Quantcast
Channel: Flickering Myth
Viewing all 7138 articles
Browse latest View live

First clip from The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey released

$
0
0
The world premiere of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey takes place tonight in New Zealand ahead of the film's release in just over two weeks, and to further build excitement for our impending return to Middle-earth, a first clip from the epic Tolkien fantasy has been released which sees Ian McKellen's Gandalf the Grey bestowing a familiar gift upon Martin Freeman's Bilbo Baggins - his trusty sword, Sting.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is the first of Peter Jackson's three-part prequel to The Lord of the Rings, and sees Ian McKellen's Gandalf joined by fellow Middle-earth veterans Cate Blanchett, Ian Holm, Hugo Weaving, Orlando Bloom, Christopher Lee, Andy Serkis and Elijah Wood. Also featuring in the enormous ensemble cast are Richard Armitage (Captain America: The First Avenger), Benedict Cumberbatch (Star Trek Into Darkness), Stephen Fry (Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows), Evangeline Lilly (Lost), Sylvester McCoy (Doctor Who) and James Nesbitt (Coriolanus).

Here's the 'sneak peek' first clip:


The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey hits cinemas on December 13th in the UK and December 14th in North America, while The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug is released on December 13th, 2013 and The Hobbit: There and Back Again concludes the saga on July 18th, 2014.

Ben Savage and Danielle Fishel confirmed for Boy Meets Word sequel

$
0
0
About a month ago it was said that Disney was developing a new series that would be a sequel to Boy Meets World, entitled Girl Meets World. Now it has been confirmed that both Ben Savage and Danielle Fishel, who played Cory and Topanga, will be reprising their roles for the new show.

Ben Savage revealed he would be returning via Twitter saying, "I’m going to be a father! Well, on TV at least. The Boy Meets World sequel is officially happening!” Meanwhile Danielle Fishel wrote a post to her Tumblr saying that she spoke with fellow castmates Savage, Will Friedle, Rider Strong, Williams Daniels and creator/producer Michael Jacobs before making her decision. She promises that they "will make GMW with the same honesty, innocence, and intelligence that you learned to expect from BMW.”

There's no word yet if any other cast members from Boy Meets World will return, although there seems to be a good chance if Fishel spoke with most of them before making her decision to return. Girl Meets World is still in early development, with Boy Meets World creator Michael Jacobs executive producing.

Grave Circumstances: Hugh Macdonald talks about Frankenweenie

$
0
0
Trevor Hogg chats with Hugh Macdonald about the visual effects found in Frankenweenie...


“Nvizible had previously worked with VFX Supervisor Tim Ledbury on Fantastic Mr. Fox [2009], Wes Anderson’s stop-motion film, and he approached us to work with him again on Frankenweenie [2012],” explains Hugh Macdonald who is a VFX Supervisor and the Head of Technology for the British visual effects facility.  “On Fantastic Mr. Fox, we got involved right towards the end of the post production period, helping out with some of the left-over shots that needed completing. Conversely, on Frankenweenie, we were involved from a far earlier stage; this gave us the ability to take a longer view of the work and to visit the set so to have a better understanding of how it was to be shot.”  Ledbury was able to visually articulate what he was looking for to Macdonald and his team.  “As someone who has a background as a matte painter, Tim was able to quickly put together rough digital paintings illustrating the look and palette of a shot. We were also working on a number of sequences and looks alongside his in-house team, which gave us ideal reference to match to. There were also a number of sequences where we came up with a number of look options ourselves, and submitted these both Tim Ledbury and Tim Burton [Alice in Wonderland] to decide on the final look.”


Hugh Macdonald
“There are a number of things that make visual effects on stop-motion more complex that traditional live-action – rigs and motion continuity,” says Macdonald.  “When you consider how a stop-motion film is made, any character or object that is not touching the ground, or has only minimal contact, a rig is needed to ensure that it stays in the same position in the shot. These rigs all need painting out in post. An extreme example of this in the work that we did is the shots with the sea monkeys climbing all over the telephone booth. Each sea monkey had its own rig, and while great care was made to ensure that the rigs blocked as little of the action as possible, this wasn’t always feasible;  we did have to re-build sea monkey legs or tails on a number of frames.  The other complexity is motion continuity. In a live-action film, if a ball is thrown the laws of physics dictate the path that it will follow, and any rotoscoping can make use of interpolation features. However, in a stop-motion film, this isn’t necessarily the case. The ball would have to be positioned every frame by hand; it is not always in the same place that physics would define it to be. Rather than rotoscoping keyframes and letting interpolation do a lot of the in-between work, we would often end up having to tweak the roto on every single frame. On the other side of this, when adding CG elements to a shot, for example the water splashes or the popcorn explosion, we would add a very slight randomisation to the position of each particle on each frame, giving it less of a smooth look.  One area where stop-motion does make some elements of visual effects easier is the lack of motion blur; this makes edges cleaner, and much more straightforward to key and rotoscope.”


“If anything the fact that the final result was to be black and white made our lives easier,” observes Hugh Macdonald.  “It was shot in colour, and we had the original colour footage to work on, which was essential for any shots involving green screens.   We also had the LUT that gave us what the final result was going to look like. When working on the shots, artists would have the ability to view the result in both colour and black and white. Their primary aim would be to ensure that the black and white version of the shot looked seamless, but having access to the original colour was a good indicator when elements of the shots weren’t quite sitting together properly.”  In regards to the visual research which had to be conducted, Macdonald remarks, “The style of the film had to come first and foremost. We had a lot of reference for the look of certain practical elements, and a lot of our work, for example the goop from the exploding sea monkey, was based on this. For the water that comes out of Sparky’s back when he is drinking from his water bowl, they had shot some tests which they liked the look of, but didn’t feel that it would be practical to get the motion of the water with Sparky jumping around. This reference formed the basis of our CG water.”


“Our biggest challenge on the film was the popcorn sequence,” states Hugh Macdonald. “This involves an over-filled popcorn machine that overflows and fills up a tent, populated with animated sea monkeys. The tent fills, expands and eventually bursts, showering popcorn and the ‘goop’ that the sea monkeys turn into all over the place.  The main challenge here was how to get the stop-motion popcorn that was inside the popcorn machine to transition to CG popcorn that would then fall around the sea monkeys, filling up the tent whilst still interacting with their movement. To achieve this, we built proxies of the sea monkeys and animated them to match the real sea monkeys. We then had a particle system consisting of a million particles, with various different types of popcorn instanced. These interacted with the sea monkeys, and came to rest on a floor that was animated up to simulate the popcorn piling up.  The goop, for both the tent explosion shot and the close-up of a sea monkey exploding, was another particle system that was meshed. Most of the particles were general ‘goop’, but a small proportion of them were made larger and stickier, to represent the pieces of popcorn inside the goop.  For the look of the goop, we had a practical reference shot of Bob having the goop run down his face. We used this to match the look and feel of our CG goop, including the translucency and viscosity.”


