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April 30, 2008

Weekly Picks

Each week the crew here at RBN will be spotlighting what has them excited this week. Here's what has us taking notice this week.

Mike's Picks of the Week:

ultimatehuman.jpgUltimate Human #4 - Warren Ellis and Cary Nord has been delivering a great series and this week brings the final issue. Ellis has crafted a story that plays to his strengths, and Cary Nord has been on fire. Last issue delivered a nasty Ultimate version of old Ellis standby Pete Wisdom and this issue promises to deliver the action.

 

gtaiv.gifGTA4 - The Grand Theft Auto series goes next gen. Seriously what more do you need than that?


 

Larry's Pick of the Week:

boudin.jpgThe famous Boudin sourdough. San Francisco sourdough is arguably the most famous in the country, and while some folks in Oregon will give you a hard time about where and when their Mother sponges came from, even the most grizzled partisan will allow that the Boudin starter is as old as the territory, with each loaf using a bit of the mother dough from 1849. The starter dough they use to make the bread has been in constant use since 1849. When you eat a slice of Boudin's, you're eating bread literally as it was in 1849. The same stuff. I've been known to have some Santa Cruz Extra from Alfaro's in a pinch, but they're owned by Sara Lee, so... c'mon. Perfectly pleasant corporate-owned bread, or time-travelling sourdough from the Barbary Coast? The choice is clear. www.boudinbakery.com

 

Ash's Pick of the Week:

DCU.jpgI'll be in Arizona this week and far, far away from my comic store when this week's books, hit, but were I not, I'd be hitting up Comics Conspiracy's Geoff Johns signing for DC Universe 0. Geoff Johns has done a great job of cementing himself as one of the modern DC architects, and considering that this 50-cent tome was cowritten by Grant Morrison, I don't think that there's a reason for any superhero fan - even the staunchest Marvel Zombie - to not pick this book up. It's a key lead-in to DC's Final Crisis, and for half a buck, you couldn't NOT get a finer looking book, considering the array of artists on this issue. I wish half a buck would always go so far every time I go into a comic book store!


 

Erin's Pick of the Week:

Glamourpuss.jpgGlamourpuss #1: First of all, dear readers, let me point out that I am FINALLY catching a series that I'm interested in at the very beginning and this is terribly exciting for me. Dave Sim's website promises smart, provoking thoughts on fashion, a monosyllabic spy/super-heroine and fabulous shoes. Maybe I'm playing into a stereotype here, but I want someone to agree that Vogue is a messed-up concept for magazine but do it using a character in incredible clothing drawn in a 1950's fashion ad style. Ah, the dichotomy of modern girliness. Bring on the lipstick and social critique, Mr. Sim!


 

Rich's Picks of the Week:

local.jpgLocal #11 by Brian Wood and Ryan Kelly - In the next to last issue of this series, the scene shifts to Toronto and the lead character, Megan, who we've been following since she left home as a teenager, is now 30. It's always a bit of a wait in between issues for this excellent book, but I feel like that only helps to accentuate the time that passes in between issues within the story.


 

dororo.jpgDororo Vol. 1 Vertical continues its mission to release never-before-in-English manga from the late, great Osamu Tezuka. It seems like there's a new one every week. This one was originally published in Japan in 1967 and is about a young boy named Hyakkimaru whose father made a deal with some demons and sold them 48 of his son's body parts. Now a teenager and tricked out with prosthetics, Hyakkimaru travels the Japanese countryside with his young sidekick Dororo, retrieving each of his body parts from the 48 demons who now own them. It sounds like a weird Samurai video game. Unlike a lot of the releases we've seen from the Tezuka canon the past few years, this one is wall to wall action.

 

Julian's Picks of the Week:

elephantmen.jpgElephantmen: War Toys #3 (of 3): Richard Starkings has proved that there are few things that are "impossible" when you have the talent and love to back a project up. Hip Flask, Starking's Comicraft's mascot was little more than that: just a mascot. It existed in out of context pin-ups by artists from the likes of Ian churchill and Joe Madureira until a few years ago Starkings, with the help of Joe Casey and Jose Ladronn created not only a backstory but a mythology and world for the character. The result turned out to be a mix of pulp, sci-fi and action and excelling in each one of those like no other book at the time. Following up Hip Flask, Starkings presented the world with the ongoing Elephantment and the Elephantmen: War Toys mini series and each one has been an enviable product that surpasses your average tights comic quality wise by far. Everyone looking for a comic that falls outside the tedious guidellines of the medium should give this book a shot.


