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Monday, April 13, 2015
Afterburn Announces the Debut of "Tempered Steele" Comic Book
A HEROIC AGE BEGINS AS THE ROAD TO THE PARADOX WAR CONTINUES
Tempered Steele #1
“The Heroic Age Begins!” with the birth of Tempered Steele. What connection does he have to the Timestone? Why does an alien race offer Kevin powers to be their champion. All of this leads to the Paradox Wars Saga.
Cover by Don Hillsman II, Robert W. Hickey
Full color, 32 pages, standard comic size, mini-series.
Standard Comic Format, 32 full color pages.
In stores: June 2015
by Robert W. Hickey, Bill Nichols, DeWayne Haddix, Don Hillsman II, Aero Zero. Cover by Don Hillsman II.
TEMPERED STEELE #1 - Full color, 32 pages, standard comic size, mini-series.
Available in: June 2015 Diamond Code (APR150980)
More information online: http://afterburnpress.com/
About AFTERBURN:
With over 25+ years of comic book manufacturing and publishing history, Robert W. Hickey, along with his brother Mike and co-creator Bill Nichols, has started AFTERBURN, a publishing arm that offers comics books, graphic novels and special items to stores in print and digital formats.
Robert is the co-founder of Blue Line Art, the original manufacturer of professional comic book art boards. Blue Line has supplied thousands of artists over the years with quality art boards and supplies. Blue Line was the first to package and offer art boards to retail outlets with over 40 different products that support comic creators.
Creating Sketch Magazine, Robert along with Bill Nichols as the current senior editor, offering comic creators their own magazine to learn and share tips and creative techniques of the industry.
The founding force for his SkyStorm Studio where Robert has created comics for over 25 years. Within that time he has created top-selling comic for distribution into mainstream outlets such as Wal-Mart, Toys R Us and comic shops around the world.
AFTERBURN goal is pulling together new and established talents such as Tom & Mary Bierbaum (Legion of Superheroes, Legionnaires), Greg Land (Iron Man, Avengers), Beau Smith (Guy Gardner, Wildcat from DC) and Chris Dreier just to name a few to create quality and entertaining stories.
---------------
Review: "The Grand Budapest Hotel" is Stylish and Quirky, of course
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 17 (of 2015) by Leroy Douresseaux
The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)
Running time: 99 minutes (1 hour, 39 minutes)
MPAA – R for language, some sexual content and violence
DIRECTOR: Wes Anderson
WRITERS: Wes Anderson; from a story by Wes Anderson and Hugo Guinness (inspired by the writings of Stefan Zweig)
PRODUCERS: Wes Anderson, Jeremy Dawson, Steven Rales, and Scott Rudin
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Robert Yeoman (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Barney Pilling
COMPOSER: Alexandre Desplat
Academy Award winner
ADVENTURE/COMEDY/DRAMA with elements of fantasy
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Tony Revolori, F. Murray Abraham, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Jeff Goldblum, Mathieu Amalric, Harvey Keitel, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, Lea Seydoux, Tilda Swinton, Tom Wilkinson, Bob Balaban, and Owen Wilson
The Grand Budapest Hotel is a 2014 comedy-drama and adventure film from writer-director Wes Anderson. Anderson and Hugo Guinness, who wrote the film's story with Anderson, were inspired by the writings of Austrian, Stefan Sweig (1881-19420, a novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer. The Grand Budapest Hotel focuses on the adventures of a legendary concierge at a famous hotel and the lobby boy who becomes his trusted sidekick.
The Grand Budapest Hotel opens in the present day, before moving back to 1985. The film moves back again to the year 1968. A man, known as “The Author” (Jude Law), travels to the Republic of Zubrowka (a fictional Central European state). He stays at a remote mountainside hotel in the spa town of Nebelsbad. The Author discovers that the Grand Budapest Hotel has fallen on hard times. He meets the owner of the hotel, an elderly gentleman named Zero Moustafa (F. Murray Abraham). Moustafa tells “The Author” how he came to own the Grand Budapest Hotel.
