Posted at 9:25 p.m. - Friday, July 31
Army of Darkness Archives
Geek To Me TV: Ted Raimi Speaks!
This Week In Comics - January 7 Releases
Posted at 9:45 p.m. - Monday, January 5
Courtesy of my friends at Dreamland Comics in Schaumburg, IL comes this week's new releases! Of note this week: The soldiers of Easy Company are back in Billy Tucci's revival of the classic war comic in Sgt. Rock the Lost Battalion #3; Warren Ellis explores the price one will pay to become a superhero in No Hero #3 ; and the time-traveling adventures of Ashley J. Williams and Xena the Warrior Princess continue in Xena Vs Army of Darkness: What Again? #3 (co-written by yours truly!); and much, much more!
Visit your local comic shop and check out one of these titles this week!
MARVEL
Amazing Spider-Man #582
Cable #10
Dead of Night Featuring Werewolf by Night #1
Eternals #7
Invincible Iron Man #9 (DKR)
Marvel Illustrated Kidnapped #3
Marvel Spotlight Dark Reign
Marvel Super Hero Squad Hero Up #1
Marvel Zombies 3 #4
NYX No Way Home #5
Official Index To The Marvel Universe #1
Punisher #1 (DKR)
Secret Invasion War of Kings
Spider-Man Fear Itself #1
Sub-Mariner The Depths #4
Wolverine and Power Pack #3
Wolverine Switchback
X-Men Manifest Destiny #5
X-Men Noir #1 (2nd Printing)
X-Men Noir #2
DC
Black Lightning Year One #1
Detective Comics #852 (FoE)
El Diablo #5
Faces of Evil Grundy #1 (FoE)
Jonah Hex #39
Mirror's Edge #3
Secret Six #5
Sgt Rock the Lost Battalion #3
Superman Supergirl: Maelstrom #5
Terror Titans #4
Trinity #32
Vixen Return of the Lion #4
DC/VERTIGO
Haunted Tank #2
House of Mystery #9
Sandman Dream Hunters #3
DC/WILDSTORM
Authority #6
OTHER PUBLISHERS
Anna Mercury #5
Bomb Queen V #5
Boys #26
Broken Trinity Angelus
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #21
Doktor Sleepless #11
Gravel #7
Hellboy The Wild Hunt #2
Hexed #1
Kull #3
Last Reign Kings of War #2
Mercy Sparx #2
No Hero #3
Phantom #26
Rest #2
Shrapnel #1
Shrugged #8
Sword #14
Transformers Maximum Dinobots #2
Walking Dead #57
Xena Vs AoD What Again? #3
ALL-AGES
Betty and Veronica Double Digest #167
Looney Tunes #170
Sabrina #99
Supergirl Cosmic Adventures in the 8th Grade #2
MAGAZINES
Classic Marvel Figurine Collectors Magazine #82 Moon Knight
Classic Marvel Figurine Collectors Magazine #83 Deathlok
Doctor Who Magazine #403
Torchwood Magazine #12
Wizard the Guide to Comics #208
GRAPHIC NOVELS
Agents of Atlas
American Splendor Another Dollar
Birds of Prey Club Kids
Classic GI Joe Vol 1
Complete Little Orpan Annie Vol 2 HC
Daredevil by Frank Miller Vol 3
DC Universe Illustrated By Neal Adams Vol 1 HC
Fantastic Four Worlds Greatest HC
Green Lantern Wanted Hal Jordon
Groo Hell On Earth
Gunnerkrigg Court Vol 1 Orientation HC
Infinity Crusade Vol 2
Justice Vol 3
Marvel Illustrated Three Musketeers HC
Marvel Zombies Dead Days
New Avengers Vol 9 Secret Invasion HC
Rasl Vol 1 Drift
Runaways Pride & Joy HC
Secret Invasion
Showcase Presents Strange Adventures Vol 1
Spider-Man Blue Premier Ed. HC
Tales Of The Batman Tim Sale
Transformers Movie Prequel Saga of the Allspark
Ultimate Origins Premier Ed. HC
Universal War One Vol 1 Premier ED. HC
Walking Dead Vol 9 Here We Remain
Warhammer Fire & Honor
WEird Detective Adventures of Wade Hammond Vol 2
MANGA
Astral Project Vol 2
Four Constables Vol 3
Kurosagi Corps Delivery Service Vol 8
Oh My Goddess RTL Vol 31
Shonen Jump Feb. 2009
AOD:ROTFLMAO!
