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Black Mask Studios‘ Occupy Comics #2 picks back up where it left off by continuing the ongoing discussion about the Occupy movement and what it means. For readers who are expecting a comic book saga, Occupy Comics is not that. Thin...
Black Mask Studios‘ Occupy Comics #2 picks back up where it left off by continuing the ongoing discussion about the Occupy movement and what it means. For readers who are expecting a comic book saga, Occupy Comics is not that. Think of it as an anthology of illustrated essays and information that cleverly makes it points and dissections about the Occupy movement through art and words. In this latest installment, the four pieces that were attention-getters came from Alan Moore, Joshua Dysart with Kelly Bruce, Matthew Rosenberg, and newcomer Matt Miner. Each offer compelling thoughts on unique issues affecting the many aspects of the Occupy movement. Moore’s latest installation to his essay Buster Brown at The Barricades continues its prolific and deeply layered look at the history of protest through the comic book medium. This latest segment proves to be timely as well when he gets into the treatment of Siegel and Shuster at the hands of DC Comics over the years. With the recent release of Man of Steel, which hinged on a copyright battle with the estates of the Siegel and Shuster families, Moore’s scathing commentary on DC’s reprehensible treatment of the pair and subsequent legal fight for the rights to Superman hits its mark. It should serve as a cautionary tale to anyone considering a job with the Big 2. As usual, writer Joshua Dysart and Kelly Bruce’s Casino Nation has a laser-like accuracy in their fact oriented pictorial on the major Wall Street players in our government that have wrecked the American economy. Allen Gladfelter’s illustrations of each card in the deck of the Casino Nation works like a rogue’s gallery, hinting at the criminality behind each career politician involved in tanking our economy out of their own greedy self-interests. Matthew Rosenberg’s Single Family Home offers a poignant and accurate portrayal of the American Dream unraveling under the weight of greed and ignorance. The housing crisis in which the speculative bubble blew up on is drawn upon for this sobering story about the many families that were foreclosed upon. While still a grey area in many regards, the end result and net outcomes of these families like the one depicted in Single Family Home are tremendous in scope and continue to plague the economy. There are those that are to blame for undertaking something that they couldn’t realistically afford, but this piece keeps a spotlight on those that were more than happy to prop up these bad mortgages in the interest of easy money. In the story Light, Matt Miner and Sean Von Gorman take a personal story straight from Miner’s neighborhood in Rockaway, New York to illustrate how the Occupy movement came through for that neighborhood when FEMA and LIPA were nowhere to be found after the wake of Superstorm Sandy’s destruction. Using a cleaver narrative, Miner talks about how his pay-it-forward aid to the Occupy movement came back around full-circle when he needed something as simple as a flashlight with the power out in Rockaway. What started as a small act of kindness spread into something bigger and exponential in scope. Overall, reading Occupy Comics #2 provides many insights and unique takes on what makes up a movement as diverse and vast as the Occupy movement. You would be hard pressed to find these insights from big media who would desperately love to bury this movement at each and every opportunity they can. Smart, well-reasoned, and free of being preachy, Occupy Comics #2 continues to fulfill its mission of engaging readers.
about 1 hour ago
According to the NY Times, Netflix and DreamWorks Animation have agreed to a deal for the studio to provide 300 hours of original programming. They could have gone with a cable channel, but instead, they chose the subscription service (w...