That takes the story back to the year 1932, during the hotel's glory days. Monsieur Gustave H (Ralph Fiennes) is the Grand Budapest Hotel's devoted concierge. He manages the hotel's large staff and sees to the needs of the hotel's wealthy clientele, Gustave also often has sexual relationships with some of the hotel's elderly female clientele. One of the aging women who flock to the hotel to enjoy M. Gustave's “exceptional service” is Madame CĂ©line Villeneuve "Madame D" Desgoffe und Taxis a.k.a. “Madame D” (Tilda Swinton).
After Madame D dies, M. Gustave discovers that she has left him something in her will, a highly-sought after painting by Johannes van Hoytl (the younger), entitled, “Boy With Apple.” M. Gustave also learns that Madame D was murdered and that he is not only the chief suspect, but that he is also caught up in a dispute over a vast family fortune. M. Gustave is in trouble, but luckily he has hired a most capable and talented new lobby boy, Zero (Tony Revolori). M Gustave's most trusted friend and protege, Zero, may be the only one who can help a legendary concierge save himself.
I said that Ethan and Joel Coen's 2010 film, True Grit (a remake of the classic John Wayne western), was a movie in which the brothers got to work out and to employ their visual tics, cinematic style, and storytelling techniques on a Western. It was a good film, but it was truly “a Coen Bros. movie.”
In a similar fashion, The Grand Budapest Hotel is Wes Anderson employing everything that is eccentric, quirky, and unique to his films going back at least a decade. Embodied in this movie, the Wes Anderson style is wonderful and invigorating and a joy to watch. Truly, The Grand Budapest Hotel has a striking and an eye-catching visual style. Anderson's mix of ornate visual environments and eccentric characters with deeply held emotions makes his movies hard to ignore, if you give them half the chance.
Those characters can be a problem, though. For this film, Anderson easily offers 20 characters worth knowing, but other than M. Gustave and Zero, Anderson uses the others as quirky backdrops or as caricatures upon which he can hang his plot. Thus, The Grand Budapest Hotel is beautiful, but depth of character is lacking. The adventure of M. Gustave and Zero plays as if it were something straight out of a beloved children's book. Much has been made of Ralph Fienne's performance in this film, and it is indeed a good one. It must be noted that Tony Revolori as Zero is also quite good. Still, the adventure of the two leads would be better with more interplay from the other characters than the film offers. Adrien Brody's Dmitri Desgoffe und Taxis is wasted, and Willem Dafoe's J.G. Jopling is not so much a menacing villain as he is a bad guy straight out of Jay Ward Productions.
However, while this movie does not fail to burrow into the imagination, it does not really plant its roots in the viewers' hearts. It is gorgeous on the surface, but Anderson seems to avoid the deeply emotional ideas he introduces, making The Grand Budapest Hotel an exceptional film, but keeping it from being truly great. It is Wes Anderson art for Wes Anderson's art sake.
8 of 10
A
Friday, April 10, 2015
NOTES:
2015 Academy Awards, USA: 4 wins: “Best Achievement in Costume Design” (Milena Canonero), “Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling” (Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier), “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score” (Alexandre Desplat) and “Best Achievement in Production Design” (Adam Stockhausen-production design and Anna Pinnock-set decoration); 5 nominations: “Best Motion Picture of the Year” (Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven M. Rales, and Jeremy Dawson), “Best Achievement in Directing” (Wes Anderson), “Best Achievement in Cinematography” (Robert D. Yeoman), and “Best Achievement in Film Editing” (Barney Pilling), and “Best Writing, Original Screenplay” (Wes Anderson-screenplay/story and Hugo Guinness-story)
2015 BAFTA Awards: 5 wins: “Best Original Music” (Alexandre Desplat), “Best Costume Design” (Milena Canonero), “Best Production Design” (Adam Stockhausen and Anna Pinnock), “Best Original Screenplay” (Wes Anderson), and “Best Make Up & Hair” (Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier); 6 nominations: “Best Film” (Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven M. Rales, and Jeremy Dawson), “Best Leading Actor” (Ralph Fiennes), “Best Cinematography” (Robert D. Yeoman), “Best Editing” (Barney Pilling), “Best Sound” (Wayne Lemmer, Christopher Scarabosio, Pawel Wdowczak), and “David Lean Award for Direction” (Wes Anderson)
