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Monday, October 18, 2021
Comic Books, Magazines and Books from Diamond Distributors for October 20, 2021
DC Comics Shipping from Lunar Distributors for October 19, 2021
Batman #115 (Cover A Jorge Jimenez) (Fear State), $4.99
Batman #115 (Cover B Jorge Molina Card Stock Variant) ( Fear State), $5.99
Batman #115 (Cover C Arist Deyn Card Stock Variant)(Fear State), AR
Batman Catwoman #8 (Of 12) (Cover A Clay Mann), $4.99
Batman Catwoman #8 (Of 12) (Cover B Jim Lee & Scott Williams), $4.99
Batman Catwoman #8 (Of 12) (Cover C Travis Charest), $4.99
Batman Last Knight On Earth TP, $24.99
Batman Secret Files Peacekeeper-01 #1 (One Shot) (Cover A Rafael Sarmento) (Fear State), $4.99
Batman Secret Files Peacekeeper-01 #1 (One Shot) (Cover B Tyler Kirkham Card Stock Variant) (Fear State), $5.99
Batman Secret Files Peacekeeper-01 #1 (One Shot) (Cover C Rafael Sarmento Card Stock Variant) (Fear State), AR
Batman Vs Bigby A Wolf In Gotham #2 (Of 6) (Cover A Yanick Paquette), $3.99
Batman Vs Bigby A Wolf In Gotham #2 (Of 6) (Cover B Brian Level & Jay Leisten Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Black Manta #2 (Of 6)(Cover A Valentine De Landro), $3.99
Black Manta #2 (Of 6)(Cover B Sanford Greene Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Catwoman #36 (Cover A Yanick Paquette) (Fear State), $3.99
Catwoman #36 (Cover B Jenny Frison Card Stock Variant) (Fear State), $4.99
Catwoman Lonely City #1 (Of 4) (Cover A Cliff Chiang), $6.99
Catwoman Lonely City #1 (Of 4) (Cover B Cliff Chiang), $6.99
Catwoman Lonely City #1 (Of 4) (Cover C Jock), AR
Diana Princess Of The Amazons Wonder Woman Day Special Edition #1 (One Shot), AR
Dollhouse Family TP, $17.99
Far Sector TP, $29.99
Flash #775 (Cover A Brandon Peterson), $4.99
Flash #775 (Cover B Jorge Corona Card Stock Variant), $5.99
Green Lantern #7 (Cover A Bernard Chang), $4.99
Green Lantern #7 (Cover B Marco Santucci Card Stock Variant), $5.99
Harley Quinn The Animated Series The Eat Bang Kill Tour #1 (Of 6) (2nd Printing Max Sarin Cover), $3.99
Legends Of The Dark Knight #6 (Cover A Dike Ruan), $3.99
Legends Of The Dark Knight #6 (Cover B Becky Cloonan Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Legends Of The Dark Knight #6 (Cover C Jorge Fornes Card Stock Variant), AR
Nightwing #85 (Cover A Bruno Redondo) (Fear State), $3.99
Nightwing #85 (Cover B Jamal Campbell Card Stock Variant) (Fear State), $4.99
Nightwing #85 (Cover C Bruno Redondo Sketch Card Stock Variant) (Fear State), AR
Nubia And The Amazons #1 (Of 6) (Cover A Alitha Martinez), $3.99
Nubia And The Amazons #1 (Of 6) (Cover B Maika Sozo Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Nubia And The Amazons #1 (Of 6) (Cover D Joshua Sway Swaby Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Refrigerator Full Of Heads #1 (Of 6) (Cover A Sam Wolfe Connelly), $3.99
Refrigerator Full Of Heads #1 (Of 6) (Cover B Reiko Murakami Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Scooby-Doo Where Are You #112 (Cover A Derek Fridolfs), $2.99
Shazam #4 (Of 4) (Cover A Clayton Henry), $3.99
Shazam #4 (Of 4) (Cover B Juni Ba Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Suicide Squad #8 (Cover A Eduardo Pansica), $3.99
Suicide Squad #8 (Cover B Gerald Parel Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Suicide Squad King Shark #2 (Of 6) (Cover A Trevor Hairsine), $3.99
Suicide Squad King Shark #2 (Of 6) (Cover B Jorge Molina Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Superman Son Of Kal-El #4 (Cover A John Timms), $3.99
Superman Son Of Kal-El #4 (Cover B InHyuk Lee Card Stock Variant), $4.99
Wonder Woman 2016 #1 Wonder Woman Day Special Edition #1 (One Shot), AR
Wonder Woman Tempest Tossed Wonder Woman Day Special Edition #1 (One Shot), AR
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Sunday, October 17, 2021
Review: "HEARTS AND MINDS" Still Condemns with Power
Hearts and Minds (1974)
Running time: 112 minutes (1 hour, 52 minutes)
MPAA – R
DIRECTOR: Peter Davis
PRODUCERS: Peter Davis and Bert Schneider
CINEMATOGRAPHER: Richard Pearce
EDITORS: Lynzee Klingman and Susan Martin
Academy Award winner
DOCUMENTARY – War, Politics
[The recent ignominious end of the “War in Afghanistan” (October 7, 2001 to August 30, 2021) got me to thinking about America's involvement in Vietnam decades ago because … you know … people never learn and they never change. In military conflicts, if you run on up in there, you gonna eventually run on up outta there. So anyway, I remembered the gold standard in theatrical Vietnam documentary films, Hearts and Minds, and it was time to see it again.]