“The drinking sequence was the first one of these that we tackled,” reveals Hugh Macdonald.  “For this, we used a similar solution to the one we used for the goop – a meshed particle system, with a water shader. They had shot some practical water reference, which we were able to use as a look reference, and then created our dynamic system that would be controlled by Sparky’s movement, and splash onto the floor, leaving puddles and damp patches.  To give the final water effect, we ended up with four separate particle systems, each with a certain amount of interaction between them. The master system was the main stream of water in the air; to enhance where it came out of Sparky’s back there was also a spray pass which was a finer mist at the base. As the stream hit the ground it generated two new systems – the small splash, which only appeared for a few frames for each drop, and then the pool which appeared on the ground. The pools also interacted with Sparky’s feet whenever he stepped in them.  The swimming pool was done using a completely different method. We investigated a few solutions for it; including full-on fluid simulation, and generating 2D height maps and passing these through to 3D for the surface itself. The solution we eventually settled on was a 2D one, based on noise patterns and simulating reflections and refractions. This generic motion was then enhanced with ripples generated by any objects interacting with the surface, including the pole and the sea monkeys that Bob initially pours into the pool. For the shot in which the lightning hits, we used the same system that we had built for the water bowl sequence to generate the water splash.”


“The period of the film where the other children’s pets are all being brought back to life was one of the major parts of the film for us,” says Macdonald.  “Each pet’s resurrection had a different challenge for us, including the Sea Monkeys coming out of the swimming pool, which I’ve previously mentioned.  The turtle accidentally brought back with Miracle Gro which causes it to grow to a giant size, involved combining different scales of model especially for the shot where he crushes the shed.  When Weird Girl’s cat is zapped by the lightning, creating the cat/bat hybrid, our main task was to integrate the lightning effect for the sequence, plus the aftermath of the smoking bed. We had one artist who specialized in creating the lightning effect for all of the sequences that we worked on; he was able to quickly and easily add or tweak any lightning effect, giving us the flexibility to be able to quickly ramp up or down the effect to give the required result.  The last of the resurrection sequences that we were involved with was when Nassor brings his hamster back from its crypt. In the shots where we reveal the newly-resurrected hamster, we added dry ice elements rolling out of the entrance, and ensured that movement of the huge shadow that the hamster cast was accurately tied in with the far smaller hamster that appeared in the entrance.”


“My goal with these sequences was to make the environments subtle, and to ensure that nothing screamed ‘visual effect,’” states Hugh Macdonald.  “These sequences were all about the characters and the emotion of the scene, so our job was to ensure that the setting was seamless. In the final scene of the film, this involved dropping in a dark background and adding atmosphere to the beams from the car headlights. Nothing we did could look anything other than as if they had been able to shoot the whole scene for real, and this was forefront in my mind when we were working on it.”  Having to deal with stereo images made designing the visual effects more challenging.  “When a film is post-converted to 3D, it is filmed in 2D and then made 3D in post production, any visual effects shots need to go through a process that is known as ‘bag and tag’. This is when the layers that make up the shot are split out separately for the 3D conversion team; in a way that would make them easy to re-combine to form the final shot, but also allows the conversion team to add depth to each layer separately, and then recombine them to create the second eye. This process adds a certain amount of complexity at least when compared to traditional visual effects shots; if a shot is approached with this in mind, it can be composited in a way that allows for the bag and tag elements to be extracted.”  Reflecting on the $39 million production, Macdonald remarks, “It was a pleasure working with Tim Burton, Allison Abbate and Tim Ledbury. Working on a film like Frankenweenie is ultimately satisfying and rewarding because of the unique style of the director. To have been involved with this film, which has been a project in Tim Burton’s imagination for 30 years, was an honour. Thanks also to our amazing team at Nvizible, including VFX Producers Gil James and Kim Phelan, CG Supervisor Martin Chamney, and all of the artists who worked on the film with us.”


Production stills © Disney.  All rights reserved.  Images courtesy of Disney and Nvizible.

Visit the official websites for Frankenweenie and Nvizible.  To learn more make sure to read Trevor's Tim Burton filmmaker profile, Freakishly Clever.

Many thanks to Hugh Macdonald for taking the time for this interview.

Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.

Doctor Who Christmas Special poster and image

$
0
0
The seventh season of Doctor Who might be on hiatus at the moment, but Matt Smith's Timelord will return to TV screens next month for the series' traditional Christmas Special and The Hollywood Reporter has got its hands on the official poster, which you can check out right here:


Entitled 'The Snowmen', the Christmas Special has been scripted by showrunner Steven Moffat and sees the Doctor and his new companion Clara (Jenna-Louise Coleman) setting out to save Christmas from Richard E. Grant's villainous Doctor Simeon and his sinister army of snowmen. Take a look at the icy antagonists:


The Christmas Special is set to air on Christmas Day on BBC One at 8pm in the UK and BBC America at 9pm in the States. The remaining eight episodes of the seventh season will be broadcast in 2013.

Colin Trevorrow to direct Disney's Flight of the Navigator reboot

$
0
0
When rumours of potential directors for Star Wars Episode VII first began to swirl around the internet, a surpise candidate among the usual Hollywood A-listers was that of Colin Trevorrow, the man behind the indie comedy Safety Not Guaranteed. However, Trevorrow subsequently denied that he was attached to the next instalment of the Star Wars saga, although he did reveal that he had signed on to tackle "another film will all love", and now the identity of that project has been revealed, with Variety reporting that Trevorrow has signed on to tackle Disney's reboot of the 1986 family sci-fi adventure Flight of the Navigator.

According to Variety, Trevorrow and Safety Not Guaranteed scribe Derek Connolly have been hired to rewrite a screenplay from Brad Copeland (Arrested Development). The original Flight of the Navigator was directed by Randall Kleiser and starred Joey Cramer as a young boy who goes missing an reappars eight years later without having aged a day, leading to an adventure on board an alien spacecraft piloted by an artificial intelligence called Max (voiced by Paul Reubens).

"Flight of the Navigator wasn't a seminal movie of my childhood but I remember liking it and the original meant a lot to Colin as a kid, so it's really his baby," said Connolly, whose script for Safety Not Guaranteed saw him receive the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award at Sundance. "It'll be good to have some balance so it's not two fanboys writing the movie."

