Monday, July 20, 2009

DC Comics storms the film world. 'Flash,' 'Green Lantern' among adaptations in works.

By Borys Kit
July 19, 2009, 08:30 PM ET

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In the comics universe, where characters are endlessly reborn and reoutfitted, a motto from the 1980s -- "DC Comics is on the move" -- could just as well apply to the current, hyperactive state of the publisher as it relates to Hollywood.

A year after "The Dark Knight" became a worldwide phenomenon, there are more DC Comics adaptations in the works than at any other point since the company was acquired by Warner Bros. in 1969.

Among the projects on front burners:

-- "The Losers," an action-adventure drama starring Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana and Chris Evans, begins principal photography this week in Puerto Rico.

-- "Jonah Hex," a supernatural Western starring Josh Brolin, Megan Fox and John Malkovich, recently wrapped production in Louisiana.

-- "The Green Lantern," Warners' next big superhero tentpole, is set to star Ryan Reynolds after a long search.

-- Fox has picked up the TV series "Human Target," starring Mark Valley, for the fall.

-- And, in a rare example of a film project that has ventured off the Warners reservation, DC has set up "Red," a spy thriller to star Bruce Willis, at Summit.

"One of the things that has differentiated us for most of the last 20 years is the depth of our library and the depth of the creative material that we've put out and the opportunities that creates for other media," DC Comics president Paul Levitz said.

Still, when "Dark Knight" invaded theaters last summer, critics of DC and Warners complained there didn't appear to be a grand strategy in place to exploit DC properties.

In contrast, DC arch-rival Marvel moved quickly in the wake of its successful "Iron Man" to stake out a series of release dates for a slew of movies, branding them as part of one big Marvel universe leading to "The Avengers," which arrives in 2012.

But DC and Warners have taken a different approach, arguing that DC has a wider breadth of books than other comics companies. They insist their situation isn't comparable to Marvel, which already has licensed out to other studios a number of its biggest titles: Spider-Man is housed at Sony, and X-Men and Fantastic Four are at Fox.

With fewer marquee superheroes, Marvel works like an animation studio: It only develops select projects and makes most of what it develops, while DC is managing a much larger portfolio.

Still, in the wake of "Dark Knight," DC and Warners have made strategic moves in the superhero realm, including centralizing the way DC's titles and characters are developed. In the past, Warners optioned a property, paying DC a fee comparable to what a property could command on the open market. But while the projects ostensibly were being developed under one roof, many were spread out over a host of producers, each with different visions for how to approach each adaptation.

To bring competing approaches into sync, Levitz and DC's Los Angeles-based film exec Gregory Noveck have overseen a reorganization of the development slate. While Warners execs still drive the creative side, DC now has more input, making it an actual participant in the shaping of material.

"The creative process is by and large a true partnership," Noveck said. "They'll ask us a ton of questions, and we'll give a ton of answers. We will talk back and forth. We'll discuss writers and talent, but ultimately it's their decision."

This past fall, Warners quietly hired three of DC's biggest writers -- Geoff Johns, Grant Morrison and Marv Wolfman -- to act as consultants and writers for its superhero line of movies. The move involved taking back the reins on projects being handled by such producers as Charles Roven ("The Flash") and Akiva Goldsman ("Teen Titans").

Some agents and scribes grumbled about being forced to work with the consultants, never mind that Johns started his career as a assistant to "Superman" director Richard Donner or that Wolfman has worked in animation since the 1980s.

The moves have begun to pay off. Johns worked up a new treatment for a "Flash" script, being written by Dan Mazeau; Johns will act in a producer capacity on the project, which has not attached a director.

The projects Morrison and Wolfman are working on are in the early stages at Warners, whose execs declined to comment.

The process involves one writer taking point, though the trio do collaborate on projects, reading one another's materials while hashing out a story that will be at once accessible to nonfans yet still adhere to each character's long history. The writers also work in tandem with producers, writers and the Warners execs overseeing the projects, showing them treatments and providing notes on scripts.

Meanwhile, other superhero projects are moving forward at Warners.

The studio is taking pitches on sci-fi hero Adam Strange and the underwater-breathing hero "Aquaman," to be produced by Leonardo DiCaprio and his Appian Way shingle.

Also in the pipeline: "Bizarro Superman" being written by "Galaxy Quest" scribes David Howard and Robert Gordon; a sequel to "Constantine," with Goldsman and Erwin Stoff producing; two concurrent Green Arrow projects, an origin story and a prison-set one titled "Super Max"; and "Shazam," which was set up at New Line but has moved to Warners, with Pete Segal attached to direct.

