Friday, April 15, 2016
Toho Releases "Godzilla Resurgence" Trailer, Life Worth Living Again
(this is the actual, longer trailer from Toho. Sorry about the abbreviated trailer earlier)
Marvel Watch: Daredevil Season 2
If you think my movie watching has slowed to a trickle, you'd be right. We're still neck deep in TV and baseball right now. I haven't even watched my BluRay of The Force Awakens quite yet, but I did lose all of last night watching the disk of bonus material (totally great, btw).
We also blitzed our way through Daredevil Season 2, or as close to a blitz as you're going to get out of us. We basically finished the series in about 2.5 weeks, which is really fast for us, even for a 13-episode series.
Last night's post should give you an idea of the regard in which I hold the source material of Daredevil comics produced by Frank Miller in the early 1980's. But, to be truthful, I haven't read them in over a decade. That's all right. The show only references them loosely, doing what Marvel has done so well so often over the past decade: keeping the origins largely intact, remembering who the characters are at their core (and not in the squishy "well, which canon? who are you to say this isn't Superman?" way DC has done), and boiling down stories to work better in the medium in which they're appearing.
Daredevil Season 1 carried the burden of the origin and establishing their corner of New York not just for Daredevil, but - as it turned out - for Jessica Jones and Luke Cage. In all honesty, I thought both Daredevil Season 1 and Jessica Jones Season 1 could have been tighter. They seemed to be 8 or 9 episode shows spread out over 13, and that meant a lot of filler.
I think those of us who watched Daredevil S2 can agree, if this season had an issue, it wasn't that not that we were hoping it'd pick up the pace a bit.
Thursday, April 14, 2016
John Williams Appreciation Post: Indiana Jones Theme
Today we post the Indiana Jones theme, a rousing tune that, in my book, is what the call to high adventure sounds like.
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Frank Miller Takes Over the World
I have an employee who is into geek-culture stuff in a way that doesn't include actual comics. She likes horror movies, Army of Darkness, and watches the TV shows and movies based on comics. She just finished watching Daredevil (so say we all), and she was wearing a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles shirt with art from the 90's cartoon while she was talking to me about the show.
"You know," I said, "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles is a by-product of Daredevil."
She eyed me, somewhat skeptically.
"Frank Miller made ninjas cool in comics via the Daredevil comics run they're adapting for the show. After that, ninjas were everywhere in comics, but Miller did them best. It was the 1980's and Eastman and Laird were drinking beer and figuring out what might be popular for a comic and, hey, NINJAS. The 'Teenage Mutant' part is referring to some X-Men stuff. New Mutants, I think."
The look of skepticism was giving way to a bit of fear.
"Yes, I think you can argue that Bruce Lee started the craze, but in comics, I point to Frank Miller."
"Okay."
"Yeah," I said, refusing to let it go. "The crazy turtle uses sai, right? Elektra! That's Miller. What's the name of the bad guys the Shredder works with?"
She felt a trap. "The Foot?" she ventured.
"Uh huh. And the name of the ninjas in Daredevil?"
"...the Hand?"
"Right. Now... let's talk about how Frank Miller is responsible for Batman v. Superman."
She was not impressed.
"Directly or indirectly, Jack Kirby and Frank Miller are responsible for everything in media right now," I concluded.
I don't think she bought a word of it.
In general, I'd argue the conversations the comics kids are having online these days don't seem to talk so much about what's happening in their comics as they do the characters in broad strokes, undergrad 101 media criticism of race and gender (which I welcome) and the creators, like they're following demi-celebrities who might talk back to them.*
John Williams Appreciation Post: Theme to "Superman" - 1978
Yesterday I way overslept and slid into my desk at 9:26 AM. I was panicky, because Nathan Cone was DJing the Spring telethon for Texas Public Radio out of San Antonio, and he'd promised he'd play the Superman theme just for on my B-Day at 9:30 AM sharp. I fired up the website, and in a couple of minutes, I got to hear Nathan give me (and the site!) a shout out, and then he played selections from the score to Superman: The Movie (1978).
As much as the movie defines Superman for me in a multitude of ways, I'll never get over the score. It's got all the drama and adventure and fun of a Superman comic at its best built right in. And for that, we need to thank John Williams.
We all love John Williams. He provided the score to our film-going lives and is, arguably, the most important composer of the age. He's certainly taken up more of my headspace than nearly any other composer, and I've bought more of his work than nearly any other musician.
