Monday, July 4, 2011

Reign of the Supermen #257: Supermadman

Source: Superman/Madman: Hullabaloo #1-2 (1997)
Type: AmalgamIs there still juice in the Amalgamonday concept? There sure is! Consider the Mike Alred-penned mini-series that made friends of Superman and Madman. In the first issue, both characters find themselves at the same orbital coordinates, which makes them cross over to the other's universe. EXCEPT! They get scrambled like Tuvix and come out each with some of the other's features. Madman finds his way to Metropolis and discovers he has Superman's body and many of his powers. Jumping over tall buildings, telescopic vision, great strength and being able to (painfully) take bullets without them piercing his skin. Still, the best part of the experience?
Poor, sweet, naive Madman. You can't help but love him.

Next Amalgamonday... Madsuperman!

Sunday, July 3, 2011

This Week in Geek (27/06-03/07/11)

"Accomplishments"

DVDs: Legend of the Fist is first and foremost a tribute to Bruce Lee. Subtitled The Return of Chen Zhen, it acts as a sequel to Fist of Fury, with Donnie Yen reprising Bruce Lee's famous role. Having survived the original film, Chen Zhen fights with the Allies in France during WWI, and later returns to Japan-occupied China as a member of the resistance. Cue awesome action scenes and another take on the dojo scene, but Infernal Affairs director Andrew Lau also takes the time to explore the historical and political elements of the story and adds the visual richness evident in his other films. The DVD extras are comparatively disappointing, amounting to less than 20 minutes of raw behind the scenes footage, with absolutely no interviews or any kind of commentary on the film making process. Ah well, at least the movie's awesome.

I should preface by saying that I am not particularly a fan of Olivier's acting, but I do find the films he's directed creative and interesting. His Henry V is, in fact, a revelation. Filmed in 1944 in gorgeous Technicolor, it surprises by spending the first half hour as an Elizabethan play, complete with flubs, a rowdy audience and actors winking at it, then takes us into highly stylized scenes that look torn out of Medieval paintings, and then into realistic battle scenes before pulling us out again. Not only does this make the boring parts of the play (i.e. discussions of Salic law etc.) incredibly exciting (that giant model of 1600 London is just amazing) and outright FUNNY (love the bishops), but it also makes the film do what the Chorus asks his audience to do, i.e. imagine the world on stage. Film historian Bruce Eder's commentary track is scripted right down to the exclamations, but it never gets tedious because he's got so much to talk about, from the real history, to Shakespeare to the film itself. The DVD also includes a few production stills, Medieval art and a cursory chronology of England's kings.

Now for some Doctor Who material (not to say the Black Guardian doesn't appear in Henry V, because he does). It was that kind of week. Fan lore would have it that the 7th Doctor's first adventure (with Mel), Time and the Rani, is one of the worst in the program's long history. While I won't try to convince you that it's a masterpiece or anything, I will say I'm not sure why people think it's so awful. I like the clownish 7th Doctor, and his malapropisms here are fun. The premise of a villain disguising herself as a companion has never been done before. And the special effects and make-up are impressive. It comes off as a jaunty romp with a silly comic book plot, and I mean that in the best way possible. It's especially good coming off the 6th Doctor's annoying era, and for a Pip & Jane Baker script (which fare better deprived of Colin Baker's particular affectations for verbosity). Call me pleasantly surprised. The DVD features the usual strong commentaries and making of material, with vintage and contemporary interviews.

Frontios (5th Doctor, Tegan and Turlough), while technically better received, I found a lot harder to get through. This story of Earth's last colony beset by giant woodlouse is uneven to say the least. It has structural surprises, but also subplots that don't pay off. It has some of the wittiest dialog of the 5th Doctor era, but also baffling Bidmeadisms like the the destruction of the TARDIS. The monsters are distinctive, but not really workable. The acting is at time excellent, and at others over-the-top. The direction makes good use of leveled sets, but is also lazy, leaving obvious flubs onscreen and coherence and continuity on the cutting room floor (as shown by the 15 minutes of deleted/extended scenes on the DVD). Even the commentary track is lethargic, the usually excellent Peter Davison failing to animate the other guests. The making of talks a lot more about the production problems than it does any of the story's qualities, which is how it should be.

CDs: While doing some drone work this week, I listened to Marco Polo, the fourth Hartnell serial, since lost to the Great Wipe in the Sky. The 7-part historical on 3 discs uses the original audio, supplemented by narration from William Russell (Ian Chesterton). Even without the images, the story comes across as atmospheric and inventive, mixing drama, comedy, cultural vignette and suspense smoothly. Russell's narration is unintrusive and adds a lot, especially since there a number of scenes that don't have dialog. I wish we could SEE it, but listening to Marco Polo in this format is the next best thing. A 4th disc includes interviews with the narrators of the first few Doctor Who narrators - Bill Russell, Carole Ane Ford (Susan) and Maureen O'Brien (Vicki) - about their time on the program (not about Marco Polo itself). The computer-accessible extras includes the original scripts scanned in pdf format and a map of Marco Polo's journey (with notes).

