Archive for December, 2008

Snow Dope

12/22/08

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Dean Haspiel cartoons for the NY Times alcohol blog.

SPIRIT watch!

12/22/08

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In only a few short days, THE SPIRIT will open, and the long, long promotional trail — and all those posters of a flapping red tie dotting the nation — will be just a memory. It was a good run.

In the meantime, Frank Lovece catches up with director Frank Miller:

What else do you think you’ll get flak for?

Because he doesn’t have a blue suit, which would have looked silly. That Ellen Dolan isn’t just a little simpering daughter to somebody; she’s a surgeon. I don’t know what I’ll get flak for - I just do the stuff I do! … Comics fans are wonderful, sincere people, but they can be a little arch.


§ The Scotsman ALSO caught up with Frank Miller:

In technical terms, Miller’s film is also at the cutting edge. Shooting against vast green screens on virtually empty sound stages, Miller says, he was able to work in a way that allowed his imagination to burn. Did he have as much freedom as when he is sitting at his drawing board? I ask. “It’s very close,” he says. “But this is a new adventure for me so I try not to compare the two. But I think that without the CGI, I don’t know what my role in movies would be. This allows my mind to really go all over the place. I draw something and then (effects supervisor] Stu Maschwitz turns it into something astonishing. There are places in the movie where it feels like a brush drawing!”


The Metro broke with tradition and caught up with co-star Eva Mendes:

In one eye-catching scene, she’s able to avoid arrest when she drops her robe — shocking The Spirit and moviegoers with a revealing backside.

“The point is my character uses everything she has as a woman to get what she wants,” admitted Mendes.

“If there were no brains behind the body I would have major qualms with it. This girl’s kick ass in every way and she’s such a smart dame that part of getting what she wants is turning up the sex.”

Kibbles ‘n’ Bits

12/22/08

§ Must read: Many comics types weigh in on 2008’s events at The Comics Reporter.

§ MTV’s Splash Page rounds up some holiday-themed comics so we don’t have to.

§ This article from the Schenectady Daily Gazette examines how many media that are supposedly for kids are supported by adults …like comic books:

Earthworld’s owner, J.C. Glindmyer, said the market for comics and action figures has changed drastically since he purchased his store two decades ago. Today, most of his customers are between the ages of 17 and 55; teenagers and young adults comprise the majority of his market.

“We don’t see as many kids,” he said.

But he’s not overly concerned about this. The rise in adult readership, he said, has more than made up for the drop-off in kids.

“I’m not really worried about the younger reader,” Glindmyer said.

§ This piece on Corto Maltese is a bit rudimentary, but it did lead us to a Corto clip on YouTube!


To Do: December 22 - 28

12/22/08

Not a very eventful week, unless you count Christmas and all that … let us know if there are any parties or signings that we managed to miss!

Tuesday, December 23 - Wednesday, December 24

Chicago, IL, 11 AM Tues. - 5 PM Wed. - Challengers Comics Christmas Crisis

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Some retailers may be closing early for the holidays, but Challengers Comics is staying open from Tuesday morning until 5 PM on Christmas Eve. They promise camaraderie, holiday themed-activities, plus “gift wrapping, drinking, gift exchanges, more drinking, ridiculous “comic-y” party games…” and drinking. Plus, an art show for superhero stencil artist Kevin McPartlin.

Friday, December 26

Waukesha, WI - Sean McKeever at Neptune Comics

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Comics scribe and Wisconsin native Sean McKeever (TEEN TITANS, SPIDER-MAN LOVES MARY JANE) makes a Boxing Day appearance at Neptune Comics to sign his work.

Posted by Aaron Humphrey

Thrilling Christmas, trembling fear

12/21/08



Do you remember the Santa who rode on the electric shaver? Of course you do.



Norelco’s shavin’ Santa was a holiday staple for many years. For some reason, it also deeply disturbed my mother. The ads would disappear for a year or two, only to reappear in new, updated settings. Each year my mother would cry out, “No! Not again!”



The 90s version even has slick CGI-like animation.

As much as my mother disliked Santa on a shaver, we’ve been highly disturbed by the new Sprint Santa.