So, we're going to start posting some of Williams' work here for a bit. Nothing to overwhelm you, just something to listen to and enjoy yourself.
And, yes, I re-upped my membership with Texas Public Radio. Nathan is diabolical that way.
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
Happy Birthday, Ann Miller
Ann Miller and I share a birthday, but she has better legs.
Here she is in Easter Parade, performing "Shakin' the Blues Away".
indeed.
Here she is in Easter Parade, performing "Shakin' the Blues Away".
indeed.
On the Event of My 41st
Innocent When You Dream
Tom Waits
Tom Waits
The bats are in the belfry
The dew is on the moor
Where are the arms that held me?
And pledged her love before?
And pledged her love before?
It's such a sad old feeling
The hills are soft and green
It's memories that I'm stealing
But you're innocent when you dream
When you dream
You're innocent when you dream
When you dream, you're innocent when you dream
I made a golden promise
That we would never part
I gave my love a locket
And then I broke her heart
And then I broke her heart
It's such a sad old feeling
The fields are soft and green
It's memories that I'm stealing
But you're innocent when you dream
When you dream
You're innocent when you dream
Innocent when you dream
Running through the graveyard
We laughed my, friends and I
We swore we'd be together
Until the day we died
Until the day we died
It's such a sad old feeling
The fields are soft and green
It's memories that I'm stealing
But you're innocent when you dream
When you dream
You're innocent when you dream
When you dream
Monday, April 11, 2016
Happy #NationalPetsDay with Krypto and the Super Pets!
Here at The Signal Watch, we have a Super Affinity for pets. We've got our own two little geniuses at home making our lives more colorful every day.
Back in the Silver Age, National Comics introduced a dog named Krypto to the Superman mythos. Supposedly sent in advance of a baby Kal-El in a test rocket, Krypto arrived on Earth around when Superboy was making a name for himself in Smallville. The comics made their usual bends in logic and soon Krypto was appearing in both Superboy and the adventures of grown-up Superman.
Sunday, April 10, 2016
Slam Evil Watch: The Phantom (1996)
In 1989, Michael Keaton put on a terrible-looking rubber cowl with ears, got dropped onto fantastic looking sets with Jacks Palance and Nicholson, Jerry Hall and Kim Basinger, and the world went bat-shit. Warner Bros. made a ton of money off not just the movie, but the merchandising. Batman, overnight, became America's favorite superhero.
All the studios scrambled to see what else that looked like a comic books that they could exploit, but without spending a ton of money (this was a pre-CGI era). And for about 10 years, man, there was a lot of stuff coming out. A lot of stuff of varying quality.
I'm actually a fan of The Shadow from 1994 or so, and I love Disney's The Rocketeer. Both super fun movies, even if The Shadow kinda hams up, then softens up the whole concept. Marvel, for their part, laid some eggs in their straight to video Captain America and Punisher films, circa 1990.
During this era, a vision in purple spandex strode onto screens across America. And, for reasons I cannot put into words, felt compelled to see this movie then and a few times since. The Phantom (1996)!!!
Friday, April 8, 2016
Murder on the University of Texas Campus
When I was a student living in Jester Dorm, we all took a shortcut from the parking lot a fair distance from the dorm, where we'd have to descend into the wooded creekbed, hop across the rocks poking out of the water in our Doc Martens and Adidas, and then mount the steep rise to pop back out of the treeline and onto the athletic field backed up to the monstrosity that was my home for a year. There, the creek ran wide and shallow. Twenty-odd years later, a bridge spans that area.
Further toward MLK, the creek runs even more deep and wide, and I've seen exotic fisher birds standing at the water's edge, odd and out of place with five lanes of traffic on the bridge running by them 20 yards away and 13 story dorms looming in the background, but a reminder that this creek is part of the world, that the campus came long afterward, and may well be here long after the buildings are torn down and the people all gone.
A couple hundred feet from my freshman-year short-cut, Waller Creek also runs behind The Alumni Center, a facility conveniently located across a wide street from Darrell K. Royal - Texas Memorial Stadium. The Alumni Center is a low-slung facility, lodge-like, great for banquets and housing the loyal donors on gameday, windows facing the trees reaching up out of the creekbed. This intersection also includes a classroom building for the Fine Arts as well as the Performing Arts building.
On Monday morning, the UT Austin Police, alerted by a roommate to the fact a freshman was missing, began searching for the missing student. Around 10:30AM Tuesday, police found the student in Waller Creek behind the Alumni Center.
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