Hero Complex

For your inner fanboy

Category: L.A. events

Hero Complex will host 'Avatar' screening with James Cameron and film's stars

November 27, 2009 | 10:51 am

"AVATAR" COUNTDOWN: 22 DAYS

Our countdown coverage continues today with a bit of "Avatar" news that has is especially exciting for us here at the Hero Complex...

James Cameron and Sigourney Weaver Moviegoers everywhere will be able to see "Avatar" on Dec. 18 but the best place to see it that day will be at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, where director James Cameron and stars Sam Worthington, Sigourney Weaver and Zoe Saldaña will attend the screening and then be interviewed on stage by Hero Complex blogger Geoff Boucher.

The event is part of the awards-season screening series by the Los Angeles Times and The Envelope. You can find the full schedule of films and stage discussions right here. "Avatar" will be shown at 7:30 and the stage portion of the evening will begin afterward.

Zoe and Sam Check back here early next week for information on how to get tickets for the free event. First-chance opportunity for seating is for Hollywood guild members and Academy voters, but fans will be admitted into every screening as well. (There's more information on the screening series attendance policies here.)

Also, for this special night for sci-fi fans, Boucher will be picking some Hero Complex readers to attend the "Avatar" screening and have reserved seats waiting for them; interested fans just need to leave a message explaining why they want to see the  movie in the Hero Complex comments section and Boucher will pick from the most interesting or clever responses.

Boucher also interviewed director Henry Selick after a Nov. 2 screening of "Coraline" and will be handling the stage duties at two other upcoming Envelope screenings, both at the Landmark Theatre: "Crazy Heart" on Dec. 1 (with a panel of Jeff Bridges, Robert Duvall, Maggie Gyllenhaal and Scott Cooper), and "Up" on Dec. 14 (with director and writer Pete Docter).

RECENT AND RELATED

"Avatar"

Jim Cameron vs. Robert Zemeckis? The inside scoop on the rivalry

Txantstewä Fpìlfya -- that's how you say Hero Complex in Na'vi

"Avatar" as innovator: "We were in new territory ... there was no road" 

Jim Cameron, cinema prophet? "Moving a mountain is nothing" 

Avatar: The Game will follow its own path through the alien jungle

Sam Worthington looks for the humanity of "Avatar": "I don't want to be a cartoon"

Giovanni Ribisi loves Jim Cameron

James Cameron on "Avatar": Like "Matrix," it opens doorways

"Avatar" star Zoe Saldana says the movie will match the hype: "This is big"

Welcome to the jungle: Mixed reaction to "Avatar" trailer

Peter Jackson: Movie fans are fed up with the lack of original ideas


'Star Trek' exhibit, screenings and contests at Hollywood & Highland this weekend

November 12, 2009 |  4:56 pm

Gerrick Kennedy is a newcomer to the Los Angeles Times and the Hero Complex. He sent over this report on the big Starfleet geekfest this weekend in Hollywood. -- Geoff Boucher

Star Trek exhibit

"Star Trek" arrives on DVD and Blu-ray next Tuesday as one of the big home-video releases of 2009 and fans can get in on the Starfleet spirit this weekend with Trek Fest, four days of special programming being hosted at the already-running "Star Trek: The Exhibition" at Hollywood & Highland.

Jessica Smith, assistant manager of the exhibit, said fans will be treated to an impressive array of memorabilia. There is a collection of authentic "Trek" ships, set re-creations, costumes and props representing a huge swath of Federation history -- all five live-action television series and 11 films, including this year's sleek revival by dirctor J.J. Abrams, which grossed $385 million in worldwide box office.

Star trek bridge Smith said the exhibit offers a hands-on experience, which includes a chance to sit in Captain Kirk’s famed chair. “Everyone," she said, "gets really excited about that.” There is also a showcase of Madame Tussauds wax figure of Patrick Stewart on his Capt. Picard role from "Star Trek: The Next Generation," movie trivia challenges and film screenings. You can find a schedule of events below.

Rod Roddenberry, son of the late Gene Roddenberry, creator of the original “Star Trek” TV series, will be on hand for a DVD release party on Tuesday. Fans can bring their copy of the movie for Roddenberry to sign, but Smith said the exhibit won’t be selling copies on-site. Roddenberry continues to honor his late father’s legacy and said he often considers the reasons why the mythology endures the way it does.

“‘Star Trek’ has always been a lot more than just entertainment," Roddenberry said. "It’s not like 'Star Wars,' and no offense to it. Star trek has substance. It gives people hope for the future. It’s that great feeling that we’re going to actually survive and prosper. Not even the great storytelling, it’s the metaphors that we are worth saving.”

Smith also praised the optimism that is key to the franchise’s lasting appeal. “People are always fascinated by what’s going to happen in the future," Smith said. "People also like the utopian feel of [the story], especially in these times when so much rough stuff is happening."

Federation logo

STAR TREK: THE EXHIBITION

Through Dec. 27. Tickets are $16.50. TREK FEST runs Nov. 14 to 17. Tickets are $11.50 each day (it's $5 dollars off the standard exhibition admission price for this special four days of programming).

SATURDAY NOV. 14 (Spock look-a-likes admitted for half-off admission price): “Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan”: screenings at 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. and “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock”: screenings at 1 p.m. and 5 p.m.

SUNDAY NOV. 15 (Fans dressed as Klingons get half-price admission) “Star Trek: First Contact”: screenings at 11 a.m., 1 p.m., 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.

MONDAY NOV. 16 Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home”: screenings at noon, 2 p.m., 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.

TUESDAY NOV 17Star Trek” DVD release party: With an appearance by Rod Roddenberry, 6  to 9 p.m. and “Star Trek” (2009): screenings at  3 p.m., 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.

 -- Gerrick Kennedy

RECENT AND RELATED

Chris Pine wall

Starfleet goes Guantanamo? Next "Trek" may have torture themes

GENIUS VIDEO: William Shatner and the mountain of love

 Chris Pine takes command: "My name is not William Shatner"

"Star Wreck," from Finland with love

Leonard Nimoy: "Star Trek" fans can be scary

VIDEO: "Star Trek" meets ... Monty Python?

Leonard Nimoy seeks human life through photography 

William Shatner: "It's strange to say goodbye"

Simon Pegg: "I felt damn sexy" in Starfleet uniform

Photos: Exhibit photos from Tellem Worldwide. Chris Pine (Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)


Durga, Rama and the heroic roots of Indian comics comes to L.A.

November 2, 2009 |  6:00 am

Scott Timberg takes a look at an exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art that focuses on comics in the Indian culture from a fine-art perspective.  -- Jevon Phillips

Devi If you want to understand the meaning of comics in India, one place to start is a battered, chipped piece of sandstone from the 9th century. "Durga Slaying the Buffalo Demon," in which an eight-armed goddess impales a part-man, part-animal monster, doesn't bear any obvious resemblance to the X-Men or even the hipster graphic novels of Dan Clowes.

But this sculpture carved out of stone for purposes of worship represents an image that echoes through Indian culture -- and fuels some of the work created today on computer tablets by companies like Bangalore, India-based Liquid Comics.

"You're going to see visions of Durga all over the place," says Julie Romain, the curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art who organized the new show. "In both traditional and popular form -- movies, posters, comics."

She sees Durga and others as archetypes, figures that replicate through Indian society. The show, "Heroes and Villains: The Battle for Good in India's Comics," which runs through Feb. 7, looks at the transformative power of the imagery of Indian mythology: figures such as Durga, an often vengeful mother goddess who is one of several forms of India's supreme goddess Devi, as well as Rama, an avatar of Vishnu, and the mace-wielding monkey god Hanuman. (Though India is religiously diverse, most of the figures in the show come out of the Hindu tradition.)

Romain is not a fangirl but a scholar of classical Indian art, albeit one married to a comic-book lover going through what she calls a nostalgic period.

The show of 54 pieces she put together with paintings curator Tushara Bindu Gude is not comprehensive -- it doesn't look at the entirety of Indian comics and does not explicitly connect the images to the rest of Indian pop culture, whether Bollywood films or contemporary graphic design....