Unsung in the lineup is Warners' line of straight-to-DVD animated movies released via Warner Premiere. "Green Lantern: First Flight," the latest entry, will premiere at this week's Comic-Con and has a July 28 street date.

These movies, produced on budgets in the $3.5 million range, apparently overperformed their targets. "First Flight" is the fifth straight-to-DVD title, with "Superman/Batman: Public Enemies" in production for a Sept. 29 release.

In the home entertainmentarena, DC has overshadowed Marvel, with 2007's "Superman-Doomsday" generating $9.4 million in revenue and last year's "Batman: Gotham Knight," taking advantage of the tidal wave of support for the Christopher Nolan movie, generating $8 million, according to tracking site The-Numbers.com. "Wonder Woman," released in March, already has chalked up $4.4 million. Marvel's top seller, "Ultimate Avengers 2," has pulled in $7.7 million.

Not that all the stars in the DC firmament are aligned yet.

Warners and DC still haven't figured out how to translate "Wonder Woman" to the big screen. In part, that failure reflects the difficulties DC has had turning out a popular Wonder Women comic. Morrison, during a recent Q&A with Clive Barker at Los Angeles' Meltdown Comics, admitted he didn't have a complete handle on the character when he was writing the comic "Final Crisis."

Also, ever since Bryan Singer's 2006's "Superman Returns," a new Superman has been in limbo.

"Our hope is to develop a Superman property and to try again," Warner Bros. Entertainment president Alan Horn said in April. "What hurt us is that the reviews and so on for the Superman movie did not get the kind of critical acclaim that Batman got, and we have other issues with Superman that concern us."

On the Batman front, a sequel to "Dark Knight" also is quite a way off. Nolan is open to doing a third installment, but his next movie is "Inception," an original script he penned and is shooting for Warners.

All that has put a damper on any movie about the Justice League, whose roster includes the above-mentioned heroes as well as myriad others including Aquaman and the Martian Manhunter. DC would like to present some of the main heroes in their own movies before they are brought together for one big outing, so "League" currently is inactive.

On top of that, there could be another change in how Warners approaches the DC characters, with studio chiefs debating whether to put the operation under one super-exec.

To bring the next generation of superheroes to the screen, DC and Warners might yet have to unleash their own super powers.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/...e4b64a53d2e876

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Who Is Jonah Hex?

Author: Robert Reineke
July 19, 2009



As I write this, we’re a little over a year away from the big screen debut of DC Comics’ western hero Jonah Hex in the film JONAH HEX.

Although the character has been around for 35 years, his profile is certainly not on the level of Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman. Or even Flash and Green Lantern.

So, a short look at the character and the history of western heroes at DC Comics leading up to his creation.

“TWO-FISTED JUSTICE”

Western heroes or western themed heroes had been around comics since near the beginning. DC sported the modern day western hero Vigilante in 1941. World War II kept most of the attention in the meantime, with the heroes of DC mostly dealing with modern menaces, Nazis, Japanese, and gangsters in addition to the more colorful adversaries. But, once World War II ended, readers wanted to move on to other things besides recent horrors and the historical west rose sharply in popularity.



For many the end of the Golden Age is marked by the unannounced change in ALL-STAR COMICS , featuring the JSA, to ALL-STAR WESTERN in 1951. There wasn’t necessarily a style change. Instead of clean cut, square jawed superheroes, we now had clean cut, square jawed western heroes like The Trigger Twins, Nighthawk, frontiersman Tomahawk who would hold a solo book until 1970, Strong Bow, Pow Wow Smith, Johnny Thunder, and more, illustrated by the likes of Alex Toth, Carmine Infantino, and Gil Kane. All basically of the same tone that you would find in your average John Wayne film of the 1940s. And even the other superheroes of the time would find themselves in a quasi-western from time to time, ala “Batman – Indian Chief” from the period.

This however proved to be a fairly short lived era, giving over to tales of the space race and the Silver Age in very short order. And while it would be a disservice to dispute the craftsmanship of the stories, it’s hard to detect any real lasting impact from this era, unlike DC’s contemporary science fiction titles. Part of that may be that even from the start, they were slightly anachronistic. In the movies, audiences were getting a more complicated view of the west on a regular basis with THE SEARCHERS and Anthony Mann’s westerns. That was further cemented in the 1960s with the rise of the spaghetti western. Clearly, if DC was going to revisit the genre, something new was in order.

“WILL HE SAVE THE WEST OR RUIN IT?”

The period of the late 1960s to the early 1970s was an interesting one for DC. Their clean cut, square jawed heroes had gone from right in tune with the times to out of date in less than a decade. And they were finally in danger of being passed by Marvel which was clearly the company on the rise and most in tune with the times.

