to be very careful.  As you say, there are elements to the classic pulps that simply cannot be replicated today—and shouldn’t be.   Conversely, a big part of what we’re doing is trying to recreate at least something of the experience of reading a classic pulp. We want to give the readers that feeling you would have gotten by reading the classics in their day.  It’s a tricky proposition.  The best modern pulp writers can pull it off. 

AP: What led you to this particular kind of storytelling? What do you find attractive about heroic adventure? What is it you want to convey to your readers that can be done better in this genre than any other?

I want to tell stories that are fun, that are successful as fiction, and that incorporate ideas that are important to me.   I work extremely hard on them, writing and rewriting.  I spend a great deal of time and effort on the “musicality” of words and phrases and sentences and paragraphs, inserting as much of a lyrical nature as I can get away with.  It is very important to me that stories “sound” good to the ear, as well as being good stories in general.

I study other writers’ work constantly, tearing it apart to figure out what they did that worked so well and sounded so good.  I read in a very wide range of genres and styles, from Japanese poetry to science fiction to pulp noir and crime fiction to British nautical and historical adventures, as well as history, politics, economics, and then superhero comics.  I think every bit of it helps—it all goes into the mental hopper, and you never know what will conglomerate together and come out.

For the Sentinels books, as an example, I want to tell a huge, vast saga that covers many worlds and covers centuries of time. As a kid, I was utterly enthralled by the big, brain-melting conglomerations like Jack Katz’s FIRST KINGDOM, where cavemen and robots and mutants and starfleets all coexist and interact, or Jim Starlin’s “Metamorphosis Odyssey,” blending science and magic and hordes of aliens and the death of galaxies.  Thus you will find that kind of thing in the Sentinels books.  I love stuff like “Babylon 5,” where the very fate of the galaxy hinges on the decisions of a few individuals at key moments in history, played out across this epic backdrop.  To do that as an actual comic book would have taken me a hundred years.  As novels, I can fit a stack of comics installments into each novel, and move the big story along—while also digging much deeper into the heads and the motivations of the main characters than comics would generally allow, given limited space.  It all sort of became pulp when I started actually writing the stories and that was the natural form they took, right from the start.

AP: Human beings seem to have a natural affinity for storytelling, for a great many purposes. What kind of connection do you see, in cultural terms, between contemporary superhero/pulp fiction and epics like “The Odyssey” and “Beowulf?”

These are the cultural touchstones of each society, generation after generation.  They define what each society and each generation considers good or bad, right or wrong, desirable or detestable.  These kinds of stories, for every generation in every age, shape the very people that then go on to shape the society itself.  You have to have this—a society with no mythology is culturally destitute and rudderless.

AP: What do you like to read, and what have you taken from it over the years? Is there any writer or character in particular that inspired you and helped you shape your own narrative voice? What about movies, radio dramas and TV programs?

I am the product of a childhood spent reading whatever science fiction and comics I could get my hands on.  My reading preferences, as I have said, broadened out considerably as I grew up, but there’s little doubt the core of my narrative voice was shaped by the prose poetry and recurrent themes of Roger Zelazny.  I’m afraid there is a touch of his Corwin of Amber in nearly every main character I write.

Zelazny was aided and abetted in shaping my writing style and interests by the technical imagination of Larry Niven, the cosmic concepts of Jim Starlin and Jack Kirby, the superheroic alchemy of Doug Moench and Jim Starlin, and the voice and perspective of Carl Sagan.

In more recent years I’ve been heavily impacted by the writing of Patrick O’Brian (the Master and Commander series), Dan Abnett (elevating media tie-in fiction and military prose to an art form), James Clavell (big, sprawling Asian epics) and the prose styles of Donald E. Westlake (Parker) and Robert E. Howard (Conan and Solomon Kane).  They all have taught me valuable lessons about how to properly tell a story and tell it effectively and in an exciting fashion.

AP: You are a history professor as well as a writer of pulp/superhero adventures. These are obviously two subjects about which you are passionate, so there must be a few connections between the two. How does your interest in, and knowledge of, world history inform your fiction writing? You have said that you prefer big, epic sagas to short stories. What is the connection there, between the writer of
fiction and the professor of history?

Probably the main connection and appeal for me is in digging around in the background of big, important historical events and being able to root out the various intertwined causes—why things happened, who caused or contributed to them, what the consequences were, and why.  Once you have done that a few times as a historian, you start to see commonalities—causes and effects that are similar across different eras and different parts of the world.  Those kinds of things translate well into stories set in the future as well as in the past because, at their core, all stories are really the same, whether they’re set a long time ago or a long time from now.