2015 Golden Globes, USA: 1 win: “Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical;” 3 nominations: “Best Director - Motion Picture” (Wes Anderson), “Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” (Ralph Fiennes), and “Best Screenplay - Motion Picture” (Wes Anderson)
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)
Running time: 99 minutes (1 hour, 39 minutes)
MPAA – R for language, some sexual content and violence
DIRECTOR: Wes Anderson
WRITERS: Wes Anderson; from a story by Wes Anderson and Hugo Guinness (inspired by the writings of Stefan Zweig)
PRODUCERS: Wes Anderson, Jeremy Dawson, Steven Rales, and Scott Rudin
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Robert Yeoman (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Barney Pilling
COMPOSER: Alexandre Desplat
Academy Award winner
ADVENTURE/COMEDY/DRAMA with elements of fantasy
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, Tony Revolori, F. Murray Abraham, Adrien Brody, Willem Dafoe, Edward Norton, Saoirse Ronan, Jeff Goldblum, Mathieu Amalric, Harvey Keitel, Jude Law, Bill Murray, Jason Schwartzman, Lea Seydoux, Tilda Swinton, Tom Wilkinson, Bob Balaban, and Owen Wilson
The Grand Budapest Hotel is a 2014 comedy-drama and adventure film from writer-director Wes Anderson. Anderson and Hugo Guinness, who wrote the film's story with Anderson, were inspired by the writings of Austrian, Stefan Sweig (1881-19420, a novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer. The Grand Budapest Hotel focuses on the adventures of a legendary concierge at a famous hotel and the lobby boy who becomes his trusted sidekick.
The Grand Budapest Hotel opens in the present day, before moving back to 1985. The film moves back again to the year 1968. A man, known as “The Author” (Jude Law), travels to the Republic of Zubrowka (a fictional Central European state). He stays at a remote mountainside hotel in the spa town of Nebelsbad. The Author discovers that the Grand Budapest Hotel has fallen on hard times. He meets the owner of the hotel, an elderly gentleman named Zero Moustafa (F. Murray Abraham). Moustafa tells “The Author” how he came to own the Grand Budapest Hotel.
That takes the story back to the year 1932, during the hotel's glory days. Monsieur Gustave H (Ralph Fiennes) is the Grand Budapest Hotel's devoted concierge. He manages the hotel's large staff and sees to the needs of the hotel's wealthy clientele, Gustave also often has sexual relationships with some of the hotel's elderly female clientele. One of the aging women who flock to the hotel to enjoy M. Gustave's “exceptional service” is Madame CĂ©line Villeneuve "Madame D" Desgoffe und Taxis a.k.a. “Madame D” (Tilda Swinton).
After Madame D dies, M. Gustave discovers that she has left him something in her will, a highly-sought after painting by Johannes van Hoytl (the younger), entitled, “Boy With Apple.” M. Gustave also learns that Madame D was murdered and that he is not only the chief suspect, but that he is also caught up in a dispute over a vast family fortune. M. Gustave is in trouble, but luckily he has hired a most capable and talented new lobby boy, Zero (Tony Revolori). M Gustave's most trusted friend and protege, Zero, may be the only one who can help a legendary concierge save himself.
I said that Ethan and Joel Coen's 2010 film, True Grit (a remake of the classic John Wayne western), was a movie in which the brothers got to work out and to employ their visual tics, cinematic style, and storytelling techniques on a Western. It was a good film, but it was truly “a Coen Bros. movie.”
In a similar fashion, The Grand Budapest Hotel is Wes Anderson employing everything that is eccentric, quirky, and unique to his films going back at least a decade. Embodied in this movie, the Wes Anderson style is wonderful and invigorating and a joy to watch. Truly, The Grand Budapest Hotel has a striking and an eye-catching visual style. Anderson's mix of ornate visual environments and eccentric characters with deeply held emotions makes his movies hard to ignore, if you give them half the chance.