Carmine Infantino was promoted to the top of the company. And many non-traditional features were created during this period. The mystical Deadman was created by Arnold Drake and Carmine Infantino and quickly passed over to newcomer Neal Adams. Horror anthologies came back and out of them arose Swamp Thing. Kirby and Ditko came over to DC and The Creeper, Hawk and Dove, The New Gods, The Demon, Kamandi, and O.M.A.C. appeared. Batman became darker. Wonder Woman was depowered and became more Emma Peel than superhero. Green Lantern and Green Arrow debated the issues of the times. Enemy Ace fought a war with great skill, but openly wondered about the dehumanizing effects of war and why innocents must suffer for it. And a new style of western hero was created, in step with the times.



But it wasn’t Jonah Hex, yet. Debuting in 1968, Barthomew Alouysius Lash, Bat Lash, was a far departure from the stoic archetype that had previously defined the western genre in comics. Bat Lash, under the guidance of Sergio Aragones, Denny O’Neil, and Nick Cardy, was much more interested in womanizing, fast talking, enjoying the finer things in life, and, ostensibly, hated violence. Harkening to the flower children of the period, he even sported a flower in his hat. Although, certainly similar to television’s MAVERICK, Bat Lash had his own charms and perhaps accidentally dished out his own sense of justice. Bat Lash was a critical success and a success in Europe, but he only appeared in 9 issues total before being cancelled due to low sales. It’s hard to say why Bat Lash didn’t catch on. Perhaps it was due to the contradiction that although he hated violence he was quite good at it, not quite nailing the flower child ethos of the time. Perhaps it was the lack of a strong story hook, trouble found Bat Lash he didn’t particularly go out of his way seeking trouble, that didn’t ring true. Perhaps the obvious intelligence of Bat Lash left some of the troubles he got into hard to swallow. Perhaps it just was the fickleness of readership.

Still, even though Bat Lash might not have been a sales success, but he had a small cult following and was a critical success. That was apparently enough to attempt more western features and All Star Western was revived in 1970 featuring Pow Wow Smith, El Diablo, historical figures, and the feature Outlaw which started out as a falsely accused hero and soon morphed into a Billy the Kid feature. Outlaw didn’t have much success, although it certainly was an indication that DC would be prepared to showcase a hero that didn’t necessarily wear a white hat. And, with issue #10 of All-Star Western in February-March 1972, a man wearing a gray hat entered the town of Paradise Springs.

“HE HAD NO FRIENDS, THIS JONAH HEX, BUT HE DID HAVE TWO COMPANIONS. ONE WAS DEATH ITSELF… THE OTHER… THE ACRID SMELL OF GUNSMOKE.”



“Welcome to Paradise” by John Albano and Tony DeZuñiga was Jonah Hex’s introduction to comic books, and even today it reads like an archetypical Jonah Hex tale. Really, as a tale it’s a great example of storytelling. Let’s take a closer look at it.

The story opens with Jonah Hex, the scarred side of his face hidden in shadow until it’s dramatic reveal halfway through the story, dragging a couple of dead outlaws into the town of Paradise. Clearly, Jonah Hex wasn’t some sort of square jawed, “bring them in alive”, upholder of law and order, but more a practical dealer of frontier justice. That’s further cemented when Jonah Hex immediately sets out to get paid for his services, $100 a head. He quickly learns that three more of the outlaw raiders he was hired to bring down are in the saloon across the street and immediately takes the offensive, something he comments that they should have done when they had the drop on him.

Unlike your standard white hat cowboy, Jonah Hex doesn’t boldly walk in the bring them in, but instead sneaks around to the back of the saloon, climbs in a second story window, threatens a dance hall girl to keep quiet, and then ambushes the outlaws from the second floor. Two of the outlaws go down quickly with the third escaping when Jonah gets tangled up with a boy. Neither apologize for the incident. And Jonah figures that the third outlaw will lead him back to the gang leader anyways. So, after punching out the stable owner, who’s mistreating Jonah’s horse, Jonah sets out to track down the rest of the gang.

We’re then treated to Jonah Hex becoming an almost supernatural force as he tracks down the gang in the night, revealing his scarred face for maximum impact, and ultimately chasing the gang leader to a farm. The gang leader manages to take the woman farm owner hostage, although Jonah doesn’t think much of it, when the boy he tangled with earlier shows up and talks Jonah into saving his mother. Jonah, reluctantly, tosses aside his gun belt, but when the gang leader turns to ride away, he gets a thrown knife in his back that Jonah was concealing. Again, Jonah Hex violates tradition by not even taking down the head bad guy face to face.

