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    Archive for November, 2006

    ADAM HUGHES TO DESIGN COSTUMES FOR THE WATCHMEN MOVIE - NEWSARAMA

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    From the “I will believe it when I see it” category…

    ADAM HUGHES TO DESIGN COSTUMES FOR THE WATCHMEN MOVIE - NEWSARAMA

    ADAM HUGHES TO DESIGN COSTUMES FOR THE WATCHMEN MOVIE


    Add
    one more name to the list of comic industry luminaries attached to the
    upcoming film version of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ Watchmen - Adam Hughes.

    Though rumors were circling earlier this week, the artist has confirmed
    for Newsarama that he will be designing the costumes for the film
    version of the seminal comic work, to be directed by Zack Snyder.

    In an age when there’s a tremendous amount of crossover between comics and Hollywood, his work on Watchmen (“Assuming they like what I sketch,” Hughes joked), this will be his first movie gig.

    So how did Snyder and the film producers find him?

    “I’d like to say that my work spoke for itself, and my draftsmanship
    and Dave Gibbons-lie clean lines just called to them…or something…but I
    really have no idea,” Hughes said with a chuckle. “Maybe the movie guys
    walked through a comic shop looking for somebody - anybody to design their costumes, and some boobs called out to them from the rack. That’s a pun, by the way…

    “But seriously – I have no idea. Maybe they just liked my stuff. Zack Snyder is working on 300
    [based on the graphic novel by Frank Miller], so obviously he reads the
    occasional comic or two, one could deduce; but all in all, they got in
    touch with us, and it was all very causal.”

    While the story - the words of Watchmen - is virtual
    scripture in the world of comics, in the eyes of many fans, so are the
    costumes. So just what will Hughes be designing, or doing, even?

    “When you get on the other side of the fence, you sort of understand
    that there are certain things that wouldn’t survive a direct
    translation from comic to screen,” Hughes explained. “Superman and
    Spider-Man look virtually identical to their comic book counterparts.
    Batman doesn’t, but yet he still has Batman’s silhouette, and that
    seems to be enough for most people. But continuing, the X-Men hardly
    resemble themselves at all – but they still work.

    “In doing something like this, I find that I end up thinking about two
    completely different groups within the movie’s audience at the same
    time: the die-hard comic book fans who will not permit even an iota of
    alteration; and then you’ve got your non-comics readers who will be
    turned off the minute somebody walks out in a leotard. You have to come
    up with something that allures and entices them and their debit cards
    and their dollars without being so radical that it turns off the
    die-hard fan. It’s actually pretty hard work.”

    In short, Hughes isn’t looking to reinvent the wheel, or throw out
    Gibbons’ designs. What he is trying to do is take the original
    costumes, and make them…easier to swallow as something you’d see - and
    believe - on screen.

    “In
    a comic book, because it’s all graphic abstraction, it’s easier to
    accept something that’s completely insane,” Hughes said. “But in a
    movie, you can make stuff that’s slightly insane – something
    that, if you saw someone walking down the street in it, you’d think,
    ‘No,’ but there’s something about the context of a movie that allows
    the slightly bizarre to become acceptable, just like where comics allow
    the amazingly bizarre to become acceptable. So now it’s a matter of,
    ‘Okay, how do we take the Silk Spectre from the amazingly bizarre to
    the slightly bizarre?’ After all, she wears an outfit that you could
    pull right out of Victoria’s Secret…”

    Hughes is keeping mum on who exactly he’s been asked to sketch –
    although, as one might be able to guess, he was working on design
    elements of the Silk Spectre while speaking with Newsarama. “I haven’t
    been asked to do sketches of all the Watchmen, just a few of them,”
    Hughes said. “I think, the message at least I’m taking from that is
    that with some of them, there’s nothing that needs to be tweaked for
    the 21st century.

    “But yeah – the ones that you can imagine might need some help to make
    them a little easier to swallow…the ones that you look at and think…
    ‘Uh…yeah.’ Those are the ones.”

    And is he working on Dr. Manhattan designs?

    “There’s only so much you can do with a blue ____,” Hughes deadpanned.

    At the very least, Hughes said, the job with the movie allows him the opportunity to re-read Watchmen,
    and also – he’s found an invaluable reference. “One of the things
    that’s really helping is having the big hardcover Graphitti Designs Watchmen edition from…however many decades ago,” Hughes said. “It’s the same as the Absolute Edition, but it’s comic-sized.