 

ironman.jpgIron Man: Man, oh man. I vaguely remember reading Captain America books in the early 80s that had Iron Man as a guest star. Then... maybe a few late 80s Avengers issues when the character was part of the team? Understandably, when the movie was announced I wasn't thrilled. I was ready to categorize it along with Daredevil and Catwoman as sub-par action movies. Then Jon Favreau was announced as a director and my first thoughts were "really? Monica's ex-boyfriend? the guy directing a 'Jumanji' for a new generation?" Expectations went from low to non-existent. Then the posters came out and looked good. Then the teaser came out and looked fantastic. Then the trailer came out and I'll be seeing this on opening night and I'm ready for it to be my favourite action movie of the year.


 

11:53 AM | Comments (0)

April 29, 2008

Mike Carey Interview

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Old friend to YMB/RBN Mike Carey dropped by for a chat about the end of Crossing Midnight, his X-Men run and some info on his new X:Men Legacy.

Having completed Messiah Complex, what are your thoughts? Are you happy with how it all played out? You seemed to have gotten quite a few of the crossover's most dramatic beats...

Yeah, all things considered, I'm very happy. I've said before that I think we did the planning exactly as it should be done - with everyone involved, and far enough in advance so that we all knew where we were going and could make the individual titles flow into the crossover smoothly and naturally.

carey_xmen01.jpgIt was kind of weird, and kind of providential, because the structure we chose - which was effectively a three-act structure - gave me the climactic beats three times in a row: I did the two back-to-back battles with the Purifiers and the Marauders, the reveal that Bishop was the traitor and the big finale. It was very cool, and I tried not to let the residual guilt stop me enjoying myself.


How far back were you laying the seeds in X-Men for what was to come?

Since day one, almost. Way back in January of 2006 Marvel flew me over to New York for a creative summit, and that was when the idea of having a big X-Men crossover event was floated. I was already developing my ideas for my first year on the book at that stage - I hadn't written a single script. So I was able to build the ideas we were kicking around into my own planning for Adjectiveless X-Men in what felt like a very natural way. And then as things moved on and the character arc I was creating for Rogue took shape, I put that back onto the table as one of the things that would both drive and be resolved by Messiah Complex. Looking back on it now, I'm still slightly in awe of that process. It was such a luxury to have that degree of forewarning and that degree of control.

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You got to set things in motion for Cable. Why was he the character who ultimately ends up with the baby?

It had to be someone with knowledge of the future who would be in a position to make that call. But why Cable? You've only got to look at his own past - at what he's suffered and the crazy shape his life has been bent into. It's psychologically very believable that he would feel a sense of responsibility towards this other new-born child who's going to represent the same irresistible prize or target to... well, to some of the very same people who've shaped his life, for better and for worse. His protectiveness towards her makes total sense to me - and it makes for a really powerful and loaded conflict of interest between him and Cyclops, which I think comes to a head in that final chapter.

Now you have X-Men: Legacy. Can you give some more clarity for what this new direction is actually about?

Legacy, as you know, is a Professor X solo book, and it's Janus-faced. It walks forward while looking backward, allowing Xavier to review his entire life while at the same time involving him in some intense situations in the present. It's a very potent mix, I think. The flashbacks are always seen in relation to what's going on in present time, so they're not self-indulgent or decorative: particularly in the second arc, there's an urgency to them that's driven both by Xavier's need to understand his own past actions and by the ongoing consequences of those actions. The word "redemption" gets bandied around a lot, often in some fairly unlikely contexts, but that's a lot of what this book is about. It's about a redemptive or purgatorial journey through forty years of X-Men continuity, seen through the eyes of the man who started the wheels in motion in the first place.


With the X-Men seemingly disbanded, how closely does Legacy tie into current X-Men continuity?

To begin with, hardly at all. Xavier is on silent running, as it were - out of contact with the X-Men and deliberately not letting them know anything about his whereabouts or his plans. We acknowledge what's going on in the other books, but we don't feed into it - I think for good and sufficient reasons. When Xavier does come back onto the map as far as the X-Men are concerned, look out for fireworks.

You've mentioned that while Xavier is the main character in Legacy, he will have a larger supporting cast. Can you talk about who these characters are and how they tie into your story?

