Hero Complex

For your inner fanboy

Category: Batman

2009 Holiday Geek Gift Guide: The perfect presents for Muggles, Trekkies and fanboys

November 26, 2009 |  5:19 am

HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE, PART ONE

Stressed about finding the perfect gift for that special Muggle, Trekkie, Twi-Hard, Jedi or Bat-fan in your life? Relax and read on: You've come to the perfect place at the perfect time, because this is the 2009 Hero Complex Holiday Gift Guide -- just think of us as a sort of retail Yoda guiding you through the complicated swamps of holiday shopping. "Buy or buy not. There is no browse..."

It's the perfect time to get your geek on, too. The fanboy culture is in full blossom at the box office and in pop culture beyond, and this holiday season there's a mountain of gifts and gadgets that speak to the Comic-Con constituency. Here are some of the most heroic:

Fringe The Complete First Season "FRINGE: THE COMPLETE FIRST SEASON" ($60 for DVD, $80 for Blu-ray): "Fringe" may be the best sci-fi show on television right now, which is saying a lot considering the crowd of competitors. The series was impressive from its very start for its production values, casting and cerebral ambitions, but early on it was missing a certain something; I didn't stop watching and I'm glad I didn't because by the middle of the first season the show found its groove (in part by finding a defining rhythm that wasn't beholden to a rigid, single-episode procedural pace). Like "The X-Files" (yes, it's hard not to compare the two, considering the starting-point premise of FBI investigations into the paranormal), this show has an intricate and still-unfolding mythology. It's not too late to jump on board, especially with this polished Warner Home Video collection of the entire first season on seven discs with extended scenes, loads of commentary, featurettes on special effects and the science of the show, a "Deciphering the Scene" feature for true "Fringe" students, a gag reel and more. The Blu-ray is worth the extra money, the features are even better and the show's cinematic approach lives up   to the format.You can find it at retailers everywhere or directly from Warner Home Video. Want to read more about the show? Check out the Hero Complex visit to the Vancouver set.

Tauntaun sleeping bag TAUNTAUN SLEEPING BAG:

($100) This may be the best nerd gift of the year. Originally made as a one-of-a-kind prototype for an April Fool's Day spoof, the sleeping bag is an irresistible bit of "Star Wars" that takes us all back to the icy slopes of Hoth, where frosty Luke Skywalker was saved by his quick-thinking pal Han Solo, who was resourceful enough to eviscerate a dead tauntaun (think of a cranky snow camel crossed with a llama) and show the desert-planet kid inside to keep warm. Hmmmmm, cozy! This sleeping bag is made of polyester and it won't save you from hypothermia on the frozen tundra (it's not for outdoor use) but it's a crackerjack gift and even has a lightsaber zipper so you can slice your furry friend open just like Han did. For sale exclusively at ThinkGeek.The Hunter

"THE HUNTER" GRAPHIC NOVEL: ($25)  Here's one of the best graphic novels of the year and a killer gift -- Darwyn Cooke's sublime adaptation of the hard-boiled antihero created by Richard Stark (the pen name of the late, great Donald Westlake). The handsome book boasts Cooke’s spare and stylized artwork (think somewhere between the vintage cool of “Mad Men” and the storytelling flair of Milton Caniff’s “Steve Canyon” comic strips), and the 144-page tale from IDW Publishing is a meticulously faithful adaptation of the 1962 novel of the same name that introduced the scowling Parker. Available through most book merchants or directly from IDW. You can read more about this great book in the Hero Complex feature on Cooke and his mission to bring Westlake's classic character alive in a new way.

Terminator 2 limited edition "TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY" LIMITED EDITION: We don't know if "Avatar" will live up to its billing as "a game-changer" for special effects, but director James Cameron already pulled that feat off once with "T2"  and its then-startling quicksilver CG effects. I'm a bigger fan of the first movie in the franchise (better story and none of Ed Furlong's petulance) but this limited-edition packaging ($115) of the sequel is too sweet to ignore with the 14-inch, skinless, glowing-eyeball bust of the T-800 that even makes sound effects. This six-disc (!) definitive packaging comes with every "T2" featurette and extra to date, including the Skynet Blu-ray edition of the film. That's fine, but did I mention that the metal skull makes noises and its eyes glow? Cool. This package was just released by Lionsgate in May so there's a good chance that fans you are shopping for may not have seen it before. A great gift, too, for any old college friends who now work in the Schwarzenegger administration who are spending Christmas in Sacramento for the last time. You can find it for sale at a variety of merchants.  

Hermione's earrings HERMIONE'S EARRINGS, STARFLEET CUFF LINKS and "THE DARK KNIGHT" MONEY CLIP : If you're looking for a sly, understated gift for "Harry Potter" fans (you know, something that doesn't scream "Muggle!") consider these graceful earrings of sterling silver and pink crystals ($59) fashioned as an homage to the ones worn by actress Emma Watson on screen. You can find them at the Warner Brothers shop along with a staggering array of wizard merch. In the same low-key vein, for fanboys who don't want to loudly broadcast their obsessions, there are some nifty Starfleet cuff links ($65) that are crafted from enamel and plated silver and have a bullet back closure; you can find them (as well as a Klingon counterpart product) at Cufflinks.com. We also like the folding, magnetic Batarang money clip ($39) from the Noble Collection that would fit the sleek sensibilities of Bruce Wayne but might be too small for the wad of spending cash he keeps in his utility belt.

-- Geoff Boucher

CHECK BACK SATURDAY FOR PART TWO OF THE GIFT GUIDE

READ the 2008 HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE


Akiva Goldsman on 'Lobo,' 'Jonah Hex' and the new 'Swamp Thing'

October 19, 2009 |  1:22 pm

This is a significantly longer version of an article I wrote on Akiva Goldsman that ran Sunday in the Los Angeles Times Calendar section. Goldsman is one of the busiest Hollywood figures in comics and sci-fi projects with four adaptations coming based on DC characters and his new role as a key figure for the Fox series "Fringe." He's also a figure of controversy for fans who have not forgotten the sight of a Bat-suit with nipples. 

Akiva Goldsman

Akiva Goldsman arrived at the door of producer Brian Grazer in 1998 with one purpose. "I went there," the screenwriter says, "to beg."

Goldsman, who had enjoyed a steady ascension in Hollywood for years, was coming off a string of films that had badly battered his reputation. He had produced and written the forgettable dud "Lost in Space" -- and far worse, he had written the screenplay that would become the 1997 bomb "Batman & Robin," one of the most savagely disliked movies of the decade.

Lobo Given that history of burnt popcorn, Goldsman seemed like the least qualified writer in Hollywood to take on the task of adapting Sylvia Nasar's "A Beautiful Mind" for the screen, but that's the job he sought when he visited Grazer at the offices of Imagine Films. Shockingly, he got the gig, and the eventual film, about physicist John Nash and his slippery hold on reality, would win four Academy Awards, including best adapted screenplay for Goldsman, best director for Ron Howard and best picture.

"It was a profound experience for all of us involved," Goldsman recently recalled. "And I cannot overestimate what it meant for my career at that point."

The breakthrough put Goldsman in a lofty strata in Hollywood, and his screenwriting credits would include blockbusters such as "The Da Vinci Code," "Angels & Demons," "I Am Legend" and "I, Robot." And now, a decade after seeking a bit of largesse from Grazer, Goldsman is undertaking a new career path behind the camera.

He recently directed the season premiere of the Fox series "Fringe" and is now lining up his feature-film directorial debut. And despite having written what is perhaps the most reviled comic-book movie adaptation of all time, he's aggressively pursuing his childhood love of superheroes as the producer of five movies based on Marvel or DC comic books, including the Guy Ritchie adaptaion of "Lobo," the popular anti-hero show in the image on the right.