Those characters can be a problem, though. For this film, Anderson easily offers 20 characters worth knowing, but other than M. Gustave and Zero, Anderson uses the others as quirky backdrops or as caricatures upon which he can hang his plot. Thus, The Grand Budapest Hotel is beautiful, but depth of character is lacking. The adventure of M. Gustave and Zero plays as if it were something straight out of a beloved children's book. Much has been made of Ralph Fienne's performance in this film, and it is indeed a good one. It must be noted that Tony Revolori as Zero is also quite good. Still, the adventure of the two leads would be better with more interplay from the other characters than the film offers. Adrien Brody's Dmitri Desgoffe und Taxis is wasted, and Willem Dafoe's J.G. Jopling is not so much a menacing villain as he is a bad guy straight out of Jay Ward Productions.
However, while this movie does not fail to burrow into the imagination, it does not really plant its roots in the viewers' hearts. It is gorgeous on the surface, but Anderson seems to avoid the deeply emotional ideas he introduces, making The Grand Budapest Hotel an exceptional film, but keeping it from being truly great. It is Wes Anderson art for Wes Anderson's art sake.
8 of 10
A
Friday, April 10, 2015
NOTES:
2015 Academy Awards, USA: 4 wins: “Best Achievement in Costume Design” (Milena Canonero), “Best Achievement in Makeup and Hairstyling” (Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier), “Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score” (Alexandre Desplat) and “Best Achievement in Production Design” (Adam Stockhausen-production design and Anna Pinnock-set decoration); 5 nominations: “Best Motion Picture of the Year” (Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven M. Rales, and Jeremy Dawson), “Best Achievement in Directing” (Wes Anderson), “Best Achievement in Cinematography” (Robert D. Yeoman), and “Best Achievement in Film Editing” (Barney Pilling), and “Best Writing, Original Screenplay” (Wes Anderson-screenplay/story and Hugo Guinness-story)
2015 BAFTA Awards: 5 wins: “Best Original Music” (Alexandre Desplat), “Best Costume Design” (Milena Canonero), “Best Production Design” (Adam Stockhausen and Anna Pinnock), “Best Original Screenplay” (Wes Anderson), and “Best Make Up & Hair” (Frances Hannon and Mark Coulier); 6 nominations: “Best Film” (Wes Anderson, Scott Rudin, Steven M. Rales, and Jeremy Dawson), “Best Leading Actor” (Ralph Fiennes), “Best Cinematography” (Robert D. Yeoman), “Best Editing” (Barney Pilling), “Best Sound” (Wayne Lemmer, Christopher Scarabosio, Pawel Wdowczak), and “David Lean Award for Direction” (Wes Anderson)
2015 Golden Globes, USA: 1 win: “Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical;” 3 nominations: “Best Director - Motion Picture” (Wes Anderson), “Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” (Ralph Fiennes), and “Best Screenplay - Motion Picture” (Wes Anderson)
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
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Review: First Trip to "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" Was Quite Lovely
TRASH IN MY EYE No. 16 (of 2015) by Leroy Douresseaux
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2012)
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: United Kingdom
Running time: 124 minutes (2 hours, 4 minutes)
MPAA – PG-13 for sexual content and language
DIRECTOR: John Madden
WRITER: Ol Parker (based on the novel, These Foolish Things, by Deborah Moggach)
PRODUCERS: Graham Broadbent and Peter Czernin
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Ben Davis (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Chris Gill
COMPOSER: Thomas Newman
Golden Globes nominee
COMEDY/DRAMA with elements of romance
Starring: Judi Dench, Tom Wilkinson, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton, Maggie Smith, Ronald Pickup, Celia Imrie, Dev Patel, Tina Desai, Lillete Dubey, Paul Bhattacharjee, Neena Kulkarni, Rajendra Gupta, and Lucy Robinson
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is a 2012 British comedy-drama from director John Madden. The film is based on the 2004 novel, These Foolish Things, from English author Deborah Moggach. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel focuses on a group of British retirees who travel to India to take up residence in a newly restored hotel that is not quite ready for prime time.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel opens in present day Great Britain and introduces a group of British retirees and AARP types. Recently widowed housewife, Evelyn Greenslade (Judi Dench), is forced to sell the home she shared with her late husband in order to cover the huge debts he left. Jean and Douglas Ainslie (Penelope Wilton and Bill Nighy) are searching for a retirement they can afford; they lost most of their savings through investing in their daughter's Internet business.