THERE'S MORE, READ THE REST

-- Scott Timberg

RECENT AND RELATED

India

GALLERY: Images from "HEROES AND VILLAINS" exhibit

Vigin gives it up, Liquid hopes for splash

'Virulents' the movie and the future of Virgin Comics

 Neal Adams: The future is now for motion comics

Stephen King and Vertigo dig into vampires

Artist at work: Dean Haspiel


Listen in on sound masters at the Academy's 'Horrorshow'

October 29, 2009 |  2:13 pm

Continuing our countdown to Halloween is another Susan King special touting what will be a cool look by many of the creators of audible terror at some of film's greatest scary tales -- from 1925's "The Phantom of the Opera" to "Poltergeist" and "The Thing." Just spotlighting another event for fear-seeking fanboys and followers of classic Hollywood alike. -- Jevon Phillips

Bram2_f46apjgy The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences explores the things that go boo  tonight at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater. But don’t expect any scholarly examination of the use of sound in horror films at "The Sound Behind the Image III: Real Horrorshow!"

"I think what it really amounts to is a ... horror movie night in the doors with friends, pizza and some horror movies," says the program host, veteran sound editor David E. Stone, who won an Oscar for his spook-tacular work on the 1992 horror hit, "Bram Stoker's Dracula."

"What we are going to do is have a handful of basically post-production sound people each introducing clips of a horror movie where we think there is something interesting to say on how the sound was treated," says Stone. "The most exciting role that sound can play in a horror movie is that enhances what you don’t see , and that adds to the suspense."

Sometimes silence is golden in horror movies.

"Scholars tell us sound was always thought about in silent films," says Stone. "It was made part of the story by the composition of music or the characters’ miming that they heard something."

To illustrate the point, Stone will be showing the famous clip from 1925's "The Phantom of the Opera" where Mary Philbin rips off the mask of the Phantom (Lon Chaney), and her silent scream literally echoes in audiences’ ears.

Besides Stone, Oscar-nominated sound effects editors Mark Mangini and Richard L. Anderson will offer a behind-the-scenes look at how the chilling sound effects were created for 1982’s "Poltergeist." Foley artist Vanessa Theme Ament will discuss the work of master foley artist John Post, who was responsible for the terrifying sound effects on John Carpenters 1982 "The Thing." And veteran Oscar-winning production sound mixer Gene Cantamessa and supervising sound editor Don Hall will discuss their work on Mel Brooks' classic 1974 horror spoof, "Young Frankenstein."

Doors open at 6:30 p.m. For more information, go to www.oscars.org.

-- Susan King

Photo: Winona Ryder stars as Mina Murray/Elisabeta and Gary Oldman stars as Dracula in "Bram Stoker's Dracula." Credit: Columbia Pictures

RECENT AND RELATED

The Haunting poster

"The Haunting" at the Alex Theatre on Saturday

'Splatter' is vintage Roger Corman, fresh on the Web

Guillermo del Toro talks "The Strain" and "Frankenstein"

Will the "Cloverfield" director ruin "Let the Right One In"? 

'Nosferatu' will prowl Disney Hall on Halloween night

Jessica Gelt on the set of "True Blood"  

Stephenie Meyer and the future of 'Midnight Sun'

VIDEO: Looking back: The legacy of Lon Chaney Jr.

What's worse than terrorists? Vampire terrorists 

That bites: Vampires used to get bricked


Rod Serling brought sci-fi into the light with 'Twilight Zone'

October 28, 2009 |  2:35 pm

Susan King, purveyor of many things film and television and beyond, falls into "The Twilight Zone" in her latest Classic Hollywood column as she gets out the word about The American Cinematheque Egyptian Theatre's tribute to this seminal series on Friday. She also talks a great deal about Rod Serling and the barriers that science fiction had to hurdle. -- Jevon Phillips

Rod

"You're traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind; a journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead -- your next stop, the Twilight Zone."

With those now-famous words, TV audiences 50 years ago were introduced to Rod Serling's breakthrough sci-fi series "The Twilight Zone." The series, essentially morality plays with evocative twists of fantasy, ran for five seasons on CBS -- and endlessly in reruns and the public imagination.

One week, viewers could be on a plane with a troubled young man who insists he sees a monster on a wing; another week, an elderly woman could invite death into her house. Performers included veterans such as Ida Lupino and newcomers like Robert Redford and William Shatner.

"He created a new form of television," said screenwriter Marc Scott Zicree, author of "The Twilight Zone Companion."

Science fiction was basically viewed as kids' stuff," he says. "There is a great interview that Mike Wallace did with Rod just prior to 'The Twilight Zone' where he says to Rod, 'Now you are doing this kind of kids' stuff, are you giving up writing anything important?' "

Read the entire article HERE.

-- Susan King

And here's a portion of a great "Twilight Zone" episode featuring a certain Starship Enterprise captain out of uniform.




RECENT AND RELATED

Rcrumb2 William Shatner on comics, fame and missing the 'Star Trek' movie

<< R. Crumb will get biblical at UCLA lecture on Oct. 29

Hollywood and science fiction, back to the future

Honored Horror: 'Night Gallery: Pickman's Model'

Other past Los Angeles events on Hero Complex

Photo: Rod Serling.  Credit: Museum of TV and Radio


U2 show at the Rose Bowl has a fanboy backbeat? [UPDATED]

October 26, 2009 |  9:47 am

Bono at Rose Bowl 2009 The U2 show at the Rose Bowl may have been billed as the concert of the century but this is also the "decade of the fanboy" and I couldn't help but notice some overlap between the massive music event and the universe we cover here at the Hero Complex.

I was only inside the venue for 10 minutes when I saw a familiar face in the churning crowd of the stadium's outer ring. I called out to J.J. Abrams and he smiled, waved and paused but really there was no way to stop and talk amid the crowd current. "See you inside," he said.

My son, Ben, who is 8, was attending his very first concert and he recognized Abrams but not as the creative brand behind "Lost," "Star Trek" and "Fringe": "Hey, he's the guy who played keyboards in that video 'Cool Guys Don't Look at Explosions,' right?" Um, wow, yeah, son, that is him.

We were lucky enough to get bracelets for the pre-show party at the Round Room, a swanky (but sweltering) VIP tent, and one of the first people we saw when we walked in was Ewan MacGregor, who was posing for pictures with some people. Ben was properly awed by the presence of Obi-Wan Kenobi and he was searching faces in the rest of the room in hopes, I suspect, that Chewbacca might be in some corner debating the merits of "Joshua Tree" with General Grievous.

The room was dotted with Hollywood execs (Tom Freston, Jimmy Iovine, Jeffrey Katzenberg) and glossy-magazine faces (Cindy Crawford, Paris Hilton) but they held zero interest for Ben. I ran into a friend, Nancy Sullivan, who said Chris O'Donnell, the former Boy Wonder of "Batman & Robin," was walking around, and not long after Colin Farrell, who probably doesn't put "Daredevil" at the top of his resume, sauntered in wearing a jaunty hat. I saw Michael Bay arrive with his statuesque date and walked over to say hello. I congratulated him on the commercial success of "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" (which still stands as the highest-grossing film of 2009) and got him to promise I could visit the set of the third robot film. Ben, hoping he might get to tag along, smiled like the Boucher family had just won the lottery.

It was time to head for our seats so I assumed the fanboy subplots were over but I was wrong. The startling set for the show, the cosmic claw, looks like something that Jack Kirby would have dreamed up. Bono mentioned Scarlett Johansson, star of "Iron Man 2" and "The Spirit," at one point but that was just a footnote. The great line came midway through the show (a show, by the way, that was absolutely astounding) when Bono began a tongue-in-cheek introduction of the band members. He described the Edge as a mad scientist and an alien visitor, whose mission has "gone where no other guitarist has gone before." I wondered if, somewhere in the crowd of 97,000, Abrams fell out of his seat at that line. Bono added, "He's Mr. Spock to us, he's the Edge to you."

Lovely. Live long and prosper, rock fans.

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Bono at Rose Bowl 2009

Ann Powers review: U2 bring an amazing grace to Pasadena

PHOTO GALLERY: U2's 360 Tour at the Rose Bowl

Amid the rattle and hum before U2's Rose Bowl show

Keef! Backstage at Scream 2009 with Keith Richards

Trent Reznor's "Year Zero" may become a TV series

Beyonce wants to lasso the role of Wonder Woman

Photos: Bono performs at U2's Rose Bowl show in Pasadena. Credit: Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times.

