Archive for August 19, 2007
You’re not from around here, are you?
August 19, 2007At the Horror Roundtable this week we’re recommending good foreign horror movies. Here’s a completely NSFW tip as to what mine was.
Quote of the day
August 18, 2007Beginning with [Indiana Jones and the Temple of] Doom, [Steven Spielberg] begins a process of apologizing for disturbing his audience – outside the film at first, but internalizing these dual impulses *within* the films as he continues.
—Jeffrey Allen Rydell in the comment thread for Damian Arlyn’s analysis of Temple of Doom, part of his “31 Days of Spielberg” blogathon.
I Can Has Comix?
August 18, 2007(I’m back, back in the New York groove.)
This week in the hotseat at my regular Wizard interview column: Jeffrey Brown of Incredible Change-Bots and sundry autobiographical graphic novels fame. Sex is discussed.
Gone fishing
August 10, 2007If by “fishing” you mean “to Jamaica.”
Back in a week or so.
Make Mine Marvel
August 9, 2007Pay a visit with me, won’t you, to the House of Ideas as I review Criminal, Daredevil, Nova, Powers, World War Hulk: Front Line, and X-Factor in this week’s Thursday Morning Quarterback at Wizard.
(Additionally and for the record, I loved B.P.R.D. and Batman, and New Avengers and Green Lantern and The Incredible Hulk were fun too.)
Man of Action
August 8, 2007Gary Frank is one of my favorite superhero artists. He gives his characters a realistic but heightened physicality and an intensity in their eyes that connotes both potential violence and, well, sex appeal (for both sexes). We’ve got a ginchy gallery of Gary Frank sketches for his upcoming run on the Superman title Action Comics over at Wizard–take a look.
Mis/appropriation
August 8, 2007On his blog, Paul Pope has posted a quote from Frank “Dune” Herbert’s son Brian about how upset his father was over the (ahem) similarities between his work and George Lucas’s later, much more successful Star Wars. It got me thinking in a way that’s sort of in direct opposition to the way I’ve been thinking about a lot of art lately.
This is something I’ve gone into on the blog before: Basically, a sometimes-writer and a frequent consumer of fiction, I’m a very big fan of what I think of as “the art of enthusiasm”—the magpie approach of constructing your own little mythos or whatever based on elements of other stories that you really really enjoy. That’s why I like that the He-Man/Masters of the Universe toys and cartoons were an incoherent mish-mash of sci-fi, fantasy, pulp and superhero conventions; they just took everything awesome and jammed it together. That’s also why I like Kill Bill, or Scott Pilgrim, or The Immortal Iron Fist*, or Star Wars itself, and so on. And it’s not just fiction. The same principle probably applies to Bowie throughout his career, latching on to whatever music had him psyched at the time and then moving on when he felt like it, as well as really really sample-heavy late-80s/early-90s hip-hop. So on the one hand I’d say that a big part of the appeal of Star Wars is that Lucas took all the stuff he loved—Flash Gordon, Carlos Castaneda, Dune, the Fourth World, drag racing, Joseph Campbell, World War II dogfighting movies, 2001—and jammed it together. Of course the downside is when you appropriate from a specific-enough source that it’s recognizable, even if it’s in a different context or surrounded by enough other elements that it’s just part of a patchwork. It’s a fine line aesthetically and morally as well as legally. I think it’s likely that both sides are right—it’s a perfectly valid artistic approach, and it’s perfectly valid to be upset if it’s your work being appropriated.
My yapping aside, click the link to see a badass Paul Pope drawing of a Tusken Raider sandperson.
Barker up the wrong tree?
August 7, 2007In a new interview with Ain’t It Cool News’ Quint, Clive Barker says a lot of things to inspire confidence in the upcoming Midnight Meat Train adaptation–I mean, referencing Weegee is a good sign, I would say. But at the same time he says he has no idea if the Hellraiser remake is going forward. Actually, now that I think about it, I’m not sure if that’s bad news or good. Ah well, go read.