Muriel Donnelly (Maggie Smith) is a retired housekeeper who is need of a hip replacement operation. Her doctor informs her that she can have it done far more quickly and inexpensively in India than she can in the U.K., but Muriel hates Indians (as well as every other person of color). Madge Hardcastle (Celia Imrie) is searching for another husband. Aging lothario Norman Cousins (Ronald Pickup) still wants to have sex with young women, but now, he needs to find a new place to try and re-capture his youth. These six people decide to spend their retirement at a hotel in India, based only on the pictures on the hotel's website.
Meanwhile, high-court judge, Graham Dashwood (Tom Wilkinson), spent the first eighteen years of his life in India; he suddenly decides to retire and return there. When these Brits arrive at The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, they find it dilapidated. The hotel's energetic young manager, Sunil Indrajit “Sonny” Kapoor (Dev Patel), promises that he will make the hotel look like what the website promises. Now, everyone has to deal with the unexpected, and some are better at that than others.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is simply frothy feel-good entertainment – nothing more, nothing less. The characters are interesting, but not especially well-developed. There are so many of them that screenwriter Ol Parker cannot really develop them in the amount of the film's running time that actually involves storytelling, which is less than its stated 100 minutes running time.
But, boy, did I enjoy this movie anyway. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is sweet and charming, and its cast of veteran (some would say “senior citizen”) actors makes it a rare treat in a landscape of movies about children and 20-somethings saving the world. Loving and wanting-to-be-loved are not exclusively the domain of lovelorn teens and the newly-turned middle-aged. Yearning and striving for the good life: well, old folks can want that, also. That is why I am glad that this funny, heartwarming, and sometimes heartbreaking film is here to be enjoyed again and again. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is a good place for movie lovers to visit or even to stay.
7 of 10
B+
Friday, March 27, 2015
NOTES:
2013 Golden Globes, USA: 2 nominations: “Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” and “Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” (Judi Dench)
2013 BAFTA Awards: 1 nomination: “Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film” (John Madden, Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, and Ol Parker)
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (2012)
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN: United Kingdom
Running time: 124 minutes (2 hours, 4 minutes)
MPAA – PG-13 for sexual content and language
DIRECTOR: John Madden
WRITER: Ol Parker (based on the novel, These Foolish Things, by Deborah Moggach)
PRODUCERS: Graham Broadbent and Peter Czernin
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Ben Davis (D.o.P.)
EDITOR: Chris Gill
COMPOSER: Thomas Newman
Golden Globes nominee
COMEDY/DRAMA with elements of romance
Starring: Judi Dench, Tom Wilkinson, Bill Nighy, Penelope Wilton, Maggie Smith, Ronald Pickup, Celia Imrie, Dev Patel, Tina Desai, Lillete Dubey, Paul Bhattacharjee, Neena Kulkarni, Rajendra Gupta, and Lucy Robinson
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is a 2012 British comedy-drama from director John Madden. The film is based on the 2004 novel, These Foolish Things, from English author Deborah Moggach. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel focuses on a group of British retirees who travel to India to take up residence in a newly restored hotel that is not quite ready for prime time.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel opens in present day Great Britain and introduces a group of British retirees and AARP types. Recently widowed housewife, Evelyn Greenslade (Judi Dench), is forced to sell the home she shared with her late husband in order to cover the huge debts he left. Jean and Douglas Ainslie (Penelope Wilton and Bill Nighy) are searching for a retirement they can afford; they lost most of their savings through investing in their daughter's Internet business.
Muriel Donnelly (Maggie Smith) is a retired housekeeper who is need of a hip replacement operation. Her doctor informs her that she can have it done far more quickly and inexpensively in India than she can in the U.K., but Muriel hates Indians (as well as every other person of color). Madge Hardcastle (Celia Imrie) is searching for another husband. Aging lothario Norman Cousins (Ronald Pickup) still wants to have sex with young women, but now, he needs to find a new place to try and re-capture his youth. These six people decide to spend their retirement at a hotel in India, based only on the pictures on the hotel's website.