Comic Book Review - Ghostbusters #15

$
0
0

Luke Owen reviews the latest issue of Ghostbusters...

The unexpected after effects of the knock-off proton packs utilized by the Ghost-Smashers have unleashed one very juiced up ghost on the city of New York! If even the tried and true equipment of the real Ghostbusters can't stop this thing... what can?

The Ghost Smaher days are over and the Ghostbusters are victorious and it all felt so... anti-climatic. A storyline that could have been spread over a good number of months is over in just 3 issues. The Ghost Smashers were introduced at the tail end of Issue #13, proved to be frauds in Issue #14 and their problems have been solved here.

But that’s not to say that Ghostbusters #15 doesn’t have its merits. The artwork of the unleashed evil is really cool and the scene in Peck’s office is incredibly reminiscent of the scene in the first movie with the mayor (“yes it’s true...”). It was also really nice to see some true emotion from Egon as he lashes out at the foolish Ron Alexander for causing all of this havoc - it was a refreshing change of pace for his character that is mostly used for exposition dialogue (a role not unknown to the character in both film and cartoon).

It was also really nice to see the Ecto-2, the 2-man autogyro that first appeared in The Real Ghostbusters episode Ghost Busted and was one of my favourite toys growing up – another great nod to the fans as a means of tying together all Ghostbusters continuity. The issue also does a nice job of tying up a storyline involving Egon’s college friend Eugene Visitor as well as introducing Jenny Moran who could become a new love interest for Ray.

However, as I stated before, the issue as a whole feels like a letdown. The final battle with the evil demon is only spread over a few pages where an entire issue could have made for a more epic showdown. I’m sad to see the end of the Ghost Smashers, but at least we haven’t seen the last of Ron Alexander who will be returning in February’s The New Ghostbusters.

Erik Burnham and Dan Shoening are doing a great job with Ghostbusters and I hope their reign continues for many more months. But the Ghost Smashers could have done with more time to establish themselves as villains and the evil they unleash could have been more terrifying than Gozer, if it was given more than 5 pages.

Luke Owen is a freelance copywriter working for Europe’s biggest golf holiday provider as their web content executive.

Comic Book Review - Godzilla #7

$
0
0
Luke Owen reviews the latest issue of Godzilla...

It’s the day Boxer has been waiting for... the opportunity to avenge his daughter in a showdown with Godzilla. At the exact worst moment though, the government and their secret weapon step in to take matters into their own hands. You know what they say about “best laid plans...”

I stated last month that the regular on-going Godzilla series can be quite hit and miss at times while the Half Century War mini-series goes from strength to strength. Well, Issue #7 is another example of what James Stokoe is doing right and what Duane Swierczynski is doing wrong.

Godzilla #7 is nothing more than a place holder issue with nothing of note. Godzilla himself only appears in a handful of pages as we spend most of our time with Boxer and his crew sitting around waiting for him to show up. The continuation of Boxer’s war with Miss Asuka is pulled off nicely with the final few pages (featuring a couple of panels I didn’t really follow) and his fued with Godzilla has now been given an extra level. The series of explosions to hurt Godzilla was also pretty cool, but I still have some reservations over the artwork. I’m sure it was Simon Gane’s intention for this series to feel more “cartoony”, but his explosions look stuck on like a Clip Art image on a Powerpoint presentation.

Ultimately however, it feels like nothing that was set up in last month’s Issue has been carried forward. Claire’s visions of Gigan, Hedorah and Spacegodzilla were never mentioned and her statement of them “playing for the wrong team” was never followed up on. The Mothra twins’ warning was never brought up and (thankfully) Miss Asuka’s theory of “monsters in love” was never talked about. Out of the 4 missing plot threads, I can happily say I didn’t miss that one.

But because the plot threads raised in last month’s issues weren’t brought up or even mentioned made Godzilla #7 feel like even more of a waste of time. Unlike The Half-Century War where every panel matters, the on-going series feels like its trundling along at a incredibly slow pace. The series needs a blot of energy and it needs one fast.

Luke Owen is a freelance copywriter working for Europe’s biggest golf holiday provider as their web content executive.


Movie Review - Great Expectations (2012)

$
0
0
Great Expectations, 2012.

Directed by Mike Newell.
Starring Jeremy Irvine, Toby Irvine, Helena Bonham Carter, Ralph Fiennes, Robbie Coltrane, Jason Flemyng, Helena Barlow, Holliday Grainger, Ewan Bremner, Sally Hawkins and David Walliams.



SYNOPSIS:

A humble orphan moves to London to become a gentleman with help from an anonymous benefactor.



As the closing night film of the London Film Festival, I believed Mike Newell’s Great Expectations was clearly re-imagining a classic story for modern audiences. Rather than following in the footsteps of Alfonso Cuaron, whereby his 1998 Great Expectations starring Gwyneth Paltrow, Ethan Hawke and Robert De Niro was set in modern-day New York , this interpretation harks back further to David Lean’s original rather than any contemporary piece. Written by David Nicholls (writer and director of One Day), this film clearly attempts to gain the interest of a younger audience, despite its period setting. The trailer tells us “from the Director of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” and ensures Helena Bonham Carter recalls her Tim-Burton-esque roles as the unsettling Miss Havisham. Lead role ‘Pip’ is played by Jeremy Irvine and his rugged “old-fashioned-but-not-really” look seems to clearly aim towards the Robert Pattinson fans. I fear that this Great Expectations will surely guarantee many school trips and repeatable-viewings in English lessons – and may even con a few teenagers into paying for a ticket on a Friday night.

The story presents us with a young boy, Pip (Toby Irvine), who, upon visiting the grave of his Mother, is approached by  escaped convict Magwitch (Ralph Fiennes). Pip manages to smuggle food to Magwitch, alongside stealing an axe to remove his chains. Soon after, Pip is sent for to ‘play’ in the house of Miss Havisham (Helena Bonham Carter) – a wide-eyed recluse – who has an adopted daughter in Estella (Helena Barlow). The class divide is clear as Pip is the son of a blacksmith (Jason Flemyng) whilst Estella, living in the mansion with Miss Havisham, clearly has a high opinion of herself - apparently raised to break the hearts of men. Through an unfortunate event, Pip stops visiting the mansion and continues to support his family as a blacksmith, until a lawyer, Jaggers (Robbie Coltrane), reveals that an anonymous bidder has ‘Great Expectations’ for Pip (now played by Jeremy Irvine) and will pay for him to live in London to become a ‘Gentleman’…

The story is renowned for its depiction of the social divide and the attitudes people have to wealth and success. The definition of success in the family of Pip - happiness, marriage and love - opposed to the isolation and loneliness of Miss Havisham are all facets which, from the first act, you clearly appreciate. The type of criminal Magwitch is – as opposed to the sins of other characters - are revealed through the story and again highlight an injustice between those of affluence, and those without. The setting between the country and landscape of Kent, compared to the dirty hustle and bustle of London, again portray the two differing attitudes to life – and the huge divide and difference between living an urban lifestyle rather than living in the rural outsider counties. These are timeless details which relate directly to the original literature by Charles Dickens.

