Jake & Leon #601> Bat-Bots

If you know who the android woman on the right is, your geek card is secure.

Sorry this is late, There’s something of a family emergency going on, which also meant no Clutter Report this week, and at least for the first two days this may not be the last post not on time. Family comes first, website that doesn’t make me income comes second, and would still come second before family if it did make me money.

Late or not, the next Chapter By Chapter installment of Star Trek: The Vulcan Academy Murders is coming out, but as for the rest it depends on whatever’s going on here in realspace. If something is late or I miss a day at something somewhere, you know why. I hope the rest of you have a great week.

Saturday Night Showcase> Doctor Who: Power Of The Dalek Fanfilm

Well, if the current official owners of Doctor Who can’t or won’t provide anything the fans want to see, it’s up to the fans themselves.

In previous posts I posted a Doctor Who fanfilm and episodes from a fan series with an original Time Lord. Tonight’s offering is a bit different. During both of his runs, Russell T. Davies hasn’t be afraid to use non-canon prose and comics and make an episode so he doesn’t have to come up with something original. So why not have a fan film in the same vein? Take a “lost episode” (thought it does have an animated recreation), rework it with a new Doctor, and as long as you acknowledge the swipe, make an interesting episode.

Thus is the case with “The Nick Scovelli Adventures” and their original Doctor. “The Power Of The Daleks” is taken from the lost episode, but only partially. The Second Doctor’s debut is replaced with a new Doctor and this isn’t his first post-regeneration story. No Ben and Polly, the psychic paper and ties to UNIT are here despite neither of them existing when Patrick Troughton came onboard, and it’s just a remake of the episode. Tracking a distress signal, the Doctor finds Daleks are taking over a small mining operation as they recover from a crash. UNIT also detects the signal, realizes it’s a Dalek distress signal, and are ready to blow the place up, all while the unaware humans deal with their own internal politics and stupidities. Can the Doctor save the humans from themselves, the bombs, and the galaxy’s most dangerous killing machines? Enjoy.

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BW’s Saturday Article Link> George Lucas Defends Diversity In HIS Star Wars

While defenders and “creators” of DisneyFilm’s Star Wars products say that their Star Wars is more diverse than the originals because they put more emphasis on race and gender (and not enough on plot and storytelling, but we’ll apparently ignore that), George Lucas defending his characters at the Cannes Film Festival. In the interview where he received an award, Lucas pointed out not only that women and people of color were already there, but that aliens were as well…and despite all the comments about how racist the Empire is (which wasn’t addressed in the Variety piece), the good guys totally accept everyone…except the droids of course.

Shooting A Dairanger/Power Ranger Zord Battle

I feel like doing something different tonight.

Haim Saban had tried for years to get sentai in the US for years. Long story short, his first big success was combining action footage from Zyuranger with American footage to create Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, a show that more or less exists decades later. One problem the show ran into was having the American unsuited martial arts sequences look more like regular martial arts versus the sentai footage being more acted fighting sequences. Fox or somebody at Saban Entertainment wanted that changed for whatever reason, being consistency to the fighting styles between the two bits of footage.

During season two the monsters and Zord fights had to come from a new source, Dairanger, and this is the show that Mighty Morphin’ stunt coordinator Jeff Pruitt was sent to observe, to see how they handle fight and “zord” battles and translate that into any US footage with actors and zord costumes, especially since they were still using the Zyuranger costumes for the main five Rangers.

At the time they were recording fights for episodes 21, “The Birth of a Mythical Ch’i Beast”, and episode 22, “The Great Secret Art Of The Tiger Cub”, which became the giant battles and introduction of the White Ranger in the Power Rangers two-part episode “White Light”. While there, Pruitt took some behind the scenes home video and in 2013 posted it to his YouTube channel. It’s been sitting in the queue for a while so I thought you might like to see what it takes to make giant robot gods fight giant monsters.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> The Blue Beetle #1 (Charlton)

“I’m starting to miss the penny ante mobsters already.”

Blue Beetle vol 2 #1

Charlton Comics (June, 1964)

“The Giant Mummy Who Was Not Dead”

As typical, there are no credit. As atypical of this character’s adventures thus far, the comic is one big story split into three parts: “The Giant Mummy Who Was Not Dead”, “The Birth of Evil”, and “The Mummy’s Return”. This is the new continuity, with a new origin and second T on the last name of our hero, so let’s see what New Dan is like. Also, the comic has a text story and some trivia comic pages, but we won’t be going over them.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> The Background Of Willie Wonka

Catch SF Debris’ full review on his website.

 

The Many, MANY Intros Of Superman> The Latest “Adventures”

Yes, I’ve registered my complaints about this show. It’s like they dropped Superman and his Earth parents into an anime world with people who bear the name of people he knows. I just saw their take on Steel, dropping the armor for some kind of mecha exosuit, and I’m highly disappointed. At least he’s the same race he is in the comics, but I’m sorry.

That’s just not as cool as his usual armor. Also, maybe it’s explained in the story, but why is Superman now using a blue energy force…power thing?

I didn’t even plan for both of those fights to involve a character named Metallo, though again the DCAU is more accurate.

With that out of my system, I still want a complete list of every Superman TV intro, and this show doesn’t just drop a title card and call it a day. There’s an actual intro, something Superman & Lois doesn’t have, which is why we haven’t done a Superman intro in this series since the Legion Of Super-Heroes team-up series. This is the first Superman we’ve gotten in animation outside of direct-to-video movies and DC Super Friends, a series of shorts put out by Imaginext by Fisher Price. So whatever faults I have with the show itself, I’m going to judge the intro as the intro to this show. How does it hold up?

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