Archive for the ‘Features’ Category

TRIPWIRE ISSUE #54 COMING SOON!

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

TRIPWIRE #54 cover

07/01/10 (LONDON)

TRIPWIRE RETURNS FOR 2010!

TRIPWIRE is back with another info-packed issue! The Eagle-nominated British-American magazine about comics and genre culture returns this July bringing even more of the quality features you’d expect from our previous issues.

Beneath an exclusive Futurama cover featuring everyone’s favorite robot Bender, we chat with Matt Groening and David X Cohen about plans for their new run of the animated sci fi series on Comedy Central. More TV interest you? How about an examination of the works of Jim Henson and The Henson Company?

Maybe you like movies. You’ll love our talk with with veteran movie poster artist Drew Struzan revealing all about his work on the most iconic movie images in the history of cinema. We also get up to our arms in the special effects of megahit Iron Man 2 with SFX house Double Negative.

Do you read books? Author Glen David Gold talks to us about his novels in an exclusive interview. Also, fantasy grand master Michael Moorcock gives us a glimpse into his early career and growing up in post-War London.

Maybe comics are your thing. We feature Dave McKean discussing three decades creating his own niche as an artist, illustrator and director. We’ve also got J. Michael Straczynski and Paul Cornell talking about their takes on Superman, Wonder Woman and Lex Luthor respectively. We also cover the various anniversaries of Captain America and DC Comics with in depth articles by our own comics experts. Plus we talk to Titmouse about their new magazine+book. Lastly we end the whole thing with a giant helping of original strips from some of the usual suspects like Roger Langridge.

TRIPWIRE #54 ships the last week of July and comes in at 124 pages with our new lower price of £6.95 UK, $9.99 US and $10.95 Canadian. You’ll find it at Barnes & Noble in the US, Chapters in Canada and via Diamond UK in Britain as well as at finer bookstores everywhere.

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Stumptown Comics Fest 2010

Monday, April 26th, 2010

04/26/10 (Portland OR) Andy Grossberg

TRIPWIRE was at both days of Portland’s famous Stumptown Comics Fest possibly the indy comics show of the year. It compares favorably to others such as APE: It brings out some of the bigger guns like Dark Horse and Oni (if for no other reason than that they’re based there) but also dozens of DYI mini comics creators and others were in the room taking part in the photocopier revolution and getting their work seen. There were panels and signings from the likes of Paul Pope and Mike Allred and on Saturday night they gave away the 4th annual Trophy awards.
The Inside of Exhibitor's Room
The crowd seemed bigger this year than last as the show continues to grow every year. A lot of the programming focused on creating comics yourself with panels like An Artist’s Intro to Contracts or Rights and Local Printing & Publishing but there were also spotlight panels with creators like Craig Thompson. There were also terrific offsite events like Dr. Sketchy’s art classes. In all it was a low-key but terrific and exhausting show.

Things really got started the night before though at Guapo Comics, a neat comic shop and cafe that stocks a ton of Portland’s independent comics in the back. The beer was free and I’m told there was free food but we got there too late for that. Judging from the crowd the party was a success. The inside of Guapo Comics

There was so much to see that it took going on both days just to absorb the plethora of diverse books for sale in all shapes and sizes. I’m always hungry for new comics and the inspiration that comes with them so the exhibitor’s room was like food for the starving.

The guys from Sparkplug ComicsIt was great to see that many of small publishers like Sparkplug Comics have survived the stuttering US economy.

Batton LashBatton Lash was signing copies of Wolff & Byrd as well as his Archie work.

Richard StarkingsAnd of course Richard Starkings was there to promote Elephantmen (see our review from last August of last year).

Fantagraphics boothFantagraphics made the short drive down from Seattle.

Shawna Gore from Dark Horse reviewing portfolios Dark Horse Comics even had portfolio reviews going on both days!

Overall it was another great show and a triumph for the guys who put it on. I came back with so many new books to read that my head is spinning. Hopefully I’ll have some reviews of stuff I picked up to follow throughout the coming weeks.