Books: Time, Unincorporated - The Doctor Who Fanzine Archives - vol.3: Writings on the New Series collects number of articles (from fanzines, of course, but some specially ordered texts as well) that by virtue of the subject matter, aren't as wide-ranging as the first two volumes'. However, it still manages variety with chapters on the spin-offs and the 11th Doctor as well as those on the series' return and the rise of RTD and David Tennant (without forgetting Eccleston and the companions, of course). The tone goes from spoof pieces to scholarly, and passing the ultimate litmus test, it made me revise how I think about the last few years' worth of Doctor Who, and in particular Russell T Davies' writing. Do I even need to say the word "Recommended"?

New Unauthorized Doctor Who CCG cards: Been working on the new rule sheet and new templates. The following are neither final nor actual cards you'll find in the new Basic Set.
Hyperion to a Satyr posts this week:
II.ii. O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I
II.ii. O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I - Branagh '96

Reign of the Supermen #256: Clayface Superman

Source: World's Finest Comics #140 (1964)
Type: Villainous copyIf you were the Silver Age Clayface and you could turn into anything, and when you turned into Superman, you got all his powers... Wouldn't you turn into Superman every single time?
Oh right, Batman has a crapload of kryptonite on hand.

There ain't no perfect crime, kids! Stay in school!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Cat of the Geek #118: Flippy


Name: Flippy (deceased)
Stomping Grounds: You-Tube (currently: Heaven)
Side: Good
Breed: American shorthair
Cat Powers: Mad Domino Skillz! Canadian.
Skills: Eat 3, Sleep 4, Mischief 5, Wit 8, Knocking down the right domino every single time 10
Cat Weaknesses: Leaves a huge mess and hardly ever picks up knocked over dominoes. eBay shill.

Reign of the Supermen #255: Joe Shuster's Canadian Superman

Source: CRB Foundation Heritage Project (1991)
Type: TV

Like many Canadians, I dearly love our "Heritage Minutes", well produced vignettes about Canadian history and innovation that still run on tv today. Just talking about them in any given part of Canada will make people try to enumerate them all, if not do the lines. "Patrick, Patrick O'Neil." "You know very well I cannot read a word." "Is THIS normal?!" "Come on, Vince, come on!" "We need these baskets back." They're classics.

But my world was tipped upside down when I realized the Minute about Joe Shuster and his role in the creation of Superman was completely bogus! What ELSE had I been lied to about? Are other Minutes as wrong as this one? Did Canada NOT give the world the multiplex, basketball and instant mashed potatoes (I kid you not)? I mean, look at the above Minute and doesn't it look like Shuster - Superman's first ARTIST - invented Superman all by himself a good 7 years before Action Comics #1? If so, why the heck is Jerry Siegel's family always taking DC Comics to court? Setting the record straight:
-Jerry Siegel was Superman's first writer, and while the character is a collaboration, I'm pretty sure you need the two of them in a room to think it up. There is compelling evidence (despite the fact no interview confirms it) that Superman was inspired by Siegel's father getting shot and killed in a bungled robbery attempt. A bulletproof man seems to be more Siegel's fantasy than Shuster's.
-The name Superman was given to a character written by Siegel and drawn by Shuster in the short story "Reign of the Super-Man" in 1933. He's a Lex Luthor type, and it's only after this that they thought up the Superman we all know and love. They had to shop it around for half a dozen years.
-Lois Lane is not based on the fictional woman seen here, but rather on two women: Joanne Carter, a model hired by the creative team who later married Siegel, and Torchy Blane, a female reporter from a series of movies of the 30s (loosely based on Nellie Bly). In some of them, Torchy is played by... Lola Lane.
-Shuster IS considered responsible for naming the Daily Star - the newspaper Clark and Lois originally worked at before it turned into the Daily Planet - after the Toronto Daily Star, for which he had worked as a newsboy.
-When he was 10, Shuster's family moved to Cleveland, Ohio, so that part's correct. It's where he met Siegel and the historic partnership began.

So that Heritage moment is bogus, but please, someone reassure me that Winnie the Pooh got his name exactly as the CRB would have it!

Friday, July 1, 2011

The Original Alpha Flight #1: A Canadian Perspective

Happy Canada, everyone! I've got the day off!

So... it's all very well to criticize Pak and Van Lente for their portrayal of Canada in the new Alpha Flight series, but hold on!

How did Canadian-raised John Byrne actually DO in HIS depiction of Canada in the original Alpha Flight series?

Set the way-back machine to 1983 and find out...