Sexy Claus

For the current world, not only is Santa so cool that he has to use a cell phone, but he’s magically been transformed into a young, hip “sexy” Santa, with a waxen, smooth countenance that suggest that he really looks like a Thomas Nast drawing but has been Photoshopped into someone you might spot out at the PInk Elephant and would avoid at all costs.
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Cherchez la femme…again and again and again

12/19/08

J. Caleb Mozzocco at Blog@ had a good post yesterday about women in comics. Again? Yes, again. Mozzocco tries to put a positive spin on things — pointing out that writers G. Willow Wilson, Amy Woolfram, Ivory Madison, Grace Randolph and Marjorie Liu all debuted this year or last year. And Amanda Conner, Amy Reeder Hadley and Nicola Scott are drawing mainstream comics, while a few folks like Colleen Coover and Kathryn Immonen have been working on slightly more offbeat fare.

It’s a nice piece, although praising a book by saying “it hasn’t been cancelled yet!” sort of speaks for itself. More to the point, will we EVER get to the day when there is more than one woman allowed to write comics? I’m encouraged to see Wilson, Wolfram, Randolph and Madison come on the scene, but when it comes to women writers in comics, Gail Simone has sort of cornered the market, through no fault of her own. 

For some reason, for women to break into writing “mainstream” comics has been ever harder than women drawing mainstream comics, perhaps becuase artists are generally more in demand than writers. It actually strikes me as odd, since writing — in journalism and novels, at least, two fields where women readers are a given — women writers have near parity with men. Off the top of my head, I would say that three of the all-time greatest comics writers have been women: Lynda Barry, Alison Bechdel and Posy Simmonds. All are cartoonists who write and draw, of course, but even reading a few panels of their work shows a mastery of language and dialogue that anyone would envy.

Maybe I’m just cranky at the end of the year, but any idea that women in comics in the mainstream have progressed over the last few years is wrong. A colleague and I were trying to come up with the name of a noted female industry figure other than Karen Berger, and the list was shockingly short. Try it yourself. Diana Schutz and Jann Jones. Shelly Bond. I sincerely hope I’m forgetting someone, because that’s just one more than there was five or 10 years ago. (Yes I know Francoise Mouly, but we’re sticking to the “mainstream” for now.)

While indie and manga scenes have given rise to dozens of notable women creators on all levels, there are still only a tiny handful of mainstream female “superstars.” For instance, the New York Comic-Con has announced dozens of featured guests – including the tech writer for Newsweek, the marketing director for Bandai, and the guy who covers video games for MTV News  — and only two women, Barbara Canepa and Colleen Doran. Now, Canepa co-ccreated one of the most successful properties worldwide over the last 10 years — W.I.T.C.H. — and Colleen is Amerca’s Sweetheart, and I think both of them have given a little bit more to the industry than the guy who covers video games for MTV News. No offense. In fact I can think of a dozen women who have done more for comics than the guy who covers video games for MTV news.

Looking at the guest list thus far,  I do wonder, what do you have to do to get recognzied in this industry anyway? If you are a man, draw an issue or two of CAPTAIN AMERICA. If you are a women, you must slave away your whole life, and hope that some day, some guy somewhere deigns to put you into a history book.

Am I overstating the case? Maybe a little. But only a teeny, tiny bit. I’ve been in this game for a long time, and looking around, women aren’t in any better position than they were 10 years ago. There are many reasons for that, among them, yes, sexism of some kind, but also women who don’t want to compete at being as loud and attention-getting as men are expected to be. It’s a complex issue.

To end this on a high note, one area seems to have made major progress in the last decade — and it’s not where you think! DC now has 9 or 10 female editors at all levels, including, by my count, four or five in the DCU. That’s a sizable percentage, and I can only imagine what kind of influence it will have down the road. Let’s hope that these young women have long, distinguished careers and don’t become “symbols” of anything other than their own tastes and abilities. That would be true equality.

Frank Miller to direct BUCK ROGERS?