UPDATED: Fixed a misspelled name. And, no, it wasn't Bonno or Beno and Bobo.


Why the Scream Awards matter

October 26, 2009 |  5:59 am

SCREAM AWARDS, airing 10 p.m., TUESDAY, OCT. 27 on SPIKE TV
 
Scream logo I remember sitting at the MTV Movie Awards a couple of years ago and wondering when the show had gotten so sour. It was the year that host Sarah Silverman ridiculed Paris Hilton with raunchy glee and a boozy Jack Nicholson barely made it to the stage. Some of it was funny, sure, but coupled with the relentless, scripted promotion of upcoming films, the sneering personality of the show made for a completely joyless affair. After years of attending the event, I left that night thinking, "Where did all the fun go?"
 
The answer is the Scream Awards. The upstart show may have an ungainly (and somewhat misleading) name, but it also has the of-the-moment energy that once was a hallmark of the MTV Video Music Awards and a sense of wonder that has been missing from the MTV Movie Awards.

The 2009 Scream Awards air this Tuesday night and I don't know if the broadcast version will (or even could) have the same frenetic charm of the taping last weekend at the Greek Theatre, but I hope that it does well. This is a franchise that I'm rooting for, quite honestly, as a fan of sci-fi, comics, fantasy and all the other entertainments that veer toward the fantastic. The Scream Awards may sound like a horror gala, but it's more like Comic-Con International -- it's a big, noisy tent for any and all of the contemporary Hollywood enterprises that require a special-effects budget, but it also has enough sense of history to hand an on-air award to Stan Lee.



Last year, the Scream Awards earned  everyone's attention by getting George Lucas and Tim Burton in the house. This year they could have gone for a mainstream, play-it-safe approach to the program, but instead they gave stage time to comics writer Geoff Johns (a superstar in comics, to be sure, but not exactly a big draw for mainstream television audiences who think Sinestro and Kilowog sound like the new models from Hyundai) and brought in pirate king Keith Richards instead of, say, the Jonas Brothers dressed like zombies. Co-executive producers Michael Levitt and Casey Patterson aren't crazy enough to ignore mass appeal -- there was a nice big chunk of time devoted to "Twilight," which will bring a young female viewership to the broadcast, I suspect. 

 

I sat down with Patterson at the control board during part of the show and she was giddy. It was hard to hear her -- the crowd was cheering and the music was pumping -- and it occurred to me that maybe that's why they call it the Scream Awards. She told me that one of the reasons the show feels different than other trophy broadcasts is that, unlike most awards franchises, this one does not completely rely on all the scripted one-liners that are force-fed to presenters from a teleprompter. Here's hoping that trend catches on. We watched the show for a bit and she shook her head slowly. "Can you believe all of this? You were here last year, you know how great it was, but now it's just getting even better. I feel like people get it now, they know what we're trying to do and they know who we are."

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Keith Richards at Scream

Keef! Backstage at Scream 2009 with Keith Richards

"Galactica" stars bring "The Plan" to Scream Awards 

Scream Awards are a sign of the times

Why is Stan Lee signing Jack Kirby's artwork?

Depp: "There's a crack in my enthusiasm" for "Pirates" 4

Is the "Pirates" franchise sailing into rough waters?

James Cameron: Yes, "Avatar" is "Dances With Wolves" in space...sorta

Update on "Lobo," "Jonah Hex" and "Swamp Thing" films


'Nosferatu' will prowl Disney Hall on Halloween night

October 22, 2009 |  8:14 am

Now this should be good: F.W. Murnau's silent and sinister 1922 classic "Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens" will be screened on Halloween night at the Walt Disney Concert Hall with organ accompaniment by the accomplished Clark Wilson. You can find ticket and event info right here.

Nosferatu ship wide

So do you think Bella would have swooned if the vampire Graf Orlok (portrayed, above, with such weird verve by mysterious Max Schrek) had showed up for classes at Forks High School? For those of you that haven't seen "Nosferatu" (and can't make it on Oct. 31 to Disney Hall) you can actually watch the entire film on You Tube now.

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

The Haunting poster

"The Haunting" at the Alex Theatre on Saturday

Guillermo del Toro talks "The Strain" and "Frankenstein"

Will the "Cloverfield" director ruin "Let the Right One In"? 

"True Blood" pumping: HBO ratings soar

Jessica Gelt on the set of "True Blood"  

Stephenie Meyer and the future of 'Midnight Sun'

Hollywood's undying passion for fangs

Robert Pattinson has an Obi Wan moment

What's worse than terrorists? Vampire terrorists 

That bites: Vampires used to get bricked


'The Haunting' -- and the haunted -- at the Alex Theatre this Saturday

October 21, 2009 |  5:30 am

The Haunting poster You know what's scary than watching a screening of the "The Haunting," director Robert Wise's classic about paranormal activity? Viewing it while seated next to the darkened aisles in a haunted theater.

This Saturday, the grand old Alex Theatre in Glendale will present two showings (one at 2 p.m. and, for you braver souls, an 8 p.m. screening) of the spooky 1963 film that starred Russ Tamblyn, Julie Harris, Claire Bloom and Richard Johnson. (You can see the trailer below) But there's more: Michael J. Kouri, an author and  self-described psychic-medium and parapsychological investigator, will be on hand for to describe his repoire with ghosts and also show footage of a seance staged in the 84-year-old Glendale movie palace.

Kouri, has a number of books and the latest is “True Hauntings of Glendale & Beyond,” had a, um, spirited conversation with Hero Complex contributor Susan King regarding the five dozen ghosts or so that inhabit the Alex.

SK: So the Alex Theatre is haunted?

Michael J. Kouri: It’s very haunted. I grew up in Burbank and I used to go there to watch movies. I would often see a woman in the men’s room dressed as an usherette. And this is a weird thing to say, but I was at the urinal and somebody pinched me on my butt. I didn’t notice a ghost or anything. But while I was washing my hands I could see her reflection -- in the mirror behind me -- holding towels. Because I can see ghosts I could talk with her mentally, telepathically. I ask her her name and she didn’t say anything. Then I asked, 'Why are you here?' And she said, 'Because I like my job. Wouldn’t you stay where you liked your job?'

I told my girlfriend the story. We went back to our seats. We were seated in the balcony and saw a strange light like a ball of lightning come down the middle aisle like an usher was helping somebody to their seat. Denise, my girlfriend, noticed it. There was no one humanly attached with it, but she thought she saw a hand on the flashlight. I could see it, too. I could see the same woman holding the flashlight, but I could also see a man and a woman both beautifully dressed. The usher was helping the woman to her seat, which was a couple of rows back and across from us. There are so many spirits there, they are doing the things they were doing when they were alive.

SK: Wait, so ghosts don’t just haunt the place they died?

Kouri: It’s a misnomer that they only haunt the places that they die. The thing is, they go back to places they enjoyed themselves. That was a place where the usherette had a regular routine. Her clothing looked like the period of the 1930s. I am a historian and an antiques dealer so I know the styles really well. She’s not always there. She’s only there at night.


SK: Can you enlighten us about some of the spectral presences at the Alex?

Kouri: There is a couple that used to go to the theater every Tuesday. They always sat in the 13th row, in the center. They are often been heard talking during movies and programs. People will shush them and the man will turn around and say ‘’I can talk as loud as I want!’ and then he dematerializes from view. Many, many people have told me that story.

The last time I heard that story was when the Russian Ballet was in town. I think it was Christmastime a year ago and some people were sitting in that area and they kept hearing this couple talking. They couldn’t make out what they were saying but they could hear this bickering [about dinner]. The woman [I talked to] said she could only see the backs of heads because it was dark. She leaned over and said, "Could  you talk about your dinner some other time?" The man turned around and looked at her. She said the man’s eyes were glowing yellow like a cat. She was so scared she left her husband there [and went into the lobby for help]. But they were gone...

The Haunting cast 1963 SK: Truly creepy.

Kouri: I have interviewed people from the Gay Men’s Chorus that use that facility and they say they have seen a haggard woman in the dressing room and she’s always wearing a wedding gown.

