BW Programming Note> Hoping To Get Back To Schedule

This week’s Clutter Report goes over why I’m late and comicless tonight. I’m not used to being as active as I have been and it keeps catching up with me. Now that the hernia and the kidney stone appear to be no longer an issue maybe I can change all that. Meanwhile we’re playing musical TV providers again this week and I don’t know how that’s going to affect production this week. I have to clear out my DVR and even if I come up with a Jake & Leon idea I need time to draw it. How much depends on what the comic ends up being. I might get a Finally Watched or two out of it though. We’ll see what happens.

What I know is coming is the first chapter of Batman: Knightfall for Chapter By Chapter, comic reviews, and whatever else I come up with. Don’t be surprised if nothing shows up for Saturday though thanks to the cable and possible internet concerns. I’ll try to get stuff out on time the rest of the week though. Have a great one, everybody!

Saturday Night Showcase> Beast Wars: Transformers

It’s been a time-consuming month here at BW Media Spotlight and I need something to post, so let’s go with something I think most of you will enjoy.

After the original Transformers and Generation Two toylines Hasbro was looking for a way to revitalize the franchise. Their solution: animals. While robotic animals have been part of the series from the beginning thanks to Ravage, Laserbeak, and Buzzsaw and later the Dinobots and beyond, this would feature more real-looking animals, or as best as you could do while still being able to get them to transform into robot warriors. Kenner, at the time a recent acquisition of Hasbro, was tasked with redesigning these figures using the articulation engineering they did with their regular action figures. The result was Transformers: Beast Wars, with new factions Maximals and Predacons battling for control of Earth.

Instead of Sunbow, who had made the original cartoon and were still active at the time, Hasbro went with Canadian computer animation company Mainframe Entertainment, still riding high from their successful series Reboot to bring the Robots In Disguise to a new generation. Due to the limits of CG at the time they opted for a smaller cast, to move away from modern (or futuristic given the series history by that point) Earth for something a bit more sparse, and to take advantage of that smaller cast not only to have less to render but to explore their characters and a few other mysteries of the planet they found themselves on.

The two-part opener, simply titled “Beast Wars”, finds Optimus Primal, commander of the exploration vessel Axalon, engaging with criminal and would be war monger Megatron for control of a planet’s source of raw Energon. Beast Wars: Transformers would go on to introduce many part of multiversal continuity, like the Transformer life force called “sparks”, the idea that Energon could exist naturally in multiple forms–we would later see Energon ore in Transformers Energon for example–and gave us something besides machines for the shape-changing Cybertronians to turn into. Unfortunately what’s on the official YouTube channel for Transformers that allows me to show these episodes here at the Spotlight is the Fox Kids edit. The credits are off to the side so Fox could stick in an extra advertisement and there are edits for time on the Fox Kids broadcast versus the original syndication broadcast as part of “The Power Block”, which shared the truncated intro, and later airing on G4 as part of the “Action Blast” block that included matches from Kaiju Big Battel. Still, there’s enough here to enjoy.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> The Blue Beetle #6

Even as an adult Tom Sawyer still won’t paint that fence.

The Blue Beetle #6

Fox Publications Inc (March/April, 1941)

Another problem with the anthology, and I do apologize for harping on it, is that it leaves me no credits to pad out the homepage part of the article. Just having the title, company, cover date, and one cover doesn’t grab your attention and draw you into the article. Unfortunately all I have to discuss here is how much of a pain it is to review that way versus how easy it is to read. At least this issue only has six comics to go over, but why are they printing non-Blue Beetle stories in his solo comic? What’s the point of the regular anthology titles featuring Blue Beetle and these other characters if all the comics are anthologies?

I may never know, but that’s enough padding. On to the review. Read along here.

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Alan Moore Doesn’t Understand Superman

I keep hearing how Alan Moore wrote two really good Superman stories, but think about them a moment. “For The Man Who Had Everything” is a decent story, but it’s about how Superman really would have been happier growing up on an unexploded Krypton. “Whatever Happened To The Man Of Tomorrow” is about Superman giving up his powers after accidentally killing a suddenly murderous Mr. Mxyzptlk. Moore thinks a better Superman is a guy without superpowers. Just look at Watchmen and Doctor Manhattan. The only hero with superpowers lacks Clark’s empathy, compassion, and mercy, not unlike the other heroes in his story…and remember he wanted to tell that story with the recently acquired Charlton Comics superheroes but DC wisely turned him down. That was supposed to be Captain Atom. Moore has a very negative view of superheroes, especially the ones with superpowers.

So when Screen Rant found him on a sanity day to actually discuss Superman I’m not that surprised that he really doesn’t understand the Man Of Tomorrow as much as you’d think. In the interview with Andrew Firestone, Moore tries to make the case that Superman wasn’t just ruined recently thanks to Dan DiDio, Brian Michael Bendis, and the remaining DiDio acolytes at DC Comics but that he shouldn’t have changed at all since 1939. Let’s go over the interview and all the stuff he gets wrong about Superman.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Tangent Comics: The Flash

I see The Atom is still looking for the backgrounds.

Tangent Comics: The Flash

DC Comics (December, 1997)

“Premiere”

WRITER: Todd Dezago

PENCILER: Gary Frank

INKER: Cam Smith

COLORIST: Patricia Mulvihill

SEPARATIONS: Jamison

LETTERER: Chris Eliopoulos

ASSISTANT EDITOR: Frank Berrios

ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Dana Kurtin

EDITOR: Eddie Berganza

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BW’s Daily Video> Why Cable Channels Lost Their Identity

Catch more from Captain Midnight on YouTube

 

“Yesterday’s” Comic> Sonic & Knuckles: Mecha Madness

What Sonic did on his summer vacation.

Sonic & Knuckles: Mecha Madness Special

Archie Comics Publications (1998)

COLORIST: Kyle Hunter

EDITOR: Freddy Mendez-Gabrie

“Mecha Madness”

WRITER: Michael Gallagher

PENCILER: Pat Spaziante

INKER: Harvey Mercadoocasio

LETTERER: Jeff Powell

The Chaotix: “Don’t Let The Island Hit You On The Way Down”

WRITER: Kent Taylor

ARTIST: Harvey Mercadoocasio

LETTERER: Vickie Williams

Forty Fathoms Freedom Fighters: “Eel Of Fortune”

WRITER: Michael Gallagher

PENCILER: Dave Manak

INKER: Rich Koslowski

LETTERER:  Vickie Williams

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