It's very much a rolling programme, and it will depend on the logic of each arc. To begin with, we see him with the Acolytes, particularly Exodus, with Omega Sentinel and with... a very old acquaintance who's been both a friend and an enemy at different times. I've already blown the lid on the fact that Rogue and Gambit are coming in at various points, and some other prominent former X-Men will also get to be involved.

One of the central themes is Xavier interrogating his own past, and he's going to be seeking out people who've played a part in that past. Not just to reminisce but to claim fragments of his memories that he lost as a result of being shot in the head by Bishop. You can expect that quest to go all the way back to his earliest childhood, so literally anyone could turn out to play a part. But some of the things he discovers along the way make him seek out certain individuals with particular urgency.

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What about adversaries? Who can we look forward to seeing pop up?

Apart from Exodus and Magneto (oops, what a giveaway!) Sebastian Shaw, Juggernaut, Hazard... lots of people. But this book doesn't resolve itself through fight scenes. It really doesn't. The significant encounters are mostly verbal.


You've been paired with some dynamic artists for your Marvel work. What can you say about working with Scott Eaton? And what about your backup artists?

Scott is fantastic - really a great visual storyteller, which is what it's all about. We had a ball with Endangered Species and we're having a ball with Legacy. It's not really a case of lead artist and backup artist, though: it's more that the flashback scenes scream out for a stylistic contrast with the present-day narrative, and we reflect that by having different artists handle them - to begin with, the legendary (overused word, but in this case what else can you say?) John Romita Jr. I think this is turning out to be one of the most beautiful and visually arresting books I've ever been associated with. Which, you know, considering some of the people I've had the privilege of working with, is really saying something.

I'd like to ask you about Crossing Midnight. Why do you think it didn't catch on? How do you feel about the book ending?

Oh man, that's material for a whole interview in itself. Why didn't Crossing Midnight find its audience? I don't think it was any one thing, but if I had to pick out the main factor, I'd say that in spite of knowing I HAD to do this, I didn't come out of the gate fast enough. A first issue these days has to lay everything on the line - has to play to the high concept, and leave the audience feeling like they know what they're going to be getting - in broad outline, anyway - in the rest of the series. There's no room to be coy or teasing or indirect or allusive or even (except within strict limits) to bait and switch.

Crossing Midnight#1 made a strong genre statement, I think, in the way it set up as fantasy and then switched to really nasty horror. But it didn't make a strong narrative statement: people weren't sure where the Hara twins' story was going and how they were meant to feel about it. If you stick around for the first arc, then it all makes sense, but not enough people did. And to be fair, not enough people picked up the first issue in the first place, so even a normal level of attrition would probably have been fatal for us - and we had very high attrition in those early days. I think most of the people who stayed with the book have a strong affection for it, but it wasn't a high enough number to give us stability.

So yeah, I feel sad about it ending prematurely - but happy that DC gave us the time to finish out the core story of Kai's quest. They treated us very considerately, warned us up front that there was likely to be a problem and then kept us appraised month on month so we could plan to get to the climax and denouement more quickly if we had to. Really, we were able to wrap up everything that we'd set in motion, and the overall ending is more or less what it would have been if we'd had all the time in the world to play with. It could have been so very much worse, if the axe had fallen suddenly.

In Crossing Midnight #10 you have a commentary in the issue titled "Innocence for Sale or Rent". Why was it important for you to address the issue of child prostitution? Do you think you might speak out on other issues through your work again?

carey_commentary_tm.jpgI think what prompted me to do that was a combination of three things - the strangeness of that situation to a Western eye, which might have led some readers to see it as purely invented; the seriousness of the issue, which seemed to require some contextualisation (or at least some choric comment besides Tarimoku's); and the fear that I might be seen as complacently pointing to the mote in Japan's eye while ignoring the beam in Europe's. As I said in that essay, people trafficking is fast becoming Britain's national shame. It's happening on a colossal scale, and the authorities don't seem to be dedicating any serious resources to dealing with it. So I yielded to temptation and got up on my soapbox.
Generally, although there *is* a political dimension to the stuff I write, it's usually left implicit. The inherent danger of being topical is that your references date very quickly and become incomprehensible to later readers. Which is not to say that topical is always equal to bad: it depends on what your aims are. Some critics sneered at Dickens's Great Expectations because the prison ships he writes about had all been decommissioned before the book came out - as if that invalidated the story in some way! But the issues of class conflict and mistrust at the heart of the book aren't affected at all by the collapse of the topical reference

Do you hope to give Vertigo another go at some point?

