After languishing in recent years at Harris Publications and its bizarre fight with Fangoria, the 40-year-old Vampirella comic book franchise has a new home with Dynamite Entertainment.
“Vampirella is one of the most well known and longest running comic characters in the history of the business,” Nick Barrucci, Dynamite’s president said in a March 17 press release. “Outside of Marvel and DC characters, very few comics characters that debuted in the 60′s still resonate with fans today.”
Created by N3F member, the late Forrest J Ackerman, as a mix of costumed superhero and horror heroine, Vampirella joins Dynamite’s growing stable of household name titles such as Green Hornet, Red Sonja and Buck Rogers. Niether a price tag nor a target launch date for the first issue of Vampirella under the Dynamite brand was announced with news of the sale.
Vampirella debuted in 1969 as a black-and-white title, but with memorable art by Frank Frazetta, the comic – the first to feature a vampire as the lead hero – quickly made a name for itself, spawning horror title imitaions at both Marvel and DC.
During its storied past, many writers have penned issues of the comic, including Alan Moore, Mark Millar, Grant Morrision, James Robinson, Jeph Loeb and Warren Ellis. After Frazetta left, other artists to step into his shoes in the following four decades included Joe Quesada, J. Scott Campbell, Michael Turner, Jae Lee, Adam Hughes, Mark Texeira, Joe Jusko, and Arthur Suydam.
In a few days, attendees at the 2008 Comic-Con will get to see never-before-seen footage from the highly anticipated 2009 block buster The Watchmen, directed by Zach Snyder (300). Scheduled to debut March 6, 2009, the film is based upon the seminal graphic novel written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Dave Gibbons.
WATCH THE TRAILER
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Fandominion will have continuing coverage of this film in the forthcoming days, including The Watchmen news from Comic-Con.
Whether it's run-of-the-mill fanboy attention, rabid Batman fans, or ghoulish gawkers eager to see dead movie star Heath Ledger's final performance, The Dark Knight is set to be one of the biggest blockbuster movies of 2008.
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OPENS: July 18, 2008 RATING: PG-13 (Violence) GENRE: Superhero, Fantasy
Three years ago independent film maker Christopher Nolan, best known for a little film called Memento, was picked by Warner Bros. to helm and write the big screen return of Batman.
Worse yet, Christian Bale, a British actor was cast in the lead role.
A skeptical but hopeful fanbase was pleasantly surprised when the movie opened as a smart ans serious treatment of the Caped Crusader – not the campy mocking treatment that has been done in past years.
So it was with great anticipation over the past few years that Batman followers looked forward to the release of The Dark Knight, Nolan’s sequel – which had the debut of Nolan’s take on the Joker as played by Oscar nominee Heath Ledger (Roar, A Knight’s Tale, Brokeback Mountain).
Then this past winter the unthinkable happened when Heath Ledger died in an accidental overdose from mixing prescription medications.
Because of this tragedy, The Dark Knight premiere became overshadowed as the last performance of a gifted young actor.
To a one, each mainstream media reviewer – and most fannish reviews – have focused on ledger and his performance. The consensus is that his turn as Joker is a success and exceeds any other actor’s previous attempt to inhabit the iconic role. Many – but not all – predict that Ledger will be nominated for best supporting actor when the Academy Award nominations come out next year.
Also of note, the addition of Maggie Gyllenhaal as Rachel Dawes, replacing Katie Holmes as Rachel Dawes. Most pointed out that Gyllenhaal’s acting chops, easy glamour and commanding screen presence show not only that Holmes was miscast in the role in the first film – but that Gyllenhall, maybe more so than her better-known brother Jake, is destined for a long career in the movies.
Of the few negative comments. Some reviewers didn’t line the 2 1/2 hour length of the film. Others said the film lost the edgy magic of the first film as it reached too far toward becoming an action flick. Still other negative comments focused on the dystopian, bleak atmosphere of Dark Knight.