AP: Suppose you were approached by the richest man or woman in the world, whoever that might be, and he or she offered to bankroll any project you wanted to do. You would have complete creative freedom, you could obtain the rights to any character or characters you wanted to use—there would be no legal obstacles, you could freely use anything you wanted, your own characters and/or any others—in a novel, comic book, TV series or movie. What would you do?

The Sentinels in every medium!  Seriously, I’d love to see a series of movies based on the Sentinels, in the vein of what Marvel’s doing with its Avengers-related characters right now.  I think it would work very well, because it’s as much a sort of big-budget space opera saga as it is a superhero story.

Lots of folks have asked about the possibility of seeing a comic book series based on the Sentinels, and I’m not opposed to the idea.  It does seem like a natural, since many of the main characters are essentially super heroes and super villains.  It’s not a big priority for me, though, at least for now, simply because I worry that converting them into comic books might cause them to kind of blend in and lose a big part of what (I think) makes them special; they might be seen as just another comic book super-team. 

The property would work well as a television series, I think—it would look a lot like “Heroes” (which I didn’t watch until after the first three books were finished), but with a serious cosmic angle; sort of “Heroes” meets “Babylon 5,” you might say.

As far as properties that don’t belong to me, I’d love to produce a live-action movie or TV series based on Roger Zelazny’s “Amber” novels.  I’ve even gone so far as to write an outline for a screenplay.  (I think it’s out there on my web site, somewhere.)  Corwin and his scheming royal brothers and sisters seem like a natural fit for an HBO series.  This needs to happen!

AP: You seem to always have a great deal going on. Have you got anything new coming up that you’d like to talk about?

I sure do, and I sure do.  First up, the premiere volume of Mars McCoy: Space Ranger just came out from Airship 27.  This is a very cool retro-SF throwback character in the vein of Flash Gordon and the Lensmen, complete with spaceships and blast-cannons and space pirates and robots.  I helped create the character’s supporting cast and I co-edited the book, so I’m certainly hoping it will find a large and appreciative audience.  The second volume, which I hope will be coming along soon, will contain a 45,000-word Mars McCoy novella that I wrote and that I think is one of my more entertaining efforts of the past couple of years.  For that one, I tried to channel Dan Abnett writing 1950s space opera as if it were Warhammer 40,000. We’ll see what people think of that!

The next volume in the Sentinels series, Stellarax, is very close to being finished.  I try to get one of these out every year, and the announced publication date for this one is July 12, 2011. We will see if I can meet that deadline.  This is going to be a big book—at least 100,000 words—and will wrap up the second major story arc of the series, called “The Rivals.”  It’s the most “cosmic” one yet, with vast, Kirby-esque space gods threatening to devour the Earth, in one fashion or another.  Our heroes are trapped in Earth orbit and have no clue how they’re supposed to deal with a menace on this scale—and that’s before the alien nano-virus shows up and starts turning everyone, human and alien and robot alike, into zombies!  Can’t wait to wrap it up and get it out to the growing Sentinels fan base and see what they think.  Chris Kohler returns with his signature interior art (I can hardly imagine a Sentinels book anymore without Kohler art accompanying it!) and Rowell Roque again supplies the fantastic cover—which completes a three-panel mural when you lay it and the two previous volumes down next to each other.

I also have a story in the upcoming Lance Star-Sky Ranger, Vol. 3 anthology, called “Thunder Over China.”  It was fun to get to play with Bobby Nash’s 1930s air-ace characters a little bit, and I think I got ol’ Lance into a pretty good fix. 

There are a bunch of other things simmering on the back burner, but that’s probably enough for now.  Make sure to give Mars McCoy a try, and look for the Sentinels in Stellarax, coming (I hope) in July!

Twitter Updates for 2011-03-26

Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy Granted New Life

Remember Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy movie? It was released 21 years ago, and as movies go, it was somewhat south of Gone With The Wind.

But according to a federal court in Los Angeles, Beatty retains the movie and teevee rights to Dick Tracy – because he appeared in his Dick Tracy costume on a teevee interview that was filmed in 2008.

That was the year Beatty sued the Tribune Company to prevent the owners from taking back the media rights after 18 years of dormancy. “The court found that Warren did everything that was required of him to retain the rights,” Beatty’s lawyer, Charles Shephard, said. Tribune spokesman Gary Weitman said, logically, “At the present time, we are reviewing the judge’s opinion and evaluating our options.”