Meanwhile, high-court judge, Graham Dashwood (Tom Wilkinson), spent the first eighteen years of his life in India; he suddenly decides to retire and return there. When these Brits arrive at The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, they find it dilapidated. The hotel's energetic young manager, Sunil Indrajit “Sonny” Kapoor (Dev Patel), promises that he will make the hotel look like what the website promises. Now, everyone has to deal with the unexpected, and some are better at that than others.
The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is simply frothy feel-good entertainment – nothing more, nothing less. The characters are interesting, but not especially well-developed. There are so many of them that screenwriter Ol Parker cannot really develop them in the amount of the film's running time that actually involves storytelling, which is less than its stated 100 minutes running time.
But, boy, did I enjoy this movie anyway. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is sweet and charming, and its cast of veteran (some would say “senior citizen”) actors makes it a rare treat in a landscape of movies about children and 20-somethings saving the world. Loving and wanting-to-be-loved are not exclusively the domain of lovelorn teens and the newly-turned middle-aged. Yearning and striving for the good life: well, old folks can want that, also. That is why I am glad that this funny, heartwarming, and sometimes heartbreaking film is here to be enjoyed again and again. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel is a good place for movie lovers to visit or even to stay.
7 of 10
B+
Friday, March 27, 2015
NOTES:
2013 Golden Globes, USA: 2 nominations: “Best Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” and “Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Comedy or Musical” (Judi Dench)
2013 BAFTA Awards: 1 nomination: “Alexander Korda Award for Best British Film” (John Madden, Graham Broadbent, Peter Czernin, and Ol Parker)
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for syndication rights and fees.
-----------------------
Labels:
2012,
BAFTA nominee,
Bill Nighy,
book adaptation,
Fox Searchlight,
Golden Globe nominee,
international cinema,
Judi Dench,
Maggie Smith,
Movie review,
Participant Media,
Tom Wilkinson,
United Kingdom
Ashley Wood's "String Divers" Arrives in August 2015
STRING DIVERS LOOM LARGE AT IDW
Team of Micro-Bots Launches in August In Partnership with Ashley Wood’s 3A Toys
Acclaimed artist/designer Ashley Wood is preparing to launch his latest comic-book project at IDW this summer with String Divers, a comic series blending a team of robot adventures and string-theory physics! String Divers, directed and overseen by Wood and written by Wood’s Zombies vs. Robots co-creator Chris Ryall, features stunning artwork by Nelson Daniel and a concept that grows bigger the smaller it gets!
Spun out of Ashley Wood’s 3A Toys’ line of titular figures, String Divers incorporates string theory as threats to our universe at the sub-microscopic level have dire and lasting repercussions in our universe and across all dimensions.
A chance to combine high adventure on a scale both bigger and smaller than what I’ve done before is appealing enough, but a chance to again work with Ash Wood and Nelson Daniel on a series packed with crazy action, mis-applied theoretical physics and micro-scale intrigue that affects the larger universe being built here is about as fun as comics gets. – Chris Ryall, Writer/IDW Chief Creative Officer
Ashley Wood will be providing story direction, concept design, art direction and covers for String Divers. Wood and Ryall are joined by Nelson Daniel, fresh off a long run on IDW’s Judge Dredd, on art. Daniel, who previously partnered with Ryall on the Stephen King/Joe Hill project, Road Rage, will again be providing art and colors on both interiors and variant covers of each issue.
“It’s always a pleasure to work with IDW and Chris,” said String Divers creator and toy designer Ashley Wood. “String Divers is just the first in a series of comics that sees IDW and 3A combine forces!”
String Divers #1, a 32-page, $3.99 comic, launches in August!
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Signeersessie Scott McCloud 15 april bij Lambiek
Woensdag 15 april om 18:00 komt Scott McCloud bij Lambiek zijn nieuwe boek De Beeldhouwer signeren.