WATCH THE TRAILER
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Outstanding cast
Terrific writing
Possibly the first superhero movie destined to win in a major Oscar category
{/rw_good} –>
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Not for children because of extreme violence and scary scenes
At 2 1/2 hours, may be too long for some people
If you want an uplifting feel-good movie, you won’t get it
{/rw_bad} –>
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{for="Houston Chronicle" value="9"}
"Even without the sentimental distinction of being the late actor's last role, Ledger's performance as the Joker is the best thing about the movie." – Eric Harrison
{/for}
{for=”E!” value=”9″}
“It’s almost unfair to call The Dark Knight a sequel. Director Christopher Nolan has crafted a Batman film of such devastating impact, it practically obliterates the memory of its predecessors.” – Alex Markerson
{/for}
{for=”Salt Lake Tribune” value=”9″}
“ Ledger, tearing into his last great role, embodies the insane genius of The Joker – and of the movie.” – Sean P. Martin
{/for}
{for=”CNN” value=”8″}
“ In a summer when action overwhelms intelligence (and even good sense), here’s a movie that works on many levels.” – Tom Charity
{/for}
{for=”Washington Post – Family Filmgoer” value=”7″}
“Ledger walks away with the movie. His Joker is insane, evil, scary, funny and even pathetic in his psychopathic lack of feeling. He could give younger kids nightmares. This is not a movie for teens younger than high school age, let alone grade schoolers.” – Jane Horwitz
{/for}
{for=”Newsday” value=”8″}
“Ledger is wickedly brilliant as the Joker. He revels in his spaghetti hair and maimed-clown makeup, but it’s his delightfully nasty delivery and twisted posture that transform him into a force of nature. If Alfred Hitchcock was right that a film is only as good as its villain, that explains the success of The Dark Knight.”- Rafer Guzman
{/for}
{for=”Boston Globe” value=”8″}
“You come away impressed, oppressed, provoked, and beaten down, holding on to Ledger’s squirrelly incandescence as a beacon in the darkness.” – Ty Burr
{/for}
{for=”Chicago Sun-Times” value=”10″}
“Because these actors and others are so powerful, and because the movie does not allow its spectacular special effects to upstage the humans, we’re surprised how deeply the drama affects us.” – Roger Ebert
{/for}
{for=”Salon” value=”6″}
“Looks as if it were made from a messy blackboard diagram with lots of circles, heavily underlined phrases (“Duality! Good vs. evil — in the same person! Kinship between hero and villain!”) and crisscrossing arrows that ultimately point to nothing.” – Stephanie Zacharek
{/for}
{for=”London Free Press” value=”9″}
“this shadowy opus of morality and identity bends the genre to new dimensions — hinging not on spectacle, but the yin-and-yang pathology of its hero and villain. It’s a gripping, gratifying high-wire act and a startling departure for a genre usually dismissed as effects-driven eye-candy.” – Kevin Williamson
{/for}
{for=”San Francisco Chronicle” value=”8″}
“The Dark Knight is by no means a complete success. But the more it reveals its dark heart, the better it gets, and at times it seems just a step away from achieving something extraordinary. In the end, it’s no leap forward, but it’s certainly a step in the right direction.” – Mick LaSalle
{/for}
{for=”USA Today” value=”10″}
“A more thrilling, intelligent, morally complex and masterfully crafted film than any summer blockbuster in recent years. It’s probably the best superhero movie to date.” – Claudia Puig
{/for}
{for=”Los Angeles Times” value=”9″}
“The Dark Knight may be the most hopeless, despairing comic-book movie in memory. It creates a world where being a superhero is at best a double-edged sword and no triumph is likely to be anything but short-lived.” – Kenneth Turan
{/for}
{for=”Chicago Tribune” value=”10″}
“Sensational, grandly sinister and not for the kids, “The Dark Knight” elevates pulp to a very high level.” – Michael Phillips
OPENS: July 11, 2008 RATING: PG-13
GENRES: Dark Fantasy, Comedy, Steampunk
NO SPOILERS
Writer/director Guillermo del Toro (director of three-time Oscar-winner Pan’s Labyrinth as well as Blade II and the original Hellboy) is on a roll, according to mainstream movie critics, who hail him as everything from the next Hitchcock to the next Ovid.
