Thursday, May 19, 2016
Weimar Watch: Threepenny Opera (1931)
Obviously near-post-silent German film isn't my usual deal, nor Brechtian musical comedy. The closest I'll get to that is a fondness for Fosse's Cabaret and that I have all of the albums by The Dresden Dolls. And, you know, Tom Waits and others have carried through the spirit of the movement through to the modern era.
I haven't seen much in the way of G.W. Pabst's directorial efforts, although I'm well aware, from film school, he's one of those names you're supposed to be able to drop. He was a giant of German cinema in the pre-Nazi days, and brought Louise Brooks out of Hollywood and over to Weimar Germany, and I've seen Pandora's Box. A contemporary of Fritz Lang and F.W. Murnau, going to the pictures in Germany back in the day must have been something.
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
DC Comics gets a new logo. So... this means... what, exactly?
Blah blah blah...
DC Comics has a new logo.
It's certainly not as "we might sell paper like Dunder-Mifflin" as the last DC Logo. Or as hopelessly detergent-label-like as the prior. But there's not a lot of standards to go with in this realm. The big, chunky red Marvel logo isn't really... much of anything, either, so let's not get too excited in the compare and contrast department.
the logo that screams "'fun', as defined in Appendix C of the PDF attachment in Tuesday's email" |
Like a lot of other folks, I looked at the new one up top and said "huh, interesting they went Bronze Age with it". Because a bit of a throw-back to those early 1970's logos DOES say what you want to say to fans about respecting the past, and the fun of that past - something DC hasn't just had a problem with, but has aggressively trampled over the past 5 years. But it IS new-er-ish. They're not just endeavoring into a revival of a period which is remembered fondly, but would make no sense in 2016. Mostly, unlike the DC Fold, it's also squarely not the sort of thing that would look at home on a box of 3.5" diskettes in 1994, either. But maybe a loaf of bread from a company that hasn't changed it's packaging since, well, 1974.
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
In Memoriam Watch: Justice League - The New Frontier (2008)
With the passing of Darwyn Cooke, I had my quick appreciation write-up, and on Sunday, as I was eating my oatmeal and pondering the fact I had to work all afternoon, Jamie pitched watching the animated version of Cooke's comics classic, Justice League: The New Frontier (2008).
For a while there, I was purchasing every single new DVD WB Animation pushed out as DC got into the feature-length animated film business. These days I limit my actual purchases (my last purchase being Flashpoint, which seemed as good a place to jump off DC Entertainment in many-a-ways), but I have a pretty good run of Batman, Superman, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman and Justice League videos. And, as I type this, why the hell didn't they ever make a Flash movie? It seems like an obvious fit.
But I don't think I'd actually watched this disk in something like 6 years.
Monday, May 16, 2016
20th Anniversary of DC Comics' "Kingdom Come"
This month marks the 20th anniversary of the release of the first issue of Kingdom Come, the prestige 4-issue, oft re-issued, comic by creators Alex Ross (artist) and Mark Waid (writer).
It's extremely difficult for me to state how much of an impact this comic had on me as a reader at the time of it's release. In fact, I'd argue it was one of the comics that came out at a particular time in my life that tilted me from an interest in comics and enthusiastic readership to... whatever it became. Further, I'd say that Kingdom Come stands as one of the key books that pushed me from thinking Superman was pretty neat to... whatever my deal is with The Man of Steel today.
By 1996, I just wasn't that interested in superhero comics. It seemed like a lot of books were trying to pull things off that weren't working, and, honestly, at age 21, glancing over the covers - a sense of creeping embarrassment hit me for the first time in my life in regards to comics. Not for the hobby or comics themselves, but it seemed that, in the mainline superhero books, writers and artists and the companies themselves had a vision they were trying to execute, and that vision felt like a 13-year-old trying on their dad's suit thinking they could con the bank into giving them a loan.