Starring: Captain Randy Floyd, Sgt. William Marshall, Lt. George Coker, George Bidault, Father Chan Tin, Daniel Ellsberg, David Emerson, Mary Cochran Emerson, Senator J.W. Fulbright, Sec. Clark Gifford, Corporal Stan Holder, Mui Duc Giang, Walt Rostow, Vu Duc Vinh, Vu Thi Hue, Vu Thri To, Gen. William Westmoreland, and Richard Nixon, John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon B. Johnson
Hearts and Minds is a 1974 documentary film directed by Peter Davis. It is an antiwar movie that examines the Vietnam War (1955 to 1975) and confronts the United States' involvement in the civil war within the Southeast Asian nation of Vietnam. The film's title, Hearts and Minds, is based on the following quote from U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson: “the ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds of the people who actually live out there.” Hearts and Minds won the Oscar for “Best Documentary, Features” at the 47th Academy Awards, which were presented in 1975.
During the time of its release, critics of Hearts and Minds complained that the film was two one-sided, but from the beginning, the film's stated and obvious premise was that the United States should not have been involved Vietnam and in the strife between the governments of North Vietnam and South Vietnam. Director Peter Davis recounts the history of the Vietnam War by examining the history and attitudes of the opposing sides of the war, and he does this by interviewing government officials and military leadership and personnel from both sides of conflict. He also uses archival news footage, specifically featuring the U.S. Presidents whose actions started, sustained, and/or exacerbated the conflict and violence that marked the Vietnam War.
It is in that way that Davis presents what I see as the film's key theme: American attitudes and goals were the reason that a Vietnamese civil war became an American-driven Vietnam War. After World War II, the leadership of the U.S., both government and military, decided to make the world in its image. American's imperial ambitions had been long-simmering, seeing a number of nations as rivals or obstacles, especially the Soviet Union and China, the faces of “international communism.” Such imperialism found a proxy war in the struggle between communist North Vietnamese and its South Vietnamese allies, the Viet Cong,against South Vietnam (or the State of Vietnam).
Hearts and Minds emphasizes how the the United States helped to create the bloody conflict with Vietnam and how it ultimately prolonged the struggle. In interviews with such people as General William Westmoreland, the American commander of military operations in the Vietnam War during its peak period from 1964 to 1968, not only does the self-righteous militarism of the U.S. reveal itself, but also American' racist attitudes about the Vietnamese people.
This militarism and racism is also exemplified in another one of the film's interview subjects, American prison of war (POW), U.S. Navy pilot, Lt. George Coker. The film includes footage of Coker making public speeches after his release from six-and-a-half years in North Vietnamese captivity. Coker's racism and jingoism are repulsive, which, to me, are obviously the result of his upbringing (brainwashing) and military training. However, I'm not sure that it was a good choice to include him in Hearts and Minds, as the film's detractors have used Coker's status as a POW to criticize the film as being “too one-sided” and anti-war propaganda. One could always say that the attitudes Coker reveals in his return to the U.S. are, to some extent, the result of the degradation he experienced as a POW.
That aside, what makes Hearts and Minds one of the greatest American documentary films of all time (if not the greatest) is director Peter Davis' willingness to give voice to the Vietnamese people through interviews and film footage. One of Hearts and Minds' most shocking and controversial sequences shows the funeral of a South Vietnamese soldier. His grieving family includes a sobbing woman (his mother?) who has to be restrained from climbing into the grave after his coffin is lowered into the ground. The cries of a grieving boy, perhaps his son, are like that of a wounded animal. I first saw Hearts and Minds a few years ago on TV, and that scene stays with me, even as I write this.