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TRIPWIRE on the Yorkshire Moors with John Landis

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

09/01/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows
One of the reasons why it’s great to be located in London is that there is always something going on in terms of film and culture. At the end of August for the past decade, FrightFest has been a festival celebrating the new and the classic in horror. In 2009, they showed An American Werewolf in London, presented by its director John Landis, to celebrate its imminent release on Blu-ray. Held at the Empire Leicester Square, one of the most prestigious cinemas in the UK, it was spectacular to watch a film I’d been obsessed with as a teenager but had never seen on a big screen before. It was also clear that the film has lost none of its impact in the intervening years with the director’s clever choice of incidental music still as inventive as it ever was and the black comedy still raw and affecting. We are planning a full-blown Landis feature in the next TRIPWIRE and I’ll be reviewing the Blu-Ray in the next month or so but here are a few photos for you from the event including John Landis with some of the British crew from the film gathered together in a brief Q&A after the showing…

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Thicker Than Water

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

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8/30/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows

NOVEL REVIEW

TITLE: Thicker Than Water
WRITER: Mike Carey
PUBLISHER: Orbit Books

Mike Carey has made a name for himself as an established comic writer on titles like Lucifer, Hellblazer, Crossing Midnight, X-Men and Ultimate Fantastic Four but he has also displayed a deft hand for prose. Thicker Than Water is the fourth book featuring his Felix Castor character, an exorcist in a slightly alternate London who uses a tin whistle to banish ghosts to the netherworld.

This fourth book sees Castor get embroiled in a case that takes him back to his childhood and briefly forces him from London to Liverpool, the place he is from originally. Thicker Than Water, like the previous Castor novels, uses its settings like another character in the proceedings and Carey crafts prose that is dripping in atmosphere and mood, creating a London of tower blocks and belligerent coppers. He continues to merge classic noir or detective tropes and supernatural stylings with ease and proficiency. Carey fills Castor’s world with well-delineated supporting characters like his landlady Pen, former friend Rafi Ditko (possessed by the spirit of a truly evil demon) and succubus Juliet.

When the first book was published, Castor came across like a more serious John Constantine, a character that Carey wrote for a number of years for DC’s Vertigo line. But the differences between the two are more apparent now: Castor is less callous and arrogant than Constantine and less sure of himself. Also, Castor’s world is more low-key and mundane than the world that Constantine inhabits and it makes the horror more hard-hitting.

My only minor quibble with this particular volume is that perhaps it might be a little hard to pick it up if you haven’t read the three predecessors, but that’s a minor criticism. So, once you’ve picked up and digested the first three (The Devil You Know, Vicious Circle and Dead Men’s Boots), then you can grab this one. And not one to rest on his laurels, the fifth Castor book, The Naming of The Beasts, is out as you read this. Felix Castor comes from a long British tradition and is a worthy addition to the canon.

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The Life of Terry

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

International Move Poster for The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus

FILM REVIEW
8/23/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows

The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus

Director: Terry Gilliam
Cast: Christopher Plummer, Lily Cole, Tom Waits, Heath Ledger, Jude Law, Colin Farrell and Johnny Depp

A new Gilliam film is always an event. Sadly, The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus was overshadowed by the premature demise of Heath Ledger. Luckily, Gilliam, as one of the most enterprising and imaginative directors still making moving images, managed to finish the film with the absence of one of its major players.

Nearly all of his films have serious flaws: with the exception in my opinion of Brazil, they are filled with visual flourishes and impressive setpieces but never quite manage to gel as a cohesive whole. The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988) was slated when it was released because the director went significantly over budget, his first attempt to make The Man Who Killed Don Quixote at the beginning of the Noughties was doomed to fail (although it did make a scintillating documentary, Lost in La Mancha, that came out in 2002) and Gilliam is having another go at putting that on the screen for 2011.

Director Terry Gilliam at San Diego Comic-Con in July 2009

So, considering the fact that Gilliam is not one to let a hindrance get in his way, I have a soft spot for his work. It could be argued that he is one of the last auteurs currently working in his small corner of Hollywood and this is in evidence in The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus. He has put together a good, if eccentric cast for this endeavour, something that he has always had a real knack for: Christopher Plummer, as the eponymous Dr Parnassus is excellent, Tom Waits acquits himself well as The Devil and even catwalk model Lily Cole shows range as Parnassus’s daughter Valentina. The late Heath Ledger isn’t bad on screen but his role is a little unformed here compared with the rest of the cast.

Christopher Plummer as the titular ParnassusParnassus, played by Christopher Plummer, is a carnival turn who travels the world with his old-fashioned act, accompanied by his daughter Cole, plus Verne Troyer (Mini Me from Austin Powers) and Anton, played by Andrew Garfield. They all live in a rundown gypsy caravan-cum-portable-stage but everything seems to change when they rescue Tony (Ledger), hanging off Blackfriars Bridge. To top it all, Mr Nick (Waits) follows them in order to collect on the wager that Parnassus and he made years ago, a bet that Parnassus really doesn’t want to honour.