12/19/08

Just ahead of THE SPIRIT’s opening day, director Frank Miller is supposedly “eyeing” Buck Rogers, which could be alarming or exciting, depending on how you look at it. Odd Lot, the production shingle which made THE SPIRIT, is negotiating for BUCK ROGERS, which is controlled by longtime Miller pal Flint Dille.

Miller will write and direct his own big-screen take on the comic serial; while the creator has only begun to sketch ideas, it’s expected to be a darker take, with many of Miller’s signature visual elements and themes, such as corruption and redemption.

It’s likely to be a priority project for Miller, though he has been mulling a “Sin City” sequel.


To be honest, having seen THE SPIRIT, “darker” is not a word we’d apply to it, despite many night-time scenes and “Sin City” visual elements. It is, like ALL-STAR BATMAN AND ROBIN THE BOY WONDER, more of a broad, broad satire, whose humor is either deliberately outrageous and campy or deliberately infuriating. Early reviews of THE SPIRIT are, well, less than thrilled, although most allow that it looks good.

“The Spirit,” graphic artist Frank Miller’s first solo effort as a director after sharing credit with Robert Rodriguez on 2005’s adaptation of his own “Sin City,” has a single redeeming feature. It illustrates the limitations of the comic-book aesthetic on the big screen.

If we didn’t realize this before, it’s now clear: Movies must obey the immutable laws of cinema and cannot unfold like so many moving panels. For all its bold digital drawings, a comic-book movie must observe the narrative rhythms, scene construction, character development and dialogue delivery that cinema has honed for more than a century.


On the plus side, the premiere on Wednesday looks like it was pretty swell!
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Chow off GREEN HORNET

12/19/08

200812191314Asian film superstar Stephen Chow is no longer directing the GREEN HORNET movie, although he will still star as sidekick Kato. The reason given is “creative differences.”

And so, our interest in this movie went from 100 to about -10. In shape, Seth Rogen, or not.

Financial Fretting: 12/19/08

12/19/08

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Just to keep the holiday spirit going, here’s a roundup of recession rumbling from the comics world:

Rick Veitch notes that he has received a notice from Diamond indicating that “offered again” items will be scrutinized more:

In the solicitation package I just received from Diamond Distribution, suppliers are being notified that due to economic conditions Diamond will be much more selective in which items they will offer in PREVIEWS and that they are cutting back on items being “Offered Again”. Since most publishers, large and small, depend on these relists of backlist items, this will be a hard pill to swallow for many.

It looks like King Hell backlist titles, such as THE ONE, MAXIMORTAL, SHINY BEASTS, ABRAXAS AND THE EARTHMAN, HEARTBURST AND OTHER PLEASURES, RABID EYE, POCKET UNIVERSE and CRYPTO ZOO will not be available through PREVIEWS in the immediate future even though historically most, especially the superhero titles, have attracted healthy orders each time they have run in the catalog.

So if you are a reader wishing to pick up a King Hell book, you’ll probably have to do it on Amazon.com, or at Paneltopanel.net (which offers exclusive signed plates for some titles) or, better yet, at my own on-line store (where all copies come signed).


This sounds very ominous — as Veitch mentions, relisting back stock is a major source of income for collection publishers — but note that this looks like it could also be part of the recently announced policy on cutting back on posters and prints. It’s also worth noting that the April 2009 D&Q solicits that Chris Butcher just posted include lots of offered again items, so maybe there is wiggle room.

• ICv2 reported this week that Comic Stores are “Holding Up Really Well’:

The numbers from comic stores are “holding up really well” in the economic crisis, Diamond Comic Distributors Vice President Sales and Marketing Roger Fletcher told ICv2. “Diamond’s sales are tracking close to last years levels, but down about 3%.”

“Retailers are trying to be prudent and conservative on inventory,” Fletcher explained. “That’s led to some sales declines.”