Scott McCloud geniet wereldwijde bekendheid als strip-goeroe. Hij heeft niet alleen een aantal standaard naslagwerken over strips geschreven (Understanding Comics, Reinventing Comics en Making Comics) maar bedacht ook de 24-hour-comic-day, een inmiddels wereldwijd fenomeen waar honderden tekenaars en instellingen aan mee doen. Natuurlijk maakte Scott McCloud al eerder
verhalen als Zot! en Destroy! Nu is daar de Beeldhouwer. Kom dus woensdag langs om je eigen
gesigneerde exemplaar te bemachtigen of stuur ons een mailtje als je niet aanwezig kunt zijn maar wel graag een gesigneerde 'Beeldhouwer' in je kast wilt. Tot woensdag.
---------------
Scott McCloud geniet wereldwijde bekendheid als strip-goeroe. Hij heeft niet alleen een aantal standaard naslagwerken over strips geschreven (Understanding Comics, Reinventing Comics en Making Comics) maar bedacht ook de 24-hour-comic-day, een inmiddels wereldwijd fenomeen waar honderden tekenaars en instellingen aan mee doen. Natuurlijk maakte Scott McCloud al eerder
verhalen als Zot! en Destroy! Nu is daar de Beeldhouwer. Kom dus woensdag langs om je eigen
gesigneerde exemplaar te bemachtigen of stuur ons een mailtje als je niet aanwezig kunt zijn maar wel graag een gesigneerde 'Beeldhouwer' in je kast wilt. Tot woensdag.
---------------
Sunday, April 12, 2015
IDW Sends Godzilla To Hell in July 2015
Godzilla Faces The Fiery Inferno Of Hell Itself
Abandon All Hope…
In over six decades of battles and triumphs, Godzilla has never faced a challenge as great as what’s coming his way this July, when Godzilla goes to hell! In Godzilla in Hell, a five-issue miniseries launching in July, Godzilla will storm through the gates of hell itself, proving that the towering behemoth is King Of The Monsters both above and below.
With no warning and no sign of salvation, Godzilla is plummeted to the deepest, darkest bowels of the infernal kingdom. The mystery of what led to Godzilla’s damnation, and what it will face, will take readers on a dark and twisted journey unlike any Godzilla story before.
A rotating creative team will each take Godzilla through a new and more dangerous layer of Hell, beginning with none other than writer and artist James Stokoe, who is returning to the character for the first time since his haunting stunner of a miniseries, Godzilla: The Half Century War.
“Drawing Godzilla must be my comfort food, because it feels really great to come back and work on pages with IDW again,” said Stokoe, writer and artist on issue 1. “Also, the list of amazing creators they’ve tapped for this series beyond my issue feels equally great as a fan, especially with the theme everyone gets to play with. You can’t get much bigger than Godzilla versus Hell!“
Successive issues in this five-part series will feature talents familiar to the Godzilla franchise, including the multi-talented writer/artists Bob Eggleton; and Dave Wachter; Wachter most recently wrapped up the apocalyptic take on Godzilla in Godzilla: Cataclysm.
New to the world of Godzilla will be writers, Ulises Farinas and Erick Freitas, together on issue #3 and Brandon Seifert, tackling issue #4; artists will be announced on these issues at a later time.
“I’m very proud with the level of quality we’ve brought to all of our Godzilla mini-series,” said editor Bobby Curnow. “Godzilla in Hell will prove no exception. It’s been incredibly fun seeing the creator’s imagination stretch to fully utilize this otherworldly premise.”
This explosive new series will join a number of other major debuts in July as part of the Five Featured Firsts program, which launches a brand new title each and every week in July. Additionally, the debut issue will feature an EC Comics homage variant cover by Godzilla: Rulers of Earth artist Jeff Zornow as part of EC Cover Month.
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Labels:
Comics,
EC Comics,
Godzilla,
IDW,
press release
Unlock "Terminator Genisys"
Unlock the new TERMINATOR GENISYS trailer with #TerminatorUnlock
Click the "Tweet to Unlock" link on the Terminator Genisys Twitter page to release the new trailer and more exclusive content. The first photo is already revealed!
Direct links:
https://twitter.com/Terminator
https://twitter.com/Terminator/status/587374640827240448
#TerminatorUnlock
"Terminator Genisys" in theaters July 1, 2015
When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: To reset the future…
Directed by Alan Taylor
Official Site: http://terminatorgenisys.com/
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