Right there, you’d have a badass anti-hero. But, Albano throws in yet another curve to further define Jonah Hex. After saving the widow and her son, Jonah gets invited back by the son for his mother’s apple dumplings, supposedly the best around. And, Jonah considers settling down. He pays off the pretty widow’s back taxes with his bounty and enquires about purchasing a place where he could settle down.

And the town elders have none of it, quickly informing Jonah Hex that there’s not a place for sale in the whole territory. They’ve no place for a man of, and marked by, violence like Jonah Hex. Turns out that he’s not invited for apple dumplings either, as the widow takes a pot shot at him with a rifle on the way out to her farmhouse and informs him that he’s not welcome and a bad influence on her son. A last encounter with the son, who really does like Jonah but clearly there’s no place for Jonah in this town, and Jonah informs him that he hates him “like poison!”. “Welcome to Paradise” indeed. With the very first story, John Albano informs us that there’s not going to be a fairy tale happy ending for Jonah Hex.

Jonah Hex was apparently an immediate hit. And ALL-STAR WESTERN apparently recognized it as it became WEIRD WESTERN with issue #12. Jonah Hex would headline the magazine for all but one issue through issue #38, at which point he graduated to his own self titled book.

John Albano’s Jonah Hex was more a mythic figure than a man. He specialized in dealing out justice, often ironic justice that fit into the WEIRD WESTERN title theme. He was lonely, had an unexplained past full of violence, had some sympathy to women, children, and animals and was otherwise ruthless and unsentimental. And many of the villains he faced tended to be very depraved, when Albano wasn’t treading in moral grays.

John Albano created the character, but only ended up writing 10 stories, interrupted by one Arnold Drake story, before leaving the character. There’s no definitive explanation for why Albano left, but most explanations center around money and ownership. There’s a particular rumor that Clint Eastwood was interested in purchasing the rights for adaptation and DC didn’t want to fork over compensation to Albano. Perhaps true, perhaps not, although it’s worth noting that 1975’s THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES features an ex-Confederate soldier haunted by his past. In any event, Michael Fleisher was hired to take over Jonah Hex and he would stay with Jonah Hex throughout the 1970s and through the late 1980s.

Fleisher’s run was different than Albano’s in that Fleisher embraced the serial storytelling conventions of the time and slowly fleshed out Hex as a character. We learned about Jonah Hex’s past and Quentin Turnbull was introduced to serve as the first recurring villain for Jonah to overcome. A recurring villain with a strong link to Jonah’s past, Turnbull blames Hex for the death of Turnbull’s son Jeb. To add to the story complexity, Jonah blames himself for the death of Jeb. Jonah Hex became less an archetype of old school justice being carried out and more of a flawed human being. Fleisher still carried over the main themes and they were consistent with Albano’s stories, but there’s clearly a difference in approach. Fleisher most set his mark on Jonah Hex by having Jonah marry immigrant Mei Ling and fathering a son, Jason, before Jonah’s past catches up with him and it’s clear that he can’t settle down and have a normal family life as Mei Ling leaves him. Violence has, literally, marked Jonah Hex and there’s no escaping it. A theme Clint Eastwood’s UNFORGIVEN would get to a decade and a half later. Fleisher also added the Mexican bandit El Papagayo to the mix who would be a continuing adversary. Most of these things worked as Jonah Hex graduated to his own title which had a successful 92 issue run. Fleisher even gives an end to Jonah Hex in a late 1970s special, shot at the turn of the century and, gruesomely, stuffed for display as a relic of his era.



Jonah Hex was clearly the most successful western character of that period, with his western adventures appearing on a regular schedule from 1972 until 1985. He seemed to be the springboard for a small western universe with Bat Lash and El Diablo along with new creations Scalphunter and Cinnamon. Sales must have been pretty solid for awhile. So, why was he a hit and others not?

In many ways, Jonah Hex combines some of the elements that make Wolverine and Batman successful. You just have to look at Hex to see that he’s had a traumatic past. And his stories involve escaping from one tight situation after another and eventually delivering a rather unique brand of justice. Tenacity is also a hallmark of Jonah Hex, as he also has Wolverine’s “you can hurt me, but you can’t kill me” characteristic. Jonah Hex, more than most, is a terrific example of the outsider. A person that wants to fit in, but circumstance, prejudice, and his own characters flaws prevent it. And, at long last, Jonah Hex was a character that finally had come up to date with the modern conception of the west. Not one of pure white hats, but a more complicated and tougher place. Jonah Hex would be right at home in THE SEARCHERS or THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY. He wasn’t so much a revisionist western hero, but someone who could combine the old fashioned virtues of fast gunplay and quick thinking with deeper character moments.

“ONCE UPON A TIME...IN THE WEST?!?”