I know that there was a woman who was an actress who came to Glendale in 1927. She and her fiancee performed at the Alex Theatre in a play. They rented an apartment in Glendale. She was stood up at the alter at a church right up the street on Brand Avenue and later she found out he had died in a car accident. She never moved on from that. She finished the play and went on to another city. Since her death, she haunts the basement of the theater. She’s seen wearing an old, torn-up wedding gown and her face is kind of gaunt and gray and her eyes are dark. She looks like a ghoul. I have seen her, too. I try to help spirits understand they are no longer in the living  and they don’t have to stay there. So I try to help them make peace with their existence.

"The Haunting" at the Alex Theatre, 216 North Brand Boulevard, Glendale. Tickets are $13.50; $9.50 seniors (65+) and $8 for full-time students with I.D. For more details on this event or the venue, go to the website of the Alex Film Society.

-- Susan King

RECENT AND RELATED

Phantasm red "Phantasm," the 30-year reunion interview 

VIDEO: 13 Wes Craven films reconsidered

A decade later: What is the legacy of "Blair Witch"?

"Exorcist" director Friedkin: The 13 movies that scare me 

VIDEO: Looking back: The legacy of Lon Chaney Jr.

"Nightmare on Elm Street" claws its way back to screen

Maggot vomit? Sam Raimi dragged his star through hell

'Black Lagoon' and 'Frankenstein' among 13 planned remakes

Wes Craven on the "inheritance of violence"


R. Crumb will get biblical at UCLA lecture on Oct. 29

October 15, 2009 | 10:48 am

Tickets are now on sale for "An Evening with R. Crumb" at UCLA's Royce Hall on Oct. 29, an event that ties into the iconoclastic cartoonist's exhibit at the Hammer and his intriguing (and provocative) new hardcover "The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb."

Here's a blurb from the museum about the exhibit (which begins Oct. 24 and runs through February) and a few of the pieces that will be on display. 

The Hammer Museum presents seminal comic artist R. Crumb’s adaptation of the first book of the Old Testament, the Book of Genesis. Crumb has spent the last five years on this incredibly ambitious endeavor. The exhibition features 207 individual, black and white drawings incorporating every word from all fifty chapters, as well as a cover, title page, introduction and back cover. Each drawing contains six to eight comic panels illustrating the stories of Adam and Eve, Noah’s Ark, Sodom and Gomorrah, and more. Using his signature bawdy style, Crumb’s version of the Book of Genesis puts an entirely new twist on the Bible... 

Crumb 1 

Continue reading »

Ray Bradbury brings his 'Dark Carnival' to Santa Monica on Oct. 24

October 8, 2009 |  5:27 pm


Ray Bradbury painting

Meet Ray Bradbury, the illustrating man.

The 89-year-old dreamer is renowned as a lion of literature, of course, but it's his longtime pursuit of the visual arts that will bring him to the Santa Monica gallery called Every Picture Tells a Story on Oct. 24. Bradbury will be there to unveil a new giclee print of an evocative oil painting that he completed back in 1948 and has come to refer to as "Dark Carnival."

Dark Carnival cover "Painting has been part of my life since I was a child," Bradbury told me Thursday when we spoke by phone. "My Aunt Neva went to the Art Institute of Chicago and she took courses there and she took me to see the paintings. I began to paint in the 1930s and 1940s and I did a lot of amateur work over the years. I visited art galleries everywhere I went in the world."

It was restless imagination that put the brush in Bradbury's hand most often, but in the case of the midnight vision shown above, he reached for canvas with a measure of frustration. It's also no coincidence that the moody piece shares the name of the author's first book, which was published in 1947, when Bradbury was 27.

The collection of 27 short stories (which had a print run of about 3,100 copies) was clearly a proud career moment for the young Illinois native but he still got a sour feeling whenever he looked at the cover -- he just couldn't stand the cover by George Burrows, a composition with primitive masks that you can see here on the left.

Dark Carnival cover "I didn't like the original cover that was on the book when it came out so I designed my own. I made this painting and hoped that someone would use it as the cover in the future," Bradbury explained. (He eventually got his wish, as you can see with the 2001 Gauntlet Press special expanded edition of "Dark Carnival," shown here on the right.)

Bradbury is such a visual writer, I asked if through the years he found himself creating stories to go with his paintings, or vice versa.

"My artwork doesn't inspire my writing, it's my writing that inspires my artwork," said the author of "Fahrenheit 451" and "The Martian Chronicles." "All of my stories are combinations of metaphors, visual metaphors and poetry.When I was in my teen years, I tore pictures out of magazines and wrote prose poems about them. And my painting is a prose poem written about itself. My stories don't influence that, they are separate, but other people's pictures and paintings do."

This is the third Bradbury painting that has been revived in this fashion by the gallery and, with its primal energy, blustery twinkle and midnight tremble, I'd say it's the best one, too. (See if you agree, the other two prints are here.) For many years, the "Dark Carnival" painting (which, technically, is an untitled piece, but if Bradbury calls it "Dark Carnival," well, that's good enough for me...)  was in the collection of the author's longtime friend, the late Forrest J. Ackerman, but now it is owned by Donn Albright, the noted Bradbury scholar and bibliographer.

Every Picture Tells a Story had the painting photographed and printed on prestige-quality paper. The edition is limited to 200, each signed by Bradbury. The prints are 18 inches by 24 inches and cost $300. Bradbury will attend the public reception at the gallery (1311-C Montana Ave. in Santa Monica) at 4 p.m.; autographed books and items will be sold. (He will not, however, be signing items at the event).

After the art event, at 7:30 p.m., Bradbury will introduce a screening of the 1983 film "Something Wicked This Way Comes" at American Cinematheque at the Aero Theatre (at 1328 Montana Ave., just across the street from the gallery). Here's a trailer for that Disney film, which had Bradbury as the screenwriter adapting his own 1962 novel.


I plan to be at both events, hope to see some of you Hero Complex readers there....

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Fahrenheit 451 GN cover

"Fahrenheit 451" and the credibility of comics

PHOTO GALLERY: Bradbury's birthday at Clifton's

Ray Bradbury dreams of a different downtown

GUEST ESSAY: Searching for Bradbury

"Slaughterhouse 5" is on Guillermo del Toro's project list

Michael Chabon on "writers who can dwell between worlds"

Eoin Colfer will give "Hitchhiker's Guide" a new ride

H.P. Lovecraft and Hollywood, an unholy alliance?

Christopher Priest and his "Inverted World," revisited

 


 


This is the droid you're looking for: 10 questions with C-3PO actor Anthony Daniels

October 6, 2009 |  1:30 pm

Anthony Daniels

"STAR WARS: IN CONCERT," L.A. LIVE NOKIA THEATRE, OCT. 7-8

Anthony Daniels is one of the most famous voices of the "Star Wars" franchise thanks to his zesty portrayal of the persnickety droid C-3PO. Now the British actor is also becoming a face of the franchise as the narrator of "Star Wars: In Concert," which is touring arenas with more than 100 musicians, elaborate lighting and special effects, film props and, of course, the signature music of John Williams.

The tour just kicked off in Anaheim and this week it arrives in downtown L.A. at the Nokia Theatre. (You can find tour dates and ticket info here.) Hero Complex contributor Liesl Bradner caught up to Daniels; her interview is below. --Geoff Boucher 

LB: What would the "Star Wars" movies would be like without John Williams' music?

AD: I saw chunks of it in 1976 when I was dubbing my voice without sound. It wasn’t until George [Lucas] added a Stravinsky track that the scene came alive and suddenly you had a feeling about that particular scene. It echoed the loneliness and bleak setting of remote desert. Music is the absolute direct mouthpiece to your feelings and soul. It makes you feel something. It manipulates your feelings very quickly. I believe John Williams’ music in this case is within itself as much its own character as any of the other characters in "Star Wars."

LB: Do you play any instruments?

AD: Sadly no. But I do appreciate the music. It's so multilayered and every time I listen I notice how a new instrument struck me, like the trombone or piano.

LB: If "Star Wars" hadn't come along, what do you think you'd be doing right now?