Although not all the critics loved the film – almost 9 out of 10 gave it positive reviews – which is an accomplishment for a genre film since the mainstream press seems hellbent on dismissing anything with an out-of-this-world imagination.
Not so with Hellboy II: The Golden Army.
Critics universally praised del Toro for his unique visual style and ability to set a mood like not other directer working today. Also, the actor playing the title role, Ron Perlman (TV’s Beauty and the Beast) an unlikely action hero at age 58, was praised by most as being at the top of his game.
Of the few negative comments, some found fault with the story as too simplistic or unbelievable, as if they forgot they were watching a social commentary disguised as a horror comedy about a big red demon who cut off his horns, loves kittens and decided to fight for the good guys.
The absurdity of life is the message, guys.
Del Toro’s next films: Doctor Strange in 2010 and in 2012 – The Hobbit (official prequels to Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy)
WATCH THE TRAILER
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Outstanding special effects
Great visuals in cinematography
Genuine chills – and laughs
Moody and original dark fantasy elements
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Action, violence and language may be too harsh for children.
A few critics found the plot too predictable.
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{for="Los Angeles Times" value="8"}
"Starting with characters created by Mike Mignola for Dark Horse Comics, writer-director Del Toro, whose one-of-a-kind Pan’s Labyrinth won a trio of Oscars in 2007, is almost alone in his ability to re-create on screen the wide-eyed exhilaration and disturbing grotesqueness that is the legacy of reading comics on the page.” – Kenneth Turan
{/for}
{for=”Seattle Post-Intelligencer” value=”8″}
“It definitely gives us our money’s worth in the sheer volume of its imaginative fantasy creatures and it’s that rare superhero-movie sequel that’s better than the original.” – William Arnold
{/for}
{for=”Slate” value=”8″}
“Mexican director Guillermo del Toro has started to look like a legitimate successor to Ovid. Del Toro is not so much a creator of myths as a collector of them, a transhistorical myth nerd whose pantheon of influences ranges from Hesiod to Harryhausen (with liberal helpings of steam punk and Catholic iconography).” – Dana Stevens
{/for}
{for=”Kansas City Star” value=”6″}
“Here’s the problem: too much razzle-dazzle. Not enough Ron Perlman.” – Robert W. Butler
{/for}
{for=”The Vancouver Sun” value=”9″}
“In a season of endless comic book superheroes, Hellboy II is a unique visual feast.” – Jay Stone
{/for}
{for=”Minneapolis Star-Tribune” value=”9″}
“Guillermo Del Toro’s stylish sense of wonderment makes for the best superhero movie of the summer. ” – Colin Covert
{/for}
{for=”Chicago Tribune” value=”7″}
“in the right hands, digital effects, creature design and directorial elan can work together to give you the best sort of willies.” – Michael Phillips
{/for}
{for=”Rotten Tomatoes” value=”9″}
“Del Toro crafts a stellar comic book sequel, boasting visuals that are as imaginative as the characters are endearing.” Tomatometer
Description: Dragon*Con is the largest multi-media, popular culture convention focusing on science fiction and fantasy, gaming, comics, literature, art, music, and film in the US. Our host hotels for 2008 will again include the familiar surroundings of the Hyatt Regency Atlanta along with the legendary Atlanta Marriott Marquis and the Atlanta Hilton. The Hilton is across the street from the Marriott which is connected by a climate-controlled tube-way to the Hyatt. The Marriott is easily the most architecturally unique hotel in the city, if not the entire Southeast. We are pleased to announce the addition of the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel to the list of fabulous hotels hosting Dragon*Con 2008! Dragon*ConTV will be available in all four host hotels.
Five years after Ang Lee’s disappointing Hulk, Marvel decided to reboot the comic hero with a new film, The Incredible Hulk, which picks up roughly where the 1970s-80s TV series left off; ignoring the 2003 film altogether.