• As long we’re talking about Diamond, here’s a bit of news that doesn’t come under fretting, but rather, something we’ve all been wishing for. Diamond has expanded its GN sales charts from 100 to 300 titles, meaning folks will be able to track those back orders much better now. John Jackson Miller covers this and more in a new blog entry, which singles out November for yet another record:

OK, now to the bottom line. Not much good news for consumers or the market this month: First, comics were more expensive in November 2008 than in any month in history. The average comic book offered in Diamond’s Top 300 comics had a cover price of $3.50, beating the previous record (from last month) by 12 cents. The median price is still $2.99, and $2.99 is still the most common price within the chart. The weighted average price — comics dollars divided by comics units — was $3.35, another record. The average price of comics in the Top 25 was $3.43.

2009 = Price increase + recession = ?

• Several folks have responded thoughtfully to Tom Spurgeon’s ponderables, including David Welsh, who added his own questions, including one we think is highly pertinent:

2. Will Borders survive its seemingly inevitable bankruptcy or reorganization? Borders was one of the earliest adopters of manga and arguably played a huge role in popularizing the category for people who might not otherwise have ever picked up a comic, so trouble for the bookseller won’t be without consequences for manga. But while it was an early adopter, it’s been followed by other outlets like Barnes & Noble and Amazon. And if my memory is functioning correctly, graphic novels (including manga) are one of the few sectors of the book industry that are maintaining, if not thriving.


Matt Blind ups the ante, as he responds to ALL of Tom’s AND Dave’s questions:

My Best Guess: Borders will eventually have to declare a form of bankruptcy, but they’ll emerge from the process leaner, with a substantial debt load but less than what they have now and nothing an average retailer can’t handle, and with a focus on their core business. That isn’t a guarantee, though: The same could have been said of Hudson, Studebaker, and Reo back in the day.


• In shocking book news — and bearing in mind that returns from Borders caused many a woe in the second half of the year — HarperStudio Publisher Bob Miller talks about his new NON-RETURNABLE publishing plan. That’s right — books are becoming MORE like comics.

Today, Borders announced they will not be shipping unsold books back to HarperStudio, forging a new sort of relationship between publisher and distributor.

Yesterday, GalleyCat caught up with HarperStudio president and publisher, Bob Miller, to talk about non-returnable deals. In this exclusive video, Miller explains how he hopes to cut similar deals with more bookstores, and readers get a glimpse of HarperStudio’s upcoming titles.

The Wall Street Journal has the story: “Under the terms of the deal, the nation’s second-largest bookstore chain by revenue will get a deeper discount on initial orders of books published by the new imprint of News Corp.’s HarperCollins Publishers — 58% to 63% off the cover price, instead of the usual 48%. In exchange, Borders won’t return any unsold books to HarperStudio, instead probably discounting them in the store.”

• Finally, because you will need to laugh about all of this, here’s the MySpace Guide to Holiday Shopping by ACHEWOOD’S Chris Onstad which we’ve excerpted above.

With the days until the winter festivities rapidly dwindling, and the number of people in your life tired of receiving gifts from Eddie Bauer rapidly increasing, please enjoy this ACHEWOOD-style holiday gift guide. Your yuletide shopping woes are OVER!

If this is your first experience with ACHEWOOD, hang on to your butts. You can check out more of one of the internet’s most popular comics on ACHEWOOD.COM, or on our very own MYSPACE DARK HORSE PRESENTS, or in the newest ACHEWOODcollection, THE GREAT OUTDOOR FIGHT.

Many thanks to Chris Onstad for the hilarious comic and to our good friends at DARK HORSE COMICS. Happy holidays!

Ho-ho-h–

12/19/08

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Well, things are slowing down everywhere you look. To be honest, we’re really dragging here at Stately Beat Manor. If it isn’t the brutal holiday party schedule, it’s the stress, the rushing around, the shopping, the worries, and so on. We’ll be on VACATION all next week, and today we’re officially going into slowdown mode. But in the meantime, here is a Disney Christmas Cards collection from the always amazing ASIFA Archives.

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Here’s a nice vintage Christmas card set of Flickr. When we run out of steam, we’ll just post a few of these and hope everyone understands. Let’s face it, it’s that or more Red Sonja covers, and no one wants that.

PS: Where are all those digital Christmas cards we used to get? Don’t hold out on us.

RIP: Majel Barrett Roddenberry

12/18/08

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Majel Barrett Roddenberry, widow of Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry, passed away today at the age of 76.

