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Interview with Chris Wedge

Interview with Chris Wedge

A cinematic masterpiece just passed a major anniversary — a cutting-edge film showing a battle between light and dark that changed the way movies are made and the way movies are looked at, a film that still holds up after all this time. And while it’s often considered him to deride it, it laid the foundation for almost every movie in theaters today.

No, not Star Wars — I’m talking about Tron. And also talking about Tron, on the occasion of its 25th anniversary, is Oscar-winning Visual Effects producer Chris Wedge, talking about the progression from Tron to Ice Age and Robots. Scribe Media has the video.

(Oh, and speaking of accuracy and disclosure, my wife is an employee and shareholder of the Walt Disney Corporation, producer of Tron.)

Bring on the funny!

Bring on the funny!

By now you’ve heard about all the new teevee shows announced by the networks. Here’s some new Comedy Central shows you might be able to look forward to, as a while bunch of new shows are going to pilot:

Root of All Evil, a courtroom show in which comedians argue that their client is the root of all evil. The show would pit Paris Hilton against Dick Cheney, or chick flicks against video games. Lewis Back is the judge.

Held Up, in which a bank teller is held hostage by two teams of robbers and a comic version of the Stockholm syndrome ensues.

An animated Larry the Cable Guy show, as if Larry wasn’t animated enough. Here he’s the co-owner of a cable TV channel whose other owner would prefer to program classier fare.

Michael Ian Black Doesn’t Understand, starring you-know-who in a sketch show/

Night Writer from one-time Saturday Night Live head writer T. Sean Shannon.

The Watch List, which features material from up-and-coming Middle Eastern-American comedians.

According to TV Week, Comedy Central also has production deals in the works for David Alan Grier and JoKoy.

Did Pirates really beat Spider-Man worldwide?

Did Pirates really beat Spider-Man worldwide?

I held off on the breathless reporting on Pirates breaking all the records claimed in many weekend stories because I heard the numbers might be a bit suspicious, and it seems I had good reason to wonder. Nikki Finke has all the details:

First, I received a statement from Sony Pictures Entertainment, and then later today, a statement from Disney. Sony’s first: "While Disney and the filmmakers of Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End deserve their due on a remarkable opening worldwide, there are some irregularities in their claim regarding record-setting. There are at least two territories, Italy and France, where Buena Vista International opened the film on Tuesday —  in essence adding a seventh day of  grosses into Pirates‘ “six day record." While there may or may not be other territories that opened prior to Wednesday, we believe that as more and more day-and-date releases enter the marketplace, there should be a consistent standard in international box office reporting. This issue is larger than an opening week box office statistic. For the record, Spider-Man 3 grossed $418.1M in its first seven days of release worldwide with $256.7M generated from territories overseas and $161.4M accumulated in box office receipts from North America."

Now Disney’s: "By any measure, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End clearly and deservedly holds the new record for a six-day opening at the global box office. A limited number of evening previews were held in Italy and France prior to the official opening day in those countries, but the grosses from those previews amounted to only $1.4M of the total. In the international marketplace, it is customary and common practice to include evening previews in the following opening day numbers. We are enormously proud of Pirates record-breaking worldwide opening gross of $404M. We look forward to the film’s subsequent openings in China and India."

But the Disney statement still leaves a lot of questions unanswered: Did they hold previews in other countries? (Sony didn’t do previews for Spider-Man 3). How many screens in Italy constitute "limited". (It’s believed that P3 was on a "substantial" number of the top national screens.)

Sony’s anger comes after Disney announced its Pirates 3 "shattered" global box office records with an unprecedented 6-day opening of $404M and claimed a record international opening gross of $251M in 102 international territories on an unprecedented 17,500 screens as well. Disney reports record-breaking industry openings in 17 territories: Argentina, Ecuador, Holland, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Malaysia, Norway, Panama, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Taiwan, Ukraine, Venezuela.

Sony isn’t questioning P3‘s new domestic milestone of the all-time biggest 4-day gross for a Memorial Day or any holiday weekend of $139.8M. Just the foreign and global #s. (Domestically, the Jack Sparrow third romp lagged behind the Peter Parker third thriller: P3’s 4-day gross didn’t even beat SM3‘s 3-day weekend gross.)

Will anyone in the news media correct the misinformation they reported? Right after they report that Saddam Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11, I’m sure.

(Oh, and speaking of accuracy and disclosure, my wife is an employee and shareholder of the Walt Disney Corporation.)

Trailers, trailers everywhere…

Trailers, trailers everywhere…

The trailer. A long seen but woefully underappreciated art form. Now, they’re not only getting the recognition they deserve, but they’re becoming the movies they deserve.

First, we have the Golden Trailer awards, being held Thursday in New York (at NYU, no less, indicating what a lot of the Tisch Film School graduates are actually going to be doing with their degrees).

But now we’re talking about an entire movie of trailers. Eli Roth (Hostel) has anounced plas to do an entire movie filled with nothing but trailers for non-existent movies. The film would be called Trailer Trash and, like the segments directed by Edgar Wright and himself for Grindhouse, be fake trailers for fake movies. No main feature. “I want to make a movie like Jackass or Borat or Kentucky Fried Movie that’s just totally ridiculous, absurd and silly”, Roth told Rotten Tomatoes. And theoretically, it might even have– well, plot might be too strong a word, let’s try theme.