Americans sometimes remember how many Americans died in the Vietnam War (over 58,000), but almost three-and-a-half million Vietnamese civilians and soldiers died during the war (according to numbers provided by Vietnam in 1995). An example of the wanton death and destruction is personified in a North Vietnamese farmer who loses his eight-year-old daughter and his three-year-old son because of an American bombing campaign. His anger and grief, especially at the death of his daughter who was killed while feeding pigs (all of which apparently lived), encapsulates the wrongness of American involvement in Vietnam.
Two other interviews of American servicemen stand out to me. First, Sgt. William Marshall, an African-American from Detroit, offers a bit of levity in the film by the way in which he describes his experiences. However, he also condemns Americans, demanding that they witness in his war injuries a guilt from which we may not turn away.
The other is Hearts and Minds' concluding interview, which features US Vietnam veteran, U.S. Navy pilot, Captain Randy Floyd. One of his statements summons up the feckless relationship that Americans have with their militarist and imperialist government. Floyd says, “We've all tried very hard to escape what we have learned in Vietnam. I think Americans have worked extremely hard not to see the criminality that their officials and their policy makers exhibited.”
With those words, Hearts and Minds makes itself both timely and timeless, although the American “Global War on Terror” of the twenty-first century also helped to keep this film timely. It is left up to academics, film historians, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' (AMPAS) “Academy Film Archive,” and the “National Film Registry” to save Hearts and Minds from being entirely forgotten. Still, we movie fans, or at least some us, must make an effort to bring Hearts and Minds back into prominence. America has need of this work of art and of this lesson in history.
10 of 10
Sunday, October 17, 2021
NOTES:
1975 Academy Awards, USA: 1 win for “Best Documentary, Features” (Peter Davis and Bert Schneider)
1975 Golden Globes, USA: 1 nomination: “Best Documentary Film”
2018 National Film Preservation Board, USA: “National Film Registry”
The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
Saturday, October 16, 2021
Negromancer News Bits and Bites from October 10th to 16th, 2021 -- Update #18
by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
You can support Leroy via Paypal or on Patreon:
ENTERTAINMENT AND CULTURE NEWS:
DC COMICS - From Variety: See previews, performances, and personalities from upcoming films and TV, live-action and animated, based on DC Comics characters at DC FanDome 2021.
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SPORTS/BLM - From TheAtlantic: Is the NFL's Jon Gruden scandal a sign that the league has a problem with bigotry among its coaches, team executives, and owners? Jemele Hill of "The Atlantic" discusses.
MOVIES - From Deadline: Oscar-winner Tommy Lee Jones is replacing Oscar-nominee Harrison Ford in Amazon's "The Burial," which will also star Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx.
MOVIES - From Deadline: Jensen Ackles ("Supernatural," "The Boys") joins the ensemble cast of the Western, "Rust," which already includes Alec Baldwin as an actor and producer.
BUSINESS - From Deadline: Unless an agreement is reached with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers in the coming days, the 60,000 film and TV workers of the IATSE (International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees) will go on strike on Monday, Oct. 18, at 12:01 a.m. PDT.
TRAILERS-MOVIES - From ETCanada: Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Media Group have released a trailer for its relaunch of the "Scream" franchise with a fifth film. The film is due Jan. 14, 2022.
TELEVISION - From EW: AMC has greenlit a new spinoff of "The Walking Dead." The anthology series, "Tales of the Walking Dead" will debut on AMC and streaming AMC+ next summer.
CELEBRITY - From TimesUK: Rumors say that Prince William sees his uncle, Prince Andrew, as a threat to the British royal family because of Andrew's connection to the late pedophile, Jeffrey Epstein, and because of his ongoing legal battles with Virginia Giuffre. Giuffre says that Prince Andrew raped her when she was a teenager.
AWARDS - From THR: FX’s "Pose" and "Mayans M.C." and Hulu’s "Love, Victor" were among the winners at Sunday night's 2021 Imagen Awards. The awards recognize positive portrayals of Latinos in media.
BOX OFFICE - From BoxOfficePro: The winner of the 10/8 to 10/10/21 weekend box office is the James Bond film, "No Time to Die," with an estimated take of 56 million dollars.
From Deadline: "No Time to Die" leads the international box office with an estimated gross of 89.54 million dollars. Its total foreign gross to date is 313.3 million.
MOVIES - From BuzzFeed: Timothy Chalamet shares a first-look at himself as "Willy Wonka" from the film, "Wonka," which is due in 2023.
OSCARS - From Variety: Husband and wife entertainment mega-couple, Jay-Z and Beyonce, could make Oscar history if both received "Best Original Song" nominations.
