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    December 31, 2004

    The Inside Of A Fake Leg

    Bought
    Iron Man #2
    , Warren Ellis, Et Al
    Adam Strange #4, Andy Diggle, Et Al
    What If...Karen Page Had Lived
    , Brian Michael Bendis, Et Al
    What If...Jessica Jones Had Joined The Avengers, Brian Michael Bendis, Et Al
    Superman #212, Brian Azzarello, Jim Lee, Et Al
    Superman/Batman #16, Jeph Loeb, Et Al
    The Walking Dead #14, Robert Kirkman, Et Al
    Ultimate Fantastic Four #14, Warren Ellis, Adam Kubert, Et Al
    Ultimate Nightmare #4, Warren Ellis, Et Al
    Teen Titans #19, Geoff Johns, Et Al
    Legion Of Super-Heroes #1, Mark Waid, Et Al
    Anchorman/Wake-Up Ron Burgundy, (DVD) Adam McKay, Will Ferrell, Et Al
    Port Of Shadows, (DVD/CC: 245) Marcel Carne, Et Al
    The Lower Depths, (DVD/CC: 239) Akira Kurosawa, Jean Renoir, Et Al
    The Rules Of The Game, (DVD/CC: 216) Jean Renoir, Et Al
    Le Trou, (DVD/CC: 129) Jacques Becker, Et Al

    Actually SRIW
    Iron Man #2, Warren Ellis, Et Al
    Adam Strange #4, Andy Diggle, Et Al
    What If...Karen Page Had Lived
    , Brian Michael Bendis, Et Al
    What If...Jessica Jones Had Joined The Avengers, Brian Michael Bendis, Et Al
    Superman #212, Brian Azzarello, Jim Lee, Et Al
    Superman/Batman #16, Jeph Loeb, Et Al
    The Walking Dead #14, Robert Kirkman, Et Al
    Ultimate Fantastic Four #14, Warren Ellis, Adam Kubert, Et Al
    Ultimate Nightmare #4, Warren Ellis, Et Al
    Teen Titans #19, Geoff Johns, Et Al
    Legion Of Super-Heroes #1, Mark Waid, Et Al
    Anchorman/Wake-Up Ron Burgundy, (DVD) Adam McKay, Will Ferrell, Et Al
    Samurai I: Musashi Miyamoto, (DVD/CC: 14) Hiroshi Inagaki, Et Al
    Fargo, (DVD) Joel & Ethan Coen, Et Al
    Bad Education, Pedro Almodovar, Et Al
    Talk To Her, (DVD) Pedro Almodovar, Et Al
    The Rest Of The Polysyllabic Spree, Nick Hornby
    Some Of Sideways, Rex Pickett
    The Rest Of Angel: Season One, (DVD) Joss Whedon, David Greenwalt, Et Al

    So, as you can see, I read every single comic I picked up this week.  With no standouts (i.e. no books so anticipated that they had to be peeked at while stopped at traffic lights) I didn't have the highest hopes for the week in general.  I was pleasantly surprised, though, when almost every single book was above average in quality.  (Sorry Teen Titans, but you didn't manage the "above".  And those What Ifs were pretty slight.)  This week's superstar was undoubtedly Warren Ellis, shooting three for three on his Marvel work.  Nightmare finally got interesting, Iron Man was gorgeous and highly intriguing, and UFF actually made me appreciate the work of a Kubert Brother!  (I'm finding I have much less of a problem with Adam these days, as opposed to Andy.)  I've said in these pages a while ago that from the start UFF is the book best suited to completely own the Manga market, and the N-Zone storyline is possibly the best example of it.  Detailed spreads, kids put in harms way, it's got it all.  Not to be outdone, Mark Waid does the impossible by simultaneously making me forget both my distate for Barry Kitson and any misgivings about completely eradicating decades of the only convoluted continuity I really had any interest in someday piecing together.  He's made Legion into a really incredible book and seeing him jumpstart the concept has made me want to go back and read everything he's ever done.  (I always find myself having a strange attraction to that post-Morrison JLA story he did with Bryan Hitch, for one.)  The Walking Dead was also another highlight.  Everything else was damned good.