Considering how important location is in Great Expectations, it is a godsend that the highlight of the film is in the depiction of Kent. The wide shots portraying the vast landscapes manage to capture something mythic about the area - such beauty in the land is something that is core to the film. How would an alternate version of the story look, whereby the city life was praised as opposed to the muddy and dull country? At any rate, the stunning locale is highlighted by sunlight reflecting on the water whilst horses and carriages gently roll across the Isle of Sheppey.

But ironically, outside of Kent, the setting seems to feel quite small in scale. For a different website, I wrote an analysis of David Lean’s Great Expectations, discussing how it managed to capture the fascination with old traditions represented by the decaying house(in 1946, Lean's version followed Xanadu in Citizen Kane and Manderlay in Hitchcock’s Rebecca). In the current climate, it seems that this new version follows on from The Woman in Black, and the Gothic house which ‘the woman’ resided in. The Georgian context, though the accurate time period, is also difficult to truly grasp with regards to London itself. The streets of London often feel false whilst many rooms and locations are imitations of the sets within Lean’s film - for example the stuffy and disorganised offices of Jaggers. The sheer scale of the film is only effective when we are within the countryside – whereas within London, it feels smaller and tight.

Last year, when The Woman in Black was released, students in schools were all whisked away to the cinema at different points. Many were directed to attend a screening over the half-term as Susan Black’s book was used as a text in the English GCSE. Everything about Mike Newell’s Great Expectations seems to reek of the same thing - Harry Potter cast members in Helena Bonham Carter, Ralph Fiennes and Robbie Coltrane, alongside the direction of Mike Newell to target the teenagers of today. The Robert Pattinson look of Jeremy Irvine with a love-triangle between Pip, Estella (Holliday Grainger channelling the femininity of Christina Hendricks in Mad Men) and “Bentley Drummle” (Ben Lloyd Hughes) seems to echo the Twilight series. Even Holliday Grainger has starred alongside Robert Pattinson in Bel Ami and The Bad Mother’s Handbook– is she the ‘go-to’ girl for R-Patz’s love-interest?

It is 200 years since the birth of ‘Charles Dickens’, creating buzz and purpose to produce a version of the story before the year is out. Indeed, the BBC had a version recently starring Gillian Anderson, David Suchet and Ray Winstone. The production has ticked all the relevant boxes to ensure that the film garners success – free advertising through the Dickens relevance; a film which Grandparents and Parents alike will want to take their families – as teachers and schools will flock to maximise the use of a current trend in classic literature… and, who knows, some Twilight and Harry Potter fans may see the poster and go in on the actors credentials alone! But as a film, Jeremy Irvine is weak and wooden as Pip; Helena Bonham Carter – though effective – feels like she is simply phoning-in a character she has played before, whilst Ralph Fiennes is criminally underused. Everyone else, director included, seems to look to David Lean for some type of credible reference point. So why not simply watch the original? I doubt this will go in the history books – but I’m sure it will be in English exercise books for the next five years. At least until The Great Gatsby comes out...

Flickering Myth Rating - Film: ★ ★ ★  / Movie: ★ ★

Simon Columb

Cate Blanchett to play Cinderella's wicked stepmother

$
0
0
It appears that Hollywood is ready to remake and re-imagine any story possible and even classic fairytales are not safe. Recent adaptations have included films such as Snow White and the Huntsman featuring Kirsten Stewart (The Twilight Saga) and Chris Hemsworth (Thor), as well as the upcoming Hansel and Gretel Witch Hunters starring Jeremy Renner (The Avengers) and Gemma Arterton (Quantum of Solace), and now the newest story to be re-told is Cinderella.

According to Deadline, Cate Blanchett (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) is set to be the first cast member to sign on to Mark Romanek's (Never Let Me Go, One Hour Photo) new version of the classic fairytale and is in talks to play the wicked stepmother in the Walt Disney Pictures production.

The project was first announced in 2010 and the live-action film will be written by Chris Weitz (The Golden Compass, About a Boy), who will provide a brand-new take on the classic fairytale which centres on Cinderella and her evil stepmother who attempts to prevent her from attending the Royal Ball and meeting her Prince Charming.

Blanchett can next be seen reprising her role as Galadriel in Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, which is released in the UK on December 13th.

Brett Dalton joins Marvel's S.H.I.E.L.D.

$
0
0
Marvel Studios’ forthcoming S.H.I.E.L.D. television series has landed another star. According to TVLine, Brett Dalton (Killing Lincoln) has joined the cast as Agent Grant Ward. Dalton’s character has been officially described as:

"Quite the physical specimen and 'cool under fire,' he sometimes botches interpersonal relations. He’s a quiet one with a bit of a temper, but he’s the kind of guy that grows on you."

Marvel's S.H.I.E.L.D. will centre on the Strategic Homeland Intervention Enforcement and Logistics Division - a.k.a. S.H.I.E.L.D. Dalton joins a cast featuring Iain De Caestecker (The Little Vampire), Elizabeth Henstridge (The Thompsons) and Ming-Na Wen (Street Fighter), while Clark Gregg, who starred in Marvel films such as Iron Man, Thor and The Avengers, will also reprise his role as Agent Phil Coulson.

S.H.I.E.L.D. will be directed by Joss Whedon (The Avengers, Serenity), who will also co-write the series alongside his brother Jed Whedon (Dollhouse) and sister-in-law Maurissa Tancharoen (Oliver Beene). The show is expected to begin shooting in January 2013.

Movie Review - Red Dawn (2012)

$
0
0
Red Dawn, 2012.

Directed by Dan Bradley.
Starring Chris Hemsworth, Josh Peck, Josh Hutcherson, Adrianne Palicki, Isabel Lucas, Connor Cruise, Brett Cullen, Edwin Hodge, Alyssa Diaz, Will Yun Lee and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.


SYNOPSIS:

A group of teenagers look to save their town from an invasion of North Korean soldiers.


Happy Holidays!  The Christmas-Hanukkah-Kwanza season is upon us.  And thankfully Hollywood tends to overstuff our cinematic stockings with so many movies that it’s like a film smorgasbord.  What better way to celebrate the season of giving than by seeing a jingoistic, xenophobic piece of American propaganda with ridiculously good looking people swatting down the red menace with a furrowed brow and a seemingly endless supply of ammunition?  Red Dawn is the gift that keeps on giving!