AD: It came out of nowhere. And I didn’t want the job at first. I wanted only to be on stage, a serious actor. But some force came over me and changed my mind. Here I am 33 years later. I never, ever dreamed I’d be on stage in front of 14,000 people. All I ever wanted to do was act.

LB: Are you disappointed the franchise never went forward past the death of Darth Vader in "Return of the Jedi"?

AD: Certainly not. I was very happy with the original film ending with the destruction of the death star.

LB: What was it like to wear the suit?

AD: I got better and better at putting it on and off. I could do it in five minutes. I’m glad those days are gone. I was in it for 33 years. Now I’m thrilled to be standing on a stage in a neat dress suit made of wool and silk.

LB: How do you feel knowing that the droids are the only characters who appear in all six films?

AD: Actually, I was the only [actor] to appear in all of them. R2-D2 became fully digital in the last two films. So there was a lot of green screen in those last two. It's more fun to have someone there. The droids are prophetic characters that got pushed around.

LB: What's your favorite among the films?

Star Wars 1977

AD: The first [in 1977]. Because it had a simplicity and innocence. There were interesting characters and interesting situations and locations. A very direct and intelligent story.

LB: What would you say is the best part of the concert?

AD: That's tough to say. It's made up of parts. The sum is larger that the parts. The visual impact is palpable. The lighting, the scale of it, a three-story high LED with projected images. The arena was thrilled with the first note of music. It went straight into the "Star Wars" theme. From that moment on the audience was completely excited. Mouths were wide open.

LB: Does the symphony-type setting appeal to younger audiences?

AD: Most definitely. I met some people after the show and one was this 5-year-old boy dressed as Anakin, and I asked him what his favorite part of the show was and he said, "I liked the music -- I really liked the violin."  Plus, there is the exhibit with the props and costumes which is fun for them.

LB: What do you hope people will take away from this experience?

AD: A completely new look from a different direction from something audiences know very well. Hopefully it will evoke feelings about when they first saw "Star Wars." The story of faith, destiny, redemption and sin. People can revisit the movie and the music is synced live with images. John does a wonderful, rolling score of music that evokes classical styles and complements the movies. George asked him to write in this way. I hope that people will take away all sorts of elements of music and maybe they will venture to try Beethoven or Tchaikovsky or say, "Let's go to a concert where musicians pick up wood and string and brass and make music." The concert is a master class in showmanship and music.

-- Liesl Bradner

"STAR WARS IN CONCERT" TOUR DATES AND TICKET INFO

RECENT AND RELATED

Star Wars cast

A long time ago...the story of this photo

Yoda with coda: John Horn on "Star Wars: In Concert"

The latest scoop on "Star Tours" upgrade

U.K. grocery store underestimates the power of the Force

Look it's...Obi-Wan Obama?

The Rancor interviewed about his "grudge" against George Lucas

VIDEO: The tale of "Star Wars," as explained by a 3-year-old

A tauntaun sleeping bag? Only in your ice-planet dreams

Return of the "Chicken": Seth Green strikes back

EFX master John Dykstra on his fave "Star Wars" scene

Photo credits: Anthony Daniels photo courtesy of the actor's official website. "Star Wars" still (showing Daniels as C-3PO with Mark Hamill and Alec Guinness) and cast photo both rom Lucasfilm.


A real boy, seven decades later: Dick Jones, the voice of 'Pinocchio,' looks back

October 4, 2009 |  1:00 pm

Walt Disney's Pinocchio Next year marks the 70th anniversary of "Pinocchio," my favorite Disney film, and Dick Jones, the actor who gave voice to the beloved title character, will be a special guest at the Lone Pine Film Festival next weekend (Oct. 9-11).

If you're not familiar with that festival, it's got a wagon-wheel ethos with its emphasis on Old West fare, frontier imagery and the great old cowboy serials. So, um, how does the star of "Pinocchio" -- which is based on the 19th century Italian children's classic -- fit in with the campfire conversation?

That question is answered in this wonderful video, which was put together just for you Hero Complex readers by Don Kelsen, a veteran photographer at the Los Angeles Times who also happens to be an amateur authority on vintage westerns and saddleback serials. Great stuff, hope to bring you more retrospective videos like this one in the weeks to come.

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Walt Disney and Mickey Mouse

Pinocchio and wishing on a 70-year-old star

50 years later: "Sleeping Beauty" star dazzles D23 audience

D23: 'Lost' Mickey Mouse cartoon from the 1950s will be screened 

Johnny Depp "shocked and sad" over Disney decision

Who will Johnny Depp call Kemo Sabe?

Disney's D23 looks to future and celebrates past

John Hart, the "other" Lone Ranger, dead at 91

Gotham in wartime: A look back at Batman serials

Frank Coghlan of "Captain Marvel" serials dies at 93


Yoda with coda: 'Star Wars: In Concert' brings the Force to L.A. and O.C.

September 30, 2009 |  5:32 pm

Whatever they paid John Williams for the music he created for "Star Wars," it wasn't enough. The sound of the great space opera is as singular and powerful as its alien visions, maybe even more so in some instances. John Horn is back writing for the Hero Complex, he sent over this look at the new traveling "Star Wars: In Concert" production. -- Geoff Boucher  


With the pop culture landscape cluttered with things like "Star Wars" Lego pajamas, a Princess Leia slave costume (just in time for Halloween) and the long-ago-banished Star Wars Holiday Special,” is it any surprise that composer John Williams was a little nervous about a laser-filled "Star Wars" concert?

Williams has won five Oscars, a boatload of Grammys and, at 77, still stands atop Hollywood's movie score food chain -- he shares a screen credit on the new "Harry Potter" blockbuster. So when the producers of Star Wars: In Concert approached Williams several years ago with their plans for a live show that would wed Williams' symphonic compositions with "Star Wars" footage and rock 'n' roll arena staging, he hardly leaped at the chance.

"John was very reluctant in the beginning. He was very skeptical; he didn't want to do it," says Steve Cohen, the director of "Star Wars: In Concert." "His biggest concern was the quality of the performance."

It wasn't just that Williams wanted accomplished musicians playing his often-complex orchestrations. Lucasfilm, the company controlled by "Star Wars" creator George Lucas, also needed to be assured there wouldn't be dancing stormtroopers.

"We took a no-compromises position," says Howard Roffman, the president of Lucas Licensing. "John Williams and George Lucas shared exactly the same concern -- that the music had to be presented in the right way, with a great orchestra, and with great acoustics."

Four years later, it looks as if the conditions have been met.

After a two-performance tryout in London in April, "Star Wars: The Concert" is launching its national (and future worldwide) tour in Southern California this week. After performances at Anaheim's Honda Center on Thursday and Friday, the concert will be presented Oct. 7 and 8 at downtown's Nokia Theatre.

Star Wars 1977 

The roughly two-hour show represents an unusual combination -- for many "Star Wars" fans, perhaps the first time they'll be seeing a symphony orchestra. But don't expect contemplative silence between movements. Every instrument will be amplified (a lot), and in addition to the lasers, you'll see flames and smoke -- the staging is so elaborate, it takes 12 semi trucks to transport the show from city to city.

Belgium's Dirk Brossé will conduct an 86-piece orchestra (drawn from local musicians, the Boston Pops and the Philadelphia Chamber Orchestra) and an 60-voice choir performing a "Star Wars" montage that Williams assembled and, in some cases, re-orchestrated.

As the orchestra plays and the choir sings, a giant high-definition LED screen (measuring 60 feet wide and 35 feet tall) will show clips from all six movies, the footage matched to the music. The footage unfolds in rough chronological order but also is organized around musical themes -- a little romance here, the rise of the dark side there.

For the first time, audiences will be able to see a fully digital Yoda in "Star Wars: Episode 1 -- The Phantom Menace," as Lucas recently excised the poorly executed Yoda puppet that originally was part of the film. Anthony Daniels, who lent his voice to the golden protocol droid C-3PO in all "Star Wars" movies, narrates the proceedings.

"We tried to make a show that no one's experienced before," says Gregg Perloff, who is producing the program with Another Planet’s Spencer Churchill and Steve Welkom. "We wanted to put it together with a symphony mentality but in an arena with the scope of a rock 'n' roll concert."