On closer inspection, comic-book fantasy and dark psychology are the touchstone themes of Goldsman's career. It's a tandem that might make a therapist smirk or reach for their notepad, and the same goes for the 47-year-old's memories of his childhood. The writer is the son of child psychologists Mira Rothenberg and S. Tev Goldsman, and the nature of his youth was a key reason that Grazer used the writer for "A Beautiful Mind."

Batman and Robin "I grew up, essentially, in one of the very first group homes for what was then termed as 'emotionally disturbed children' -- these were days when, unimaginably, childhood schizophrenia and autism were lumped together in the same population," Goldsman said. "My parents founded this home, and I grew up there in this brownstone in Brooklyn Heights and my peers were, um, crazy. My definition of sanity is very labile; it's flexible and open."

Young Goldsman also lost himself in the tales of Batman, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, the Legion of Super-Heroes and all the other gaudy champions who inhabit the wildly intricate mythos of Marvel and DC. He sees his revisitation to his youthful concerns as a common experience in Hollywood. "I think we're all trying to make sense of what happened [in our childhoods] and that's what's startling -- in getting the chance to make stuff, sometimes, when everything is supended correctly, it feels like it makes sense." 

These days, his office at the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank is dotted with comic-book art, superhero statues, sci-fi imagery -- pop-culture signifiers that once would have been viewed as juvenilia but now are as proudly prevalent in Hollywood work spaces as Hitchcock posters and espresso machines.

Losers On a recent afternoon, Goldsman gleefully showed off a personalized drawing that had been given to him years ago by the late Bob Kane, co-creator of Batman, and then debated the finer points of "Days of Future Past," a landmark two-issue X-Men comic-book story from 1981.

None of that, though, changes the fact that Goldsman might be booed off the stage if he were introduced at a comic-book convention. "Batman & Robin," the bloated 1997 movie directed by Joel Schumacher and starring George Clooney and Arnold Schwarzenegger, certainly possesses an odious place in Hollywood history. Times critic Kenneth Turan said the Goldsman script had the "eerie feeling of having no beginning, no middle and no end." That was on the gentle end of the reaction; Goldsman and Schumacher actually received death threats, which suggests that there are a lot of people in the world who take their funny books seriously.

A few months ago, Kevin Feige, the president of production at Marvel Studios, said that "Batman & Robin" was more than a mere failure. "That may be the most important comic-book movie ever made," said Feige, whose studio is now at work on "Iron Man 2" and "Thor." "It was so bad that it demanded a new way of doing things. It created the opportunity to do 'X-Men' and 'Spider-Man,' adaptations that respected the source material and adaptations that were not campy."

Goldsman won't exactly apologize for the film, but he comes pretty close. He said he is proud of the effort put into it and weary of the conversations about its merit. He did learn a lesson from the film. "What got lost in 'Batman & Robin' is the emotions aren't real," Goldsman said, picking his words carefully. "The worst thing to do with a serious comic book is to make it a cartoon. I'm still answering for that movie with some people."

He said honoring the source material is the guiding concept for the projects he has in the pipeline now. Filming recently wrapped on his Warner Bros. project "Jonah Hex," which stars Josh Brolin as the bitter and scarred Old West antihero from DC Comics that dates to the 1970s.

"He's a character that has been described as having one foot on Earth and one foot beyond the grave, that he speaks to the dead . . . at the same time he is very much [like Sergio Leone's] 'The Man With No Name.' "

Jonah Hex poster "Hex," now in post-production, is being  directed by Jimmy Hayward, who is following up his very different directorial debut, last year's "Horton Hears a Who." John Malkovich plays the villain, an evil preacher, while Megan Fox and Will Arnett also star.

After that is a commando film called "The Losers," also a DC adaptation, about a team of CIA operatives who are unwittingly sent on a suicide mission but survive and return to face their superiors.

The film stars Jeffrey Dean Morgan -- who got strong reviews for his black-ops and black-hearted role in "Watchmen" -- as well as Zoe Saldana and Jason Patric and is due in April of next year.

There's also "Lobo," a blue- and gray-skinned, super-powered alien who has a bad attitude and delights in mayhem; the character, for the uninitiated, looks like a buffed-out, biker version of Beetlejuice and acts like a bar-fighting big cousin of the extraterrestrial scamp from "Lilo and Stitch." There's also some common ground with the hero-behaving-badly tale of "Hancock," which Goldsman produced. 

"Lobo" is being directed by Guy Ritchie, which sounds like an odd fit -- he's rarely succeeded in stories that go past London and this one would take him off-planet -- but Goldsman says he's thrilled with the fit.

"There's something hyperbolic and authentic about a Guy Ritchie movie. His best movie are deeply, deeply  stylized yet they are all grounded; there's a grit of stylization, which sounds like an oxymoron but it makes perfect sense when you've seen his films."

Goldsman added: "We've never seen Guy's sensibility married to a project with such a large special effects budget. "

Fringe poster Goldsman said Ritchie will shoot a test scene in November -- "We've got the character design pretty much done," Goldsman said, "and the test will get us moving forward to the next step" -- and casting will be decided after that.

Then there's "Swamp Thing," which Goldsman said will be closer in tone to the character as presented in Alan Moore's eerie, metaphysical horror comics than the rubber-suit bog creature from the 1982 Wes Craven B-movie.

"We want a film with real Southern, dark horror overtones, a little bit like a classic Universal horror film," Goldsman said, knowing full well that his presence on the project will stir controversy -- it's a character that filmmaker Guillermo del Toro has called one of the "few remaining Holy Grails" in comics. There's also also talk of a Fantastic Four reboot, which has been met, no surprise, with sharply different reactions.

Vestiges of fan vitriol remain on the Internet for Goldsman, but in Hollywood his reputation is stellar. J.J. Abrams has brought him into the fold on "Fringe" as a key story collaborator, and Howard has now directed four films with Goldsman as screenwriter.

Howard said he has been "prodding" Goldsman to direct since watching the writer work with Russell Crowe and others on the set of "A Beautiful Mind."

"There have been many screenwriters who moved into directing with varying degrees of success, but it's not an automatic path," Howard said. "Screenwriters have, of course, a great sense of story and the nuances trying to being achieved, but they shield themselves from the practical matters of getting that story told on film. None of that is a problem for Akiva. He's comfortable having conversations with actors and collaborating."

Will Smith and Akiva Goldsman 

Goldsman puts a premium on his affinity for teamwork and rattles off all the lessons he's learned from collaborators, such as Howard's open and supportive style, Peter Weir's devotion to authenticity, Will Smith's relentless optimism.

Goldsman got his start late in Hollywood. He had graduated from Wesleyan in 1983 and worked in the mental health field carrying the family tradition of sorts, but he found he was gripped more by flights of imagination than clinical challenges. He studied creative at New York University but novel writing defied him. He became an avid disciple of screenwriting guru John McKee’s approaches and had a breakthrough with his 1994 adaptation of John Grisham’s novel “The Client.”

His own literary beacons won't impress anyone with art-house sensibilities -- he talks with wonder about Stephen King's "ability to understand the emotional architecture of our imagination" -- but his populist tastes, skill with story and that old comic-book collection make him a man for the moment in Hollywood. He's now looking for a feature film to direct, and it may end up being a screen version of his favorite novel, "Winter's Tale," Mark Helprin's 1983 fantasy about an alternate-history New York, a thief and flying white horse.

It's yet another new chapter in the career of a man who has specialized in playing well with others in an asylum setting. "I'm very scared of many things, but drop me into world of people raging with schizophrenia and I feel perfectly at home," Goldsman deadpanned. "And I love Hollywood. Go figure."