I was a big fan of the 1985 original.  How big you ask?  Big enough to have watched the film dozens of times where it fueled my adolescent fantasies of taking up arms against the Communist menace.  Other kids were playing Star Wars or Transformers.  I was painting my face with combat make up, sawing off the barrel of my pellet gun and running through the woods shouting “WOLVERINES!”  See, when I was a kid the threat of annihilation at the hands of our Soviet enemies seemed plausible.   Especially living in Florida where Cuba was just a stone’s throw away.  I sure as hell wasn’t going to let Fidel Castro and his pinko commie buddies march into Miami without a fight.   While other kids were playing sports or dreaming about going into space, I was constructing battle plans for how my rag tag group of Communist hunting commandos would cripple a Russian tank squad.  To answer your question: yes, I was a troubled youth.

Now, twenty five years later, we are given a remake that nobody asked for.  The original film is a great piece of cult cinema: an action film that tugged on your national pride and poked at our shared fears.  No one will ever watch the original Red Dawn and call it classic filmmaking.  It was however a wonderfully manipulative and frankly dour piece of B movie madness.  The premise is simple enough.  America is invaded by our enemies.  Back then it was the Soviet Union.  In the update it’s the North Koreans.  That’s right. The North Koreans.  You know, that country that can barely feed their own people or successfully launch a missile into space.  The ones who have leaders that wear pantsuits and make weird claims about their sexual virility.  I understand the concept of suspension of disbelief.  However, if ever a movie was needed to legally challenge that concept, it may very well be Red Dawn.

So the North Koreans invade Washington state.  Jed (Chris Hemsworth) is a Marine who has returned home after a tour in Iraq.  When the invasion begins, he heads up to a cabin in the woods with his brother Matt (Josh Peck) and a rag tag group of teenagers trying to avoid being rounded up.  After their father is brutally murdered at the hands of the villainous Captain Cho (Will Yun Lee), Jed decides to train his crew in the art of guerilla warfare.  Soon the kids are becoming a royal pain in the ass to the North Korean army.

I’d be lying if I said Red Dawn was a good film.  But it really isn’t a bad film either.  It’s not going to do my credibility any good to be praising a piece of revisionist trash like Red Dawn.  Though I can’t say I had a bad time watching it.  The entire premise is so ludicrous that I found myself enamored by the actors ability to keep a straight face while trying to deliver high drama.  Chris Hemsworth (Thor, The Avengers) has the ability to bring validity to any project he’s a part of.  He’s able to deliver sincerity to potentially laughable characters like Thor.  His part in Red Dawn could easily have devolved into stupidity, but the guy just gives it so much effort.  He practically carries the entire film on his shoulders.  His co-stars are a bunch of well intentioned one dimensional performers who struggle to generate an ounce of charisma. 

While it’s not as bleak as the original, the updated Red Dawn tries to avoid platitudes and happy endings.  There’s a lot of action in the film, although some of the scenes are edited with the finesse of a barber suffering a seizure.  There’s not a lot of great filmmaking going on here, but Red Dawn features the kind of over the top, ham fisted approach that I prefer in my action films.  It’s as dense as the flag waving patriotism it portrays and is liberated from the constraints of reality.   It’s a world where a economically ravaged country can somehow become a global threat and where high school kids can take up arms and become trained killing machines overnight.  Not perfect, but not terrible as ridiculous escapist trash.

Flickering Myth Rating: Film ★ ★ / Movie ★ ★

Anghus Houvouras

State of the Genre: Batman John Blake

$
0
0
Martin Deer discusses the recent rumour about Joseph Gordon-Levitt being lined up for the role of the Dark Knight in Warner Bros.' Justice League movie...

Inevitably spoilers for The Dark Knight Rises are discussed here.

Boy, did the internet explode yesterday.  If you avoided all forms of technology you probably missed the news that Joseph Gordon-Levitt was all-but confirmed to be cast as Batman in the Justice League movie due 2015.  I'm going to assume you were a part of the 7 billion of us on this rock though and that you did.

Well yesterday evening - a mere few hours after the first report - Hollywood.com reported that Joseph Gordon-Levitt's representatives had already denied this was the case.  So what is happening here?

Wild, uncontrollable fan speculation.  I admit, I fell for it too, instantly shouting heresy to anyone that would listen.  This is not because Joseph Gordon-Levitt is an actor I don't like - exactly the opposite, he's a terrific actor - but because it just makes no sense.

Firstly, Nolan's trilogy is finished and he's walked away from his project and has asked Warner Bros.  to leave it at that, a trilogy.  Closed.  Of course, as we know from recent weeks and months Warner Bros. are starting to go back on some of their word to Nolan; Man of Steel is no longer a stand alone franchise as it will be part of a larger Universe of DC heroes.  So with that in mind, initially I believed this rumour, we all did.  But there is one person who I think will honour Nolan's wishes - Joseph Gordon-Levitt himself.  JGL has stated previously he is quite picky with his roles, and only takes roles he really believes in.  Justice League has the potential to be a bomb, a giant cheese bomb.  But more than that, JGL has a working relationship with Nolan, and his films are some of the most anticipated in recent years.  They're a big draw.  Given Nolan's predilection for casting people he has worked with before, vs the Justice League, my money's on JGL sticking with Nolan on this one.

Stepping back from my own bias against a Justice League movie there are fans of the team, and whether some of those want to see a Justice League movie or not when the movie is released they'll likely still go see it to see all of their favourite heroes on screen and have some vested interest in it.  Wouldn't it be a little strange for the first Justice League movie to feature a Batman that isn't Bruce Wayne?  Doesn't that kind of negate the whole draw of a Justice League film?  Superman and Batman are undoubtedly the two biggest draws of the team - especially for the mainstream audience - but for fans - who will be the most vocal you can guarantee it - they want to see that dynamic between Batman and Superman, and between Batman and the rest of the League.  But what makes the dynamic between Batman and the rest of the League so intriguing for fans is how Bruce Wayne relates to the other characters.  Bruce Wayne and his initial distrust to all those super powered beings, not John Blake.  From a business stand point, yes the mainstream audience will want to see more of John Blake and Warner Bros. would likely want to capitalise on the success of Nolan's trilogy to make Justice League a hit - it's a cheap move, but it's business.  However the reason they are making a Justice League movie is because there is a small section of fans shouting "we want a Justice League movie" - piss them off by having a Batman that isn't Bruce Wayne under the cowl, well, they're going to shout loud.