Geography
To his credit does create an "iconic" Canada in the first issue. One of the iconic things about the country is that it's so BIG and that most of it has a low population density. So he has us zoom a 1000 miles here, a 1000 miles there, all across the country to meet up with each of the heroes. Guardian (here still "Vindicator") is in Ottawa, flying out of the Parliament Hill HQ . Marrina is in weather worn Newfoundland, Puck in urban Toronto, and Sasquatch in British Columbia's redwood forests. Shaman is working in a clinic in the Sarcee Reserve just out of Calgary, Alberta, and since Byrne is from this region, no surprise that it looks right. I'm not so sure about Aurora's school for girls in "La Valle, Québec", which, for all its Swiss chalets looks like it's part of Latveria.
Plus, there's the added difficulty of placing La Valle on a map. It's clearly not urban enough to be a spelling corruption of Laval (which is on Montreal island), but there are several La-Valle-de-Something in the province. Hard to really gauge the architecture then. Puck tries to reach the team via Mansfield Airbase, which looks military here, but is just an airport as far as I know.

The bulk of the action (a battle against the Inuit god Tundra) takes place in the Northwest Territories - likely not what has become Nunavut because Byrne describes it as north and west of Calgary. However, according to the CBC, the appearance of Tundra screws with the northern lights up in Resolute Bay which IS in today's Nunavut. Not really a problem, Tundra's disruption could be seen miles away. Certainly, while the ocean isn't far from the location, it doesn't look like it's happening on the arctic islands which are almost all part of Nunavut. Byrne uses the word Esquimaux to refer to the Native people of this land, an accepted if odd spelling of Eskimo, and here, the comic shows its age. The word is now considered both inappropriate and derogatory, as it's akin to the Greek's "barbarian", a word used by Algonquins to mean "eaters of raw meat" or by Montagnais to refer to any outsider. The proper term for Arctic Natives is Inuit or Innu. The fashion in Canada now is to use the proper Native language pronunciation for tribes, rather than their Western spelling corruptions, so the latter is probably more correct, just as my area's "Micmac Indians" are now referred to as Mi'kmaq (pronounced something like "Mìgmaw").

And finally, a little treat for Google Mappers: Mac and Heather's street address! 138 Laurier drive in Ottawa. Let's look it up... Oops! It doesn't exist! There's a Laurier AVENUE (both East and West), but pictures don't look at all like the Hudsons' residential area. Almost making me doubt the existence of Avengers Mansion...

Politics
Just a week after the X-Men incident (Alpha's first appearance), Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau disbands Alpha Flight. Maybe the whole "Department H under Parliament" didn't sit well with him, who knows? It's an odd place to start the series, shaking up a status quo that never really existed. We don't really find out why this is happening, but Trudeau seems apologetic and remains on good terms with Mac. We do find out in that panel that Alpha Flight are RCMP auxiliaries and that they'll keep national policing powers. In any case, Trudeau looks like himself, so that's fine. Speaking of Prime Ministers though, look at this!
Gary Cody! I probably haven't cracked these comics open since I read them, wow, almost 30 years ago, so I didn't recognize the leader of the Unity Party as a recurring character! Cody was Alpha's official liaison with the government, here disagreeing with the government's decision to close down Department H. He would eventually get his claws into Alpha and manipulate the team, but would get his comeuppance when the villain Bedlam would effectively lobotomize him. So if you think something supervillainous is in the works re: our new PM, you have good reason to think so.

French
Byrne has an interesting take on the use of French in the comic. Instead of bracketed "translated from the French" speech bubbles (or French sentences outright), he puts a French word here and there into what you understand to be conversations between all francophones. It's a symbolic way to do it and it mostly works. Except that his French is pretty terrible. On page 9, Aurora calls her students "mon petites" instead of "mes petites", using the masculine singular possessive instead of the feminine plural. Later, the French couple living at 138A Laurier has similar gender problems - the wife is called François, which is a man's name. Françoise is what Byrne meant.

Even when the French is fine, it's still not Canadian French, something that's a lot more obvious here than in the current series. Interjections like Sapristi, Sacre Bleu, and Nom du nom are Frenchism, not things you'd hear from Quebeckers (which the Beaubiers are) or other French Canadians. The little girls all call Aurora "Mam'selle", an attempt at making "Mademoiselle" (Miss) more colloquial, except that French Canadian schoolchildren are more likely to call any female grown-up, especially a teacher, "Madame". It just sounds slightly wrong, as if we're in France.

Byrne's off to a good start regardless (I think I'll continue to do a retro-piece as a companion to my new Alpha reviews), at least achieving an iconic depiction of Canada and like Van Lente and Pak, focusing on the characters more than the geography (except when the geography comes alive and punches superheroes, of course!).

Reign of the Supermen #254: Canadian Superman

Source: FreakingNews.com Photoshop contest (late 2000s?)
Type: Fan madeHappy Canada Day!