Teaser art from the film.

Gilliam gets around losing Ledger in the second half with some canny cameos from Depp, Farrell and Law but the script is shaky and it doesn’t all hold together. Some of the CGI also looks a bit questionable here. Having said that, there are some very ingenious moments, like the flashback to Parnassus as a monk in an unnamed country centuries ago and Waits is born to play the Devil. So Imaginarium works 70% of the time and while its reach exceeds its grasp, at least Gilliam is attempting something a little bit different. He does have a deft touch for dark fantasy and, if you’re a fan of the director, you should see this film.

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The Elephantmen in the Room

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

8/18/09 (LOS ANGELES) Andy Grossberg

GRAPHIC NOVEL REVIEW

TITLE: Elephantmen Volume 1: Wounded Animals
Writer: Richard Starkings, Joe Kelly
Artist: Moritat, Ladronn, others
PUBLISHER: Image Comics

Elephantmen Volume 1 Hardcover

Richard Starkings’s comic series Elephantmen has a really big problem. Maybe I’m just biased by the prestige hardcover edition put before me to review, with a good intro and alternate covers included. Maybe I’m just easily influenced by gorgeous art from the likes of Moritat and splendid cover art by greats such as Ladronn. And maybe I simply have a thing for good stories that can stand on their own or be read as an ongoing series with an unobtrusive yet obvious arc linking them all. Maybe that’s it or maybe it’s because the entire package itself is nice enough that it makes me wonder how I’m going to fit Elephantmen into my comic buying budget every month. You see, that’s the problem with this series: it’s good enough that if people only read it and knew about it they’d be buying it in droves.

Once you crack the cover you will be shocked by glorious artwork that’s a shout back to the heyday of comics for grownups. It belongs next to titles like RanXerox and Den in the vanguard pages of the greatest Heavy Metal issues plucked from the newsstand and read furiously, absorbed by impressionable creative young adults. Yet I fear it is lost, buried among exposed corpses in a graveyard of mediocre titles, strewn with the carrion on the shelves of the dwindling specialty shops, off sale in a month, undiscovered bones bleaching in the sun. But it has to prevail!

The story is told with a clever, European pacing, also a throwback to the best of Metal Hurlant reminding one at once of books like Inkal. But this is something unique, like Richard’s Hip Flask, his anthropomorphic animal private eye, but somehow way odder than even those tales, some strange chimera made of Blade Runner and Pinocchio. It all takes place in the same world where the titular Elephantmen, corporate-created super soldiers grown from human-animal hybrids, find themselves just trying to mesh with a future society that eagerly awaits them dying off while feigning tolerance in the name of human rights. They seem to just want to fit in and live if that’s possible. Moritat’s art shows a mastery of the animal form and a use of proportion that emphasizes both the Elephantmen’s strengths and weaknesses. The other artists that have contributed to the series are all of course beyond competent but the characters really live under Moritat’s accomplished pencil!

The combination of fantastic art and a reliable, forward-moving story drive this comic at a great clip yet there is a certain drilling down in places as well, plumbing some of the most simple moments in life but projected out of context in this dangerous future. Early on a sequence has a little girl talking to one of these redeemed killing machines ending up at a bus stop and it seems so normal, so simple, so much a part of daily life that you can see it happening now as easily as in Richard’s nightmare tomorrow: The innocent questioning the nature of “the monster.”

That’s not to say there aren’t problems with the book. The diversion into a pirate fairy tale near the end of the volume felt almost like a filler story (while a perhaps unconscious nod to The Black Freighter as well!). Meanwhile the non-Moritat illustrated issues jarred this reader as I was screaming through the pages. The absence of back matter like sketches and such is a little disappointing as well because I’d like to know the full story as to who worked on which chapter and why. It lacks a credits road map considering the talent involved. I’d also like to know what sequence the original stories and issues came in, if there were for example short stories from other collections included as with later volumes. But overall the package is really strong and the whole of Elephantmen transcends these and any other minor flaws. This book is really worth checking out and that brings me back again at last to the biggest problem of this series…

Sure the comic is visible; you can see the ads all over the place online if you go to any comics site but this is more an indication of Richard’s marketing savvy than a wave of popularity from a growing readership. This series is visible but under-appreciated and not selling what it should be. Yet it’s worth the time and money to pursue. I think many comic readers just assume everyone else is buying it, but they shouldn’t assume anything, they should buy this comic. Every comic reader that appreciates mature science fiction should read this graphic novel. You will be hooked and that’s a good problem to have.