The concert's targeted audience consists of three constituencies: "Star Wars" enthusiasts, older rock'n' roll fans looking for a new kind of live show, and, a distant third, classical music aficionados. "If you look at the numbers, there are a lot more people today consuming 'Star Wars' than consuming classical music," Lucas' Roffman says.

While it's certain those music devotees will be in the minority, the show's organizers are hopeful that the grown men who wear Darth Maul costumes to "Star Wars" conventions might somehow be smitten by an easy-to-digest taste of an adagio, glissando and rondo. "A lot of us are fans of symphonies but have never been to the symphony," Perloff says.



Director and designer Cohen, who recently put together Elton John and Billy Joel's "Face 2 Face" touring rock show, said he wasn't sure his combination of "Star Wars" music, film and staging would work until the show had its two-day preview in London.

"A concert is a solemn event in a lot of ways, so that was a risk," he says. But the audience -- which included Lucas -- responded favorably if not a bit subdued, Cohen says. "I'm hoping and praying that a lot of the audience reaction here will be a lot more vocal," Cohen says. Williams and Lucas were unavailable to comment, but both have endorsed the show. Lucas has licensed his "Star Wars" rights to Another Planet for the concert and maintains absolute approval and a cut of the ticket sales.

Lucas' Roffman says an integral part of the concert will be eight separate displays of "Star Wars" memorabilia, including costumes, props and Williams' sheet music, complete with handwritten notations. The never-before-shown selections, which will be exhibited in glass-enclosed cases placed inside the lobbies of the venues hosting the concerts, include costumes for Jedi masters Kit Fisto and Plo Koon and weapons and armor from the inhabitants of Coruscant and Tatooine. Two dozen videos, each running about eight minutes, will explain how movie sequences were made, from rough drawing to finished film.

But for all the digital trickery and futuristic hardware on display inside and outside of the auditoriums, "Star Wars: In Concert" is ultimately about the music and exposing a new audience to classical compositions.

"It's like getting kids to eat their broccoli," Daniels says of using "Star Wars" to expose classical music neophytes to what oboes, cellos and timpani sound like. "Put a little cheese on it, and they won't notice. People who come to this will realize that music does not just come off a silver disc or out of an iPod. I want people to see the work."

-- John Horn

RECENT AND RELATED

Star Wars cast

A long time ago...the story of this photo

The latest scoop on "Star Tours" upgrade

U.K. grocery store underestimates the power of the Force

Look it's...Obi-Wan Obama?

The Rancor interviewed about his "grudge" against George Lucas

VIDEO: The tale of "Star Wars," as explained by a 3-year-old

A tauntaun sleeping bag? Only in your ice-planet dreams

Return of the "Chicken": Seth Green strikes back

EFX master John Dykstra on his fave "Star Wars" scene

Photo credits: Lucasfilm.


Four to beam up -- 'Star Trek' and its designs on the future

September 28, 2009 |  6:13 pm

One of our resident Trekkies at the Los Angeles Times, Linda Whitmore, was on hand as four men who helped shape our perceptions of Gene Roddenberry's "Star Trek" in its many iterations took the stage in Hollywood to talk about their endeavors and what it took to make the visions real:

Long before there was Industrial Light & Magic, there was industrial lighting and papier-mache. When CGI was, well, science fiction, the men who created the unique look of the “Star Trek” series and movies were making chicken salad out of chicken-coop wire and plaster.

Sunday night at the Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, the Art Directors Guild honored four such men during "Star Trek: 45 Years of Designing the Future”:  John Jeffries (classic “Star Trek”), Joseph R. Jennings (“Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan”), Herman Zimmerman (“Deep Space 9”) and Scott Chambliss (“Star Trek” 2009).

Trek45-250jpg

“Our winky, blinky lights were two sheets of masonite with holes drilled in them and a rope on them, and  a grip pulled them up and down and it made the lights flash,” Jennings said.

While William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy were memorizing their lines, Jeffries, Jennings and Zimmerman were conceptualizing what a phaser would look like, what color the rocks on Talos IV might be and how to mount a tricorder on a strap. They know firsthand the trouble with Tribbles.

“The scenery had to be extra sturdy for Shatner to chew on,” quipped moderator Daren R. Dochterman of the Art Directors Guild.

Clips of the men’s work were shown and the panel talked about their memories of working on the show. The event was the prelude to the screening of the director’s cut of 1979’s “Star Trek: The Motion Picture,”  completed in 2001, and which Dochterman said was one of Robert Wise’s final projects. The director died in 2005.

In the original “Trek,” other planets looked like the soundstages they were, but back in the day, the show was state-of-the-art. The papier-mache "rocks" weren’t even painted – "Paint was too expensive," Zimmerman said – they were lit with different colored lights, so the same boulders could double as other planets.

It was interesting to see clips of “Amok Time” and “Metamorphosis” from the original series juxtaposed with clips from “Deep Space 9.” Watching Kirk and Spock with their first-generation gizmos, and then clips of "Voyager" (Kes, we hardly knew ye!) and “Deep Space 9” in which shape-shifter Odo, played by Rene Auberjonois, morphs from a piece of furniture into a humoid was like watching clips of Tiger Woods as a child, playing golf with plastic clubs, then winning the Master’s by a dozen strokes as a young pro. The talent is obviously there, but the technology enabled the art directors to totally bend reality.

“Gene [Roddenberry] had a lot of do’s and don’ts,” Zimmerman said. “One was you can’t go past Warp 10!”

Much was made of the budgets and time constraints production designers face when working on TV series. There’s a little more leeway in film, but within limits. Zimmerman said the 1979 “Trek” cost about $30 million, but the creative forces wanted to film another ending, which would have tacked an extra $2 million onto the cost.

Back then, Zimmerman explained, $2 million was a lot of money, but today …

“It’s craft services,” chimed in Dochterman. Said Zimmerman of graduating from “Deep Space 9,” set in the mid-23rd century, to “Star Trek: Enterprise,” set  in the mid 22nd, he was relieved  “to be designing a show only 90 years in the future.”

Jennings joked about developing five designs for a phaser, and the powers that be choosing one element from each of the five they wanted incorporated. By the way, in "Star Trek" parlance, when a rock or wall has “GNDN” painted on it, it merely means “Goes nowhere, does nothing."

Chambliss, the youngest and most restrained on the panel, commented briefly about conceptualizing the look of the 2009 “Trek” film. He was thinking about Nero’s ship one evening while chopping ingredients for dinner in his kitchen. Looking at the knife, he said, “That’s scary.” Then pointing the imaginary knife at his face, he said, “That’s really scary.” Hence the idea for the Romulan’s ship.

The theater was about three-quarters full (and I sure hope the guests came by shuttle craft, because between “Disco Fever” night at the Hollywood Bowl, and the Feast of San Gennaro just down the street, traffic was …. well, damn). The discussion was capped by a tribute reel compiled by Michael and Denise Okuda featuring the names of every art director and production designer who has ever worked on a “Star Trek” series or film. A separate reel of Harold Michelson, a production designer who died in 2007. The interview, from 2000, kept the audience in stitches as the self-effacing professional talked about being nominated for an Oscar for his work  on the 1979 “Trek” movie. He talked about dreading winning, because he didn’t want to stand up in front of all those people and say something. He didn’t win, but said he and his wife got a great meal out of the evening.

“Star Trek: The Motion Picture” came along at an inopportune time for some. “There was going to be another series,”  Jennings said. “It was going to be ‘Star Trek: Phase 2.’ We were two weeks from starting the new series, when someone said, ‘Let’s make a movie!’”

When the movie began, the biggest round of applause wasn’t for the stars, or even the art director, for that

Startrek1_gm1n1oke

matter. It was for composer Jerry Goldsmith’s dead-on score, which opens with the French-horn driven Klingon's theme. Reminiscent of a hunt, the film opens as the hunters become the hunted.


Not nearly as peripatetic as J.J. Abrams’ reboot this summer, “ST: TMP” borrows heavily from an original episode (“The Changeling”), in which artificial life forms confront their limitations and long for something beyond circuitry and binary logic. ("Open the pod bay doors, HAL?") But the film adds the beautiful Persis Khambatta (pictured right with Shatner, she died of a heart attack in her native India 1998 in her late 40s) and Stephen Collins — former lovers who demonstrate for “V-ger” the ultimate human emotion.