She had just recently finished voice work for the new STAR TREK movie, reprising her role as the voice of the ship’s computer.

In the original series, she played Nurse Chapel, as well as Number One in the original Star Trek pilot, “The Cage.”

As the news is just hitting the wires, this will likely be expanded later tonight and tomorrow.

Posted by Mark Coale

Auction for the Fabers is live

12/18/08

Updated to add: You can find all the auctions right here.

On Tuesday, December 16, 2008, a series of auctions will begin at 5:00 p.m. Central Time, benefiting Rich Faber and his family. Rich is a well-known comic book inker and co-creator of the indy superhero series BUZZBOY. His wife Traci is battling Stage 4 metastatic melanoma. According to organizer Drew Geraci:

Times aren’t easy for anyone right now, but the Fabers are also raising their 2-year old son at home, and could use all the help that they can get right now as they try to pay for costly cancer treatments for Traci.

100% of the money raised through these auctions will be donated directly to the Faber family. These auctions are being run by longtime DC comic inker Drew Geraci, and Splash Page Comic Art.”

Inker Andy Owens has generously donated a page from the top-selling Buffy The Vampire Slayer series (written by Joss Whedon, pencilled by Georges Jeanty, published by Dark Horse).

A three piece set of Punisher try out pieces penciled by Louis Small Jr. and inked by Punisher Cover artist Tim Bradstreet. Tim stated that he was asked by his editor at marvel a while back to ink some of Louis Small’s pencils when they were considering having him pencil a run on the main Punisher title. All three pieces are drawn on 11 X 17″ comic art boards, and come together as a set. Donated by Tim Bradstreet & Splash Page Comic Art.

Ethan Van Sciver - Batman Spiderman & MJ. This fun commission is penciled & inked by Ethan Van Sciver on 11 X 17″ comic art board. Spidey’s sense tingles as he see’s Batman making a play for MJ. Donated by Mark Hay of Splash Page Comic Art

Paolo Rivera Wolverine sketch This sketch of Wolverine is drawn in pencil by Amazing Spiderman & Mythos artist Paolo Rivera on a piece of 11 X 14″ bristol board.


We’re previewing a selection of the art and will update with links when the auction goes live.
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She-Devil with a…?

12/18/08

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…cooter?

This is the gift that keeps on giving!

Graphic Novel Reporter debuts

12/18/08

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With reviews, interviews, etc. A lot to digest. We’ll have our restaurant review later.

William Moulton Marston’s OTHER pastime

12/18/08

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Psychologist William Moulton Marston had a life full of achievements — he helped invent the polygraph test, he created Wonder Woman, and he lived with two women at once! But this book cover would indicate yet one more feat to be proud of: he also wrote lurid novels about Romans — who probably liked a little loving submission now and then, if we interpret those wall paintings in the background correctly.
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Thanks to Eric S. for the link!

Kibbles ‘n’ Bits

12/18/08

§ MSN profiles First Second’s Mark Siegel:

He started out in the art department of a children’s book publisher while writing picture books on the side. Along the way an idea began to percolate, fueled by the thriving European and Asian markets for graphic novels. Siegel suspected that the United States was ready for a high-end comic book imprint specifically tailored to the American market. “MacMillan came to me,” says Siegel of the publishing company that houses First Second. “I thought they wanted me to illustrate a book for them. Instead they offered me my own imprint.”


§ Electric Ant interviews manga-popularizing pioneer Frederik Schodt at length and with very small type. We plan to settle down with a hot beverage to read the whole thing when we have a moment, and so should you.

§ Pictures from the KRAMERS ERGOT signing at Desert Island in BKNY. Looks like it was a lively day. We hear Desert Island sold more than 50 copies of the book, which is a nice number, esp. dollar-wise.

§ A biting riposte to the whole “indie comics fans are snobs” debate raging for the 9,476th time ever,

§ Tucker Stone’s The Best Comics of 2008, Part 1 of 2 demonstrates the wide range of notable material that was available this year via catholic tastes and a nice critical eye.