Posted at 8:20 a.m. -Monday, January 5
Ok, this is the very essence of awesome geek-film making:
A bunch of Evil Dead fans get together and create their own version of Army of Darkness via Be Kind To Rewind. You just have to appreciate the energy and sincerity in the effort. Oh, and the 'This is my BOOMSTICK!' scene? With the characters from 'other' geek/nerd franchises? HILARIOUS!
Thanks to DEADITES ONLINE for uncovering this gem!
Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated...
Posted at 10:15 a.m. - Monday, December 29
Christmas has passed and I'm still alive, despite catching one wicked flu bug that had me bed-ridden and fuzzy headed for most of the holiday. I'm on the comeback trail right now, and while not a hundred percent just yet, I'm up and about and on the lookout for New Year's happenings and whatnot.
In the meantime, I'd encourage you to check out my guest appearance on the Around Comics podcast with Chris Neseman and Tom Stillwell of Spinner Rack Comics.
We have a nice discussion about comics and what it's like to write for a licensed property like Xena: Warrior Princess and Army of Darkness.
Please check it out and feel free to comment below!
Talking Zombies with Robert Kurtzman
Posted at 10:35 p.m. - Tuesday, November 25
Robert Kurztman has been working in the horror movie genre
since his college days, starting off as an effects artist on Sam Raimi’s Evil
Dead series before going on to building an impressive resume on a number of
different genre features, including The Rage, a movie he directed and co-wrote with John
Bisson. The Rage will be shown as part
of the MonstersHD Thanksgiving Day of the Dead Marathon. Kurtzman spoke with me about the marathon, his
experiences in film and what it’s like to work in Bollywood.
Geek To Me: Where did the idea of having a monster movie marathon on Thanksgiving come up?
Robert Kurtzman: I would guess,[it's like] when I was growing up there was the ‘monster movie weekend,’ you had the late night horror host on Friday night, Saturday horror host – afternoon super host – and then your afternoon movie which was always a genre movie. Most of the time King Kong played on the holiday weekend, y’know on Thanksgiving. So when I was a kid I was looking forward every year as I got to watch King Kong.
So I would suppose that they [Monsters HD producers] had a similar thing when they were growing up, so they’re thinking ‘hey, Thanksgiving weekend marathon! Plus, it’s a zombie marathon and you eat a lot!’
G2M: What are some of the projects you’ve worked on that you look back on with the most fondness?
RK: Probably working on the Evil Dead movies, Evil Dead 2 and Army of Darkness. I’m most fond of the ‘hey day’ movies when creature effects was kind of the burgeoning industry, y’know in the eighties, that’s when I got into it. Movies like that, Bride of Re-Animator and films like that, I really enjoyed working on.
Army of Darkness is probably the best time I’ve ever had working on a film. You’re a big kid out there, you get to play with skeleton puppets, and guys on horseback with swordplay. That’s great.
The second one (Evil Dead 2) was a blast to work on
too. We were kids, I was probably about
twenty, and they stuck us in this ‘Texas Chainsaw’ type house, the effects guys
were all in this house out in the country, a scary barn with the pillars out
front. We all stayed in the house while
making a movie, being shot in an abandoned middle school, which is were they
built all the stuff for Evil Dead, all the cabin sets and interiors. It was three months in North
Carolina
G2M: And beating the crap out of Bruce Campbell.
RK: Yeah, that’s the other thing. Sam’s whole thing is ‘the innocent must suffer.’ Which is great because that’s the great things about the Die Hard films too, John McClane gets his ass kicked.