The film’s special effects are a pay grade above classic “Trek,”  but remember, between 1969, when the series was canceled, and 1979, “Star Wars” rewrote the rulebook. But asked how he felt about working as production designer for “The Wrath of Khan,” Jennings deadpanned, “It was a better show than the first one.”

--- Linda Whitmore

Photo: John Jeffries (classic “Star Trek”), Joseph R. Jennings (“Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan”), Herman Zimmerman (“Deep Space 9”) and Scott Chambliss (“Star Trek” 2009). Paul Cantillon / Lidec Photo; Second - William Shatner observes a mysterious change in Persis Khambatta as Stephen Collins and Leonard Nimoy watch in the background in Paramount Pictures' '"Star Trek: The Motion Picture." Credit: Paramount Pictures

RECENT AND RELATED

Chris Pine wall

Starfleet goes Guantanamo? Next "Trek" may have torture and terrorism themes

 Chris Pine takes command: "I am not William Shatner"

REVIEW: "Star Trek" star Chris Pine takes the stage in L.A.

VIDEO: "Star Trek" meets ... Monty Python?

Leonard Nimoy: "Star Trek" fans can be scary

William Shatner: "It's strange to say goodbye"

Simon Pegg: "I felt damn sexy" in Starfleet uniform

Eugene Roddenberry and the legacy of 'Star Trek'


Jigsaw, Michael Myers and Chucky team up for Universal Studios' Halloween Horror Nights

September 28, 2009 |  9:12 am

T.J. Kosinski is back as a contributor for Hero Complex, this time with a quick preview of the seasonal scares coming soon to Universal Studios Hollywood...  

Universal Halloween SawMaze 1 

Want to play a game? This October, Universal Studios Hollywood wants to take you on a hellish ride with Jigsaw, Michael Myers, Chucky and more as part of its Halloween Horror Nights. This year’s event, entitled "You'll Wish it Were Just a Movie," is the biggest in park history, and there will be some very familiar faces lurking in the dark corners of four new mazes.

“Our big vision was to take the most popular horror movies in the world and turn them into living horror movies that people get to experience,” said Universal's John Murdy, the longtime horror aficionado who directed, designed and wrote everything the audience experiences in those mazes.

The mazes are based on three major horror franchises -- "Saw," "Halloween" and "Child's Play" -- and "My Bloody Valentine," which hit theaters with a splatter in January.

As you might expect, Universal officials say this is the biggest and baddest edition of the fright franchise, which launched at the Universal City park in 1986 with sequel years in 1992 and 1997 through 2000. The event was revived as an annual tradition in 2006 and has been a potent draw in Southern California, explaining the calendar expansion this year to 16 horror-dedicated days, the most ever. 

For Lionsgate, which will release "Saw VI" on Oct. 23, the event is a fairly potent marketing opportunity, although the franchise is a killer all on its own; the worldwide box office for the films to date is $669 million, an impressive total considering the production budget for the first was $1.2 million and, reportedly, none of the sequels have cost more than $11 million to film.

In the "Saw: Game Over" maze, park-goers venture into the lair of Jigsaw, the demented and ingenious killer, and they dare to inspect some of his intricate death machines from the films, among them the razor-wire trap and the needle pit.

That may be the centerpiece attraction, but the other three mazes offer frights of different flavors.

Universal Halloween Containment Zone 

"Halloween: The Life and Crimes of Michael Myers" takes brave souls through the odyssey of the masked mass murderer who first appeared on screen 31 years ago and has proved himself a supernatural survivor after nine films (with a 10th reportedly on the way). "Chucky's Funhouse" brings back everyone's favorite demonic doll (five films from 1988 to 2004) and gives him an army of playthings -- think "It's a Small World" but with a body count.  "My Blood Valentine: Be Mine 4 Ever,"  keyed to the 2009 remake of the 1981 movie, digs deep into the horror of an abandoned mine where a pick-ax killer looks for unromantic revenge.

In addition to the mazes, there are six "scare zones" with varying themes -- two have "Saw" imagery (think pig-masked minions, like the one in the top photo); another is devoted to the zombie shenanigans of the 2004 film "Shaun of the Dead" -- and the park's signature back-lot tour has been refitted as “Terror Tram: Live or Die," with, you guessed it, a "Saw" theme. If you need a psychic break from the flood of arterial blood, there are also two ensemble performances: "The Rocky Horror Picture Show: A Tribute" and "Bill & Ted’s Excellent Halloween Adventure."

After all that, if you make it out in one piece, you might feel the true weight by Jigsaw’s famous words: “Congratulations. You are still alive. Most people are so ungrateful to be alive, but not you. Not anymore ...”

Halloween Horror Nights event dates are: October 2-3, 9-11, 15-18, 23-25, 28-31. The event will begin nightly at 7; closing hours vary by night throughout the event. 

TICKETS AND MORE INFORMATION

-- T.J. Kosinksi

RECENT AND RELATED

Sam Raimi at the door

Maggot vomit? Yes, Sam Raimi dragged his star through hell

Guest blog: Jaime King hit bottom (literally) on "Mother's Day" set

"Saw" scream-queen Shawnee Smith's Web scare 

Guest rant: Horror remakes need to aim higher

Horror! Moviegoer stabbed at "My Bloody Valentine"  

No rest for the wicked: Rob Zombie explains his sleepless life

"Nightmare on Elm Street" claws its way back to screen

Eli Roth's scariest plan: I almost made a "Baywatch" movie

Wes Craven discusses the American "inheritance of violence"


Upper photos: Scenes from Halloween Horror Nights. Credit: Universal Studios

Lower photo: Sam Raimi. Credit: Ann Johansson / For The Times


'Star Trek' event goes back to the future with an eye on design

September 26, 2009 |  1:34 pm

Susan King checks in with a dispatch about an L.A. event Sunday with Starfleet appeal...

The bridge from Trek Enterprise

For more than four decades, the “Star Trek” universe has boldly gone where no production designers have gone before. And this Sunday at 5 p.m. at the Egyptian Theatre, the Art Directors Guild Film Society and the American Cinematheque are honoring these visionaries who have vividly created the future with the program: “Star Trek: 45 years of Designing the Future.”

Production illustrator Daren R. Dochterman will moderate a panel discussion featuring four of the “Star Trek” production designers — John Jeffries, Joseph R. Jennings, Herman Zimmerman and Scott Chambliss — which also features clips from the first two seasons of the first “Star Trek” series, scenes from “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan,” which panelist Jennings designed, clips from “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” “Deep Space Nine” and “Enterprise,” all designed by panelist Zimmerman and a trailer for this year’s hit feature, “Star Trek,” designed by panelist Chambliss. The photo above shows the briidge from "Next Generation," for instance, which recalls the original show's command center but takes it into sleek new directions.  

Rounding out the event will be a screening of Robert Wise’s director's cut of 1979’s “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” and clips of its late production designer, Harold Michelson. There are details about the entrire program here. And here's the trailer for Wise's space opera, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year...

-- Susan King

RECENT AND RELATED

Chris Pine wall

Starfleet goes Guantanamo? Next "Trek" may have torture and terrorism themes

 Chris Pine takes command: "I am not William Shatner"

REVIEW: "Star Trek" star Chris Pine takes the stage in L.A.

VIDEO: "Star Trek" meets ... Monty Python?

Leonard Nimoy: "Star Trek" fans can be scary

William Shatner: "It's strange to say goodbye"

Simon Pegg: "I felt damn sexy" in Starfleet uniform

Eugene Roddenberry and the legacy of 'Star Trek'


Documentary reminds fans to 'Dig Comics,' not just superhero movies

September 25, 2009 |  3:17 pm

Dig_comics

SATURDAY: FREE SCREENING OF "DIG COMICS" AT MELTDOWN

It seems comic book heroes are bigger than ever.

In 2007, "Spider-Man 3" topped the charts with a $891 million in worldwide box office. The following year "The Dark Knight" grossed more than $1 billion while "Iron Man" rang up $585 million.

But while heroes are flying high in theaters, comic book publishing is on the verge of being a mere footnote to the cinematic franchises it spawned.