Just because you’re paranormal don’t mean they’re not after you
August 7, 2007Check out this unbelievably awesome original art spread of the B.P.R.D. by Guy Davis and Dave Stewart over at Wizard. It’s an illustration for a character guide we did for this thrilling Hellboy spinoff series, which in my opinion has surpassed its source.
The guy from TV on the Radio is wearing a PaperRad/Ben Jones T-shirt
August 6, 2007Premature T-shirt blogging! Check this beauty out! (You can sorta see it behind the guitar and the beard.)
As made by the great Buenaventura Press. I eyed this covetously at MoCCA this summer, but couldn’t bring myself to spend $60 on a T-shirt knowing what I tend to do to the things. My loss is avant-rock’s gain!
The Blot
August 6, 2007If you care about horror in comics, you really ought to read this Tom Spurgeon interview with Tom Neely, author of the new graphic novel The Blot. The Blot contains some of the most unnerving and original horror imagery I’ve seen in comics all year, including my favorite spread of the year thus far.
Elements of style
August 6, 2007In the comment thread in the Midnight Meat Train image post below, Bruce Baugh points out the striking and obviously thoughtful composition of the image, leading me to note what a pleasant surprise it is any time I come across an image from a horror film (let alone a promotional image for a horror film) that has any kind of panache. I’ve thought of this the last several times I went to the mall and saw this poster for the werewolf flick Skinwalkers hanging up:
The leading-less font, the white background, the off-center placement of the title, the image composition–gorgeous. I hold out no hopes for the film itself, of course, but man, this was money well spent. Comparisons to the almost confrontationally dull and generic Dark Is Rising The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising poster are most instructive.
Throwing darts in lovers’ eyes
August 5, 2007Scott Pilgrim artist Bryan Lee O’Malley just posted this gorgeous David Bowie sketch he drew for me at MoCCA. I’ve got a lot more where this came from, actually; watch this space.
Check the sidebar
August 5, 2007I’ve fixed some long-dead links and added several interviews you may not have read before, with everyone from Chuck Palahniuk to Drea DeMatteo to Underworld to Bettie Page. And don’t forget my trip to Loch Ness!
“His blood, on the floor. It brought me back.”
August 4, 2007This week’s Horror Roundtable asks if we ever drifted away from the genre, and what brought us back if so. The responses are fascinating. It may be my favorite Horror Roundtable so far.
Come on ride the train, and ride it
August 3, 2007Another very, very cool image of Vinnie Jones as Mahogany from The Midnight Meat Train. I’ve heard great things about the footage shown at San Diego Comic-Con from a friend who was there. Hope springs eternal. (Via Bloody Disgusting.)
I Can Has Comix?
August 3, 2007The latest installment of my interview column is up, with Angry Youth Comix‘s Johnny Ryan. If you’ve ever wondered about the inspiration behind Blecky Yuckerella, Loady McGee, and Sinus O’Gynus, I’ve got you covered.
Friday T-shirt blogging
August 3, 2007I can’t decide which of these genuinely amazing T-shirts from Rich Juzwiak’s Poison concertgoer photogallery I love more. God damn ziggety zam do they hit my crass T-shirt sweet spot: tacky, funny, yet not racist, misogynist, or otherwise offensive, and with awesome no-nonsense fonts.
Which do you like better?
I love this even though I also love disco.
I hear you knocking, brother.
Baby, everything is alright, Uptight, outta sight
August 2, 2007My thoughts on the new issue of Jordan Crane’s Uptight, as well as World War Hulk, New Avengers: Illuminati, Justice Society of America, Conan and the Midnight God, Detective Comics, The Exterminators, and Iron & the Maiden can be found–where else?–at Wizard’s Thursday Morning Quarterback.
I get less and less excited about this
August 2, 2007First that horrendous trailer, and now the news that the film adaptation of The Dark Is Rising is now called The Seeker: The Dark Is Rising for some reason. Jimmy crack corn and I don’t care.