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Fringe's Joshua Jackson and John Noble ON THE SET: Hero Complex visits "Fringe" in Vancouver

J.J. Abrams, the Hero Complex interview

 'Trek,' 'Fringe,' 'Transformers' make summer hot for Orci & Kurtzman

Del Toro: Swamp Thing is one of few Holy Grail projects left

Jeffrey Dean Morgan gets dead again...and darker  

Raimi's Spider-Man regrets: "I would have done everything differently"

Why is Stan Lee signing Jack Kirby's artwork?

Should George Clooney star with Johnny Depp in "Lone Ranger"?

Harrison Ford: George Lucas in "think mode" on fifth "Indy"

Photos: Akiva Goldsman on the Warner lot (Brian Vander Brug/Los Angeles Times). Lobo from DC Comics. The cast of "Batman & Robin." Posters for the DC series "The Losers," the upcoming "Jonah Hex" film and "Fringe." Will Smith and Akiva Goldsman in 2007 (Toshifumi Kitamura/Getty images)


'Batman: Arkham Asylum' is a mad success

September 15, 2009 |  8:23 am

Ben Fritz writes for the Business section of the Los Angeles Times and has mad-love for all things geeky, so you'll see his name here at the Hero Complex a lot in the seasons to come. Here's an exceprt from his update on the sales of the hottest video game to ever come out of Gotham City...

Batman Arkham Asylum action

Warner Bros. may not have a new Batman movie this year, but the Caped Crusader is turning out to be the biggest thing in Hollywood-licensed video games.

"Batman: Arkham Asylum" sold 593,000 units in August according to NPD Group, which tracks industry sales. It's the biggest first-month sales for any video game this year based on a Hollywood property and particularly impressive given that "Arkham Asylum" was released Aug. 25, meaning NPD only tracked its sales for five days.

Warner said last week that Arkham Asylum, which received stellar reviews, had sold nearly 2 million units worldwide through Sept. 8, a very strong launch for a video game...

THERE'S MORE, READ THE REST

-- Ben Fritz

RECENT AND RELATED

Wolvbat

SILLY VIDEO: Meanwhile ... in the Batcave

A round up of "Arkham" game reviews

Top vintage Bat-toys...including a somewhat lewd watergun 

Gary Oldman: Cameras rolling next year on new Bat-film

Adam West talks about cat-scratch fever

Joker creator Jerry Robinson on Gotham's golden age

Photo: A scene from Batman: Arkham Asylum. Credit: Eidos.


Tim Burton's graveyard cabaret -- career highlights for the filmmaker who turns 51 today

August 25, 2009 |  5:07 pm

Tim Burton, 2006 Happy birthday today to Tim Burton, who long ago pulled filmgoers down into the rabbit hole into his own singular imagination.

Burton is 51 today and enjoys a rare status in Hollywood as one of very few contemporary directors who are as big as the films they make and truly unique in the sensibility and vision they put on the screen. Martin ScorseseWoody Allen and Quentin Tarantino, in their own ways, would make that list, as would Guillermo del Toro and Hayao Miyazaki, but none of those masters has made blockbusters on the scale of Burton. (The 13 Burton-directed feature films to date have grossed $1.3 billion in the U.S. alone.)  Love his work or hate it (and there are plenty of outspoken advocates for both points of view), it's impossible not to recognize a Burton film at this point and anyone who loves film pays attention to each of his releases.

Burton is back next year with "Alice in Wonderland" (check out the trailer if you haven't already seen it) but today we're taking a look back at some of his previous work. Since this is the Hero Complex, let's start with Burton's highest-grossing film, "Batman" from 1989, and its underrated sequel, "Batman Returns." Hard to believe it has been 20 years since Jack Nicholson brought the Joker to life and even harder to believe that it's now only the second most-celebrated portrayal of the greatest comic-book villian ever. Ever wonder what Burton thought of "The Dark Knight"? I asked him, and his surprising answer is here.


 

My favorite Burton movie? I know this is going to be jeered by many of you, but I adore "Ed Wood." There's a spirit to the film that is so playful and loving and bittersweet -- I think it may be the most human of all his films. Depp is amazing in the movie, and it has the role of a lifetime (and an Oscar winner) for the great Martin Landau. Along with Woody Allen's darkly sublime "Crimes and Misdemeanors" in 1989, this gave Landau two marvelous touchstone films in the third decade of his career, which got an early jump start with Alfred Hitchcock's "North By Northwest" in 1959. Burton, Hitchcock and Allen? Pretty good directors there, Mr. Landau. "Ed Wood" was a commercial bomb and I remember that I coaxed a group of friends to go see it at late show and (after too much beer) a few of them were dozing off by the end. I don't care, I thought it was genius that night in 1994 and I still think so today.


Burton likes to stick with actors who understand his vision. Apparently, no one understands it better than Johnny Depp, who has been in six of Burton's films and stars in "Alice" as the Mad Hatter. Here are the trailers for their first collaboration, 1990's "Edward Scissorhands," and the most recent, 2005's "The Corpse Bride."

Not every Burton movie works. I thought "Mars Attacks!" was, well, unwatchable, and the ending of "Planet of the Apes" still has me scratching my head. When they click, though, they can be magic. Take a look back at "Beetlejuice," which (along with the "Ghostbusters" films) really created the template for special-effects comedies that would follow, among them films as varied as "Men in Black" and "Night at the Museum." I was never fully won over to the idea of Michael Keaton as Batman (although he was a good Bruce Wayne) but he was perfect in this ghost movie that has become one of my kids' favorite films despite the 21 years since its release. (And look how skinny Alec Baldwin was!)


What do you think, what's Burton's best film? Leave a comment or, better yet, a birthday wish. I know Tim has checked out the blog in the past and he may see your message.

--Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Johnny_depp_and_tim_burton_kevork_d

"Alice" will be a big part of Disney's D23 Expo

Tim Burton on past "Alice" films: "There wasn't anything underneath"

Tim Burton on Comic-Con of the 70s: "The last time I was here..."

Meet the cast: Tim Burton's "Alice in Wonderland"

Tim Burton on working with Depp on a darker "Alice"

CREDITS: Tim Burton in 2006 at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, photographed by Ricardo DeAratanha/Los Angeles Times.Tim Burton and Johnny Depp photo by Liz O. Baylen/Los Angeles Times.


Beautiful batarangs fly from reviewers as 'Batman: Arkham Asylum' is released

August 25, 2009 |  4:23 pm

The cool marketing schemes are (mostly) over and the midnight madness release has been done, so "Batman Arkham Asylum" is now available to all on almost every platform there is.

Reviews came fast and furious as game sites, tech sites and general fandom sites all rushed to give their opinions of the new Dark Knight game, one that ultimately may use more of his skill as a detective and strategist than as a martial artist and brawler.

This version of the vigilante is universally praised.  'All-time' banners are thrown about here and there, but the general consensus is that it's one of the best games of the year. Here's the trailer again, and then a few opinions afterward:



Kotaku

"I really enjoyed this game, so much so that I would have its babies if such a thing were possible. Sure, the last two boss fights sour the attraction a little, but all relationships have problems. Just look at Batman's list of lovers and Robins if you want examples.

Seriously, though, Batman: Arkham Asylum is an excellent game. Buy it, play it and bask in the glow of the brightest Batman game to date."

USA Today - Game Hunters

"Arkham Asylum is a must-play for Batman fans, but it also presents a highly satisfying option for action game aficionados, between the platforming, elegant combat and effective use of stealth play."