That is deeply alarming to Miguel Cima, who wants to preserve the lore of the truly American pop-culture phenomena -- and he has the help of someone who knows about endangered species, namely actor Edward James Olmos, who led the ragtag fleet of human survivors in the critically acclaimed series "Battlestar Galatica" and, back in 1982, was a key cast member in "Blade Runner," regarded by some as simply the best sci-fi film ever.

Cima's documentary “Dig Comics” will screen this Saturday at the Los Angeles landmark store Meltdown Comics [7522 Sunset Boulevard, 323-851-7223] and it cautions that comic book lore and legacy is in jeopardy.  Through various interviews with comic industry vets -- such as Jeph Loeb, Scott Shaw and Dame Darcy -- personal pleas and assorted examples of the comic as art, Cima challenges viewers to see the importance of comics.

“It’s the most vibrant art form that exists in America today and yet nobody engages in it,” said Cima, who took a closer look at the state of the industry after trying to publish his own comic. “At the same time, there’s monetization of properties like X-Men and Batman; they’re making millions of dollars. But no one is going back to the source. People only know comics from the movies. It’s sad.“

The film won best documentary at the Comic-Con International: Independent Film Festival and has been selected for screenings at the Vancouver International Film Festival, the Tucson Film and Music Festival and the Royal Flush Film Festival in New York City. It recently screened at the Downtown Film Festival: Los Angeles.

And it’s garnered the attention of Olmos’ company, Olmos Productions, which has agreed to produce a full-length version of the documentary.

“I had no idea the comic industry had been so badly beaten up until I saw the documentary,” said Olmos, who will also appear in the upcoming masked-man film "The Green Hornet." “It’s a crucial art form that goes beyond comic books. We use it in the film industry all the time with storyboarding. It’s a fantastic art form and a great way to increase literacy among kids.”

Olmos will make a special appearance for the Saturday screening. He’ll take part in a post-screening Q&A with Cima, along with members of the cast and crew. 

-- Yvonne Villarreal

RECENT AND RELATED

Edward James Olmos by AP Gus Ruelas

Edward James Olmos: "The Plan" is not the end for "Battlestar"

VIDEO: "Battlestar" panel in L.A. with Olmos and McDonnell

Starbuck speaks! Katee Sackhoff on the end of 'BSG'

PHOTO GALLERY: What's next for the 'Battlestar' cast?

Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and the quest for credit (and money)

Artist at work: Dean Haspiel

Photo: Edward James Olmos. Credit: Gus Ruelas / Associated Press


Ray Bradbury dreams of a different downtown

September 19, 2009 |  4:31 pm

I'm looking forward to seeing Ray Bradbury on Oct. 24 at Every Picture Tells a Story, the delightful visual-arts shop in Santa Monica (1311-C Montana Ave., 310-451-2700), where the literary lion will be signing his books and a new print he is introducing. Bradbury turned 89 last month and remains a vital force in the written word of America and, as Mary MacVean reports in today's Los Angeles Times, a vocal presence in the civic life of Los Angeles. [Updated 5:14 p.m., Sept. 21: An earlier version of this post misspelled Mary MacVean's last name.]

There's an excerpt from her story below, which is an upbeat piece -- so I'm sure Bradbury won't take umbrage with her casual description of him as a science fiction writer. That's a term he has met with an eye-roll or a shrug in the past. "I've only done one science fiction book and that's 'Fahrenheit 451,' based on reality," he told another interviewer a few years ago. "Science fiction is a depiction of the real. Fantasy is a depiction of the unreal. So 'Martian Chronicles' is not science fiction, it's fantasy. It couldn't happen, you see? That's the reason it's going to be around a long time -- because it's a Greek myth, and myths have staying power."  Anyway, here's that excerpt with some links added by yours truly...

-- Geoff Boucher

Ray Bradbury at Cliftons

To celebrate his 89th birthday, Ray Bradbury returned Friday to a place where his writing career was nurtured, but it should be no surprise that the science fiction master was more interested in talking about the future than the past.

Bradbury belonged to the Science Fantasy Society, whose members met in the 1930s at Clifton's Cafeteria on Broadway in downtown L.A.

But it was the Broadway of tomorrow that was on the mind of the author of "Fahrenheit 451" and "The Martian Chronicles," among many books.

"All the money is being spent on the south end of Broadway. . . . Staples [Center] and what have you," he said. "The money should be distributed all along Broadway."

He'd like to see Clifton's thriving near 7th Street, a restaurant in the Bradbury Building, mosaics on the sidewalks and a consistent color used prominently along the street -- preferably something that calls to mind the Latino community.

"I want to rebuild all of Broadway. That's why I'm here today," said Bradbury, who told of informally advising people about the design of a few shopping malls and of the downtown plaza outside the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on Grand Avenue.

Bradbury and some friends organized Friday's lunchtime party, held about halfway between his Aug. 22 birthday and the Oct. 15 anniversary of the Science Fiction Society's founding. They had heard that the economic downturn had hit Clifton’s hard and wanted to show their support...

THERE'S MORE, READ THE REST

-- Mary MacVean

RECENT AND RELATED

Fahrenheit 451 GN cover

PHOTO GALLERY: Bradbury's birthday at Clifton's

GUEST ESSAY: Searching for Bradbury

"Farenheit 451" and the credibility of comics

"The Illustrated Man" among 13 planned remakes

"Slaughterhouse 5" is on Gullermo del Toro's project list

Michael Chabon on "writers who can dwell between worlds"

Eoin Cofer will give "Hitchhiker's Guide" a new ride

H.P. Lovecraft and Hollywood, an unholy alliance?

Christopher Priest and his "Inverted World," revisited


Whip it good: Indiana Jones marathon this Saturday

August 21, 2009 |  6:33 am

Raiders of the Lost Ark

Would you like to pretend "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" never happened?

It's easy to do this Saturday during a fedora triple-feature at the American Cinematheque's Egyptian Theatre because it ends with everyone's favorite action-archeologist riding off into the sunset in 1989, back when Shia LaBeouf was just a three-year-old tyke.

The Indiana Jones marathon is part of 9th Annual Festival of Fantasy, Horror and Science Fiction, an event with  a programming schedule more lively than its name. There's also a "Star Trek" double-feature on Sunday (the Leonard Nimoy-directed "Star Trek III: In Search of Spock" from 1984 and Nicholas Meyer's underrated "Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country" from 1991) and an outstanding "ghostly romance" night on Aug. 27 (with Joseph Cotten in the forlorn gem "Portrait of Jennie" from 1948 and Joseph L. Mankiewicz's classic "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" from a year earlier). There's also a John Carpenter night ("The Thing" from 1982 and one of my favorite guilty pleasures, "They Live" from 1988, with the best alley-fight scene ever) on Aug. 29 and more, such as an Aug. 28 visit by actress Diane Baker as two of her 1960 films are screened.

As for Indy, this Saturday night the adventure begins at 6 with the pretty-much perfect "Raiders of the Lost Ark" from that grand year of 1981, followed by the darker and less-than-perfect "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" and, finally, the sunnier and (to my mind) more satisfying "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade."

For fun here's a nifty fan-made trailer for "Raiders," which shows how well the film ages when framed for today's sensibilities...

To buy tickets for any shows at the festival, go to the American Cinematheque page at Fandango and for more programming information go the festival website. The Egyptian Theatre is at 6712 Hollywood Blvd. and the phone number is (323) 466-3456.

-- Geoff Boucher

RECENT AND RELATED

Raiders-of-The-Lost-Ark-Poster Harrison Ford says George Lucas in "think mode" on Indy 5

On the set with Indiana Jones, past and present

Harrison Ford on a new generation of Indy fans: "They'll get over it. I did."

The spirit of Indy? In search of Johnny Quest, the film

SILLY VIDEO: Han Solo, reloaded as "Magnum P.I."

James Cameron: Yes, "Avatar" is "Dances With Wolves" in space...sorta

Guy Ritchie on the elementary nature of Sherlock Holmes 

RARE PHOTO: The "Star Wars" cast gather, circa 1977

PHOTO CREDIT: From the set of "Raiders of the Lost Ark," Lucasfilm



Advertisement

About the Bloggers



Categories


Archives