If one were to pinpoint a low point in the modern popularity of the western, the mid-1980s is as likely a time as any. Jonah Hex’s sales were headed down and the time came to either cancel the series or try something different. And, Michael Fleisher decided that he’d rather try something different.

So, taking a page out of MAD MAX, Jonah Hex was whisked to a post-apocalyptic future, given a leather outfit, a pair of laser pistols, and let loose to take care of a new generation of varmints. Lasting a brief 18 issues under the writing of Fleisher, and the art of Mark Texeira and Keith Giffen, it’s a chapter best left forgotten. And after an impressive 15 year run, Jonah Hex took an absence from comics starting in 1987.

“TWO GUN MOJO”



Jonah Hex didn’t sit on the shelf long, before being given another chance. In the early 1990s, DC Comics launched the Vertigo label which was open to more adult interpretation of characters. And Clint Eastwood had a significant hit with the revisionist western UNFORGIVEN. The circumstances were right for a re-launch.

In August 1993, Vertigo released JONAH HEX: TWO GUN MOJO written by Joe “Bubba Ho-Tep” Lansdale and drawn by Tim Truman. This incarnation took the title of Weird Western tales literally, pitting Jonah Hex against a strange circus of freaks and zombies, basically branching out from the ranks of straight western into a horror western hybrid. Although, Jonah Hex’s solutions to problems didn’t change all that much, a bullet to the brain works against the living and the undead. Atmospheric, dark, violent, and funny, TWO GUN MOJO turned out to be a modest hit prompting a sequel.

In 1995, JONAH HEX: RIDERS OF THE WORM AND SUCH was released. This time Jonah Hex found himself up against a Cthulhu type menace and half worm/half human gunfighters in the form of the “Autumn Brothers”. Again the same strengths of the first series were in abundance. Unfortunately, there was a completely unexpected turn of events.

The “Autumn Brothers” were clearly an homage to rock and roll’s Winter Brothers. And they didn’t take the homage with any sort of good natured sense of humor, but turned around and sued DC Comics for use of their public image. The lawsuit took several years to run it’s course with several setbacks to DC along the way, but in the end a significant precedent was established. Comic books weren’t just a way of selling action figures and other merchandise, but a legitimate art form entitled to all the protections of parody, satire, etc. afforded to all other art forms. It’s obvious, but the Jonah Hex case was the first to make it part of law.

However, while DC Comics may have ultimately won, it clearly took the momentum away from the Lansdale / Truman team. JONAH HEX: SHADOWS WEST was published in 1999, dealing with Jonah Hex involved with spirit people and then Jonah disappeared from regular comics again for another seven years.

It’s also worth noting that courtesy of Joe Lansdale, Jonah Hex had his biggest exposure outside of comic books in this period. Jonah Hex basically took over one episode of BATMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES, “Showdown”, where he took down the son of Ra’s al Ghul in the old west.

“A FACEFUL OF VIOLENCE”



In 2006, Jonah Hex was relaunched. Perhaps due to the mild boom in westerns with OPEN RANGE and 3:10 TO YUMA coming out in the same time frame, perhaps as a reaction to all the superhero books that were flooding the stands. Writers Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti took their turn in a critically acclaimed, if sales challenged, run. Gray and Palmiotti avoided the serial chronological storytelling of Fleisher to tell stories that could take place anywhere during the life of Jonah Hex and were usually resolved in one issue. Often told from many different perspectives and portraying Jonah Hex in different lights, although usually facing off against depraved s.o.b.s who deserve the rough justice that Jonah Hex is going to deliver. Probably with a dose of irony.

By eschewing continuing serials, the current run has embraced a variety of artists that really have few other outlets for drawing western themed comics. Luke Ross drew most of the first year, using a slick realistic style that had Jonah Hex visually modeled on Clint Eastwood. Phil Noto mostly followed Luke Ross. And, with the “Origins” story arc, European artist Jordi Bernet became the semi-regular artist on the book and has graced us with a distinct style, slightly remiscent of Joe Kubert, but 100% fantastic and eschewing splash pages in favor of old fashioned storytelling. Guest artists still appear and it’s worth seeking out the issues illustrated by Darwyn Cooke and J.H. Williams III.

Although the book isn’t really interesting in serial storytelling, it has added to the world of Jonah Hex. Bat Lash and El Diablo have been regular guest stars. And Gray and Palmiotti have added the heavily scarred and traumatized Tallulah Black to the cast, as an homage to the grindhouse film THEY CALL HER ONE-EYE. Quentin Tarantino also mined similar territory in using Daryl Hannah in KILL BILL in a similar homage. Currently, the book is in the middle of a six part storyline and building towards its 50th issue, with a graphic novel in the works to tie into the movie.