Joystiq

Rest assured, I'm not being hyperbolic when I say that Batman: Arkham Asylum is unquestionably the best licensed game I've ever played. At the end of the day, however, that's a fairly low hurdle to clear -- it better reflects the game's quality to say it's one of the best stealth-action games ever made, and easily the best video game 2009 has had to offer thus far.

Stuff.co.nz

"Everyone stand up and give Batman: Arkham Asylum a round of applause and a pat on the back.

It has done what many were beginning to say was impossible... delivered a good - nay, a great Batman game; possibly the greatest of all time!

... one of the main signs of a great game is whether when you finish it do you want to play it again? For me, the answer is definitely yes."

Game Informer
Like BioShock’s underwater dystopia, Arkham Asylum is a place of wonder and inexplicable horror. The demonized Victorian architecture blends seamlessly with a lifetime of comic book history to create a tourist attraction that steals your attention away, and makes you wish you had a camera to preserve the unbelievable imagery. The Asylum isn’t just a backdrop for this twisted tale, it is its tone-setter and driving force. The Asylum pumps just as much excitement into this adventure as the pointy-eared vigilante, Batman, does.

-- Jevon Phillips

RECENT AND RELATED

Wolvbat Meanwhile ... in the Batcave

Top vintage Batman toys...including a somewhat lewd watergun 

Gary Oldman: Cameras rolling next year on new Bat-film

Adam West talks about cat-scratch fever

Joker creator Jerry Robinson on Gotham's golden age


Gotham in wartime: Skirball will screen 1943 Batman this Sunday

August 6, 2009 | 11:21 am

Batman 1943 

The Skirball Cultural Center is closing its “ZAP! POW! BAM! The Superhero: The Golden Age of Comic Books-1938-1950” exhibition Sunday, Aug. 9, with a screening of the 1943 "Batman" serial. The 260-minute, 15-chapter serial finds Batman and Robin attempting to rid Gotham City of a World War II Japanese spy ring. With each thrilling chapter, they encounter — and overcome — the likes of zombies, alligators and even radium guns.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that “Batman” is also incredibly racist. Made during the height of World War II, the film is filled with stereotypical images and ethnic slurs of Japanese.

J. Carrol Nash, who was of Irish heritage, plays the evil Japanese Dr. Daka, who is trying to help his countrymen take over the United States with the use of a special radium gun. All of his henchmen, ironically, are Caucasian.

(The film will be shown in two parts with an hour lunch break).

Because of the racist depictions in the film, program director Jordan Peimer will be discussing the film before the second half starts.

“I think you have to see it in light of what was going on during the war and the mass hysteria in this country over the Japanese presence here.”

Of course, adds Peimer, “I am not in any way justifying it. It is ugly and full of caricatures that should never had been filmed. I had to really think long and hard if we should show this because of its content, but it’s really important to look at how comic books were used as this form of propaganda.”

World War II, he says, was "the first opportunity for these comic book heroes that had only been around for about four years to suddenly take on the world."

The majority of the villains in the comic book universe were Japanese, not German.

“It was so much easier to bring white America around to fighting in the Japanese theater than against people in Europe who looked like them,” he says.

 Surrounding a Japanese villain with Caucasian henchmen was de rigueur in comics.

“It is almost as if they are completely emasculating the Japanese spies because they have white henchmen,” says Peimer. “There’s a really famous Superman comic book from 1943 where he visits a Japanese American relocation center and uncovers a spy ring that exists there. But they are all being helped by white people on the outside. The Japanese are evil, they are monsters but aren’t capable of functioning without Caucasian input.”

-- Susan King

Detective no. 69

Last chance: Skirball's brilliant comics exhibit closing Aug. 9

VIDEO: The Joker: Jerry Robinson reflects on a pop-culture wild card

Jerry Robinson tells the colorful tale of meeting Bob Kane

Top 10 vintage Batman toys, for your inner Boy Wonder

The Joker, the unfunny history of a classic character

Christopher Nolan dissects his favorite scene in "Dark Knight"

Golden Age flashback: Marvel Comics house ads


Meanwhile, in the Batcave...

July 31, 2009 |  6:38 am

Remember the fun video "The Dark Knight meets Superman"?

Or "Batman vs. Superman, Duel to the Death"?

Or the spoof showing Batman as a video-game addict in the Batcave?

The Caped Crusader is just soooo much fun to mock. Here's a sequel to that last one, the hero-as-gamer farce...

 

  --Geoff Boucher 

RECENT AND RELATED

Batman watergun

Top 10 vintage Batman toys...including a somewhat lewd watergun 

Gary Oldman: Cameras rolling next year on new Bat-film

Gotham sings! Listen to the new Batman musical

Adam West talks about cat-scratch fever

Joker creator Jerry Robinson on Gotham's golden age


Next 'Batman' film on track for 2011 release?

July 24, 2009 | 12:40 pm
Gary_oldman_dark_knight_5_

Gary Oldman is at again. The actor shocked Comic-Con attendees in San Diego this morning when he revealed that the next film in the "Batman" franchise was to start filming in 2010, and potentially be released in 2011.

Oldman, who was at Comic-Con to promote "The Book of Eli," was reportedly asked by a Comic-Con attendee when the next film in the series would begin shooting. He told the crowd that the film would go before cameras in 2010, and then quickly added, "But you didn't hear that from me," which we at the Hero Complex HQ learned via the tweets of our Comic-Con reporter Denise Martin.

There didn't appear to be any other "Batman"-related spoilers out of Comic-Con this morning. Oldman portrayed Police Commissioner Gordon in the first two films directed by Christopher Nolan, 2005's "Batman Begins" and 2008's "The Dark Knight." 

This isn't the first time Oldman has possibly spoken out of turn about a forthcoming "Batman" film. While promoting "The Dark Knight," Oldman was quoted as saying, "Maybe we don't need the Joker. Because we'll have the Riddler."

Nolan is currently busy filming "Inception," a Warner Bros. sci-fi picture starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Ellen Page.

--Todd Martens

RECENT AND RELATED

Jolie How to follow "Dark Knight"? Angelina Jolie as the purrrrfect Catwoman

"Dark Knight" producer talks about the next Batman film

Heath Ledger's Oscar won't go to his parents after all

Christopher Nolan on his favorite scene in "Dark Knight"

Heath Ledger and his "gentle way" remembered

Photo credit: Warner Bros.


Gotham sings! Batman musical will premiere at Comic-Con

July 19, 2009 |  7:38 am

Jon Burlingame checks in with this fun piece on a catchy new tune echoing in the Batcave. And, no, it's not Adam West and the Batusi or Prince's "Batdance."

Ready for a superhero musical? Usually the answer is, no, no we're not. There’s been only one superhero musical of note: “It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s Superman,” which didn’t last four months on Broadway in 1966.

Admittedly, $40 million is being spent on “Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark,” coming to Broadway next year. But even with Bono and the Edge doing the music, that’s a creative crapshoot, as conventional Music Meister in the grips of Batman wisdom has always been that it’s enough trouble persuading audiences to believe in flying crime-fighters wearing colorful tights, much less breaking into song.

Still, the producers of “Batman: The Brave and the Bold,” the animated series that airs Friday nights on the Cartoon Network, are confident enough in the first Batman musical -- titled “Mayhem of the Music Meister!” -- which they’re unveiling to fans Friday at Comic-Con International in San Diego before its airing when the series returns for its second season in the fall.

In this most lighthearted take on the Caped Crusader since the Adam West series of the 1960s, “How I Met Your Mother” star (and upcoming Emmy host) Neil Patrick Harris voices the villain the Music Meister.

“It was always in the back of my mind that a musical would be a fun thing to do,” says James Tucker, producer of the series. A musical theater fan, he enlisted his co-producer Michael Jelenic to collaborate. Together, they came up with what Tucker calls “a bare-bones framework of a plot to hang the songs on. We didn’t want to do ‘Les Miserables' or ‘Sweeney Todd.’”