    You might also notice a few new additions to my little Criterion family.  More importantly, though, take note that I actually watched one of the ones I already had (this one in particular, actually, I must have had for over two years and still had not watched.)  Yes, as I'm doing with books, I'm going to curtail my fresh purchases of Criterions until I finish watching the ones I already own.  A startling turn of events for our hero to be sure.  Samurai I: Musashi Miayamoto turned out to be the perfect place to start.  (Although after I finish the trilogy I might, unbelievably counterproductively, start over with Grand Illusion just to see it shine on the WSHDTV.  Or maybe I'll just come back to it when I get to the end.)  On the surface, it doesn't look to be the most appealing entry in the CC.  Toshiro Mifune as a Samurai?  Upgrade.  No Kurosawa?  Downgrade.  But, surprise, the movie was actually quite gripping once you get into it.  It's about an actual legendary Samurai (Miyamoto, of Square's Brave Fencer Musashi fame) and the time in his life he spent being betrayed at almost every turn.  The shit this guy goes through is ruthless.  He comes home after his side loses a great battle and his childhood friend bails on him to hook up with a freaky mom and her 16 year old daughter, only to find that it's been taken over and everyone wants him dead.  He seeks solace with a local priest who wastes no time in hanging him from a tree and leaving him there for several days.  There's more ignominy in there, but I'm loathe to ruin the surprise.  The photography; full color, 1.33:1; is also a standout.  I remember thinking the transfer was pretty ass when I watched some of the film on my old TV, but somehow it looks significantly better on my heroic WSHDTV.  There are some spots where the film itself rocks some fading colors, but for the most part, it looks pretty fantastic.  (And this was most of the reason why I was tempted to start over and watch everything in the Collection again from #1 on.)

    Speaking of transfers, something's rotten in the state of San Diego.  I was lucky enough to get my paws on all three Anchorman related discs (the film, Wake-Up, and the Best Buy Exclusive) and before I get started on how awesome they are, I have to say the Anchorman transfer sucks complete and total ass.  Samurai looked significantly better than this film.  None of this, however, actually stopped any of the film from being incredibly hilarious.  And this is without even getting into how awesome pretty much every moment of deleted and/or outtaked (outtaken?) material is.  The commentary is also fantastic, featuring both Lou Rawls and a long conversation about Adam McKay's upcoming projects, including Brek, an animated comedy about a fairy-tale cyclops.  Wake-Up, unsurprisingly, is a pretty thrown together movie, but it finally brings the lunchroom scene ("What do you mean one of those?") to the light of day and introduces us all to the incredible wonders of the Ron-Driving-While-Looking-At-Veronica-The-Entire-Time Scene.

    I think that's all I've got for you this week.  The Almodovar was fantastic (especially seeing Talk To Her again.  When the dancers come out waltzing at the end?  Unbelievable.  And The-Guy-Playing-Marco?  Also unbelievable).  As far as Fargo and Angel go, man, my TV rules.

    December 25, 2004

    Yeah Thanks, Nick

    So I just started reading The Polysyllabic Spree by Nick Hornby and even though I buy The Believer every month and see the column the book is based on when I flip through the latest issue before burying it under a pile of comics and/or clothes, having them all in one clump (and actually reading them) has naturally inspired me to do something similar in this space.  Long time readers will no doubt remember similar attempts to focus this blog into something more than it really is, but I think it really could work this time.  After all, everything in this blog that's not directly related to production of my comic could be framed as something I bought and my reaction to it.  My only regret is that I didn't start this a few weeks earlier, when I was reading Lemony Snicket's The Grim Grotto and Import Tuner magazine.