By '93, a brave new world of tough, militaristic, snarling characters had flooded the shelves. New publishers had arrived with fully formed concepts and universes, clearly either inspired as "extreme" versions of existing characters, or taking their cues from the artwork on heavy metal album covers (which, you know, how could you fault them?). And at DC and Marvel, familiar characters were getting changed and rebooted (see: Azrael Batman) to reflect the times. To me, the stories themselves lacked anything resembling narrative sophistication or substance, taking a Canon Films approach to violence and vitriol and mistaking it for maturity. The plots were sophomoric at best, and adding spiked shoulder pads to pre-existing characters did nothing to sell me on their new grittiness. I'll never forget cackling my way through the 1994 Dr. Fate reboot, Fate, wherein the hero turns the all-powerful helmet of Dr. Fate into a knife. So he can cut things! To the extreme!*
Meanwhile, Karen Berger had set up Vertigo at DC and was putting out Hellblazer, Shade: The Changing Man, Animal Man, Swamp Thing, The Invisibles, and, of course, Sandman and Sandman Mystery Theatre. I didn't think I had to look too far to see characters who were telling me they were for older readers - they simply were the sophistication (or what passed for it) that felt like the proper heirs to the Moore legacy.
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Bat Watch: Batman Begins (2005)
I hadn't watched this movie in a few years, but I've got a shelf full of Batman films, cartoons and TV, and on Friday night - in the wake of finishing The Caped Crusade: Batman and The Rise of Nerd Culture, it felt like time to review some Batman again.
Not sure what to watch, I just gave Jamie some options, and she selected Batman Begins.
Darwyn Cooke Merges With The Infinite - #RIPDarwynCooke
Just yesterday we heard that Darwyn Cooke had entered palliative care in the last stages of cancer, and by the time I went to bed, the internet was telling me we that we have lost Darwyn Cooke, comics artist and writer.
2016 seems intent on taking my favorite artists from the world before their time.
It seemed to me Cooke was properly appreciated by comics enthusiasts, and a favorite in the creator community as a solid guy.
His art is making its way around the internet, and you won't have to look far for the next 72 hours to see all of us posting our favorite pieces. I'll focus here on his DC work and his work with Richard Stark's Parker novels.
Perhaps the best known of his works is DC's New Frontier, the Jet Age re-imagining of the origin of the Justice League of America, featuring all the mainstay players and some more-forgotten characters of the JFK/ pop explosion era of DC. If you've never read it, it's available out there in print and digital. And, it was adapted into a feature length cartoon film a few years back.
Cooke's art tilted toward iconographic cartooning, and fit no house style at DC, even as it clearly fit the aesthetic and mood of the DCU on the sunniest of days. Both retro and modern, his style borrowing heavily from the pop-art style of late-50/ early-60's illustration, with the nuance of line to manage expression and convey more in a face than 95% of comics artists.
During an era when DC Comics and comics in general are on a swing back toward projecting a world view of fire, chaos, and gnashing teeth for all of their characters, Cooke still found a place in the comics world to show a DC Universe infused with hope.
Friday, May 13, 2016
God Damn Cancer
One of my best friends is currently in Denver with his mother as she enters the final stages of her battle with cancer. His girlfriend lost her brother last year to cancer. And another good friend found out her dad had cancer and her father passed within 4 weeks.
Comics artist Darwyn Cooke, one of the finest talents in the industry as both writer and artist, is now moving into palliative care.
Goddammit.
Max's raffle is over with, but I highly recommend everyone think long and hard about giving to The American Cancer Society, or other similar organizations of your choice.
Here's to Darwyn.
Comics artist Darwyn Cooke, one of the finest talents in the industry as both writer and artist, is now moving into palliative care.
Goddammit.
Max's raffle is over with, but I highly recommend everyone think long and hard about giving to The American Cancer Society, or other similar organizations of your choice.
Here's to Darwyn.
Monday, May 9, 2016
Signal Watch Reads: The Caped Crusade - Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture (audiobook, 2016)
Here's what I know after reading Caped Crusade: Batman and the Rise of Nerd Culture (2016) - I would love to spend a couple hours at a bar with author Glen Weldon knocking back a couple of cocktails and talking comics.
The book is a perfect compliment to the sort of discussion we've been having here at The Signal Watch the past few years, from our Gen-X Recollection Project (still ongoing! Send in your posts!), to trying to contextualize what we see in movies of the past and present as seasoned dorks.