SUGGESTED READING

If any of the above piques your interest, the following collections are available from DC Comics and still in print: Jonah Hex: Guns of Vengeance, Showcase Presents: Jonah Hex Vol. 1, Showcase Presents: Bat Lash, Jonah Hex: Origins, Jonah Hex: Only the Good Die Young Vol. 4, Jonah Hex: Luck Runs Out and Jonah Hex: Face Full of Violence.

TDK: Happy 1st Anniversary!

Author: Sean Gerber
July 18, 2009



Hard to believe that an entire year has already passed since THE DARK KNIGHT was released and subsequently took over the pop culture landscape. I guess time really does fly, or in this case, it glides on a memory cloth cape. I’m well aware that one year isn’t really that long of a time period, especially compared to BATMAN’s 20th anniversary last month, but it really doesn’t feel quite like a year has gone by despite the fact that we’re in the middle of another Batman-less summer movie season.

A large part of the reason why this anniversary came so fast is because TDK has really never left. It’s been in front of us (fans and the mainstream) for the majority of the past year via its phenomenal box office run, the Oscar buzz, the appearances on numerous lists of nominees from various critics and awards bodies, the January re-release in IMAX, the controversy over the Oscar snubs, all of Heath Ledger’s accolades including his Oscar victory, and even the hype for TDK’s debut on HBO. The mainstream fever over the film has only just started to fade over the past couple months.

For those of us who religiously followed the development of TDK from start to finish, the year after a Batman film can seem much shorter than the year leading up to a Batman film, as the eager anticipation for the film’s release that slowed time down to a perceived crawl disappears (to later be replaced by anticipation for the next Batman film -- that’s where you come in, Mr. Nolan…BANG!). In addition, the viral marketing, trailers, set reports, interviews, etc. provided all of us with vivid memories of the buildup to and release of the film. Of course it doesn’t feel like a year has passed when we can remember the first time we saw that image of Heath Ledger as The Joker (which was actually over two years ago) or our experience at whatever midnight screening we attended like it all happened yesterday.

My own personal TDK anniversary was actually this past Wednesday, July 15 since I was lucky enough to literally buy my way into one of the early viral screenings. During a brief nostalgia trip, I found myself still possessing very clear memories of being the first in line at the Universal City screening, about 10 hours ahead of show time. I can still feel the intense anticipation that had been building not only since BATMAN BEGINS, but since I last saw The Joker in a live-action film in B89.

I decided that there was no better way to commemorate this little anniversary than to watch the film yet again. It was my 30th viewing of the film and I know that because I’m a big enough nerd to have actually kept an accurate count. One year later and on the 30th viewing, THE DARK KNIGHT still takes me on the same emotional and visceral journey that it did the first time except it seems to actually be getting better with each screening. I don’t have an IMAX screen in my house, but I don’t need one. No matter how many times I’ve seen the film, I still feel that same “woosh” of emotion come over me when Commissioner Gordon delivers his speech and the words “THE DARK KNIGHT” appear on the end credits. I shake my head at how great that feeling is and how remarkable it is that it hasn’t gone away.

THE DARK KNIGHT, through its buildup, release, phenomenal run at the box office and on the awards circuit, and (obviously) the film itself, has been one of the true landmark experiences in my own Batman fandom. Actually, I’d have to say it’s been the peak of my long-time relationship with the Batman character and his world of story. As if being a great film that transcended its genre weren’t enough, TDK has been a unique, exciting, emotional experience on the screen and off of it in so many ways through so many avenues. For that, I am forever grateful to anyone and everyone who helped make this film a reality.

Happy first anniversary to THE DARK KNIGHT and to all those who made it what it has been and will continue to be.

Time glides.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT - Tricia Helfer

July 15, 2009



Battlestar Galactica’s visually stunning centerpiece shifts to another space-based destination as the voice of Boodikka in GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT, the next DC Universe animated original PG-13 movie coming to DVD on July 28, 2009.



Helfer expands her voiceover career with her first feature-length film role as Boodikka, the most prominent female member of the Green Lantern Corps. Helfer joins Christopher Meloni, Victor Garber and Michael Madsen as the core quartet of voices in the film, supported by fine performances from Juliet Landau, John Larroquette, Kurtwood Smith and a host of others.

* On voicing Boodikka: "Boodikka’s a fighter, a protector. She is very honorable in that she does what she thinks is right, even if some things go against the grain. She’s certainly not an evil character per se, but she does things that she thinks are good for society. She’s not really sexy in terms of her personality, so she’s not trying to reel Hal in – that relationship is more like comrades. So I wanted to play Boodikka both strong and sweet."