§ Yet ANOTHER “Best of” list from Indy Comic News readers, and the picks aren’t particularly focused or anything, but, once again, it’s a very wide-ranging list.

§ We should note that Dick Hyacinth is rounding up all the “Best of” lists, or at least the ones that matter.

First SURROGATES image

12/18/08

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Disney and Top Shelf have released the first image of Bruce Willis in THE SURROGATES, or as Leigh Walton puts it:

Exciting news — Disney/Touchstone has released the first production still from the upcoming SURROGATES movie, based on the Top Shelf graphic novel by Robert Venditti and Brett Weldele! Here we see Bruce Willis as Agent Greer… or is it his surrogate?!

The film’s release date is September 25, 2009 — principal shooting wrapped some time ago, as I understand it, and they’re in the midst of some intense post-production work.

The SURROGATES graphic novel is in stock at TopShelfComix.com and in fine stores everywhere (and makes a great gift). The prequel graphic novel, SURROGATES: FLESH AND BONE, is scheduled for July 2009!


We especially like how Willis has mastered the “butt AND face to the camera” pose that is usually seen from female action stars. Willis is versatile, no question.

End times, continued

12/18/08

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It snowed in Vegas yesterday.

We’ve often thought about what the most absurd sight possible on earth might be, and this was one of them. The Vegas where, on at least two separate occasions, a walk to the next casino became a scene out of LAWRENCE OF ARABIA.

The freakish storm caused highway closures and power outages, but Wayne Newton’s hair level remained unaffected.

Pull Quotes: What drives the book?

12/18/08

What do today’s cartoonists think about when they sit down to draw or plan out a graphic novel? We’re always fascinated to learn what makes an artist tick, and not surprisingly, many of them have massively different creative agendas…

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It was really my first character-driven book, so I was thinking about that and how to use scenes and character designs. I figured more people would like it, since people tend to like character-driven stories. If you have characters, you can get away with a lot. But, honestly, I don’t feel particularly attached to making character-driven comics.

-Dash Shaw, on his acclaimed book BOTTOMLESS BELLY BUTTON, from an interview with USA Today.

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I interviewed quite a few of the old scenesters over beers or coffee, plumbing them for details, trying to nail the vibe of the place. It’s not historically accurate, but I wanted to get it right, because very little survives from the Akron scene, outside of the records. CBGBs was in the media capital of the world, so there were dozens of photogs and filmmakers documenting what was going on there. That’s not how it was in Akron. Most of the surviving photos look like they were taken with a cheap Kodak Insta-matic. There’s only a few minutes of film. A few scratchy tapes of live shows. I wanted to create the definitive portrait of what it was like.

-Derf, talking to Newsarama about his new graphic novel PUNK ROCK AND TRAILER PARKS, set in Akron, Ohio, considered “new Liverpool” in the late ’70s.

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I’m trying to make him more than just a big strong guy. I want to give him a bit more personality in his face, so he looks more ethnic. And in this story he’s dealing with a broken heart and trying to get over it so I’m trying to capture his personality by what he’s going through in the story. But at the same time he is Colossus. He turns into a massive metallic guy, which is really fun to draw. I’m messing around with ways of conveying the metal in his form. Any time you deal with conveying different metals in a two dimensional medium like this, it’s a lot of fun to figure out what really works and makes things look cool.

-Terry Dodson discusses his work drawing UNCANNY X-MEN for Marvel Comics with CBR.

Beat Christmas giveaway

12/17/08

Yes, it’s that time of year! We’ve located a surplus copy of Little Lulu Volume  6, and rather than just toss it, sell it, or make a pie from it, we’ve decided to make a present of it for some lucky Beat reader! To throw your hat in the ring for Lulu, email your NAME AND ADDRESS to beatgiveaway @ gmail.com.  But hurry! Because it’s so close to the holiday, we’ll choose a winner at random from those who enter by 6 p.m. EST tomorrow!

Void where prohibited!

RIP Maddie Blaustein

12/17/08

maddie06.jpgI am very saddened to learn today of the death of actress/comics writer/friend Maddie Blaustein at age 48. It’s being reported that she died in her sleep after a brief illness.