Well what if he's playing Bruce Wayne you say?  Well, that could happen, but from a marketing stand point that's a harder sell.  People will naturally think he's John Blake.  Look how many people thought Batman 1989 was connected to the Nolan series, the average cinema goer just isn't as tuned in to reboots the way comic book fans are yet, and going immediately from playing one character in a franchise to another so closely related in such a short period of time (3 years) is going to play havoc with the mainstream movie goers cerebrum.  So I don't think that is happening.

Having been able to sleep on it all, given what we know I just don't think it's going to happen.  Sure, Joseph Gordon-Levitt's people could be denying it based on Warner Bros. requests, but I don't think that is the case in this situation.

Time will tell of course, but I just don't see Robin John Blake standing side by side with Henry Cavill.

Martin Deer


Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing the Caped Crusader to the Screen - Available now via Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.

Matthew Vaughn to direct Star Wars Episode VII? Mark Hamill returning? And more spin-offs already in the works?

$
0
0
Following the recent news that director Colin Trevorrow (Safety Not Guaranteed) has signed on to Disney's remake of the 80s family sci-fi adventure Flight of the Navigator, the rumoured shortlist for the Mouse House's first foray to a galaxy far, far away continues to dwindle; Steven Spielberg (Lincoln), J.J. Abrams (Star Trek Into Darkness) and Brad Bird (Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol) are but a few names to officially withdraw themselves from contention, although one director who has so far refused to comment on the speculation is X-Men: First Class helmer Matthew Vaughn, and now - thanks to an apparent slip-up by actor Jason Flemyng - why might know why...

Speaking to HeyUGuys at the UK premiere of Seven Psychopaths, Flemyng - who has worked with Matthew Vaughn on nine occasions, including all four of Vaughn's directorial efforts (Layer Cake, Stardust, Kick-Ass and the aforementioned First Class) - appeared to offer confirmation that his good pal is already attached to Star Wars Episode VII. Take a look:


Judging by Flemyng's reaction, it seems pretty plausible that Matthew Vaughn will be the man to continue the Skywalker saga, and it would go some way to explaining his departure from Fox's upcoming X-Men sequel X-Men: Days of Future Past, as well as his complete silence with regards to Star Wars.

In other Episode VII news, Mark Hamill had a few words for E!Online about the possibility of him and Carrie Fisher reprising the roles of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia for the forthcoming sequel trilogy, stating that "We have questions about it. And really, they're not even at the stage where they're able to answer those questions because, as far as I know, is there a story yet? [editors note - yes, there is]. Until I know more about what they have in mind, I think it's better to let Lucasfilm make the announcements. If they were going to do a story where Luke was too young or too old for me to play, they would get an age-appropriate actor. There's so many good people."

And finally, last week it was revealed that Lawrence Kasdan (The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi) and Simon Kinberg (Sherlock Holmes, X-Men: First Class) had signed on to write the scripts for Episode VIII and Episode IX. However, according to The Hollywood Reporter, the two writers will be penning separate projects and that "their scripts could turn into official 'Episodes' in the main Skywalker storyline, or they could form the basis for spinoffs focusing on side characters." Either way, it seems that Disney is wasting little time in getting its Star Wars universe fully operational...

Icelandic trilogy Heaven and Hell to be adapted

$
0
0
Director Fridrik Thor Fridriksson's (Children of Nature) Spellbound Productions will team up with Cap Horn Film to adapt the critically-acclaimed Heaven and Hell novel trilogy by Icelandic author Jon Kalman Stefansson.

The three books (Heaven and Hell, The Sorrow of Angels, and The Heart of Man) follow an Icelandic man in a small fishing village at the turn of the 19th century who is fighting to be master of his own fate. The first one was published in English earlier this year.

Fridriksson will adapt the trilogy with producer Gunner Carlsson (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Let the Right One In). The films are due to begin production next year, with the first planned for release in late 2014.

First Pacific Rim footage offers a glimpse of a Kaiju attack on San Francisco

$
0
0
Last week it seemed we'd seen our first footage from filmmaker Guillermo del Toro's upcoming giant monster movie Pacific Rim via a promotional video for del Toro's VFX company Mirada. While that ultimately proved to be a false alarm, the film's viral marketing campaign has now stepped into gear with the release of a faux news report containing footage of a Kaiju attack on San Francisco.

A homage to Japanese 'kaiju' movies, Pacific Rim sees mankind threatened by a legion of monstrous creatures, leading to a war that costs millions of lives. To combat the threat of the Kaiju, special weapons are constructed - giant robots known as Jaegers - which are controlled by two human pilots. On the verge of defeat, the fate of humanity rests on the shoulders of two unlikely heroes, a washed up former pilot (Charlie Hunnam; Sons of Anarchy) and a rookie (Rinko Kikuchi; The Brothers Bloom), who team up to pilot a legendary Jaeger in one final stand against the Kaiju.

Here's the kaiju attack viral video, followed by the schematics for a 'Gipsy Danger' model Jaeger released via Wired:




Pacific Rim also features Idris Elba (Prometheus), Rinko Kikuchi (The Brothers Bloom), Charlie Day (Horrible Bosses) and Ron Perlman (Hellboy) and is due to hit cinemas on July 12th, 2013.

Movie Review - The Cinema Snob Movie (2012)

$
0
0
The Cinema Snob Movie, 2012

Directed by Ryan Mitchelle
Written and starring Brad Jones
Also starring Jake Norvell, Noah Antwiler, Zachary La Voy, Jillian Zurawski

SYNOPSIS:

When an exploitation filmmaker goes undercover as a pretentious film snob to obtain proper filming permits, he is thrust into a strange mystery surrounding the very secretive film commission.


Regular visitors to Thatguywiththeglasses.com or viewers of their movies Kickassia, Suburban Knights and To Boldly Flee may be aware of Brad Jones’ character The Cinema Snob and his brand of movie criticism. Visitors to his own site will have probably already seen this movie or are anticipating its arrival in the post. If you’re not one of these however, let me bring you up to speed.

The Cinema Snob is a character portrayed by writer Brad Jones who reviews exploitation movies from the view point of a pretentious film critic (based of a rant her saw Roger Ebert give about Friday The 13th Part V: The New Beginning). What started out life as a Youtube video has spawned its own life into his own website, a couple of other web series, 3 appearances in the aforementioned Thatguywiththeglasses.com movies and now his own feature length movie. But can a character about a guy who watches movies from his couch last a near 2 hour running time?