* On how much did she knew about Green Lantern/the GL mythos: "I did a little research, but not too much.

I grew up without a television on a farm in the middle of nowhere, so I really didn’t see hardly any movies or TV series, and no cartoons. So I kind of have to go into things with a really blank slate, an open mind, and I think sometimes that’s good actually for voices because you don’t go in with anything really preconceived. I never feel like I have to fit a certain (type) because I’ve seen this character played that way before. I can read the script and go in feeling with my own gut instinct. And then (she laughs) you have a nice room full of people that tell you if you’re messing up or to try it different way."

Check out these three new images:





Saturday, July 11, 2009

Ryan Reynolds Lands Green Lantern!

Source:The Hollywood Reporter, Variety
July 10, 2009



Warner Bros. Pictures has hired X-Men Origins: Wolverine and The Proposal star Ryan Reynolds to play the title role in the anticipated Green Lantern, scheduled for a June 17, 2011 release.

Based on the DC Comics hero, the action-adventure will be directed by Martin Campbell (Casino Royale, GoldenEye) and produced by Donald De Line and Greg Berlanti. Berlanti wrote the script with Marc Guggenheim and Michael Green.

The Hollywood trades say that Reynolds and his camp entered negotiations for the part Friday, after the studio held two rounds of screen tests, along with actors Bradley Cooper and Jared Leto. Justin Timberlake also did a screen test. The studio had holding options on the actors, but, except for Reynolds, those expired Monday. Reynolds' option would have expired end of day Friday.

Production is expected to begin in January.



The "Green Lantern" was created in 1940 by writer Bill Finger and artist Martin Nodell. Introduced in 1959, Hal Jordan is a second-generation test pilot, an ordinary man who was given the power ring and battery (lantern) by a dying alien named Abin Sur. When Abin Sur's spaceship crashed on Earth, the alien used his ring to seek out an individual to take his place as Green Lantern: someone who was "utterly honest and born without fear."

Reynolds recently starred in Fox's "Wolverine," in which he played Wade Wilson/Deadpool. The character is now being developed for a spin-off to which Reynolds is attached. He also played Hannibal King in Blade: Trinity.

The actor will next star in Buried, a dark indie drama that will begin filming shortly in Barcelona with Spanish director Rodrigo Cortes. Reynolds will play a civilian contractor who is kidnapped in Iraq and awakes in a coffin, struggling against time to coordinate a rescue even though he doesn't know where he's buried in the desert.

Friday, July 3, 2009

Brown, Conroy, And Daly Confirmed For Upcoming "Superman/Batman: Public Enemies"

July 04, 2009



The World's Finest has received confirmation on the lead roles in the upcoming Superman/Batman: Public Enemies direct-to-video animated feature.

A representative for Warner Bros. Animation has confirmed for The World's Finest that Clancy Brown, Kevin Conroy, and Tim Daly will be reunited in the upcoming Superman/Batman: Public Enemies direct-to-video animated feature, scheduled to hit Blu-ray and DVD in September 2009. All three actors will be reprising familiar roles.

Kevin Conroy is cast as Batman, Tim Daly as Superman and Clancy Brown as Lex Luthor in the upcoming direct-to-video animated feature based off the initial six-part "Public Enemies" storyline from the Superman/Batman comic book. All three actors have played these respective roles before, most notably in Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series.

Allison Mack, CCH Pounder, and John C. McGinley also have roles in the animated feature.

An official announcement on the upcoming Superman/Batman: Public Enemies direct-to-video animated feature, scheduled to hit Blu-ray and DVD in September 2009, is expected next week. Stay tuned for further updates.

http://worldsfinestonline.com/news.php?action=fullnews&id=482

Writer Jeph Loeb On The Upcoming "Superman/Batman: Public Enemies" Animated Feature

July 03, 2009 by James Harvey





Jeph Loeb sits down with The World's Finest for an exclusive Q & A on the upcoming Superman/Batman: Public Enemies direct-to-video animated feature.



The World's Finest caught up with famed comic and television writer Jeph Loeb for a quick Q & A to share his thoughts on the upcoming direct-to-video Superman/Batman: Public Enemies animated feature. The animated feature adapts the six-issue story arc of the same name, originally written by Loeb, from the Superman/Batman comic series currently published by DC Comics. The story features Superman and Batman facing off against Lex Luthor, now President of the United States.

The World's Finest: Any thoughts on seeing one of your stories being adapted into an animated feature? Were you surprised by the announcement?