Blaustein started out in the comics industry at Marvel, where he was known as Adam, but gradually went on a path that few could imagine — first as a very successful, talented and well-known voice actress, most notably as the voice of Meowth on the US version of Pokemon. Second, as a transgendered individual. She also wrote several issues of Milestone comics, including a run on STATIC.

Aaron McQuade, who profiled Maddie for The Advocate, has more on his blog:

Maddie (born Adam Blaustein) might be the most recognizable transgender voice on the planet, from her roles as Meowth on Pokemon, and Solomon Moto on Yu-Gi-Oh, not to mention dozens of other anime and video games. She was also a writer for Milestone Comics, penning issues of Static and Hardware, as well as the limited series Deathwish.

Maddie once told me the story of how she was inspired to fully transition from male to female (and to come out to her co-workers as transgender) by an episode of Pokemon. In the episode “Go West, Young Meowth” her character travels to Hollywood to make it big. There, Meowth falls in love with another Meowth, who spurns his advances. He decides to learn how to speak and to stand upright in order to impress her - but she rejects him for being a “freak.” Meowth was a human trapped in a Pokemon’s body.


Maddie and I worked together at DC Comics for a few years, and she was a character as unusual as any she played, but a true friend with a heart of gold. Meowth was my favorite Pokemon (me being a cat lover and all) and I kept a talking Meowth on my computer at DC — both as a tribute to the character and Maddie but also as a tribute to the fact that this brave, compassionate and talented person could become the voice of a character known to millions and millions of children.

My path never crossed with Maddie’s as much as it should have, and for that I am sorry. I do know that she will very much be missed by everyone who called her friend.

Spain Rodriguez video

12/17/08

Revel In is a video company devoted to making videos of cool, people, and underground legend Spain Rodriguez certainly qualifies. There’s a nice historical context to the interview as well, with archival material on Crumb and the entire underground movement.

Spain’s CHE just came out from Verso.

Carla and Lance Hoffman update

12/17/08

Carla’s brother, Jason McComb, posted an update on their condition in our comments:

I am Carla’s brother. I live in South San Francisco and commute to Orange, CA where the UCI Burn Center is. I just got back from visiting them yesterday, and I am happy to report that they are both out of danger and have begun the hard tasks of rehabilitation from both the smoke inhalation and burns. Burns require daily cleaning and the ‘hydrotherapy’ is taxing and painful. Carla is able to talk and is walking a little, and we hope that Lance is not far behind.

Fortunately, UCI is a top facility and even the nursing staff has decades of burn treatment experience. As far as bad situations go, its the best it can be right now.

So, at this time, anything that can be done to keep their morale up is vastly important. I have been out the comic world since high school (I am 42) so any help from the blogsphere would be most appreciated. Anyone know Stan Lee’s unlisted phone number?

Carla has asked for updates on the following:

Secret Invasion
Dark Reign (Rain?)
Final Crisis

Iron Man
The two new Thor books with Matt Fraction
Man of War
God Sized Thor

If anyone can email me at jasonmccomb @ hotmail.com with news or links on these subjects I would really appreciate it. I fly down again on Saturday and will share any well wishes, news or information that come my way.

Thanks everyone for their prayers and support,

Jason McComb

“Warren Ellis: King of the Internet”

12/17/08

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You’ve got a lot to answer for, Dustin Harbin.

EX MACHINA’s unlikely cameos

12/17/08

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IGN has a preview of EX MACHINA #40, which posits: What if New York had a superpowered mayor? The issue kicks off the title’s final year, and in old Stan and Jack fashion it co-stars…creators Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris. But WHY? CBR has the answer to that in an interview with Vaughan:

“It’s really one of the first stories I thought of when I came up with the concept of the book, and it’s something I’ve been putting off forever because I didn’t want to do it because it involves me. And I really dislike myself,” Vaughan told CBR News. “The last thing I want to do is something that puts myself at the center of the story, and I put it off for as many years as I could, and then it just felt like in a weird way – not because of my presence in the story but because of what the story is – it became incredibly central to what happens next in an odd way. So, it’s a story that ‘had to be told.’”