The film also features fa nod to long-time Hulk fans with witty cameos of the stars from the TV series.
Mainstream critics had been lukewarm on the film, with the most scathing comments from those critics who are quick to pooh-pooh most genre films anyway.
But the consensus is that those who are looking for a great action film with killer CGI animation, this Hulk will not disappoint.
Also noted in most reviews is a stand-out performance by Oscar-winning actor, William Hurt – who make the most of his part of a military leader teetering on the edge between loyalty to his orders and loyalty to his conscience.
Some thought the message was a little too preachy and most found the end battle scene too predictable.
Below are selected reviews from prominent critics:
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Outstanding Special Effects
Great Supporting Cast
Action packed
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Too Scary for Small Children
End is Predictable
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{for="National Post – Canada" value="5"}
"For all its ground-shaking, the final battle amounts to no more than a pause between the creation story we have just witnessed and the inevitable sequel." – Chris Knight
{/for}
{for="Christian Science Monitor" value="6"}
"Now that we've demonstrated that comic book icons can look like you and me, how about we go back to the Christopher Reeve era when they looked like square-jawed movie stars?" – Peter Rainer
{/for}
{for="CNN" value="7"}
"The climax is a bit of a yawn — it boils down to two big apes slugging it out with an entirely predictable outcome — but most of what precedes it is vigorous and sharp." – Tom Charity
{/for}
{for="Washington Post" value="7"}
"There are sequences that are genuinely beautiful, especially the scenes shot in the Brazilian favela, with its rich visual textures and evocative roofscapes." – Ann Hornaday
{/for}
{for="San Jose Mercury News" value="8"}
" The Incredible Hulk has a few annoying flaws, but it’s gratifying in many of the ways a Marvel Comics movie should be.” – Bob Straus
{/for}
{for=”New York TImes” value=”6″}
“The Adequate Hulk would have been a more suitable title.” – A.O. Scott
{/for}
{for=”Chcago Tribune” value=”7″}
“The Incredible Hulk keeps slamming everything forward, satisfyingly.” – Michael Phillips
{/for}
{for=”Entertainment Weekly” value=”7″}
“The audience, in all likelihood, will be so grateful not to see another joyless, inert, pea green dud that it may not mind that The Incredible Hulk is just a luridly reductive and violent B movie — one that clears a bar that hadn’t been set very high.” – Owen Gleiberman
{/for}
{for=”USA Today” value=”6″}
“The saga is uneven and there are plot holes, but as a popcorn movie steeped in action, it keeps our attention.” – Claudia Puig
A CBS report today credits both rabid Gerard Butler and Internet-based comic fans for the success of 300 in theatres. The eye-candy appeal of the cast didn’t hurt either, as droves of women attended a film most critics wrote off as a teenage boy’s fantasy with limited appeal.
But the movie-going public revealed that most mainstream critics must be middle-aged straight men with limited imaginations. The public? Not so. The film did boffo box office and attracted people who normally shun comic book-inspired genre film.
It grossed more than $500,000 world wide (half a trillion dollars). The 2-disc DVD is on sale now and is expected to be one of the biggest sellers of the year. (Click the DVD picture above for an Amazon.com link.)
Warner Bros. teased the masses at Comic-Con in San Diego this weekend in what must be Summer 2008′s most-anticipated release, The Dark Knight, the follow-up to Batman Begins.
The studio unveiled the teaser viral website: WhySoSerious.com and new teaser trailer. You can see the trailer by clicking here. There is no footage from the film itself, but there are audio clips – including how Heath Ledger sounds in full Joker mode.
Additionally, a knife-wielding photo of Ledger as The Joker surfaced (click the thumbnail above to get a larger version.) In the photo he is threatening Rachel Dawes (played by Maggie Gyllenhaal).
Gyllenhaal replaced the original actress for the part, Katie Holmes, who was almost universally panned by Batman fans as a bad fit for the character. Holmes was not cast in the second film due to “scheduling problems.”