    Bought
    Following Cerebus #2, Various
    Astonishing X-Men #7, Joss Whedon, John Cassaday, Et Al
    Green Lantern: Rebirth #3, Geoff Johns, Ethan Van Sciver, Et Al
    Sleeper: Season Two #7, Ed Brubaker, Sean Phillips, Et Al
    The Goon #10, Eric Powell
    JLA Classified #2, Grant Morrison, Ed McGuinness, Et Al
    The Shaolin Cowboy #1, Geofrey Darrow
    Wolverine #23, Mark Millar, John Romita Jr., Et Al
    The Authority: Revolution, Ed Brubaker, Dustin Nguyen, Et Al
    X-Men #165, Chris Claremont, Salvador Larroca, Et Al
    The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season, (DVD) Various
    Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban, (DVD) Various
    Kingdom Hearts, (GBA) Various
    The Believer, Issue 20, Various
    The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, Wes Anderson, Noah Baumbach, Et Al
    The Days Are Just Packed, Bill Watterson
    There's Treasure Everywhere, Bill Watterson
    It's A Magical World, Bill Watterson

    Actually SRIW (Seen, Read, Interacted With)
    Astonishing X-Men #7, Joss Whedon, John Cassaday, Et Al
    Green Lantern: Rebirth #3, Geoff Johns, Ethan Van Sciver, Et Al
    Sleeper: Season Two #7, Ed Brubaker, Sean Phillips, Et Al
    JLA Classified #2, Grant Morrison, Ed McGuinness, Et Al
    The Shaolin Cowboy #1, Geofrey Darrow
    Wolverine #23, Mark Millar, John Romita Jr., Et Al
    The Authority: Revolution, Ed Brubaker, Dustin Nguyen, Et Al
    X-Men #165, Chris Claremont, Salvador Larroca, Et Al
    Some Of The Simpsons: The Complete Fifth Season, (DVD) Various
    Some Of Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban, (DVD) Various
    Some Of Kingdom Hearts, Various
    The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, Wes Anderson, Noah Baumbach, Et Al
    Some Of Chrono Cross, (PS1) Various
    Some Of Final Fantasy X-2, (PS2) Various
    Some Of Kingdom Hearts: Chain Of Memories, (GBA) Various
    Another Dose Of Arrested Development: Season One, (DVD) Mitchell Hurwitz, Michael Cera, Et Al
    Some Of The Polysyllabic Spree, Nick Hornby
    Shaun Of The Dead, (DVD) Simon Pegg, Edgar Wright, Et Al
    Return Of The King: Extended Edition, (DVD) Peter Jackson, Et Al
    Some Of The Lord Of The RIngs, JRR Tolkien

    (I don't know how far back this goes, but hopefully future installments will be a bit less unweildy.  These were the things that popped into my head.)

    One of things I'm enjoying most about TPS is the paper trail Hornby follows in cataloguing the things he reads.  It was the thing I was most looking forward to here.  For example, you can see that I bought Kingdom Hearts but played KH: Chain Of Memories, FF X-2, and Chrono Cross.  What happened was this.  Some of you might remember my recent attempts at improving my video game driving acumen.  This was continuing on apace until, for some reason still a bit mysterious to me, I recaught my always-at-least-dormant zeal for Square RPGs.  I started back in on FF X-2 at first and returned immediately to getting into random battles and increasing my AP levels in order to learn new abilities.  I will freely admit that this is the main reason I play RPGs and probably why I stick to Square.  I honestly have no idea how most other RPGs are set up in terms of levelling (the only non-Square RPG I can think of that I've played was Knights Of The Old Republic and I didn't really enjoy it), but Square is set up, as far as my inclinations go, perfectly.  Every one of their games that I've actually finished, I've finished resoundingly, trouncing the final boss, because I've spent upwards of twenty hours in one dungeon picking fights and getting new Spheres/Materia/Jobs.  Most of the time I don't even use the stuff I've unlocked.  I'm just as bad a collector in the virtual one as I am in the physical.  Anyway, this led to me to a brief fling with Chrono Cross, a massive trade in of old and unused GBA games to fund the purchase of Kingdom Hearts: Chain Of Memories and after getting halway through that, a necessary purchase of its progenitor, because there was shit going on that I just knew I was missing.  You can expect at least one Disney DVD purchase in the next installment of this "column" because Kingdom Hearts is great at both reminding you of what's so appealing about DIsney Animated Films and completely erasing any memory of their more annoying charateristics.  (How could I have any desire to buy Aladdin, when "Whole New World" is in the film?)