Batman, along with fellow heroes Green Arrow, Aquaman and Black Canary, and villains Gorilla Grodd, Black Manta and Clock King are powerless to resist the voice of the Music Meister, who naturally plans to control the world. Over five songs that occupy 18 of the show’s 22 minutes, the plot is revealed and foiled, along with a love-story subplot that fans of the DC comics will recognize and maybe even find touching.

This all started in July of last year, when Tucker and Jelenic met with “Batman” composers Lolita Ritmanis, Michael McCuistion and Kristopher Carter (all of whom won 2001 Emmys for scoring an earlier animated series, “Batman Beyond”). It would be up to the trio -- who together have scored hundreds of Warner Bros. superhero cartoons dating to 1991 -- to make it all work musically.

Ritmanis, who had the most experience working on musicals, acknowledges that she was “a little gun-shy,” knowing Music Meister belting that they had only three months to do what often takes a year of writing and rewriting. Yet, she says, “for us to be in on the beginning phase was thrilling, because usually we come in at the very end,” providing underscore that punches up the action dramatically or quietly supports the dialogue.

“They knew what they wanted the songs to do,” McCuistion adds. All three composers were impressed that the producers were following musical theater tradition in using songs to move the story forward. Tucker and Jelenic -- neither of whom had any songwriting experience -- went off to write lyrics, which the composers later set to music within specific musical styles.

Says Jelenic, “When we conceived a musical, we didn’t necessarily want to wink at the audience. We wanted it to stand on its own -- yet some of the lyrics are really absurd.” He hopes it works for audiences on multiple levels.

The opening song, which introduces the Music Meister, needed to be part “Guys and Dolls,” part Stephen Sondheim, McCuistion said. Ritmanis got to write the big ballad “If Only,” in which several characters yearn for their imagined soul mates.

The biggest challenge was the finale, which Tucker says demanded “a big, over-the-top, Busby Berkeley feel,” yet at the same time, Carter adds, needed to function as a grand “tango of death.” There is also a rock number and a funny patter song in which all the villains complain about Batman.

Harris was everyone’s first choice as the villain, since he had done voices for “Justice League” and “Spider-Man,” and proved his musical mettle onstage in such productions as “Rent” and “Assassins.” Tucker saw him in “Sweeney Todd” at the Ahmanson Theatre in 1999 and remembered how good he was.

“Eighty-five percent of this episode is music,” says casting and voice director Andrea Romano, “so we Music Meister jumpsuited needed somebody who was going to be able to handle this quickly and easily. Neil just flew through his session. It really was a perfect marriage of role and actor.”

Luckily, most of the other regulars were talented singers, notably Grey DeLisle (Black Canary) and James Arnold Taylor (Green Arrow). Diedrich Bader, who regularly voices Batman, stepped aside for Jeff Bennett to sing in the final number.

Tucker thinks this concept would never have worked on the earlier Warner Bros. comic book shows, many of which he worked on as designer, storyboard artist and director. All were too serious in tone. “Brave and the Bold” was just different enough.

“We wanted to free up Batman to be fun again,” he says. “This show has been so wild and out of the box that we can do a musical and no one will question it at all.” The studio even agreed to hire a 28-piece orchestra, similar to that granted to the composers of “The Simpsons” and “Family Guy” but nowadays considered a luxury in children’s animation, which is usually scored with synthesizers and samplers.

Could the Music Meister return in another Batman musical? Ritmanis answers with a smile: “I have an idea that maybe he could return on Broadway.”

-- Jon Burlingame

RECENT AND RELATED

Bob Holiday as Superman on Broadway

Heroic history: A look back at Superman on Broadway in 1966

"Brave and Bold" series is high-polish fun for whole family

Adam West, back in the Batmobile and talking "Family Guy"

Superman and Batman, "Public Enemies" animated

Top 10 vintage Batman toys, for your inner Boy Wonder

Bono goes Broadway: "I'm more of a Green Goblin"

Julie Taymor reveals her wall-crawling plans for Broadway

"Toxic Avenger: The Musical" is a valentine to haz-mat N.J.

Credits: Batman images: DC Comics and Cartoon Network. Superman: Los Angeles Times.

UPDATE: This post had one incorrect title earlier, it has been fixed because we all deserve second chances.


'Public Enemies' ... no not that one, the one with the superheroes

June 30, 2009 | 11:01 am

Public Enemies logo

I saw Michael Mann's "Public Enemies" a few weeks ago and I have to say I walked out of the screening feeling disappointed.

I'm a big Johnny Depp fan (who isn't?), I love the source material (the brilliant book of the same title by Brian Burroughs) and I consider director Mann to be one of the most gifted filmmakers in Hollywood. But even with all that (or maybe because of all that) I didn't get everything I needed out of this efficient but oddly inert period piece. I'm also thinking that maybe Christian Bale should make fewer movies. Christian, how can we miss you if you won't go away?

There's a different "Public Enemies" on the horizon and it doesn't involve Jack Sparrow and John Connor squaring off with tommy guns. In September, DC will release  "Superman/Batman: Public Enemies," the sixth release in the series of PG-13 animated films that are made for the home video market. Today we have some advance art from the film.

Batman from Public Enemies 

The film is based on the 2003 comics saga by writer Jeph Loeb and artist Ed McGuinness. It was very popular, but I have to say it just wasn't one of my favorites ... maybe I need to lower my standards. Or stop writing about movies with this title. (Looks like there was a 1941 comedy about newspaperman called "Public Enemies" that had William Frawley, Fred from "I Love Lucy," as a co-star ... hmmmm.)  

Here's a blurb from DC: 

In the film, United States President Lex Luthor uses the oncoming trajectory of a Kryptonite asteroid to frame Superman and declare a $1 billion bounty on the heads of the Man of Steel and his “partner in crime,” Batman. Heroes and villains alike launch a relentless pursuit of Superman and Batman, who must unite – and recruit help – to stave off the action-packed onslaught, stop the asteroid, and uncover Luthor’s devious plot to take command of far more than North America.

The movie reunites the lead voices of Superman, Batman and Lex Luthor from the landmark "Superman: The Animated Series" and "Batman: The Animated Series." Tim Daly ("Private Practice"), Kevin Conroy ("Justice League") and Clancy Brown ("The Shawshank Redemption") reprise their roles as Superman, Batman and Lex Luthor, respectively.

Superman from Public Enemies 

There are a lot of extras on the DVD for "Superman\Batman: Public Enemies." Among them are a behind-the-scenes look at the upcoming "Blackest Night" comics event; "A Test of Minds," a featurette with Loeb looking at the relationship between the Man of Steel and the Caped Crusader; and “Dinner with DC: With Special Guest Kevin Conroy,” with the voice actor sitting down with voice director Andrea Romano, DC's Gregory Noveck and the very gifted producer Bruce Timm. There's even more on the Blu-ray, including bonus epsiodes of "Justice League" and "Justice League: Unlimited."

-- Geoff Boucher 

RECENT AND RELATED

Jerry Robinson Joker creator Jerry Robinson reflects on Gotham's golden age

Wonder Woman's Keri Russell is 'a tourist' with a tiara

Ode to Carmine Infantino, the flashiest artist of the silver age

David S. Goyer on film future of Green Lantern and Flash

Fallen 'Heroes': Jeph Loeb and Jesse Alexander fired 

VIDEO: Batman and Superman fight ... to the death

DC sends Superman into space and gives Batman his last rites

Artwork courtesy of DC Comics. Jerry Robinson photo by Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times.