The Dick Tracy newspaper strip, in constant syndication since 1931, was revitalized last week when artist Joe Staton and writer Mike Curtis took over the feature.

We at ComicMix now anticipate Mr. Beatty eventually returning to the role of Milton Armitage, the antagonist he played in the classic Dobie Gillis teevee series.

A BOOK A DAY DOUBLE HEADER-PART 2

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Dangerous Curves

Dangerous Curves
 

Named a Top 10 book of 2010!
“We were like dragonflies. We seemed to be suspended effortlessly in the air, but in reality, our wings were beating very, very fast.” – Mae Murray

“It is worse than folly for persons to imagine that this business is an easy road to money, to contentment, or to that strange quality called happiness.” – Bebe Daniels

 “A girl should realize that a career on the screen demands everything, promising nothing.” – Helen Ferguson

In Dangerous Curves Atop Hollywood Heels, author Michael G. Ankerich examines the lives, careers, and disappointments of 14 silent film actresses, who, despite the odds against them and warnings to stay in their hometowns, came to Hollywood to make names for themselves in the movies.

On the screen, these young hopefuls became Agnes Ayres, Olive Borden, Grace Darmond, Elinor Fair, Juanita Hansen, Wanda Hawley, Natalie Joyce, Barbara La Marr, Martha Mansfield, Mary Nolan, Marie Prevost, Lucille Ricksen, Eve Southern, and Alberta Vaughn.

Dangerous Curves follows the precarious routes these young ladies took in their quest for fame and uncovers how some of the top actresses of the silent screen were used, abused, and discarded.  Many, unable to let go of the spotlight after it had singed their very souls, came to a stop on that dead-end street, referred to by actress Anna Q. Nilsson as, Hollywood’s Heartbreak Lane.

Pieced together using contemporary interviews the actresses gave, conversations with friends, relatives, and co-workers, and exhaustive research through scrapbooks, archives, and public records, Dangerous Curves offers an honest, yet compassionate, look at some of the brightest luminaries of the silent screen. The book is illustrated with over 150 photographs.

A BOOK A DAY DOUBLE HEADER-PART 1

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Al Bowlly

Al Bowlly
 

Al Bowlly was Britain’s first pop singer, some say the world’s first, if you define pop singer as someone who stands in front of a band and sings the hits of the day strumming a guitar.  He rose to prominence in the decade before the Second World War, before the phrase “pop singer” had been invented, and has now become the voice of the 1930s as evidenced by the use of his recordings in films and TV drama set in that decade.  In fact, when it comes to British musical nostalgia of the 1930s, the biggest name worldwide is Al Bowlly.  During most of the 1930s, Al was Britain’s leading popular singer and was sometimes billed as the “Ambassador of Song.” 

However, during his career, Al never won the fame he deserved.  It is even said that he is more famous today than he was then, although he is now definitely recognized as Britain’s leading light in that era of popular song.  Even though the competition was good, Al was a head and shoulders above his nearest rivals when it came to his artistry and originality, but his popularity rating did not always reflect this.  He was renowned within the inner circles of musicians in the London music scene as “the man,” but to the contemporary public listeners in the early 1930s Al Bowlly’s name seemed almost a well-kept secret.

Blood of the Innocent, Dracula vs. Jack The Ripper. Art by Marc Hempel.

It’s Dracula Vs. Jack The Ripper as ‘Blood of the Innocent’ Gets Film Funding

Blood of the Innocent, Dracula vs. Jack The Ripper. Art by Marc Hempel.Variety reports that Blood of the Innocent, based on the graphic novel series setting Dracula against Jack the Ripper written by Rickey Shanklin & EZ Street and Lone Justice co-creator Mark Wheatley, drawn by Munden’s Bar artist Marc Hempel & Mark Wheatley, and published by Warp in 1985, is being funded as a full length feature.

Inferno has acquired underlying rights to the series and is funding development and production of the feature, which is being co-produced with Circle of Confusion. Jim Siebel, Marc Butan and Bill Johnson are producing for Inferno; Circle of Confusion partner David Engel and VP Stephen Emery are also producing along with Ksana Golod.

“Blood” has been in development at the production/management banner since last year. Breck Eisner (“The Crazies”) is attached to direct and Bill Marsilii (“Deja Vu”) is writing.

Congrats to Rickey, Mark, and Marc. Save us aisle seats at the premiere.