    Speaking of collecting, there were some great fucking books out this week.  It might be fun in this and future installments to compare the list of comics I bought with the list of comics I read.  (For those unwilling/able, I bought but didn't read Goon and Following Cerebus this week.)  FC isn't really a comic, it's a magazine about Cerebus, but that's hardly an excuse.  The Goon is probably the best book I'm buying but slow to read.  Maybe it's because I have an inherent wariness to read a book about a weird city with stories that bend genre conventions.  For some strange reason.  Astonishing was the book I read while walking from the store back to work.  I was just dying to read it.  And it was out of control great.  There was a sense that, at a few more crowded moments over the past couple of issues, Cassaday wasn't really doing his best work.  A few scenes, like that bunch of people crashing through that wall last issue, seemed sketchier than usual. There are no such moments in the latest issue.  Tight as a drum and thank God, because this is Joss' best written issue so far.  Sure that S.W.O.R.D. exposition scene doesn't feel at all relevent (yet) but everything else was goddamned fabulous.  And that page with Wolverine (you know the one I mean) was his funniest moment since What Th--?!? #2 brought us "Grepppps!"  On the other hand, X-Men was just embarassing.  The kind of book that, even though only you are reading it and thus only you can see how cheesy and cloying it is, you are embarassed to be seen with in public.  Authority was a fine read, but its the kind of book I probably won't have much to say about it until it's finished (same goes for Sleeper)Wolverine is a book I'm pretty wild about these days.  The art is fantastic and Millar is successfully recreating the stories behind every doodle I ever drew in High School.  ("In this one, Daredevil is fighting Wolverine!")  The Green Lantern book is only the latest Geoff Johns jernt I've picked up.  I've become quite enamored with with the way he writes superhero stories.  Don't ask me how or why.  Superhero books have always been one of my more unexplainable pleasures.  When they work for me, they work for me.  There was a scary moment while reading Shaolin where I thought I might have outgrown my affinity for Geoff Darrow's work.  Does this mean that my internal battle over whether or not to plunk down fifty bucks for the Matrix Boxset might be over?  (Pros: Conceptual Artwork by Darrow/Skroce, West Commentary, new Matrix transfer.  Cons: Nearly every second of Matrix Revolutions)  I don't know for sure that I'm all the way over him.  There were just a few moments in the book where it seemed he wasn't really working for me anymore.  We'll have to see how this ends up after a few more issues.  Morrison back on JLA was just incredibly fun to read, offering very little to discuss.

    I'm kind of miffed that the people I know who I know have seen Shaun Of The Dead did not immediately ensure that I saw it immediately.  I can see why they didn't, though.  I hate, hate, hate scary movies.  This is because, when it comes to movies, I am a complete and total pussy.  I clench up in my seat, I cover my eyes and ears.  I am liquid.  So even I myself was pretty loathe to see this movie.  Wrong move.  It was so fantastic, so smartly clever (you know, clever but in a subtle way that doesn't annoy you), so perfectly attuned to my sensibilities that it went from unseen to instant personal classic in (according to the box) One Hour, 40 min.  There was only one big jump (shower scene) and I even got a little thrill out of it (this often happens with good scary movies like Alien and never happens with shitty scary movies like Aliens).  More importantly, though, it was just shit in my pants hilarious.  I won't waste time recounting line after line of comedy (I'll save that for when Anchorman/Wake Up Ron Burgundy comes out next week), but the record bit was a particular standout.