Well thankfully, much like the Angry Video Game Nerd movie (which had its trailer released recently), Jones and director Ryan Mitchelle have taken the idea of the character and expanded upon it. Brad Jones plays Craig Golightly, a struggling exploitation writer who along with director Neil Hall (Jake Norvell) are trying to get their movie Black Angus made but they need the correct permits from pretentious film snob Dan Phillips (Mitchelle). In order to get said permits, he takes on the guise of Vincent Dawn (The Cinema Snob) and infiltrates Phillips’ film snob group. While there he gets involved in a murder mystery as well as attracts the interest of Phillips’ wife Nancy (Jillian Zurawski).

Jones states in the filmmakers commentary that he didn't want to make a movie that could just be enjoyed by fans of his Cinema Snob show and he has successfully done that. The in-jokes to his reviews are kept to a minimum and when they are used it’s within context of the plot rather than just being used as a cheap joke. It’s a credit to Jones that he has managed to create a movie which can be watched by a first time viewer to his work but yet remain faithful to the character.

However it’s not all roses, the movie does suffer from some issues most notably that the film isn't all that well made. It looks nice and the framing is decent on almost every shot, but the film was clearly made with only an on-board mic and not a proper boom mic. Because of this, the sound is often unclear in certain shots but fine in others. It can be quite annoying at times as you find yourself fighting with the volume button between shots. But, having been a fan of Jones’ previous movies like Game Boys and Hooker With a Heart of Gold, I am kind of used to this “point and shoot” mentality.

And to be honest, it’s kind of hard to criticise the movie for this fault as it’s the sort of film that the characters Craig and Neill would make. The Cinema Snob Movie has the same cheap “point and shoot” vibe about it as Black Angus– albeit this one isn't a blaxploitation black roller derby pro with a vengeance.


On the plus side of The Cinema Snob Movie, it’s a really funny and entertaining (if a little too long) film. Jones’ script is full of incredibly well-written dialogue and his mocking of the world of pretentious film snobs is hilarious. Having spoken with people like this in the past, it’s really funny to see it being parodied with perfection by a man who’s favourite film of all time is Caligula. While I feel the story is a little contrived and poorly handled at times, the dialogue exchanges between characters is fantastic and their ideas for other exploitation movies are laugh out loud hilarious (for example, Card Shark– where a casino gets flooded with sharks). Also for a group of people who aren't really actors, they do a half decent job – especially in the supporting cast. Jake Norvell and Jillian Zurawski can be a bit wooden at times, but Jones’ charisma sees the film through from start to end.

While not a perfect film, The Cinema Snob Movie is an enjoyable no-budget affair made with a lot of heart and dedication. You can see the progression Jones has made as a writer and Mitchelle as a director. With some more time and a bigger budget, these two could really make a fantastic exploitation film that would rival a lot of the direct-to-DVD trash I’m used to picking up in the cheap section at ASDA. Who knows, maybe one day we’ll get to see Card Shark.

Flickering Myth Rating - Film  / Movie 

Luke Owen is a freelance copywriter working for Europe’s biggest golf holiday provider as their web content executive.

Marvel Studios testing several actors for Guardians of the Galaxy's Star-Lord

$
0
0
With both Iron Man 3 and Thor: The Dark World currently in production ahead of their release next year, you would think that the folks at Marvel Studios would have their hands full at the moment, but the studio is already turning its attention towards the line-up of 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy, with Deadline revealing a potential shortlist for the role of Peter Quill, a.k.a. Star-Lord.

According to Deadline, Marvel has made test deals with a number of actors for the role of the Guardians'half-human / half-alien leader, with the shortlist said to include Joel Edgerton (Zero Dark Thirty), Jack Huston (Boardwalk Empire), Jim Sturgess (Cloud Atlas), Lee Pace (The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey) and Eddie Redmayne (Les Miserables). Also thought to be in contention are Garrett Hedlund (Tron: Legacy), James Marsden (X-Men) and Sullivan Stapleton (Animal Kingdom).

Guardians of the Galaxy is set to be directed by James Gunn (Slither, Super) and is currently scheduled to arrive in cinemas on August 1st, 2014.

Movie Review - The Hunt (2012)

$
0
0
The Hunt (Denmark: Jagten), 2012.

Directed by Thomas Vinterberg.
Starring Mads Mikkelsen, Alexandra Rapaport, Lars Ranthe, Thomas Bo Larsen, Anne Louise Hassing, Susse Wold and Ole Dupont.



SYNOPSIS:

A teacher and father's quiet life implodes when a child accuses him of the worst kind of inappropriate behaviour...


Thomas Vinterberg's The Hunt is about belief and doubt and how quickly those doubts can spiral out of control. In a similarly gruelling, uncomfortable way to Vinterberg's most celebrated film Festen, here interpretations of suspicion, memory and the fragile nature of human relationships are integral to the unnerving plot. A nervous, thought provoking and deeply sensitive work, The Hunt is fully deserving of all the accolades it has so far received.

Recently divorced Lucas (Mads Mikkelsen; Valhalla Rising, Casino Royale) leads a humble life of kindergarten teaching and living alone in a small, picturesque Danish town. Apart from occasional boozy outings with drinking buddies and the amorous attentions of strong-willed fellow teacher Nadja (Alexandra Rapaport), his is a remote, isolated existence. And it is an existence eked out in the sort of sheltered community where everyone knows everyone else and it is practically impossible to keep any kind of secret.
Battling for custody of his teenage son and struggling with every day, Lucas' life takes a much darker turn when Klara (Annika Wedderkopp), one of his kindergarten pupils, makes a horrifying accusation against him.

Vinterberg and Mikkelsen portray Lucas in as normal a light as possible but the film manages to instil a reasonable amount of doubt in the audience. In this tortured situation, it is all about the witch-hunt and how acquaintances, colleagues and even friends can so quickly turn.

Without divulging any spoilers, Klara appears to be experiencing a form of infatuation for Lucas - in a half dream she calls out to him with the oblique statement "it was not supposed to happen". The strength here, is the script's openness to interpretation and Vinterberg's skill at presenting a believable whole.

The only slightly off note to my mind comes at the conclusion, which I shall not reveal within the words of this article, except to say it was the only aspect that did not quite ring 100% plausible. But even with this, it can be argued that events could have transpired to bring it about. In any case, the haunted looks in Lucas's eyes show no signs of going anywhere soon.

Beautifully shot and featuring tremendous performances; most notably from Mikkelsen and Wedderkopp, The Hunt is a truly frightening film and one that will remain lodged in the memory like a Chinese whisper or scurrilous rumour.

Flickering Myth Rating - Film: ★ ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★ ★

Robert W Monk is a freelance journalist and film writer.