Absolutely. In fact I've got two pitches in at Vertigo right now. I love the imprint, I love the creative freedom and most of all I love the people. I learned the ropes at Vertigo - to an enormous extent, honing my writing skills first with Alisa Kwitney and then for seven years on Lucifer with Shelly Bond. Since then I think I've worked with every editor Vertigo has, and always had a fantastic time. Without any bulls**t or hyperbole, Vertigo is a unique entity, with a unique place in comics history, and I'm really proud to have been a part of it.

As a creator, what are the range of emotions you experience during the creation of your work?

Everything from triumph to despair by way of inspiration, desperation and pulmonary resuscitation. There are distinct phases, but they're not always the same. Some scripts I go into with a kind of eagerness and hunger, because I know what I want to do and I'm just keen to be doing it. Others are conundrums. I know where I want to come out on the other side, but either I'm not sure how to get there or I've got a plan and I'm not sure it will work. I'm lucky to have been able to choose my projects for a good few years now, so it's a long while since I went into a script thinking "how am I going to make this piece of crap move like it's alive?" but I've been there. I think everyone's been there.

The bottom line is that if you're a writer, whether you're making a living out of it or just doing it in your free time, there's got to be a level on which you're having a good time yourself. It's hard work, if you're putting your heart and soul into it, but the exhilaration still has to be there on top of everything else. In case that sounds like flannel, I'll ante up and admit that there have been times when I've lost that feeling. There have been scripts that I've trudged into without any sense of joy, although usually I found some joy while I was in there.

Do you want to strike a balance between your more mainstream work, like X-Men, and with things like Lucifer or Crossing Midnight, or even Voodoo Child for that matter?

If you mean in the sense of keeping a foot in a lot of different camps, then yeah, definitely. Genre writing is in my blood - whether that's superhero books, horror, fantasy, sci-fi or whatever. I don't want to be typecast, and I don't want to stop experimenting with different forms and different ways of telling stories. I'm terrified of becoming the guy who writes the same book over and over. It comes to everyone, if they stay on their feet long enough, but you have to fight against it as long as you can.

12:32 PM | Comments (0)

April 22, 2008

NY Comic Con - Jamie McKelvie

Phonogram's Jamie McKelvie closes out our NYComicon interviews with a chat about his upcoming work and his time at the con.


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NY Comic Con - C.B. Cebulski

C.B. Cebulski catches RBN up on his famous artist search Chesterquest, his surprise hit for Marvel, Loners and working on the Marvel Fairytales line.


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NY Comic Con - Brian Reed

RBN spends a few minutes with Marvel writer Brian Reed who talks about the upcoming Spider-Man Web of Shadows video game, writing Secret Invasion:Front Line and a new Spider-Man Secret Invasion mini series.


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07:57 PM | Comments (0)

NY Comic Con - Andy Lanning

Marvel writer Andy Lanning speaks about Annihilation, Nova and Guardians of the Galaxy.



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07:55 PM | Comments (0)

NY Comic Con - Duane Swierczynski

RBN favorite Duane Swierczynski takes a few minutes to chat about writing Marvel's Cable, becoming the new writer on Immortal Iron Fist and his new novel Severance Package.



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07:50 PM | Comments (0)

NY Comic Con - Dan Goldman

RBN chats with "Shooting War" artist about his upcoming work based on his time spent on the campaign trail.



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NY Comic Con - Jesse Farrell and Carissa Halston

RBN catches up with artist Jesse Farrell and writer/artist Carissa Halston in Artists Alley.



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NY Comic Con - Marc Guggenheim

Marc Guggenheim chats with RBN about Spider-Man:Brand New Day, Young X-Men, working on Nowhere Man for Virgin Comics with Hugh Jackman and ABC's Eli Stone.



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April 17, 2008

RBN covers NY Comic Con

This coming weekend Rescued By Nerds will be covering the third annual New York Comic Con.

Who and what exactly is Rescued By Nerds? Well it's a group of people who all love the same things you do, pop culture, comic books, manga, genre movies and novels... I'm Mike Collins and I'll be editing this little joint venture with our sister site YourMomsBasement.com. I'll let the rest of our group introduce themselves as we get into the swing of things.

Thanks for stopping by. I hope you like what you see.

12:28 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack