Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Seventies Art By Me


Found another cache of my old artwork, this from 1974-1979. I posted these on Facebook but wanted to share them here, also. I never did get the hang of drawing  hands but I did get better at feet. My anatomy is obviously comic book anatomy. I know it isn't all that good but I look at it now and see lost potential. 






















Monday, May 07, 2012

Booksteve Reviews: The Avengers


I feel like I'm late to the party here what with trying to avoid so many AVENGERS reviews over the past week since it opened overseas. If anyone has yet to decide as to whether or not to see the film--and if anyone cares at all about my opinion--you're about to get it.

Readers  of my 1974 blog know that I saw more than 80 movies in theaters that year. For the past few years I have seen only one or two. The thing to remember is that in 1974 even a first run film could be seen for a dollar, at least at matinees. Nowadays, at ten dollars a ticket--and a family to take along--a movie is an investment. There have been very few new movies in any given year in the 21st Century in which I would care to invest that type of time and money.

Last year I saw THE GREEN HORNET and CAPTAIN AMERICA and that was it. This year there was very little doubt that we would see THE AVENGERS.

Let's get this out of the way right up front. I hate to be unoriginal but I have to add my voice to the many fans and reviewers who have called THE AVENGERS "the best superhero movie yet." Yes, even better than SUPERMAN...but not by much. 

Even at more than two hours, I found not a dull moment as the storyline built gradually through several set-piece scenes to an all-out action-filled finale. 

One of the best things about THE AVENGERS is that it is NOT an origin film. Well...in a way it's a team origin film but you know what I mean. As a comics fan, I didn't need in-depth recaps or flashbacks showing how the protagonists became special. I knew that and writer/director Joss Whedon, a fanboy himself, knew it, too. So when we meet Cap, he is already Cap, when we see Shellhead, he's already in Iron, etc...

By now used to the fact that Samuel L. Jackson's Nick Fury (who cameoed in most of the earlier Marvel movies in the Avengers sequence) is the cool black hero spy rather than the grizzled WWII veteran of the comics, we are thrust into a storyline without so much as a real opening credits sequence. It seems the Cosmic Cu...err...the "Tesseract" has been compromised by Loki, the trickster "God" seen previously in THOR. 

An obvious but not particularly interesting villain in the previous picture, Loki accidentally instigates the gathering of our little band of heroes. In the original comic book, he did the same albeit in a completely different way. Tom Hiddleston is much better here than in THOR, playing the role with a sometimes whiny, arrogant smugness.

One of the real tricks Whedon accomplishes well here is taking the large cast of characters and giving them an equitable amount of screen time. The plot itself is simplistic but that's okay. In any kind of action flick all you really need is a mcguffin. In this case, that's the Tesseract, stolen by the God of Deceit in the opening scene. 

Cap and Iron Man are brought together to help find it. The Black Widow brings in Bruce Banner and Thor eventually just shows up on his own. The last member of our intrepid band--and I may be wrong but I don't think he was referred to as anything other than Agent Barton and "The Hawk"--is mesmerized by Loki in the beginning and is a bad guy until near the end of the action.

As much as fans initially complained about Captain America's uniform in his own picture, the eventual consensus was that it worked. In this one, however, he's given what appears to be a lovely cosplay outfit which, in action, looks like it should have been shredded. 

It's one of the few missteps, though. Everyone else looks and carries themselves quite naturally, even Loki in a variation of his classic comics helmet long curved, overcompensating, horns. Speaking of Asgardians, Thor looks and acts more like the comic book Thunder God here than he did in his last outing, with Chris Hemsworth creating a much more ingratiating hero.

Chris Evans is stalwart and gets a number of good scenes, particularly one near the end that shows why Cap is a natural leader. Scarlet Johansson is much better than expected as the Black Widow and gets a truly fun introductory scene. Jeremy Renner, perhaps best known for playing cannibal killer Jeffrey Dahmer early in his career, is unceasingly intense as the archer/spy Hawkeye (whether or not he's called that). On the surface, the character seems pointless in a film of such heavy hitters and yet somehow, Renner won me over.

Mark Ruffalo is the best Bruce Banner yet, giving a nuanced performance in a film that really doesn't lend itself to that. His Hulk--the "Other Guy"--is a part of him and he knows it. The CGI Greenskin is fun in ways his own films never let him be. Again, one seemingly has to thank Whedon for at least part of that.

There's no doubt, though, that the star of this film is Robert Downey, Jr. Once proclaimed one of THE great actors of his generation and then a mere few years later all but written off as just another drug casualty, Downey has surprised all by not only pulling his act together but also by showing more of an effortless charisma than he ever had before. This is true in most of his recent films but his casting as Tony Stark/Iron Man is surprisingly apropos. The comic book Tony Stark had to deal with his personal demons, also, and came out as a real hero. Downey makes the guy inside the metal suit much more real and much more interesting than the hero. He also gets nearly all the best lines in a script filled with quotable lines.

THE AVENGERS is hardly a perfect movie but outside of CASABLANCA, what is? There are a  few plot holes and scenes that, if one thinks too hard about them, make no sense. The thing is, though, that the roller coaster ride gives you no time to think about these points until later. In a movie filled with speed and explosions, I cared about the script and I cared about the characters, comic booky though they were. After all, considering the source material, isn't that a good thing?

Saturday, May 05, 2012

Bronze Age Sub-Mariner Splash Page Saturdays # 62

                                           Oh, please. I mean...seriously...

Friday, May 04, 2012

Kickstarter Blues



Readers and fans asked for it so we're trying to do a book version of A GEEK'S JOURNAL 1976 with KICKSTARTER. After a good start a week ago, however, we've been stalled at only $127.00 in pledges. 

And that's after a couple of significant plugs including one from BOING-BOING! It seemed like a good idea at the time. Various book projects we looked at from KS were around the same amount we're asking for. We researched area printers and based on the type of paper used and color photos, it runs pretty high for all. We can't get an exact estimate without information on paper weights and things we don't yet have. Also factored in the barcodes, ISBN, copyright registration and such. Then we have to factor in print quantity as well as the ability to pay back Kickstarter and Amazon if we succeed and to get the incentives made and distributed.  Add to that we're looking at getting rights to the various photos and illustrations used on the blog, too, some of which might be given and others of which might need to be licensed. 

We've still got 37 days to go and we're still promoting the campaign daily at different boards and sites and getting plugs and tweets. But no money. If we don't make our goal in 37 days we lose nothing...except the book. If you want to see the the expanded version of my annotated high school journal, please check out the link and consider  a pledge. Thanks!


http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/603655558/a-geeks-journal-1976-the-book-of-the-blog

Thursday, May 03, 2012

Booksteve Rarities--May Highlights




As usual there's lots of new stuff at the DVD site this month. Remember: Unless otherwise marked. single DVD's are only $7.00 each. Go here for ordering details- http://oldtimeradiotapes.homestead.com/StevenSiteHome.html

 THE LONE RIDER: The Complete Westerns
A total of 17 Westerns were made by PRC, a low-budget movie studio that produced a singing cowboy played by George Houston for the first 11 movies and Bob Livingston for the remaining 6 movies. Regrettably, the studio re-released the same movies under alternate titles causing not only confusion but chaos as people thought they were buying new Lone Rider movies on DVD and discovered after watching them that they bought a dupe under an alias title. We went to the trouble to ensure there are no dupes and that the set you get indeed has all 17 movies! This six-disc set contains all 17 movies! The Lone Rider Rides On (1941), The Lone Rider Crosses the Rio (1941), The Lone Rider in Ghost Town (1941), The Lone Rider in Frontier Fury (1941), The Lone Rider Ambushed (1941), The Lone Rider Fights Back (1941), The Lone Rider and the Bandit (1942), The Lone Rider in Cheyenne (1942), The Lone Rider in Texas Justice (1942), Border Round Up (1942), Outlaws of Boulder Pass (1942), Overland Stagecoach (1942), Wild Horse Rustlers (1943), Death Rides the Plains (1943), Wolves of the Range (1943), Law of the Saddle (1943), and Raiders of Red Gap (1943). $20  

