Jake & Leon #572> The Pick-Off Artist

This isn’t even the biggest jerk Leon’s commented on today. He discusses comics.

Why do I have such a hard time drawing crossed arms? Any other artists out there have this trouble?

Over at The Clutter Reports this week I reorganized my various art type papers for easier access.

This week here at the Spotlight our Chapter By Chapter review of Batman: Knightfall reaches part 3 of the novelization, meaning rebooting the chapter count. Kind of like modern comics. Also, more of the Beast Hunters story treatment and whatever else comes to mind as the week goes on. Have a great one, everybody!

Saturday Night Showcase> American Dragon Jake Long

Created by Jeff Goode, American Dragon Jake Long is that other cartoon Donnie Basco is famous for voicing besides Avatar: The Last Airbender. This time he gets to be the hero, the title character of Jake Long, the latest “chosen one” who must protect and sometimes battle the secret magical underground of fantasy and mythological creatures hiding among the residents of New York City. Being an American Dragon in training and a kid it’s not easy. He also has to keep his secret from his friends (though they learn pretty early about his secret and becomes his allies), his crush, and even his jittery dad who doesn’t know he married a dragon and had two magic dragon babies since they can appear human. This last part leads to a lot of questions that will never be answered, and being a kids show doesn’t believe it needs to.

In the first episode, Jake doesn’t understand Grandpa’s rather disgusting training (because of course he doesn’t bother explaining because he’s only Jake’s mentor and grandfather–why do that?), which leads to trouble when the magical creature hunting Huntsman and his girl apprentice go after them. Also there’s a cute new girl at school. Coincidence? Enjoy.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Blue Beetle #26

The long awaited Bloodshot crossover begins…on Crisis On Earth Prime or Super-Team Family or something. Not here.

The Blue Beetle #26

Holyoke Publishing (October, 1943)

[Read along with me here]

This issue has two Blue Beetle stories bookending the comic and he hosts an activity page. I guess that’s the best you can hope for in the Golden Age. That and all the stories be good but that’s become a crapshoot. Maybe that’s why they did anthologies back then, in the hopes that enough stories would be worth the price?

Who knows. Let’s begin.

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Beast Machine Hunters> The First Story Bible part 2

For those of you who came late, Beast Hunters was the original name for what we know as Beast Machines, though Hasbro would use the name in a subline of Transformers Prime because they’re almost as addicted to recycling these days as your average environmentalist. (The ones that aren’t crazy.) In part one we were introduced to some of the concepts they had planned through the original treatment by Marv Wolfman. Some were way too ambitions and others changed by the final product for good and for bad. There were some things that stayed but at this point all they have are plots, not a completed script.

I’ve chosen a word count of around 2000. When I hit that number with both quotes and comments that’s when I’ll stop, not exactly at 2000 but around that count. So last time we only got partway through page 3 of the pdf file. When we last left off the Maximals who survived the Beast Wars arrived to find Megatron got here first, took over, and for some reasons the Maximals can no longer transform while being the only active robots on Cybertron. Let’s see where they planned to go from there versus what the show actually gave us. If you want to read along the link is in part one.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Star Power #8

Remember when they told you not to look directly at the sun? This would be worse.

Star Power #8

(January, 2015)

“The Search For Black Hole Bill” part 3

WRITER: Michael Terraciano

ARTIST: Garth Graham

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> The Bad Payoff Problem

Yes, the drunken Scotsman swears.

Catch more from The Critical Drinker on YouTube

 

Doctor Who Vs Jack The Ripper

I try not to use a video from the same poster in the same week, nevermind the same day. However, while looking up the short from this morning’s Quickpost I noticed there were still two videos from Dalek 63•88 I hadn’t watched in my continuing quest to finally get caught up with my YouTube backlog. So I watched them, and one was so interesting I wanted to share it with you guys.

I hate when science fiction or horror tries to use Jack The Ripper as a character. It’s why, good as it might be, I haven’t read Gotham By Gaslight. The idea of a 19th Century Batman going up against a serial killer sounds interesting but not if that villain is supposed to be Jack The Ripper. I understand the mystique surrounding him. He was never caught, the tabloids gave him an almost mythic presence in how he escaped justice…but he murdered people. His identity was never found and now most likely never will for what little good would come out of finding out. He escaped punishment and a bunch of innocent women were never avenged. No, I don’t care what you think about what they did for a living. I have my issues with it but they didn’t deserve to be horribly mutilated just for choosing a morally questionable “career”. God Himself would be against this punishment and if you think otherwise you need to read His word a lot better.

On the other hand I have no issue with using him as a template for a completely unrelated villain. It’s not “ripped from the headlines” so much as using real world evil as inspiration for a fictional villain and it feels like less of a slight against murder victims. The police can catch Murderin’ Mick and we can all celebrate without the stigma of using an actual evil for a fictional story where they do find out who he is, and it isn’t some alien or demon responsible. Jack The Ripper can still be a very evil but clever man and Murderin’ Mike can be the space demon or whatever without any trouble.

The classic era Doctor Who episode “The Talons Of Weng-Chiang” usually only gets mentioned for being a good mystery story with casual racism because of course we have to highlight the casual racism as if pointing out makes us better people or some crap. However, Dalek 63•88 instead did a video about how the 51st century villain Magnus Greel may have borrowed from fictional villains the Phantom Of The Opera and Fu Manchu as well the Doctor acting like the fictional hero Sherlock Holmes, but the space villain’s plot took influence from Jack The Ripper and another serial killer operating in London around that time. It’s quite interesting…but be warned! We’re talking about the mutilation murders of sex workers. While not overtly graphic this is a video made for grown-ups and may thus be disturbing to somebody out there. Use your own judgement before hitting play.

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