He might have a point. For years, ComicMix regular Robert Greenberger has been running his travelling trailer show at conventions, with nothing but trailers for upcoming films, and he’s gotten strong audience reactions every time– the trailers are often better received there than the movies are in theaters.

David Kelley, Thomas Schlamme on Mars

David Kelley, Thomas Schlamme on Mars

Variety reports today that David E. Kelley, creator of Ally McBeal, The Practice, and favorite among many ComicMixers, Boston Legal (among others) has hired Thomas Schlamme to direct the pilot for the American version of Life on Mars.

Schlamme previously worked on Sports Night, The West Wing, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, and Jack and Bobby, written by comic book guy Brad Metzler.  He also once inspired New York Times writer Joyce Wadler to devote an entire paragraph to how much fun it was to say his name ("Tommy Schlamme!").

The show is based on the BBC series about a time-traveling detective who gets stuck in the 1970s. 

Hamilton to pen Blake tale for Marvel

Hamilton to pen Blake tale for Marvel

Marvel has announced that author Laurell K. Hamilton, creator of the popular Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series of books from which the company (in conjunction with the Dabel Brothers) has adapted comics, will be writing an original story for its upcoming Anita Blake hardcover coming out in July.

The story "marks Hamilton’s comic book debut, as she presents her first story ever written for the comic book medium." Really good to see Marvel actively courting female authors, particularly the ones whose creations have spawned such popular and best-selling product for them.

Anakin diagnosed with borderline personality disorder

Anakin diagnosed with borderline personality disorder

A team of researchers declared this week that Anakin Skywalker, aka Darth Vader, suffers from a controversial mental condition and could use some time in a shrink’s office.

According to the authors, who reported their findings at the American Psychiatric Association’s annual meeting in San Diego, Skywalker meets the criteria for the condition: He has difficulty controlling anger, stress-related breaks with reality (after women in his life die or leave), impulsivity (dangerous pod racing), obsession with abandonment (those darn women again) and a "pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized by alternating between extremes of ideation and devaluation" (hello, Obi-Wan).

In another sign that he’s borderline, the authors argue that Skywalker suffers from an "identity disturbance." After all, he did become Darth Vader after being "very unsure of who he was and what he wanted."

Personally, I suspect that when he was in such an unsettled condition, this didn’t help matters either…

ELAYNE RIGGS: On owning one’s errors

ELAYNE RIGGS: On owning one’s errors

"Sorry seems to be the hardest word" – Bernie Taupin

As I alluded to in last week’s column but didn’t have the space nor desire to go into at length, the comics blogosphere isn’t the only place wherein disagreements among feminists have cropped up lately.  From time to time debates occur as well amongst political liberal and progressive feminist bloggers who otherwise agree on many major principles and actions.  The latest example is the talk about whether blogger Jessica Valenti’s new book Full Frontal Feminism is inclusive enough of the experiences of women of color (certainly not an unfamiliar argument in the comics scene either, as Cheryl Lynn ably demonstrates).

The discussion is a bit involved for anyone coming into it without any background, although Feministe blogger piny has a helpful collection and timeline of sorts here), but I mainly wanted to talk about how Feministe’s Jill Filipovic posted to the critiques of her glowing review of Jessica’s book, as I think it’s a good example of how to graciously acknowledge when one realizes one has wronged others, and apologize accordingly.  You know, what we used to call civility.  The relevant excerpts appear at the end of this column — and that’s just her introduction! (You can read the whole thing here.)

Now granted, Jill is fairly well known and respected in the feminist blogosphere, but at the moment her real-world influence is somewhat limited. Can you imagine anyone in an actual position of power and privilege crafting that kind of a response?

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Did you know Dave Sim has a blog?

Did you know Dave Sim has a blog?

Neither did I. The creator of Cerebus the Aardvark has his own little space on the web called the Blog and Mail (presumably a take of on Canada’s leading newspaper, the Globe and Mail) with the same sort of commentary that he employed in the letter columns to Cerebus. We link to the site here on the off chance that people thought we were knee-jerk feminists.

In fact, if you look closely around the site, you can see all the pins from the verbal grenades.

And yet, there are always gems in his stuff:

I had had an idea for some visual comedy that could be accomplished in ten minutes or less (the Challenge of YouTube!) that involved me dressing up in a Green Lantern costume and announcing that I was running for President of the United States. That was the first 10-minute clip.

Ridiculous, of course. Dave wasn’t born in the US, and so he couldn’t be president.

Family Guy does Star Wars full length

Family Guy does Star Wars full length

Man, those Seths (Green and MacFarlane) just can’t get enough. First it’s the Robot Chicken Star Wars on June 17…

…and now word comes down that Family Guy will kick off its fifth season this fall with an hourlong episode that retells the "Star Wars" saga using "Family Guy" characters.

Lucasfilm has blessed the event, which has the Griffins acting out all the key scenes and narrative from Star Wars: Episode IV — A New Hope, or as we call it, Star Wars. Peter Griffin will play the role of Han Solo, Lois will appear as Princess Leia. Brian the family dog will serve as Chewbacca, while son Chris is Luke. R2-D2 and C-3PO will be handled by Cleveland and Quagmire, respectively, while creepy old guy Herbert plays Obi-Wan Kenobi. Stewie will be Darth Vader, of course.

But wait– shouldn’t Meg be playing Leia? I mean, Chris-Meg is creepy enough, but Chris-Lois… ewwww.