Christopher Nolan discusses the end of The Dark Knight Rises

$
0
0
Following the recent speculation that Joseph Gordon-Levitt is being lined up to don the cape and cowl as Batman in Warner Bros. forthcoming Justice League movie, The Dark Knight Rises director Christopher Nolan has taken a moment to discuss the ending of his epic Batman saga, which - if you've seen the film - you'll know appears to lay the groundwork for a John Blake-headlined spin-off / sequel. Not so according to Nolan, who had the following to say during an interview with Film Comment.

"For me, The Dark Knight Rises is specifically and definitely the end of the Batman story as I wanted to tell it, and the open-ended nature of the film is simply a very important thematic idea that we wanted to get into the movie, which is that Batman is a symbol. He can be anybody, and that was very important to us. Not every Batman fan will necessarily agree with that interpretation of the philosophy of the character, but for me it all comes back to the scene between Bruce Wayne and Alfred in the private jet in Batman Begins, where the only way that I could find to make a credible characterization of a guy transforming himself into Batman is if it was as a necessary symbol, and he saw himself as a catalyst for change and therefore it was a temporary process, maybe a five-year plan that would be enforced for symbolically encouraging the good of Gotham to take back their city. To me, for that mission to succeed, it has to end, so this is the ending for me, and as I say, the open-ended elements are all to do with the thematic idea that Batman was not important as a man, he’s more than that. He’s a symbol, and the symbol lives on."

During the interview, Nolan also touched upon the 'realistic' tone of his trilogy, stating that: "The term 'realism' is often confusing and used sort of arbitrarily. I suppose 'relatable' is the word I would use. I wanted a world that was realistically portrayed, in that even though outlandish events may be taking place, and this extraordinary figure may be walking around these streets, the streets would have the same weight and validity of the streets in any other action movie. So they’d be relatable in that way."

The Dark Knight Rises stars Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, Gary Oldman, Tom Hardy, Anne Hathaway, Marion Cotillard and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, and is released on Blu-ray and DVD this coming Monday in the UK and Tuesday in North America. 

Holy Franchise, Batman! Bringing the Caped Crusader to the Screen - Available now via Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.com.

Comic Book Review - 2000 AD Prog 1810

$
0
0
Luke Graham reviews the latest 2000 AD prog...

A lot gets revealed and explained in Prog 1810, as well as setting up the explosive next act of the Mega-City One cross-over The Cold Deck.

Judge Dredd: The Cold Deck, part five

Script: Al Ewing, Art: Henry Flint

Things take a dramatic step forward as Judge Dredd, after having been talked down to by Chief Judge Hershey, decides to confront Bachmann. Turning up to her office with a group of SJS (Special Judicial Squad, an internal investigation unit) he reveals that he and mystery figure Smiley had swapped the Wally squad list with a list of ne’er-do-wells and miscreants back in Prog 1806, and he has evidence that Bachmann sent her Black Ops troops to do the deed.

Bachmann’s face when Dredd pulls out his trump card is priceless, but things don’t end there. Bachmann is forced into initiating plan B, and the next few issues are going to be very bloody.

ABC Warriors: Return to Earth, part eleven

Script: Pat Mills, Art: Clint Langley

Okay, I’ve finally got my head around what’s going on in ABC Warriors. Back in 1978, Hammerstein was originally introduced in Ro-busters, a strip in the comic Starlord and written by Pat Mills. It was a Thunderbirds-esque sci-fi strip where robots went on dangerous missions to save humans, and Return to Earth has been a long form secret origin story, reintroducing Hammerstein’s old head, comic relief Ro-Jaws, and this issue the maniacal, malevolent and moronic Mek-Quake.

It’s a good strip this week. The introduction of Mek-Quake is amusing and intimidating in equal measures, and the opening tournaphon, in which world political leaders dual to the death to settle international disputes (it’s less barbaric than war) is cleverly satirical, and gives Clint Langley an excuse to draw guys in Blood Bowl armour knocking gorey chunks out of each other.

How much longer Pat Mills can spin this storyline out for I don’t know. Unless he’s know going to retell thirty year-old Ro-Buster stories, the narrative is at a comfortable point to wrap up.

Low Life: Saudade, part six

Script: Rob Williams, Art: D’Israeli

Dirty Frank kicks all the butts this week. Proudly telling Mr. Overdrive that the expensive list he bought is inaccurate shuts the shark up for awhile (until he bites a chunk out of Frank’s arm). Frank even gets off some great action-movie one liners.

But is it too late? In desperation, Overdrive launches Operation Olympus, and at the end of the strip, the God City begins to rise out of the moon crater, presumably to swim through space and launch an attack on Mega-City One.

It’s another great strip from Williams and D’Israeli, with plenty of humour and action and even a Total Recall reference.

Brass Sun: The Wheel of Worlds, part eleven

Script: Ian Edgington, Art: I. N. J. Culbard

The lot moves forward nicely this week. Wren, C-17 and Ramkin the butler form an uneasy alliance: they’ll take him off world if he helps them find the secret maguffin.

It’s a tense, quiet conversation in an issue that has had three action heavy strips before it, and is all the more subtle and better for it. Culbard’s art is brilliant as usual, especially the opening image of the giant four-faced child’s head where the city’s rulers live; it’s a cool metaphor or something, but I’m too tired to work it out. Wren also shows an actual bit of character and motivation this strip, actively confronting a problem, rather than just reacting to events or being talked at by other characters. The writing and art is top-notch.

The Simping Detective: Jokers to the Right, part seven

Script: Simon Spurrier, Art: Simon Coleby

Jack’s at his lowest point. Mind-washed by the Simpologists and about to be executed by a Black Ops judge, it takes the warm words of a woman who loves him (and the thought of her “chesticles”) help Jack to finally fight back.

Jack also discovers something potentially disastrous for the Judges: the sleep machines used by Archmime Turner to brainwash members of the Church have been distributed to Sector Houses (Judge stations) across the Meg. Jack has a tough decision to make at the end of the strip, but it seems his part in the final fight to save the Meg will be an important one.

Strip of the Week!

With Bachmann’s coup d’état, Overdrive’s city-sized warship and Turner’s brainwashed troops, things are not looking good for the Meg... but great for us readers. As usual the writing and art has been great across the strip. But the highlight of the strip this week has to be, once again, Low Life. The image of a pudgy old man in his pants acting like the hero of an action-movie is just perfect, and the strip is a joy to read. However, it was a close call this week, with ABC Warriors coming close to claiming the title. The mix of humour and tension was masterfully done by Mills and Langley, and actually connected with me this week.

Luke Graham is a writer and graduate. If you enjoyed this review, follow him @LukeWGraham and check out his blog here.
Viewing all 7138 articles
Browse latest View live