Tagged: San Diego Comic-Con

Comics Links & Reviews

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Beaucoup Kevin thinks this (to your right) is the greatest comics panel of all time. (It’s possible…after all, malt does more than Milton can to justify Kirby’s ways to man.)

The Beat reports that Too Much Coffee Man will be debuting in a new form at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con: as an opera.

Todd Allen of Comic Book Resources collates all of the various statements about DC’s big Zudacomics world-domination scheme, and tries to explain what to expect from it.

The Nichei Bei Times asks the loaded question: what is manga?

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Bid on dinner with Joss Whedon at Comic-Con

There are some parties at San Diego that are impossible to get into. Sometimes, it’s better to get into a nice quiet upscale dinner, and even those can be amazing — I happened to be at one two years ago where the food was great and the stories were stunning.

But this might be the topper for the year: Joss Whedon (Astonishing X-Men, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Captain America’s surrender in Civil War) is auctioning off five seats at a dinner table with him at the San Diego Comic-Con this year. Bidding is up to over $4000 a seat with a week to go. Here’s a link to one of the seats, but check on eBay as there are five separate ones and eBay didn’t set this up as a Dutch Auction.

Dinner will be on July 27th in San Diego, and 100% of the proceeds will go to benefit Equality Now. Here’s Joss making a speech for them:

Hat tip: Heidi MacDonald.

Marvel Axes Friendly Neighborhood and Sensational Spider-Man

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According to our friends at Publisher’s Weekly, this November Marvel is cancelling Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man and Sensational Spider-Man. They’re replacing both titles with… Amazing Spider-Man.

Yep, Amazing will be coming out three times a month. This one-ups the original Captain Marvel’s twice-a-month release schedule, back in the 40s. But it does beg the question of whether Marvel will follow Mad Magazine‘s lead back in the 1960s by publishing three annuals each year.

An announcement will be made at next month’s San Diego Comic-Con as to how they’re going to juggle the talent workload.

One wonders why Marvel doesn’t just bite the bullet and make Amazing Spider-Man a weekly.

Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved. Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved. Artwork copyright Marvel Characters. All Rights Reserved.

Supergirl To Fly In Smallville

Well, it turns out Clark Kent won’t be the first flying Kryptonian to inhabit the Smallville teevee series. According to TV Guide, the show’s producers are casting about to fill the role of Kara, who will appear in about half of this coming season’s shows. They hope to show the new actress off at the San Diego Comic Con.

Girls on guys

girlsguide-1081020Via Heidi at The Beat, the newest Friends of Lulu anthology has been formally announced.

The Girls’ Guide to Guys’ Stuff has a whole bunch of contributors both new and well-known, from A (Elizabeth Argull) to Y (Shayna Yates) — sorry, no "Z" surnames spotted — with each contributor presenting her take on "men and their interests."  I have mixed feelings about this antho, mostly awe and jealousy, as it’s the first FoL effort in which I won’t have a story because I just couldn’t think of one.  So I’m really looking forward to seeing what all these fine women have come up with!

If you click on the above link you can preorder the book, which will also be in stores in July in time, one presumes, for Lulu’s annual appearance at the San Diego Comic Con.

RIC MEYERS: The Thai’s have it

ric-meyers-100-7603117 As a contributor (audio commentaries, on-camera interviews, liner notes, and packaging copy) to more than three hundred DVDs in America and Asia, IÂ’’ve always wanted a source for what ComicMix is now allowing me to do — review DVDs specifically on the quality of their extras (audio commentaries, makings-of, et al). When deciding upon which DVDs to buy and which to rent, that’Â’s often the deciding factor.

All too often in DVD reviews, the extras are simply listed, which is misleading at best, since IÂ’’ve suffered through dry, taciturn, frustrating commentaries from a star-studded roster (the pre-ultimate edition The Spy Who Loved Me), but also reveled in funny, enlightening, seemingly drunken revelries (Conan the Barbarian). And even in the most prestigious publications, the critics get bogged down in their opinions of the films in question, leaving precious little copy for the quality of the extras accompanying them on the disc.