    “It’s got Alan Moore’s notes to Dave Gibbons in it, and he talks to
    Dave about the concept of the character, which helps in getting me
    thinking a little more about not what they’d be wearing, but why they’d
    be wearing it.”

    And finally, as for how his movie work will affect his regular
    workload, Hughes said that he’s got a pretty good rotation thing going.

    “I do a little writing on All-Star Wonder Woman, and when
    my typing fingers get tired, I move over to the drawing table and do a
    little more on Silk Spectre and try to make her work as well as some
    other sketches, and oh yeah, crap – I’ve got a Catwoman cover due. It’s a little schizophrenic right now, but fun.”

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    Comics2Film Fan Feed - The CW prepares for “Justice” with League repeats

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    Too bad I don’t get CW on cable anymore…

    Comics2Film Fan Feed - The CW prepares for “Justice” with League repeats

    The
    CW Prepares Us For The Justice League!

    Just
    in time for the Justice League extravaganza in the episode “Justice,”
    airing in January, The CW has planned some very heroic repeats
    in the weeks leading up to it.

    On
    Thursday, December 28, The CW will be airing two back-to-back
    Smallville repeats from past seasons - “Run,” which
    introduced us to that impulsive “flash” Bart Allen;
    and “Cyborg,” which introduced Victor Stone.

    Then,
    on January 4, the CW again brings us two episodes - “Arrow,”
    featuring Oliver Queen/The Green Arrow, and “Aqua,”
    last season’s high-rated episode featuring Arthur “A.C.”
    Curry.

    Here
    is the schedule for the next few weeks of episodes. All episodes
    air Thursdays at 8PM unless otherwise noted.

    11/30
    “Sneeze”
    12/7 “Subterranean” NEW!
    12/14 “Wither”
    12/21 “Reunion”
    12/28 “Run” (8PM) & “Cyborg” (9PM)
    1/4 “Arrow” (8PM) & “Aqua” (9PM)

    Thanks
    to Jana for letting us know!

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    IRON MAN, HEROES, AVP2, STARDUST: NOVEMBER 28TH COMIC REEL WRAP

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    Comic Book Resources - CBR News - The Comic Reel

    IRON MAN, HEROES, AVP2, STARDUST: NOVEMBER 28TH COMIC REEL WRAP
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    Comics Should Be Good! » Matt Fraction on “The Great Comic Book Store”

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    Great article on good comic book shops. Exactly what I miss every week.

    Comics Should Be Good! » Matt Fraction on “The Great Comic Book Store”

    Matt Fraction on “The Great Comic Book Store”

    Posted by Brian Cronin, Tuesday, November 28th, 2006 9:58 PM

    Matt
    Fraction currently writes Casanova for Image Comics and Punisher War
    Journal for Marvel Comics. His latest ongoing title, The Immortal Iron
    Fist (co-written by Ed Brubaker) comes out this week. His website can
    be found here.

    I’m doing a signing at Heroes Aren’t Hard to Find
    in one of my old hometowns, Charlotte, NC, on Saturday, December 2nd.
    I’ll be there from noon on, give or take, right in the middle of
    Heroes’ annual Big Holiday Sale. On top of that, last week, two books I
    wrote came out: CASANOVA #6, with Gabriel Bá and PUNISHER WAR JOURNAL
    with Ariel Olivetti, and this week, a book I co-write with Ed Brubaker
    called THE IMMORTAL IRON FIST comes out. David Aja draws that. And, the
    day before, I turn 31. So it’s a good time to sign stuff, to show up
    and promote my work and, hopefully, bring some folks into the store.
    Which, really, is what I want to write about– the comic book store.

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    The Movie Blog: Sci Fi Channel to make Wizard of Oz based miniseries

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    This should be interesting…

    Sci Fi Channel to make Wizard of Oz based miniseries

    Sci Fi Channel to make Wizard of Oz based miniseries

    tinman.jpgThe Wizard of Oz
    is a pure classic and the original should never be touched, however the
    movie is filled to the brim with take off possibilities and it looks
    like th Sci-Fi Channel is going to try and snatch some gold from the yellow brick road. The good people over at darkhorizons.com give us this on Sci Fi’s move toward OZ:

    The
    network has given a green light to “Tin Man”, a six-hour original
    miniseries described as wild SF reimagining of “The Wizard of Oz”
    reports Sci-Fi Wire.

    The story follows DG, a young woman plucked from
    her humdrum life and thrust into The Outer Zone (the O.Z.), a
    fantastical realm filled with wonder, but oppressed by dark magic. DG
    discovers her true identity, battles evil winged monkey-bats and
    attempts to fulfill her destiny. Ultimately, DG’s destiny leads her to
    a showdown with the wicked sorceress Azkadellia, whose ties to DG are
    closer than anyone could have imagined.