According to the NY Times, Netflix and DreamWorks Animation have agreed to a deal for the studio to provide 300 hours of original programming. They could have gone with a cable channel, but instead, they chose the subscription service (who’s been hurting for kids’ programs with the end of their deal with Nickelodeon). DreamWorks reportedly finds the movie business overly volatile and seeks the relative safety of a TV structure. One of their more recent films, Rise of the Guardians, was a flop that required an $87 million write-down and damaged their stock performance. The new programs will be “inspired” by characters from past DreamWorks Animation franchises, which include Shrek and The Croods, and its coming feature films. Series will also come from Classic Media, which the studio bought last year. Classic Media’s holdings include characters like Casper the Friendly Ghost, Lassie, She-Ra, and Mr. Magoo. DreamWorks Animation currently has DreamWorks Dragons: Riders of Berk running on Cartoon Network and three others made by Nickelodeon. One of the Netflix shows, debuting in December, will be Turbo: F.A.S.T., based on the movie opening July 17 about a fast snail. Childrens’ programming is apparently considered less risky than other types, according to this analysis: Children are avid streaming consumers, particularly overseas, and cartoons allow the company to pitch itself to parents as a commercial-free alternative to television. Animated shows for younger viewers are also less likely to appear on the pirated-content sites that compete with Netflix for viewers. Similar Posts: Paramount Launches Animation Unit, May Cut Ties With DreamWorks § Netflix Streaming Doesn’t Have the Biggest Movies § Everything You Like About Netflix? Analysts Think That’s a Bad Idea § Warner Thinks Waiting to Netflix DVDs Will Help Sales § DreamWorks Dragons: Riders of Berk Series Coming to Cartoon Network This Fall
about 2 hours ago
Zeb Wells answers fan questions at CBR
Zeb Wells answers fan questions at CBR
about 2 hours ago
about 2 hours ago
To promote the upcoming film The Lone Ranger, in theaters starting July 3 and starring Johnny Depp and Armie Hammer, Disney has released two behind-the-scenes featurettes. They do the job, since I’m more interested in seeing the mo...
To promote the upcoming film The Lone Ranger, in theaters starting July 3 and starring Johnny Depp and Armie Hammer, Disney has released two behind-the-scenes featurettes. They do the job, since I’m more interested in seeing the movie after viewing these promos. In “The Craft”, producer Jerry Bruckheimer talks about the practical effects and settings, and Depp almost gets trampled by his horse. The footage included is quite impressive, particularly the stunts. “Hi-Yo Silver”, as you might expect, looks at the horses involved in filming. Similar Posts: Howard the Duck § Tom and Jerry Return in New Cartoon Network Series § Dark Shadows § Cowboys & Aliens Comes to Blu-ray, DVD December 6 § *Gray Horses — Recommended
about 2 hours ago
Fantagraphics co-publisher Kim Thompson died at 6:30 this morning, June 19, at the age of 56. “He was my partner and close friend for 36 years,” said Fantagraphics co-publisher Gary Groth. Thompson was born in Denmark in 1956. He grew up...
Fantagraphics co-publisher Kim Thompson died at 6:30 this morning, June 19, at the age of 56. “He was my partner and close friend for 36 years,” said Fantagraphics co-publisher Gary Groth. Thompson was born in Denmark in 1956. He grew up in Europe, a lifelong comics fan, reading both European and American comics in Denmark, France, and Germany. He was an active fan in his teen years, writing to comics — his letters appeared in Marvel’s letter columns circa early 1970s — and contributing to fanzines from his various European perches. At the age of 21, he set foot, for the first time, on American soil, in late 1977. One “fanzine” he had not contributed to was The Comics Journal, which Groth and Michael Catron began publishing in July of 1976. That was soon to change. “Within a few weeks of his arrival,” said Groth, “he came over to our ‘office,’ which was the spare bedroom of my apartment, and was introduced by a mutual friend — it was a fan visit. We were operating out of College Park, Maryland and Kim’s parents had moved to Fairfax, Virginia, both Washington DC suburbs. Kim loved the energy around the Journal and the whole idea of a magazine devoted to writing about comics, and asked if he could help. We needed all the help we could get, of course, so we gladly accepted his offer. He started to come over every day and was soon camping out on the floor. The three of us were living and breathing The Comics Journal 24 hours a day.” Thompson became an owner when Catron took a job at DC Comics in 1978. As he became more familiar with the editorial process, Thompson became more and more integral to the magazine, assembling and writing news and conducting interviews with professionals. Thompson’s career in comics began