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There’s a Starman…

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

8/18/09 (LONDON) Joel Meadows

GRAPHIC NOVEL REVIEW

TITLE: Starman Omnibus Volume 1
Writer: James Robinson
Artists: Tony Harris & Wade Von Grawbadger
PUBLISHER: DC Comics

Starman Omnibus Volume 1

Starman started life as a spinoff out of one of DC’s sprawling crossovers, Zero Hour, back in 1994. Starman was one of the JSA’s founder members but DC hadn’t had much success trying to resurrect the name over the years: Jim Starlin turned Starman into an alien prince while the ’80s saw a straight superhero title, which ran for about four years before running out of steam. Robinson and Harris’s Starman was a little bit different: Jack Knight was the son of the original hero, Ted Knight, and he is thrust into the role when his brother is murdered.

This omnibus is part of DC’s attempt to put some of their more worthwhile back catalogue into durable hardcovers and with seventeen issues reprinted here, it’s a really nice idea. Starman does come from the revisionist hero concept that was so popular in the ’80s and ’90s but unlike many of its contemporaries, Robinson understands the legacy attached to the character and so, rather than discount Starman’s past, he incorporates it while adding his own spin to proceedings. Harris’ art starts off as rather primitive and a little bit ugly but he soon grows into the settings and makes Starman his own. The team also created a fantastic place, Opal City, which is a character in its own right with a mythology, leading players and a dark secret. But the creators also took what was a minor DC villain, The Shade, and turned him into one of the most likable and complex figures in modern mainstream comics. Recast as a gentleman villain and the soul of Opal City, The Shade is a fantastic foil for the activities of Jack Knight and we get to see a story from The Shade’s past, set in 1882, which reveals his interaction with real historical figures like Oscar Wilde.

Starman is not your typical superhero book and, in fact, there is an intelligence and an erudition here that no other modern superhero series has ever possessed. By the end of this first hardcover collection, the reader is fully invested in the main protagonists. Jack Knight is a flawed and contemporary hero who is easy to empathise with, having had the Starman role foist upon him. The ’90s were a pivotal period for comics and Starman was one of the market’s most important and groundbreaking series. It is admirable that the company is making the whole run available in the Omnibus format. If you’ve not read Starman before, then you have an enviable time ahead of you, because Robinson, Harris and the other artists who also contributed create an increasingly sophisticated graphic narrative that immerses the reader.

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TRIPWIRE Visits Titmouse

Friday, August 7th, 2009

8/09/09 (LOS ANGELES) By Andy Grossberg
titmouse logo

First of all, this is just a small part of the coverage we’re going to unspool about these guys in the coming weeks and months. They have just too much cool stuff going on and they have too many cool people working for them. So, completists keep checking back occasionally as we go along because specific show or person details won’t show up until the relevant reviews or interviews are done–and the overall profile might wait until a print issue of the mag hits.

Last week TRIPWIRE visited Titmouse, the animation studio behind everything from one of those “van tributes” and the psychedelic Total commercial to the online GI Joe Resolute cartoons with Hasbro to Cartoon Network’s death metal extravaganza Metalocalypse. But they’re also doing SO much more!

The company has expanded to add a games division stealing away Aaron Habibipour from the Guitar Hero games to work on their upcoming adventure Seven Haunted Seas. Additionally they’re doing the Black Panther cartoon series for BET, recently completed DJ and the Fro for MTV and just cut a 4-picture deal with Jeff Katz of Snakes on a Plane fame (OK, maybe that’s not fame per se but still).

Walking through the building you find it crammed to the gills with working animators:

animators at work

They all had a Cintiq and many had headphones. They work directly in FLASH for the most part. Long gone are the days of hand drawn cels yet hand-drawing still goes on.

animators at work

TRIPWIRE was informed that no animators were harmed in the making of this tour.

animators at work

Even when posing for a picture instead of working the animators exude creativity.

Freddy Cristy and Jon Schnepp editing the show

TRIPWIRE also got to duck into the editing suite (ABOVE) to see Freddy Cristy and Metalocalypse director Jon Schnepp in motion, hard at work on an episode that will air in December 2009.