HARVEY (1972 version)
James Stewart reprised his role from the Broadway play and the 1950 movie for this 1972 made-for-TV movie with Helen Hayes, John McGiver, Richard Mulligan, Martin Gabel, Arlene Francis, Fred Gwynne and a young Madeline Kahn making her screen debut. (Quality is not superb or up to our usual standards, we're mentioning this in advance.)


BLITHE SPIRIT (1956 TV special)
This 90-minute production was not only based on the Noel Coward stage play, but co-stars Noel Coward and was directed by Coward himself! Stars Lauren Bacall, Mildred Natwick, Claudette Colbert and Brenda Forbes. Originally telecast on January 14, 1956.
LEON ERROL COMEDY COLLECTION
This seven disc box set contains 28 classic comedy shorts (each about 20 minutes in length). The bald-pated Hollywood comedy star was best remembered for his two-reelers for two decades from 1933 to 1953. Considered short sitcoms without a laugh track, these comedies are still gems. This set includes: One Live Ghost (1936), Wedtime Story (1943), Should Wives Work? (1937), Rented Riot (1937), Counselitis (1935), Lord Epping Returns (1951), Twin Husbands (1946), Down the Ribber (1936), His Pest Friend (1938), Major Difficulties (1938), Moving Vanities (1938), Wrong Room (1939), Pretty Dolly (1942), Bested by a Beard (1940), Girls, Girls, Girls (1944), Radio Runaround (1943), Let's Go Stepping (1945), Borrowed Blondes (1947), Wife Tames Wolf (1947), Oil's Well that Ends Well (1949), Man-I-Cursed (1941), The Dummy Owner (1938), Bested by a Beard (1940), Beware of Redheads (1945), I'll Take Milk (1946), Sweet Cheat (1949), High and Dizzy (1950), and Bet Your Life (1948).  $35

THE NINE LIVES OF EL FAGO BACA: The Complete Series
All ten hour-long episodes in this five-disc box set. The story of a mild-mannered New Mexico lawman was one of several Westerns on rotation under the Walt Disney Presents banner. Robert Loggia stars in the lead from 1958-1960. Includes the following episodes: The Nine Lives of El Fago Baca, Four Down and Five Lives to Go, Lawman or Gunman, Law and Order Inc., Elfago Baca, Attorney at Law, The Griswald Murder, Move Along Mustangers, Mustang Man, Mustang Maid, Friendly Enemies at Law, and Gus Tomlin is Dead.  $25 
This set is available for this month only. Limited quantity, sold on a first-come, first serve basis!

Wednesday, May 02, 2012

Creativity and Dedications

Craig Yoe's new book, THE CREATIVITY OF DITKO won't be out for another few months but I wanted to point out how flabbergasted I was when I found it that Craig had dedicated his latest collection of classic comics to...ME! Wow. Little did I suspect when I was sitting on the stairs at (appropriately) my Aunt's house when I was seven reading about Spidey struggling to lift that big freakin' piece of machinery off of himself so he could get that medicine to his Aunt May...that someday I would have a major book on the artist and his work dedicated to me. Wow. Just wow. Thanks, Craig!



 

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

Talon Poster-Steranko


This poster adorned my walls for many a year in the seventies and is probably still folded up in a box somewhere. Steranko's  TALON was supposed to be the ultimate Conan-type warrior. I impatiently awaited his adventures while staring for hours at this colorful image. Every now and then a few new images would arise in fanzines of in Jim's own newspaper or even as a paperback cover for non-Talon stories! But in the long run, Talon was apparently left in the same bin along with the remaining volumes of THE STERANKO HISTORY OF COMICS. The bin marked "Maybe...someday."