Jeph Loeb: I got a call from DC asking if I wanted to write the script, which caught me totally off guard because I had no idea they were thinking about this series. I love the Justice League: The New Frontier DVD both in terms of look and how faithful they were to the story. My schedule wouldn't allow it, so all I could do was hope for the best. And from what I've seen it's better than the best!

WF: Have you been consulted about this project? Are there any moments you'd like to make sure appear in the animated movie, and do you think they'll stick close to the source material?

JL: I didn't have anything to do with it. I know the people involved and they are all first rate, top of their game in animation. I did some commentary that is on the DVD. I hope that's not too embarrassing!

WF: Is there another Superman/Batman arc of yours you would like to see adapted?

JL: Sure! All of them! I'd love to see them adapt the next arc, Supergirl, and do it in Mike Turner's style. That's what makes these DVD's so unique is that they have been following the designs of the specific artists. The “McGuinness” look to Superman/Batman: Public Enemies just rocks!

WF: Do you plan to check out Superman/Batman: Public Enemies when it hits shelves?

JL: On the shelves?! I'm hoping for an advance copy (laughs)! I've downloaded the trailer and play it all the time.

WF: There have been rumors that your other work, specifically Batman: The Long Halloween, may be adapted into animation at some point. Any details on that? Any thoughts?

JL: Haven't heard a thing, but they keep secrets really well over there. Batman: The Long Halloween is certainly one of my favorite stories, and I was incredibly flattered how much has been used in Batman Begins and The Dark Knight.

WF: To wrap this up, can you give fans a quick update on what you're up to right now, including current comic and entertainment work? What can we expect from you down the line?

JL: In movies and television there are a few huge announcements which I can't really talk about at this time, but very soon. I am going back to television on a new series that is going to be huge!

In comics, my plate is very full. I've got the monthly Hulk book, featuring the all-new, all-deadly Red Hulk, with my Superman/Batman partner Ed McGuinness. Also, we're finishing up Ultimatum with David Finch, which will both reinvent and reinvigorate the Ultimate Universe at Marvel and lead toward Brian Bendis' new Ultimate Spider-Man, Mark Millar's Ultimate Avengers, and my own New Ultimates with Frank Cho. It's going to be a very big year!

The World's Finest would like to thank Jeph Loeb for his participation!

A co-production of Warner Premiere, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, Superman/Batman: Public Enemies will debut Tuesday, September 29th, 2009 on DVD and Blu-ray disc. Click here to view the official press release for the upcoming direct-to-video Supermna/Batman: Public Enemies animated feature release.

Stay tuned for further Superman/Batman: Public Enemies updates coming soon!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT World Premiere at Comic Con on July 23, 2009!

July 1, 2009

GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT, the highly-anticipated fifth entry in the popular DVD series of DC Universe animated original PG-13 movies, will have its world premiere at Comic-Con in San Diego on Thursday, July 23, 2009.

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More than 4,000 fans will have the opportunity to see GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT on the big screen five days before the latest DC Universe film is distributed on DVD and Blu-Ray� Hi-Def. The film will premiere in the San Diego Convention Center�s Ballroom 20 at 8:00 p.m.

A panel comprised of filmmakers and voice cast will be presented on the following day, Friday, July 24. Details on that panel and its participants will be announced next week.

Acclaimed actor Christopher Meloni (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit) fills the lead voice of Hal Jordan aka Green Lantern. Meloni is joined by fellow Emmy Award nominee Victor Garber (Milk, Titanic) as the villainous Sinestro, Tricia Helfer (Battlestar Galactica) as the voice of Boodikka, and Michael Madsen (Reservoir Dogs) as Kilowog. The cast also includes Juliet Landau (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), John Larroquette (Night Court), Kurtwood Smith (That �70s Show), and David Lander (Laverne & Shirley).

Produced by animation legend Bruce Timm, GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT is helmed by heralded director Lauren Montgomery (Wonder Woman, Superman Doomsday) and scripted by four-time Emmy Award-winning writer Alan Burnett (The Batman).

GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT finds Hal Jordan recruited to join the Green Lantern Corps and placed under the supervision of respected senior Lantern Sinestro. The earthling soon discovers his mentor is actually the central figure in a secret conspiracy that threatens the philosophies, traditions and hierarchy of the entire Green Lantern Corps. Hal must quickly hone his newfound powers and combat the treasonous Lanterns within the ranks to maintain order in the universe.

A co-production of Warner Premiere, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the illuminated hero�s first-ever full-length animated film is set for release by Warner Home Video on July 28, 2009. GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT will be available as a special edition 2-disc version on DVD and Blu-Ray� Hi-Def, as well as single disc DVD.

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GREEN LANTERN: FIRST FLIGHT comes to DVD on July 28, 2009. Visit the official site at GREENLANTERNDVD.COM.