here. In 1981, Fantagraphics began publishing comics (such as Jack Jackson’s Los Tejanos, Don Rosa’s Comics and Stories, and, in 1982, Love and Rockets). Thompson was always evangelical about bandes dessinées and wanted to bring the best of European comics to America; in 1981, Thompson selected and translated the first of many European graphic novels for American publication — Herman Huppen’s The Survivors: Talons of Blood (followed by a 2nd volume in 1983). Thompson’s involvement in The Comics Journal diminished in 1982 when he took over the editorship of Amazing Heroes, a bi-weekly magazine devoted to more mainstream comics (with occasional forays into alternative and even foreign comics). Thompson helmed Amazing Heroes through 204 issues until 1992. Among Thompson’s signature achievements in comics were Critters, a funny-animal anthology that ran from 50 issues between 1985 to 1990 and is perhaps best known for introducing the world to Stan Sakai’s Usagi Yojimbo; and Zero Zero, an alternative comics anthology that also ran for 50 issues over five years — between 1995 and 2000 — and featured work by, among others, Kim Deitch, Dave Cooper, Al Columbia, Spain Rodriguez, Joe Sacco, David Mazzuchelli, and Joyce Farmer. His most recent enthusiasm was spearheading a line of European graphic novel translations, including two major series of volumes by two of the most significant living European artists — Jacques Tardi (It Was the War of the Trenches, Like a Sniper Lining Up His Shot, The Astonishing Exploits of Lucien Brindavoine) and Jason (Hey, Wait…, I Killed Adolf Hitler, Low Moon, The Left Bank Gang) — and such respected work as Ulli Lust’s Today Is the Last Day of the Rest of Your Life, Lorenzo Mattotti’s The Crackle of the Frost, Gabriella Giandelli’s Interiorae, and what may be his crowning achievement as an editor/translator, Guy Peelaert’s The Adventures of Jodelle. Throughout his career at Fantagraphics, Thompson was active in every aspect of the company, selecting books, working closely with authors, guiding books through the editorial and production process. “Kim leaves an enormous legacy behind him,” said Groth, “not just all the European graphic novels that would never have been published here if not or his d
about 2 hours ago
Posted On Today at 09:58:45 pm EDT by Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man [Reply] [Quote] [New] It's fine that Spider-Man doesn't kill people, but Venom is a soldier as well as a superhero. It only makes sense that he'd be w...
Posted On Today at 09:58:45 pm EDT by Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man [Reply] [Quote] [New] It's fine that Spider-Man doesn't kill people, but Venom is a soldier as well as a superhero. It only makes sense that he'd be willing to kill to complete his mission, just like any real military or law enforcement personnel would. For that matter, I'm sure Captain America killed people during World War II, even if he has a code against killing now.
about 2 hours ago
#leftcontainerBox { float:left; position: absolute; top: 60%; left: 70px; } #leftcontainerBox .buttons { float:left; clear:both; margin:4px 4px 4px 4px; padding-bottom:2px; } #bottomcontainerBox { height: 30px; widt...
#leftcontainerBox { float:left; position: absolute; top: 60%; left: 70px; } #leftcontainerBox .buttons { float:left; clear:both; margin:4px 4px 4px 4px; padding-bottom:2px; } #bottomcontainerBox { height: 30px; width:50%; padding-top:1px; } #bottomcontainerBox .buttons { float:left; height: 30px; margin:4px 4px 4px 4px; } Organization to premiere latest public service announcement, “Ask for Help” 2013 marks the 15th anniversary of The Trevor Project WHAT: The Trevor Project, the leading national organization providing crisis intervention to LGBTQ youth, will ring the bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on Thursday, June 20th. The organization celebrates its 15 th birthday [...]
about 2 hours ago
Writer Ed Brubaker appears at Berkeley Pubic Library on Monday July 1st, 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Press Release: After creating award-winning stories for characters like Batman, Daredevil, and Catwoman, Ed Brubaker has returned to his noir...
Writer Ed Brubaker appears at Berkeley Pubic Library on Monday July 1st, 6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Press Release: After creating award-winning stories for characters like Batman, Daredevil, and Catwoman, Ed Brubaker has returned to his noir roots with the genre-busting horror mash-up Fatale! The Berkeley Public Library is thrilled to welcome Brubaker for a conversation about his illustrious career, independent publishing, and what it’s like to be known as the man who killed Captain America! Berkeley Pubic Library – Central Branch 2090 Kittredge at Shattuck, Berkeley, CA 94704
about 3 hours ago
Posted On Today at 09:20:43 pm EDT by Omar Karindu [Reply] [Quote] [New]
Posted On Today at 09:20:43 pm EDT by Omar Karindu [Reply] [Quote] [New]
about 3 hours ago