Then there’s other movies like Dances With Wolves and Misery,
films like that, more main stream, aren’t so much genre movies, but I enjoyed
them as well.
G2M: What is it about zombies that you think really strike a chord with people?
RK: Probably just the primal fear of having your flesh eaten by another human being and being eaten alive. And the taboo of eating human flesh, it all plays into the thing, the phobia. [It] continues to resonate over the years, as do vampires and werewolves for various reasons.
G2M: There are those that say that the zombie genre is played out, that there's nothing new you can do with them. What are some of the challenges that you find as a creator to make these types of archetypes, like zombies, effective and resonate with people?
RK: There are two kinds of [approaches]: the very realistic approach to them, [recreating] what they would really look like decaying which is what you always try to make using the technology and make-up effects, creature effects and advances and that. You just try to make them more realistic and more anatomically correct.
And then you have the fantasy element, which [are] the goofier
movies that are [created] really to be more fun than anything.
The genre is never dead because someone eventually puts a twist on it and revives it somehow and comes up with a new idea. Same with vampires and whatever, they get into that rut where it kind of overused and everything’s kind of similar, and then, you know, it dies out for a few years, and then – bam – somebody comes up with something real interesting.
I don’t think it ever truly dead.
G2M: Have you seen any of the current work in comic books being done with Zombies, like Robert Kirkman’s Walking Dead or Garth Ennis’ Crossed?
RK: I don’t really follow [them]. I’d been dabbling with the comics with The Rage release, but I really don’t collect them anymore. Stopped doing that when I was in my teens, unfortunately. Couldn’t afford it.
G2M : Speaking about The Rage, what do you felt worked best about that project?
RK: We set out to make a really fun kind of b-movie, roller coaster ride. It has a lot of things, elements from films I grew up on, everything from Re-Animator to the old 40’s and 50’s (Bela) Legosi movies; mad doctor films and mix it in with some mutant animals, some living dead mutants; kind of a mix of everything where we just have fun with it.
It’s totally kind of a fun throwback movie. We made it on a shoestring budget. We kind of did it to experiment. Me and John [Bisson] kind of wanted to experience the process that they did on Evil Dead when they went out and raised money and shot a movie outside the system kind of on their own in the back yard. So we put a film crew together, in our home town, on my studio and everything and we made the movie. Even though we’d made other films over the years, we went ‘hey, let’s go back and make a movie like we were making our first film.’ We basically did everything ourselves. I was the DP (Director of Photography), John was production designer, and he was also writing and storyboarding the film. We were doing a little of everything, built our own sets and it was that kind of guerilla movie.
G2M: Do you think you would want to re-visit The Rage like Sam Raimi did the Evil Dead movies?
RK: If there’s an opportunity, we already have ideas for spinning it off. It just depends on what’s going on at the time, what the market is and raising the financing again.
G2M: What do you think is going to be the next thing in horror that is going to strike a chord with fans of the genre?
RK: I think it’s going to be somebody coming up with an original concept that doesn’t use any of those creatures like vampires, werewolves and things. They have been so overused. I think coming up with a new mythology for something, or experimenting with other cultures’ mythology. I just finished a film called ‘Hiss’ which is an Indian production, its all wrapped around their Snake Woman legend. So there’s things that we’re not familiar with over here that might be a new inspiration for films over here like a golem-type film.
[‘Hiss’] is an all Hindi movie which definitely a different thing, working with an Indian crew and translators was an experience. It was really cool.
G2M: Do scary movies go over in
RK: Yeah, they actually have a lot of horror films that come out, even our [American] films come out. They had their 'Hammer Films' period over there too. They made fifty of these snake movies, but they never had any with real transformations and snakes or special make-up. They’ve been making these types of movies for a long time: supernatural movies and movies with witches.
G2M: Robert, thanks so much for taking this time to speak with me.
RK: Thank you.
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Visit MonstersHD.com for more info on their Thanksgiving Day of the Dead!