No. 1 sci-fi woman of all time? Ripley, believe it or not

June 8, 2009 | 12:38 pm

I'm a big fan of lists, so is Jevon Phillips, a star contributor here at Hero Complex. Here's his take on a recent tally of the women of sci-fi....or is that sigh-fi? -- G.B.

Alien3_jgm1vfnc

As usual, there's a lot to dispute about anyone having a top so-and-so list, but Totalscifionline.com's 25 women who shook up sci-fi isn't too startling. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "Battlestar Galactica" and "Star Trek" are the only franchises with multiple entries on the list (and rightfully so). Sigourney Weaver's Ellen Ripley of "Alien" fame was named First Lady of Sci-Fi.

Of course, there were parameters, which the site laid out like so:

We've limited ourselves to TV and film - SF and fantasy literature probably warrants a further list all of its own - and in those instances where multiple actresses have portrayed a character, we’ve written who we believe gave the most definitive performance in brackets. No doubt there are many characters you feel we’ve left off.

Yeah, yeah -- and the site does include a more in-depth examination of each choice. There will be debate over ones who didn't make it. I really like River Tam on "Firefly" -- but it was short-lived -- and the women of "Cleopatra 2525" and Carrie-Anne Moss as Trinity in "The Matrix" and ... well, let's stop there.  And there may be some on the list who deserve to be higher. Wonder Woman and Xena, 22 and 23? Hey, I like Leeloo and Claire bear, but not over those two icons.

Again, it can be debated (Lois Lane! "Bionic Woman!") until we're all breathless, but give the site credit for taking on the task. Here's their final list. Let the comments flow.

The 25 Women Who Shook Sci-Fi:

1) Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver, "Alien" series)

2) Buffy Summers (Sarah Michelle Gellar, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer")

3) Starbuck (Katee Sackhoff, "Battlestar Galactica")

4) Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson, "The X-Files")

Leia3_hc124ekf 5) Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton, "Terminator," "T2")

6) Princess Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher, "Star Wars" series)

7) Rose Tyler (Billie Piper, "Doctor Who")

8) Sam Carter (Amanda Tapping, "Stargate SG-1")

9) Nyota Uhura (Nichelle Nichols, "Star Trek")

10) Leeloo (Milla Jovovich, "The Fifth Element")

11) Claire Bennet (Hayden Panettiere, "Heroes")

Storm3_fxchkvke 12) Storm (Halle Berry, "X-Men")

13) Pris (Daryl Hannah, "Blade Runner")

14) Catwoman (Michelle Pfeiffer, "Batman Returns")

15) Barbarella (Jane Fonda, "Barbarella")

16) Sarah-Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen, "The Sarah-Jane Adventures" / "Doctor Who")

17) Mikaela Banes (Megan Fox, "Transformers")

18) Susan Ivanova (Claudia Christian, "Babylon 5")

Xena3_g2miceke 19) Number Six (Tricia Helfer, "Battlestar Galactica")

20) Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew, "Star Trek: Voyager")

21) Willow Rosenberg (Alyson Hannigan, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer")

22) Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter, "Wonder Woman")

23) Xena (Lucy Lawless, Xena: "Warrior Princess")

24) Sydney Bristow (Jennifer Garner, "Alias")

25) Marina (Stingray)

-- Jevon Phillips

Photo credits: "Aliens" - 20th Century Fox. "Star Wars" - Lucasfilm Ltd. "X-Men" - 20th Century Fox.  "Xena Warrior Princess" - Reuters.

RECENT AND RELATED

Wonder Woman by Alex Ross

Beyonce wants to lasso the role of Wonder Woman

Princess Leia strikes back at 'Star Wars' and George Lucas

A Whedon-less Buffyverse continues

Starbuck speaks! Katee Sackhoff on the final days of 'Battlestar Galactica'

Lights, shining on Wonder Woman

Dan Akyroyd says Sigourney Weaver ready for "Ghosbusters 3"


Batman's bad day, continued...

May 26, 2009 |  9:40 am

Remember the "Batman's Bad Day" video? Here's the silly sequel...

 
 

These "Batman-the-sad-sack-mortal-in-a-world-of-superheroes" spoofs never get old. Or do they? Hmmm.

Seen any good fan videos lately? Leave a link in the comments section, and I'll put the best ones up.

MORE RANDOM SILLINESS

Batman watergun VIDEO: Batman vs. Superman...to the death 

<< Top 10 vintage Batman toys...including a somewhat lewd watergun

VIDEO: "SNL" flashback, superhero party circa 1979

VIDEO: Come out of the cave! Batman is addicted to videogames 


Happy birthday to Carmine Infantino, the flashiest artist of the Silver Age

May 24, 2009 |  3:56 pm

If you read DC Comics in the 1960s and '70s you were probably looking at images drawn by Carmine Infantino or influenced by him. Just as Jack Kirby was the signature force at rival Marvel Comics, Infantino was an inescapable presence at DC, where the Space Age brought a new science-based, cerebral tone that fit his angular style and sleek, kinetic flair.

Infantino was so adept at creating striking images that, after Marvel's failed 1967 attempt to steal him away, the veteran went on to become DC's artistic director ... then editorial director ... and then publisher. One of his first moves in the top post: luring Kirby away from the House of Ideas and onto the DC roster. Don't think for a minute that talent doesn't recognize talent.       

Infantino is celebrating his 84th birthday today and here at the mighty Hero Complex we thought that would be a wonderful excuse to dip into the vault and reflect on his singular style. Infantino's career stretched out six decades but it was his Silver Age work on Batman, Adam Strange and, especially, the Flash, where his elegant lines and eye-catching composition made for a special kind of magic.       

Flash 123 Flash 174 Detective Comics 329 Mystery in Space 75 Detective 339 Flash 163 Batman 171 Flash 135
Detective 347 Detective 365 Flash 105 Flash 131 

--Geoff Boucher

Flash by Alex Ross David S. Goyer on Green Lantern and the Flash as film franchises

Shhhh...Grant Morrison is "deeply involved" in "The Flash" film

For you inner Boy Wonder: Top 10 vintage Batman toys

Adam West, back in the Batmobile

VIDEO: Batman and Superman fight...to the death!

Silver Age memories: Fred Hembeck reeling in the years

Illustration: The Flash. Credit: Alex Ross / DC Comics  


Batman's got game

May 22, 2009 |  9:51 am

Video game addiction is a serious problem in America....even in Gotham City.


-- Geoff Boucher

MORE RANDOM SILLINESS

Batman watergun VIDEO: Batman vs. Superman...to the death 

Top 10 vintage Batman toys...including a somewhat lewd watergun

VIDEO: "SNL" flashback, superhero party circa 1979

VIDEO: Mr. T talks smack to Superman

VIDEO: "Watchmen," now Saturday morning safe


Top 10 vintage Batman toys, for your inner Boy Wonder

May 11, 2009 |  1:26 pm

 Today we have a special treat for you here on the Hero Complex. We've been impressed with the serious fanboy obsessiveness of the Bat Blog, a colorful corner of the Internet devoted to the Caped Crusader and the mountain of collectibles that bear his pointy-eared visage. So today we venture into the Batcave and turn the Complex over to collector expert Tommy from Bat-Blog, for a guest column: The 10 coolest vintage Batman toys. It's a great list -- although we're not quite sure what's going with that water gun...

Toy 10 - Batman Water Gun10. 1960s Batman Figure Water Gun

This vintage Batman toy is a total blast. It's a 1966 Batman plastic toy water gun, released the same year that Adam West debuted in Batman's cape and cowl on television and also hit theaters with the tie-in film.

This item was created in a way more innocent time and I bet they never gave any thought at all about where they had placed the trigger for this toy. For that matter, they probably didn't even care about where the water plug was either.