    That's it for this installment.  If it's in the second list and I haven't talked about it, it was simply really excellent and I expected it to be really excellent so, really, what is there to talk about.

    Ta ta for now.

    June 08, 2004

    "Tell Them To Get Off My Boat, Or There's Gonna Be A Shitstorm"

    So, there was apparently a screening of The Life Aquatic in Los Angeles the other night.

    God damn I'm jealous.

    There's a littany of snippets from the film in the last review (I've chosen the final brilliant one as the title for this post, because, for some reason, it just strikes me as the best thing ever when I imagine it in a tight, Yeoman/Anderson Tag Team close-up. Perhaps a dangling cigarette?), and all signs point to Gonzo.

    Sounds like a keeper.

    May 05, 2004

    We Lost The Game Because Of Blockhead!

    It's been a little bit of a while because I just moved, okay? I know you've all been breathless.

    Exciting News Break #1

    Someone actually signed up for the Genre City Newsletter. Next Stop: Two Subscribers!

    There Have Actually Been A Lot Of Things Catching My Attention Lately

    A We3 Preview

    This looks so awesomely cute and violent and great. I subtitled the Barbelith thread, "Watership Down By Law". My, aren't I clever.

    An Astonishing X-Men #1 Preview

    Legitimately funny and home of the most convincing image of Katherine Pryde ever released. Sold.

    The Complete Peanuts Vol. 1

    This thing is so effortlessly beautiful, it will restore your faith in comic art.

    Micah Wright Is A Total Douche-Chill

    What more can I say?

    Manga Is Slowly Garnering My Attention

    Over the past couple of days, I've picked up Mahromatic, Kiss Me Kill Me, Iron Wok Jan, Getbackers, Negima, and Kare Kano. I've been hard pressed to find any consistent Manga Review site, except for the marvelous Previews Review. Once I read this large batch of stuff (along with the large batch of stuff I didn't get to read before the move and from this week's paltry batch of new comics) I will most likely have some words.

    David Foster Wallace Writes Well About Math

    Everything And More is very entertaining and readable. Even if you don't generally like math. It's reminded me how much I love Wallace's voice. He was very nice when I met him, too.

    The Second Issue Of The Believer Is Turning Out To Be Better Than The First

    No small feat, that. I've been buying The Believer monthly since it came out but have made no attempts to really read it. Same goes for McSweeney's product. I rabidly seek it out and then put it on the shelf, where it remains pretty. But I finally decided to at least get through the issues of The Believer I had and the first issue was a crackerjack. Got me interested in the work of Susan Straight, had a great chat with Beth Orton and some wonderful writing on Dickens, along with a nice opening salvo from Heidi Julavits (whose name I had been misreading in my head pretty much since the first time I saw it), among tons of other fascinating things. The second issue has a great piece by Sven Birkerts that sums up and validates much of what I love in contemporary literature. Thank you, Sven. I am less ashamed. I really don't get the backlash that nearly all McSweeney's products get. Sure, the Achewood strip was classic and very apt, but all too often the stuff is pigeon holed as one thing when its clearly not. A mag like The Believer shows this very well. There's such a wide array of subject matter that, well, I just can't see slamming their output because of one small segment of it.

    Wow! What a recap.

    Quick Notes: Sunday's Sopranos was so great, and even better having been titled "Unidentified Black Males", and if every episode was that good, I'd understand. Last week's Angel was jaw dropping. Kill Bill Vol. 2 was better than Vol. 1, mainly because it didn't frighten me as much and I am a big baby. I no longer have DVR, so it's so long West Wing until the summer starts. Not that I'm too concerned. Scrubs is a great show.

    January 2008

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