MOVIES - From USAToday: "Best horror movies: 10 thrilling, chilling films to watch for Halloween 2021."
POLITICS/TELEVISION - From Reuters: How AT&T helped build far-right One America News (OAN).
From RollingStone: "Fox News and OAN Were Deeper in the Bag for Trump Than Anyone Realized."
OBIT:
From Deadline: Disney animator, Ruthie Thompson, has died at the age of 111, Sunday, October 10, 2021. She worked an a camera technician, animation checker, or scene planner on many Walt Disney animated films over a four decade period, including "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "Fantasia," "Mary Poppin," and "The Rescuers." She was named a "Disney Legend" in 2000.
Thursday, October 14, 2021
Comics Review: VAMPIVERSE #2
VAMPIVERSE VOLUME 1 #2
DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT
STORY: Thomas Sniegoski and Jeannine Acheson
ART: Daniel Maine
COLORS: Francesca Cittarelli
LETTERS: Taylor Esposito
EDITOR: Matt Idelson
COVER: Madibek Musabekov
VARIANT COVER ARTISTS: Stephen Segovia; Meghan Hetrick; Maria Sanapo; Daniel Maine; Roberto Castro; Madibek Musabekov; Rachel Hollon (cosplay)
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (October 2021)
Rated Teen+
“The Red Mass” Book 2: “Even More Yous”
Vampirella is a vampire and female superhero created by the late author and science fiction and horror expert, Forrest J Ackerman, and designed by comic book artist, Trina Robbins. Vampirella first appeared in Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969), the debut issue of a black and white horror comics magazine from Warren Publishing. Writer-editor Archie Goodwin changed the character from a hostess of horror comics to a leading character in her own stories.
Vampirella publications were published by Warren into 1983, and after Warren's bankruptcy, Harris Publications obtained the character and published new and reprint Vampirella comic books into the mid-1990s. In 2010, Dynamite Entertainment obtained the character and has been publishing new Vampirella material since then.
Dynamite's latest Vampirella comic book series is Vampiverse. The series is written by Thomas Sniegoski and Jeannine Acheson; drawn by Daniel Maine; colored by Francesca Cittarelli; and lettered by Taylor Esposito. In this new series, a Vampirella from one universe must travel the “Threads of the Fabric” and gather Vampirellas from other universes. Their goal will be to stop a mysterious force from destroying them and the Creator of all things.
Vampiverse Volume 1 #2 (“Even More Yous”) opens on a world in which its Vampirella was forced to marry Dracula in order to save humanity. Things only got worse, and this Vampirella became the killer, “Bloodwing.” After destroying her own world, Bloodwing travels the “Threads of the Fabric” (also known as the “Weave”) seeking the “Book of Prophecy,” personified as an elementary school-age boy called “Book.”
Now, our heroic Vampirella and Book arrive on a world ravaged by the “Chaos Plague.” There, they meet this world's Vampirella and her sidekick, Prague, both of whom are ready for action. However, Bloodwing is also coming to this world, and she has a taste for a book.
THE LOWDOWN: Dynamite Entertainment's marketing department recently began providing me with PDF review copies of some of their titles. One of them is Vampiverse Volume 1 #2, one of a growing number of Vampirella comic books that I have recently read.
As I've been reading Dynamite Entertainment's comic books over the past few months, I have noticed that some first issues introduce the main series, but are more prologue than story. With these series, it is in the second issue that the story really kicks off. I find that to be the case with Vampiverse #2. Writers Thomas Sniegoski and Jeannine Acheson start this issue by quickly defining Bloodwing and then, they move on to an action-packed story. I find the characters likable, and I am intrigued by this book chase and Vampirella kill-fest.
Vampiverse's writers have certainly given me a reason to return for more, especially if they can offer a line-up of interesting Vampirellas the way Sonjaversal offers a universe of intriguing alternate Red Sonjas.
I READS YOU RECOMMENDS: Fans of Vampirella comics will want to read Vampiverse Volume 1.
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
https://twitter.com/DynamiteComics
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The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Comics Review: VAMPIRELLA VOLUME 5 #24
VAMPIRELLA VOLUME 5 #24
DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT
STORY: Christopher Priest
ART: Ergün Gündüz; Chris Graves (flashbacks)
COLORS: Mohan
LETTERS: Willie Schubert
EDITOR: Matt Idelson
COVER: Lucio Parrillo
VARIANT COVER ARTISTS: Marco Mastrazzo; Shannon Maer; Ergün Gündüz; RB White; Lucio Parrillo; Shannon Maer; Lorraine (cosplay)
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (September 2021)
Rated Teen+
“The Red Mass” Book 3: “The Groom”
Vampirella is a vampire and female superhero created by the late author and science fiction and horror expert, Forrest J Ackerman, and designed by comic book artist, Trina Robbins. Vampirella first appeared in Vampirella #1 (Sept. 1969), the debut issue of a black and white horror comics magazine from Warren Publishing. Writer-editor Archie Goodwin changed the character from a hostess of horror comics to a leading character in her own stories.