    This project is written by Steven Long Mitchell and Craig
    Van Sickle, shooting is slated to begin early 2007 in Vancouver with a
    December 2007 release set.

    There have actually been quite a few attempts, successful and otherwise of bringing Oz to television if you click here you can see them, my personal favorite is The Muppet’s do The Wizard of Oz where Miss Piggy played all four witches.

    This sounds pretty good. I mean it could be completely terrible but
    at a first glance this gets me interested. A sci-fi take on OZ, I can
    dig it.

    What might work well is if they involve aspects of OZ that always
    felt sci-fi anyway. Like the little people, to me they always seemed
    very alien having these little people among Dorothy. Or the ruby
    slippers don’t hold a spell they are actually made out of special
    crystals that could power a whole universe, and here Dorothy is walking
    around on them all day, getting them scuffed, having no real idea of
    what they are worth, only that people want them. Yep, there are some
    cool possibilities here.

    What could go wrong though is in an attempt to have a fresh look at
    the concept of this magical story the creators could go so far away
    from the original and over the top with the sci-fi genre that the
    appeal of an OZ with a sci-fi twist would be lost.

    To the best of my knowledge and research there has never
    been a sci-fi version of The Wizard of Oz. And as long as the
    commercials for it don’t look like Cleopatra 2525 meets Oz I will be open to seeing it.

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    DYNAMIC FORCES TO PRODUCE SIX BOOKS WITH STAN LEE - NEWSARAMA

    Posted by Chris Mosby on 30th November 2006

    DYNAMIC FORCES TO PRODUCE SIX BOOKS WITH STAN LEE - NEWSARAMA

    DYNAMIC FORCES TO PRODUCE SIX BOOKS WITH STAN LEE

    Press Release

    Dynamic Forces today announced a line of Historical
    Retrospective Books pairing the premiere comics and collectibles
    company with the legendary Stan Lee. Stan Lee, the co-creator of many
    great silver age characters – the corner stone - of the Marvel
    Universe, and the foundation of the multi-billion dollar entertainment
    giant Marvel has since become, is responsible for co-creating such
    characters as The Amazing Spider-Man, the Hulk, Iron Man, the Avengers,
    the Uncanny X-Men — and the list continues as Stan is the most
    prolific writer/creator in comics history. Previously Lee helped create
    an entire generation of writers and artist not only with his comics
    work, but with such previous “instructional” books as How to Draw the
    Marvel Way. This new series will help create the next generation.

    The first two titles scheduled for release in the series will be
    editions of Stan Lee’ s Guide to Writing Comics and Stan Lee’s Guide to
    Drawing Comics. The books will be presented in full-color with the
    first book scheduled to be released in early 2007, the second in mid to
    late 2007 and more in the series will follow.

    The
    arrangement comes after many months of planning, the end result of
    which has proved to be exceptionally rewarding for Dynamic Forces as
    President Nick Barrucci explained: “This is so surreal, that words
    escape me. I have grown up reading Stan’s comics. He’s done such an
    incredible body of work, that he’s influenced so many generations of
    not only comic creators, but literary greats and directors and
    producers, his legacy speaks for itself. This is really a pinnacle for
    me, as I’ve known and worked with Stan on many projects in the past,
    but never one with as much impact as this new venture is going to have.
    I known so many artists that got started and now have stellar careers
    in comics based on books like How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way. It’s
    something that I never could have hoped for as a fellow fan growing up,
    but something to definitely grab the brass ring and run with it. And
    this is a brass ring! We’ll be not only offering Stan’s take on art,
    but writing and other important aspects of creating comics, and
    co-branding with the POW! Imprint. This is something I’ve waited all my
    life to do. It’s nothing short of “dynamic”, and I thank Stan and the
    guys at POW! for entrusting us to bring these incredible instructional
    and historical books to a new generation of fans!”

    “Wow! It’s hard to believe that I wrote How to Draw Comics the Marvel
    Way so many years ago! That’s why it was a snap for Nick Barrucci to
    convince me it’s time to write a follow-up tip sheet about how to draw,
    together with one telling how to write comics. It was a real blast for
    me to be working with the great guys at Dynamic Forces and I hope
    you’ll enjoy reading our sure to become best-sellers as much as I
    enjoyed working on them. Excelsior!” – Stan Lee

    Look for more information on the series “Stan Lee’s Guide” in the weeks to come

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