As a matter of course, I've read a few Superman retrospectives, but very few feel like an honest conversation. Les Daniels' works read like what they are - honest if fairly sanitary historical accounts of the rise of Superman in all media. The very-well-selling Larry Tye book felt like a lot of research into something the author felt would move books but for which he had little personal affinity and seemed surprised that Superman wasn't the character he remembered from his years watching The Adventures of Superman. Author Tom De Haven has the strangest relationship with Superman, having written a full novel re-imagining the character from the ground up (in ways that often seemed far, far off the mark), and then a sort of retrospective that made it clear - he kinda hates Superman.
But aside from Les Daniels and a few excerpts in books like Ten Cent Plague and Men of Tomorrow, I haven't read up as much on Batman. I actually heard of author Glen Weldon when he put out a book called Superman: The Unauthorized Biography. I purchased the book, but hadn't read it as I had a stack of books I was making it through. Still haven't read it, honestly, aside from the first few pages, which had me cackling in recognition of someone who truly knew their Superman. But, two days after I picked up the Superman book, Weldon announced on twitter his Batman book was coming, and as I'd just finished the Tye Superman book, I figured - I'll just wait for that one.
I really can't recommend Caped Crusade enough. This is a "run, don't walk" sort of recommendation.
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Marvel Watch: Captain America - Civil War (2016)
Let''s be honest - if you're trying to look at Marvel movies as individual installments - you're utterly missing the point. I suspect you're the sort of person who, while selecting a computer, asks the sales associate what gauge typewriter ribbon this contraption will require. The strength of the Marvel U is the serial nature and continuity, something more traditional critics seem to balk at, continually expect to flounder, but then engage with once they get down to brass tacks in their discussion of the semi-annual Marvel release. Captain America: Civil War (2016) is the culmination of the past decade's worth of Marvel studios box office success, tight narrative management, and editorial vision of a shared universe reflecting the best aspects of more than 50 years of Marvel comics.
I should point out right here that I still have not seen Batman v. Superman, so I'll do my best not to make any comparisons between this film and one I haven't seen. It's not fair to either.
My relationship with the original Civil War comics from Marvel is not a great one. I loved the art in the main series, but I didn't entirely buy either Cap or Tony suddenly coming to their respective positions, and due to events in recent Captain America comics - Steve had unmasked on camera and said his name directly into a microphone as a sign of strength while confronting terrorists (it was just post 9/11) - I didn't really think it made sense for him to be the standard bearer in the comics for being anti-government management. After all, Steve has been roughly a government op for SHIELD since his return in the 64' era and getting his own title.
At the series' conclusion, it felt like they took dozens and dozens of comics, from the mini-series to the associated mini-series, to the in-continuity issue tie-in's, to tell a story which only really needed about 5-7 issues to tell. And, at the conclusion of that series, I dropped Marvel as a line, except for, I think, Black Panther - which I only stuck with for a while longer, and then Cap. They were headed into doing the same thing over again with another storyline (that Skrull dealy-o), and I just raised my hands and said "I can't afford this, and you need to do this better".
Thus, I was a bit skeptical when Marvel selected Civil War as the basis for its next storyline for Cap following Winter Soldier. If I was cheered a bit, it was that I felt Winter Soldier was an entirely new story using pieces of the comics (which I'd enjoyed terrifically), maintaining the central conflicts and many of the characters while telling an entirely different story.
Friday, May 6, 2016
I Spend Too Much Time Leaving
Travelling for work is strange. Especially once you get into a job where you travel regularly. The romance of travel fades away, and, air travel, in particular, becomes a series of repetitive, boring, sometimes risky events.
"Have you been to Atlanta?" people will now ask me. "Yes. Twice," I'll say. "What did you see?" they'll ask. "A hotel, a conference room and a hotel bar. And another bar that served cheeseburgers." And they always look disappointed. Because for reasonable reasons people assume it's a grand romantic trip to America's Peach Land! or however people think of Georgia when you're travelling. But it's not. It's a series of steps you're taking, all of which you want to go as smoothly as possible. You don't want a story. You don't want an adventure. You want to just do your conference, talk with work pals, get a reasonable amount of sleep, get home without any fuss.