As you can imagine, Batman collectors really love this item for its kitsch appeal and because it's really Toy 9 - Friction Tin Batmobile funny.

9. Battery-Operated Bump-N-Go Batmobile

It would be totally impossible to do any Batman toy list without mentioning the super-famous Batmobile. I mean, come on, that's one of the coolest pieces of bat-gear.

This toy was one of those battery-operated Bump-N-Go Cars. You flip the switch and this thing went nuts! It had sound effects and lights that blinked ... kids loved it.

Toy 8 - Bat-Projector
Today, it's a really great display piece and a fave of Batman collectors.

8. Chad Valley Give-A-Show Bat-Projector

You might remember these Give-A-Show toys from your childhood. I recall as a little kid having the one with Popeye, and I really loved it.

But this one was produced in Great Britain and is extremely hard to find here in the U.S. Heck, it's even hard to find in the U.K.!

I also included it on the list because the vintage-style graphics are so distinctive and eye-catching.


Toy 7 - Bicycle Ornament 7. Batman Bicycle Ornament

This is the 1966 official Batman bicycle ornament.

It was a hollow plastic figure of Batman that clamped on to your handlebars, and it had a spring that made the caped crusader go berserk as you cruised your neighborhood.

You know, there's something I've always loved about toys from this era and it goes beyond the actual product. At the time, the box-art often showed children using the product and really, really grinning.

I mean, this kid looks pretty darn happy with the product right here.


6. Japanese Tin Toy Batmobile

Toy 6 - Japanese Tin Toy BatmobileAnother Batmobile makes the list! 

This one is a Japanese friction-driven tin toy.

Now, why is this Batmobile "more cool" than the previous one?  Well, from a toy collector's point-of-view, it's a lot harder to find because it was "Sold Only in Japan." 

Toy 5 - Captain Action Plus, it's a unique variation. And OK, it's a sports car!


5 - Captain Action Doll Batman Costume

In 1966, to compete with Hasbro's G.I. JOE, the Ideal Toy Company created CAPTAIN ACTION.

The accessorized approach was very similar, but instead of being a military man, this captain could do his heroic duty in the costumes of various crime fighters and adventure stars.

There was Superman, Aquaman, Captain America, Flash Gordon, the Phantom and many more. Of course, our favorite Caped Crusader was the most popular!


 Toy 4 - Marx Friction Cars 4. Batman and Robin Friction Toy Cars by MARX

These wonderful toys from the past were made by the MARX Toy Co.

The cars are made of tin litho and the heads of Batman and Robin are vinyl rubber.

Nobody really knows why this pair is so extremely rare but expect to pay a few hundred dollars for them.

That is, if you can find them!


Toy 3 - Japanese Ray Gun 3. Japanese Batman Ray Gun

OK, I really don't need to explain why this item is so awesome ... just check out the picture.

First, it's a tin toy ray gun, which is always cool. Second, the graphics have Japanese lettering, very beautiful.

Plus, did I mention Japan?

Japan was among many countries that got caught up in the whole Batman TV show craze. In fact, there's an entire sub-culture of the toy collecting community that is totally devoted to these treasures.

And now the final two...

Continue reading »

'Joker' creator Jerry Robinson reflects on Gotham and the golden age

May 6, 2009 |  4:10 pm

Jerry Robinson

My interview with Jerry Robinson will run in this Sunday's Calendar section in the Los Angeles Times; here's an early look at it for you Hero Complex readers. This version is also longer than the one that will appear in print.  

Jerry Robinson, an essential figure in the early history of Batman and the American comic book, has many of his vintage ink treasures on display right now at the Skirball Cultural Center, among them his original 1940 sketch of the Joker, the cackling clown who today rivals Darth Vader and Hannibal Lecter in popcorn-movie villainy. But, in Robinson’s long and wandering career as an illustrator, this new, sleek installation is hardly the most important art show — that distinction belongs to a one-man exhibit he staged 70 years ago on a tennis court in the Catskills.

Robinson was fresh from high school graduation in Trenton, N.J., and saving his nickels for college, but his mother was worried about his health; he had been peddling (and pedaling) for weeks as a bicycle ice-cream salesman, and the wiry teen was under 90 pounds. At her insistence, he splurged on a visit to a leafy resort and arrived on its tennis court wearing a white painter’s jacket that he had decorated with his cartoons, the same sort that had made him a popular contributor to his school paper.

“That was a fad then, kids would get these linen jackets with all the pockets and personalize them with all this razzmatazz,” he recalled. “I was wearing mine as a warm-up jacket and someone tapped me on the shoulder and asked, ‘Hey, who drew that stuff?’ It was Bob Kane, who had just finished the first issue of Batman [which was "Detective Comics" No. 27]. I didn’t even know what that was. He showed me the issue that was on sale there at the local village. I wasn’t very impressed.”

Robinson, however, was impressed with Kane’s offer of a drawing-table job in New York. The teenager had been accepted at three universities and had planned on Syracuse, but after the serendipitous meeting, he phoned Columbia in the city and said he was on the way. Just to complete the giddy Frank Capra-esque sweep of the story, Robinson was spared a bus ride when a resort guest, the celebrated tenor Jan Peerce, offered him a lift.

Joker card sketch “I went straight from the resort to the city and I had never been to New York before and there I am arriving in a fancy car with a driver and sitting next to a man who would be a star at the Met,” he recalled. “It was the beginning of everything for me.”

Robinson shook his head and smiled. Born on New Year’s Day, 1922, the artist still has the lean physique, tan and alert eyes of a lifelong tennis player. He lives in Manhattan but, on a recent afternoon, he was visiting the Skirball to check on the exhibit of his collection of original drawings from the golden age of comics, an archive that, quite literally, is a lesson in the potential of trash to reach museum walls.

In the years after he met Kane, Robinson worked on “Batman” and other comics and made a habit of rescuing the drawings by his peers that routinely ended up in the garbage. Those poster-sized pages — many worth hundreds of thousands of dollars — make up the heart of the Skirball exhibit that is indelicately titled “ZAP! POW! BAM! The Superhero: The Golden Age of Comic Books, 1938-1950.” The exhibit, from the Breman Museum in Atlanta, runs through Aug. 9.

Jack Kirby, Joe Simon, Joe Shuster, Mac Raboy, Lou Fine and Robinson are some of the artists featured, a circle of young Jewish artists who became the basis for the ink-stained dreamers in Michael Chabon’s wistful, Pulitzer-winning novel “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay.” The Jewish heritage of those creators makes the exhibit a natural for the Skirball, said Robinson, who is now working on a book about Jewish traditions echoing in classic comics art.

Continue reading »

Paul Dini will be the Hero Complex guest at Festival of Books

April 25, 2009 | 11:55 am

Batman animated series The Los Angeles Times Festival of Books is underway and I'm headed over to Westwood shortly for all the excitement. It's a gorgeous day here in Southern California (big surprise) and the festival is one of the real sparkling events here every year so I'm looking forward to meandering the UCLA campus and meeting some authors and, hopefully, some of you readers as well.

I told you the other day about two stage discussions I'll be handling and now I have good news about a third: On Sunday at 3 p.m., I'll be joined on stage at the Los Angeles Times Pavilion by Paul Dini, one of the real nice guys in the entertainment industry and a man who has had success in animation, comics, sci-fi television and just about every other area of interest for Hero Complex readers.

I became a fan of his work with the wonderful "Batman: The Animated Series" and "Superman: The Animated Series," which, to this day, may be the most consistently satisfying incarnations of both those characters beyond the printed page. I'm not the only one who admires his labors: He has won the Eisner and Harvey awards and has a shelf full of Emmys.