Vampirella publications were published by Warren into 1983, and after Warren's bankruptcy, Harris Publications obtained the character and published new and reprint Vampirella comic books into the mid-1990s. In 2010, Dynamite Entertainment obtained the character and has been publishing new Vampirella material since then.
Dynamite's flagship Vampirella comic book series, simply entitled Vampirella, is now in its fifth volume. Vampirella Volume 5 is written by Christopher Priest; drawn by Ergun Gunduz (and Chris Graves); colored by Mohan; and lettered by Willie Schubert. The series focuses on a reborn Vampirella who fights the forces of chaos to save humanity.
Vampirella Volume 5 #24 (“The Groom”) offers up the story of seven-year-old Matty. Vampire cultists want to worship him, and a group of religious fanatics, “The Scarlet Legion,” want to kill him. Why is Matty's life like this? Matty carries the “Dracula virus,” and one day, he will become Count Dracula. All Vampirella wants to do is save him, even if she has to make enemies out of friends to do so.
Twenty years later, FBI Agent Matthias “Matt” Ecsed sees a psychiatrist who doesn't believe that Matt is Dracula – such nonsense. But “Kauldryn,” a group of preteen vampiri (space vampires), does. And so does a mysterious man, Shane, the so-called “First Man,” who is on a murderous journey to find Matt … and the virus he carries.
Meanwhile, poor Vampirella finds herself begging “The Oracle” for help in destroying the virus. The Oracle wonders, however, why he would help a bitch that's been hunting his kind for decades.
THE LOWDOWN: Dynamite Entertainment's marketing department recently began providing me with PDF review copies of some of their titles. One of them is Vampirella Volume 5 #24. It is not only the third issue of this series that I have read, but it is also one of many Vampirella comic books that have engaged my imagination these last few months.
Issue Vampirella #22 intrigued me mainly because I am a fan of writer Christopher Priest, and I did find issue #23 to be more consistent in the flow of the narrative and less all over the place. It was funny and deranged, and Priest showed off his gift for sharp dialogue. Issue #24 is still even more exciting a read. It's funny, weird and crazy, and really brings this story arc's plot together. Someone new to the series could start with issue #24 and quickly understand this story arc. Priest is offering some of his best writing that I have read in awhile.
Two artists draw this issue. Series regular Ergun Gunduz draws the story set in the present, while Chris Graves tackles the past, specifically the first time that Vampirella meets Matt Ecsed. I like Ergun's clean line work which fits Priest's wit and humor, and his art looks great under Mohan's sharp coloring. Graves' art is not as refined, but his storytelling, while also a little raw, does convey the story and this time, Vampirella's desperation.
Issue #23 made me curious about #24, and now, I am ready for #25. I have high hopes.
I READS YOU RECOMMENDS: Fans of Vampirella comics will want to read Vampirella Volume 5.
B+
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
https://twitter.com/DynamiteComics
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https://www.linkedin.com/company/dynamite-entertainment
The text is copyright © 2021 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
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Wednesday, October 13, 2021
LAIKA Will Screen Its Films at Oregon Museum of Science & Industry Beginning Oct. 15th
- Coraline’s Other Kitchen with Other Mother/Other Father and Beldam’s Sewing table from Coraline
- Interior of Norman’s Bedroom and Mitch’s van with the gang and Zombie judge from ParaNorman
- Sparky's Market tent and Snatcher’s Truck from The Boxtrolls
- Kubo's market building from Kubo and the Two Strings
- Sir Lionel's apartment and Adelina’s boat cabin from Missing Link
- Friday, October 15: Ollie Jones, Director of Practical Effects
- Saturday, October 16: Production Designer Nelson Lowry
- Sunday, October 17: VFX Supervisor Steve Emerson
- Friday, October 22: ParaNorman and Missing Link writer/director Chris Butler
- Saturday, October 23: Brian McLean, Director of Rapid Prototyping (3D Printing)
- Sunday, October 24: Animation Supervisor Brad Schiff
- Friday, October 29: VFX Supervisor Steve Emerson
- Saturday, October 30: Head of Production/Producer Arianne Sutner