What struck me on this go-round is how much time I spend leaving.
Friday morning I woke up at 6:00 Central Time to get ready for my day (I never bothered to adjust to East Coast time), as well as pack up, and do that triple-check of the room you kind of have to do so you don't leave your power supply or vital cord behind (or ditty bag with your toothbrush and all that, which I did last summer). Then I have to check-out (virtually, this time, from my phone). Then find a bell station to check my bags. Then go to my conference, then make my good-byes. Then putter around the hotel looking for a functioning ATM. Then find a store to buy gum so I can get change and I don't have to tip the bellhop $20 for 2 minutes of work. Then I get a cab. Then I fear for my life in the cab. Then the cabby gets mad because I want to use a credit card instead of paying cash (this was entirely new in Atlanta, and a dick move. What business traveler doesn't need a receipt?). Then the kiosk and bag check at the airport. Then whatever adventure awaits you in security. Then the train ride you take in the Atlanta airport. Then finding your gate. Then sitting. Then boarding. Then sitting. Then flying. Then sitting. Then de-planing (and all the shenanigans people get up to seemingly as if they've never gotten off a plane before). Then baggage claim. Then the shuttle. Then my car. Then the booth where I pay to leave parking. Then I drive home. Then I'm home. Then I have to unpack.
If I'm driving, yeah, it's a drive, but it's so many fewer steps, and so much more is under my direct control. Plus, audiobooks and scenery. And a lack of annoying seatmates. And way, way more legroom.
There absolutely was a time when I liked being A Guy On The Move. But, the romance of air travel died in the 1970's, and airports somehow became just places where snackfoods have a 250% markup. They're dull and depressing, and no one has ever invented a comfortable airport seat.
In short, I'm a bit over it.
"Have you been to Atlanta?" people will now ask me. "Yes. Twice," I'll say. "What did you see?" they'll ask. "A hotel, a conference room and a hotel bar. And another bar that served cheeseburgers." And they always look disappointed. Because for reasonable reasons people assume it's a grand romantic trip to America's Peach Land! or however people think of Georgia when you're travelling. But it's not. It's a series of steps you're taking, all of which you want to go as smoothly as possible. You don't want a story. You don't want an adventure. You want to just do your conference, talk with work pals, get a reasonable amount of sleep, get home without any fuss.
What struck me on this go-round is how much time I spend leaving.
Maybe Shane had the right idea. Just saddle up and bail. |
Friday morning I woke up at 6:00 Central Time to get ready for my day (I never bothered to adjust to East Coast time), as well as pack up, and do that triple-check of the room you kind of have to do so you don't leave your power supply or vital cord behind (or ditty bag with your toothbrush and all that, which I did last summer). Then I have to check-out (virtually, this time, from my phone). Then find a bell station to check my bags. Then go to my conference, then make my good-byes. Then putter around the hotel looking for a functioning ATM. Then find a store to buy gum so I can get change and I don't have to tip the bellhop $20 for 2 minutes of work. Then I get a cab. Then I fear for my life in the cab. Then the cabby gets mad because I want to use a credit card instead of paying cash (this was entirely new in Atlanta, and a dick move. What business traveler doesn't need a receipt?). Then the kiosk and bag check at the airport. Then whatever adventure awaits you in security. Then the train ride you take in the Atlanta airport. Then finding your gate. Then sitting. Then boarding. Then sitting. Then flying. Then sitting. Then de-planing (and all the shenanigans people get up to seemingly as if they've never gotten off a plane before). Then baggage claim. Then the shuttle. Then my car. Then the booth where I pay to leave parking. Then I drive home. Then I'm home. Then I have to unpack.
If I'm driving, yeah, it's a drive, but it's so many fewer steps, and so much more is under my direct control. Plus, audiobooks and scenery. And a lack of annoying seatmates. And way, way more legroom.
There absolutely was a time when I liked being A Guy On The Move. But, the romance of air travel died in the 1970's, and airports somehow became just places where snackfoods have a 250% markup. They're dull and depressing, and no one has ever invented a comfortable airport seat.
In short, I'm a bit over it.
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