I'll be chatting with him about his own projects, his collaborations with people including George Lucas and Kevin Smith, his stint with "Lost"  and his thoughts on this dazzling era we live in when, for better or worse, fanboy tastes seem to rule in Hollywood and beyond. The pavilion is free, as is the entire festival, so hope to see you there.

-- Geoff Boucher

Credit: Batman image courtesy of DC Comics and Warner Bros.


Harley in 'Arkham', Chris Evans in 'Losers' and Hugh Jackman on free comics in Everyday Hero headlines

April 20, 2009 |  8:47 pm

Fan favorite. Harley Quinn, or Dr. Harleen Quinzel, has never really been the main, go-to villain when fighting against The Dark Knight. But in Eidos' "Batman: Arkham Asylum," the squeaky-voiced Joker sidekick gets a new uniform and the spotlight.

Not that we do a lot of video game coverage on Hero Complex, but this tidbit looks interesting.

Harley, previous reports of back-breaker Bane and the Joker's orchestrations could make this an awesome game just for the storytelling experience alone!

* * * * * *

Chris Evans wants to be a Loser. "The Fantastic Four" and "Push" actor is apparently in talks to play Jensen, the tech guru on the special forces elite team that is the subject of the DC Comics/Vertigo comic "The Losers." Johnny Storm is on a comic-book role roll. Keep it up! [Mania.com]

* * * * * *

They're free comics, bub. In a couple of weeks, Free Comic Book Day arrives (May 2).  With a new video, Hugh Jackman is doing his part to make sure everyone knows. Of course it doesn't hurt that it is the day after his "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" movie hits the screens, but Hugh always seems so sincere!


And for those of you who want to know what you'll be picking up when you head to your local comic book store, there is a list online of all that'll be available, including the first-ever all-new title for a Free Comic Book Day: DC's Blackest Night #0, a prelude to their huge Blackest Night / Green Lantern event launching later this year.

-- Jevon Phillips


The Joker: Jerry Robinson reflects on a pop-culture wild card

April 2, 2009 |  1:55 pm

Jokerbolland I spent a lovely afternoon recently chatting with Jerry Robinson, one of the key figures in the long, rich history of Batman as a publishing sensation and pop-culture icon. It was Robinson, who started working on Batman in 1939 with Bob Kane and Bill Finger, who came up with the name "Robin" for Batman's sidekick, and he was creator or key contributor to the first and formative appearances of enduring characters such as the Joker, Alfred and Two-Face.  

I'm working on a long feature about Jerry and the wonderful exhibit now at the Skirball Cultural Center that uses his amazing collection of original artwork and vintage comics to frame the Golden Age of comics in the 1930s and 1940s. Jerry, now 87, gave me a tour of the exhibit and joined me for a bite to eat in the cafe as well. He's an extremely pleasant and insightful gentleman, and it was a real privilege to hear his stories about the days when the superhero concept first took flight in America.

Jeff Amlotte, who shoots and produces video for The Times, joined me, and he's put together an outstanding segment that weaves my interview with Jerry together with some amazing images. The video is so good I wanted to share it with you right away.


Check back here in the days to come for my article and, if you are in Southern California before the close of the exhibit Aug. 9, do yourself a favor and check out the impressive presentation that really speaks with the voice of this comics industry pioneer.

LINK TO EXHIBIT: "ZAP! POW! BAM! The Superhero: The Golden Age of Comic Books, 1938-1950"

-- Geoff Boucher

Joker artwork by Brian Bolland, courtesy of DC Comics

RECENT AND RELATED

Madoff_joker_2 Life imitates comics: Bernie Madoff as the Joker

The Joker, the unfunny history of a classic character

Heath Ledger's Oscar will not go to his parents after all

Christopher Nolan dissects his favorite scene in "Dark Knight"

Golden Age flashback: Marvel Comics house ads


Adam West gets back in the Batmobile

March 20, 2009 | 10:10 am

Adam_west_in_super_capers_jpg

Adam West barely recognizes Gotham City these days. “Batman is so dark now,” the 80-year-old actor said with a carefree chuckle. “The new films, they are grim, Gothic, full of explosions, mayhem. It’s the way of things, I suppose, the whole world seems darker.”

Well, the world was also heaving with angst back when West wore the cape for 26 months of prime-time silliness that began in January 1966. The native of Walla Walla, Wash., became an icon of camp with his masked-man deadpan and, for much of America, his version was the enduring definition of the caped crusader for decades.

That’s changed after the cemetery cabaret of Tim Burton’s Bat-movies and the ferocious revenge films of Christopher Nolan, whose “The Dark Knight” hit the billion-dollar mark at the box office a few weeks ago. Batman now seems closer kin to Dracula and Dirty Harry than he does Dick Tracy, but that don’t tell that West who is still dancing the Batusi and enjoying his busy role as an elder statesman of farce.

“I look at [it] this way: They’ve got the ‘Dark Knight,’ and I was the bright knight,” he said with the breathy, oddball diction that still keeps him in demand as a voice actor in animation. “Or maybe I was even ... the neon knight.”

Adam_west_in_batmanWest has an upcoming appearance on “30 Rock,” and there’s also his ongoing voice work on “Family Guy,” on which he plays Mayor Adam West; that namesake role, along with his portrayal of himself (albeit, a cat-obsessed version of himself) on the loopy Nickelodeon series “The Fairly Oddparents” has given him entire new generations of fans who have never seen the odd “Batman” series except maybe in snatches on YouTube. There’s also his voice roles in “Chicken Little,” “Meet the Robinsons” and animated Batman shows on which he played the mayor of Gotham, not its infamous mystery man.

“I’m like Madonna, I keep reinventing myself,” said West, who splits his time between Palm Springs and Sun Valley, Idaho. “I get called ‘Mayor West’ a lot in airports. I’ve been very fortunate to have a fan base that keeps growing and the work gets such a warm response and humor from people.”

This week, West is back in a familiar comedy vehicle -- literally. The new film “Super Capers,” yet another superhero parody (it follows “Hancock,” “My Super Ex-Girlfriend,” “Zoom,” “Sky High,” “Superhero Movie,” etc.), opened Friday and while its showing in just 80 theaters nationwide, it’s a memorable gig for West because it puts him back in the driver’s seat of his most famous ride.

“It’s a very bright comedy adventure. In it I’m a cab driver whose gotten a hold of the Batmobile and converted it to a taxi cab –- with air conditioning,” West said. “I meet up with a young guy who’s trying to be a super hero, played by an actor named Justin Whalin, who is quite good, and I’m able to drive him around on some of his misadventures.”

And how was it to sit in that grand old tail-finned time capsule? “It was great,” he said. “All those things that you do in a long career come back pretty easily once you get your hands on the wheel.”

Batman_and_robin_museum_of_radio_anThe film’s cast reads like a game of celebrity Mad Libs (Doug Jones from “Hellboy,” June Lockhart from “Lassie,” Tom Sizemore from the courthouse), but after years of comic book conventions and car shows West is more pleasant than proud. "It’s a family film which means you can take anyone from a 2-year-old to your great-granny to it and they probably would all enjoy it,” he said. “I’m happy to be part of that.”

Like William Shatner of “Star Trek,” West spent a considerable amount of his career feeling smothered by his short-lived but unforgettably eccentric TV role from the 1960s: “I remember the struggle that I had,” West said. “I mean, I did the Music Center in L.A., I did the Mark Taper Forum, I did regional theater, anything I could to keep working. I think it’s an actor’s obligation, if possible, to keep working, playing the instrument. But, yes, there were a lot of doors closed for a long time.”

Continue reading »


Advertisement

About the Bloggers



Categories


Archives