BELOW are Production Manager Ben Kalina and Sales and Marketing VP Sam Schoemann.

Ben Kalina and Sam Schoemann

Ben was the one who suggested we talk to Titmouse over Indian food and great conversation at the 2009 San Diego Comic Con. He was not kidding about the explosion of creativity at this company. Meanwhile Sam was the man that guided the office tour before we sat down to talk turkey about the new directions (and there are many) that the company is taking.

It was an exhaustive tour over an exhausting several hours. TRIPWIRE spoke with a bunch of people there and did a lengthy interview (more later!) with VP and Creative Producer Keith Fay, newly minted Creative Director Aaron Habibipour and of course Sam who made all of it happen for us. We even got a few minutes with (co-)founder Shannon Prynoski!

The place is just hopping with creative energy and enthusiasm much of which TRIPWIRE will be sharing with you in the coming weeks ahead.

An Enterprising Effort

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Star Trek Review by Joel Meadows.

Star Trek Nemesis, released in 2002, was the last big-screen outing for the characters from the Federation Universe and it wasn’t exactly an unmitigated success whilst on TV, the series Enterprise sputtered to a halt in 2005. So it looked like the Trek franchise wasn’t just dead but buried complete with a wake and there was a realisation that perhaps there was no room for Star Trek in a world that had Ron Moore’s Battlestar Galactica in it.

Fast forward to 2009, Battlestar Galactica has come to a close and we are greeted with a new Star Trek film. The new feature is directed by J. J. Abrams, whose deft hand for genre steered handheld monster movie Cloverfield, and on TV has been responsible for guiding Alias, Lost, and the current genre hit Fringe. So when it was announced that Abrams would be at the helm, with his writing partners Orci and Kurtzman, Paramount must have wept with joy.

I was invited to see this new reboot at the lavish Empire Leicester Square in the centre of London and security was ridiculously tight: we were patted down for recording devices and then herded into the screen. The screening was packed to the rafters with an almost-palpable sense of anticipation. I saw a number of the usual suspects in the audience, including comicbookresources’s Richard Johnston.

This Star Trek goes back to the beginning to show us a young James Kirk (Chris Pine) and a youthful but not inexperienced Spock (Zachary Quinto) giving us the story of how the crew came together. It opens with a killer punch to the face with a recurring mcguffin about time travel. In fact, what happens in the opening sequence has echoes through time, effectively creating the situation that forces James Kirk to join Starfleet. We see how Kirk first meets Uhuru (played by the gorgeous Zoe Saldana) while still a farmboy in Iowa, how he gets into a punchup with her fellow Starfleet cadets and we even find out what motivates Spock to join Starfleet rather than the Vulcan Science Academy. The film plays up his mixed lineage (half-human, half-Vulcan). We also get to see a young Kirk take the Kobayashi Maru test, its outcome bringing him into conflict with Spock.

The cast are very good indeed especially Pine, who channels Shatner but not in a parodic way, and Quinto has the depth needed to portray a young Spock while bringing enough of his own acting abilities to bear that the chemistry between young Kirk and young Spock is electrifying at times. Karl Urban as Bones sounds like the departed Deforest Kelly but that comes across as charming rather than grating. It’s hard to believe this was the same actor who played the pony-tailed Eomer in The Lord of The Rings. Abrams has also created a decent adversary in the shape of maniacal future Romulan Nero, played by Eric Bana. Nero is the man who is at the heart of the time travel shenanigans here. By this point, the Romulans have ditched the duvets and they are dressed in leather with wicked-looking facial tattoos that give them an almost Maori feel to the way they look on screen.

Of course, we have to address the Nimoy cameo. The cameo is used smartly and old Spock reveals facts that explain that this Star Trek reboot doesn’t negate the previous adventures, something that allows fans of the old show and the previous movies the opportunity to continue to regard what has gone before as still part of Trek’s canon. The interplay between craggy Spock and young hothead Pine works very well too.

Star Trek is not note-perfect by any means: Pegg as Scotty can be a little annoying and sometimes it feels like he’s a fan who’s won a competition to appear in Star Trek. And sometimes the plot holes are a little bit noticeable. But minor quibbles (or should that be tribbles☺) aside, Star Trek is an exciting, likeable and entertaining summer popcorn blockbuster that deserves to sweep aside the opposition at the box office. Abrams has revived the franchise in style and it will be exciting to see what he does with the next instalment.

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