But enough raison dÂ’’etre. Now itÂ’s time for shameful confessions. Naturally, I wanted to fill this first edition with insightful analysis of the most famous, anticipated DVDs on the market, but find myself presently concerned with quirky titles many of you might not have even heard of.

So, what to do, what to do: detail the flowing bounty of extras to be found on the consistently entertaining but hardly hilarious Night at the Museum or well-made but uninvolving Dreamgirls, or tell you about the demented delights of Thai cinema?

Well, given that this site is called ComicMix, and IÂ’’m best known for Jackie Chan comics and my annual three-hour San Diego Comic-Con Superhero Kung-Fu Extravaganza, IÂ’’m going for the stuff thatÂ’s as exhilarating and under-reported as comic books. Staggering into video shops this week are some DVDs that will either have you trawling for Thai flicks forever or keep you from seeing another ever again.

born2fight-8833677 More accessible and superheroic is Born to Fight (Dragon Dynasty [The Weinstein Co.] Two-Disc Ultimate Edition), which is flailing feverishly to get out of the shadow of ThailandÂ’s most famous and popular action export (Thai Warrior, aka Ong-Bak). The same fearless stunt crew worked on both films, but the latter starred Muy Thai boxing great Tony Jaa, whoÂ’s attitude and strength mirror Bruce Lee while his acrobatics and films crib from Jackie Chan’Â’s homework.

In order to differentiate itself from Tony, the Born to Fight crew decided to create even sicker, and more bone-breaking stunts, while catering to Thai patriotism, in a plot that has a village overrun by nuke-carrying terrorists on the same day itÂ’s being visited by the Thai Olympic team. The discÂ’s main extra — an hour-long behind-the-scenes documentary – lays it all out in loving, if repetitive, detail, with many interviews and glimpses at the set-ups for the insane stunts.

It’Â’s hard not to marvel at the filmmakersÂ’ passion, love for Thai tradition, and the crewÂ’s willingness to risk their lives to gain America and AsiaÂ’s respect. The result is a flick that balances goofy and great (featuring one stomach-turning moment of near-suicide as a stuntman nearly gets ground up under a tractor-trailerÂ’s wheels). (more…)

The evolution of the comic book

Hard as it may be for some of us NYCC-centric folks to believe, comic book events are also happening outside of our little enclave.  Take Northridge, for instance, whose CSU branch’s Oviatt Library features a new exhibit starting this coming Monday mapping the evolution of the comic book.  The show’s curator, university archivist Tony Gardner, notes that comcs "have a very interesting history, and I’m trying to tell that history using our collection from the 1930s to the 1990s," with particular attention given to Senator Estes Kefauver, who led the public hearings on comic books in 1954. 

The exhibit runs through August 3, in case any San Diego Comic-Con attendees want to travel up the coast this summer…

Stardust reappears

Catch it whilst you can! Neil Gaiman reports that the more-or-less authorized Stardust movie website is back up. Stardust, of course, ties into Stardust the graphic novel by Neil and artist Charles Vess. Neil has also announced that Paramount has moved up the official release date of the Stardust movie to August 10 of this year. Considering the San Diego Comic-Con International is on July 26-29, I should think a debut showing there isn’t entirely out of the question.

And speaking of works by Neil, IESB’s Robert Sanchez asked director Joel Schumacher yesterday which comic book character he’d most love to tackle. “The response – Neil Gaiman’s Sandman!”

SDCC Hotels Sold Out

Heidi MacDonald covers the impossibility that is hotel booking for the San Diego Comic Con International. Congratulations for being one of the few to score your room of choice, Heidi! Although that doesn’t really make sense, does it, if they’re all sold out (here today, gone two hours later!). Erm, how about, congratulations on being one of the many who got lucky!