Showing posts with label comic books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comic books. Show all posts

Friday, May 01, 2009

Let Me Plan Your Saturday

If you live in the Seattle area and are looking for something to do tomorrow, I've got it covered. If you have kids, you're even better off:

1. Wake up. I cannot stress how important this step is.

2. Find nearest comic book store. Go there and pick up a FREE COMIC BOOK. Also, pick up something else for yourself. (If it's been awhile, might I suggest Identity Crisis, Omega the Unknown, DMZ or perhaps something by Brian K. Vaughan (Y: the Last Man, Ex-Machina, Runaways)?)

3. Grab your kid(s,) put on some rain gear and head to the 2nd Annual Denny a Go Go, see The Presidents of the United States of America's Chris Ballew perform his new kids music side project, Casper Babypants (not much of a stretch from POTUSA). Also featuring The Recess Monkey, who are like pied piper to the kiddies.

4. Go home and get dry from the all the rain.

5. Find some earplugs and pawn the kids off for the night. It's the annual rock show benefit for Crohns & Colitus Foundation of America, with the UFO tribute band Flight To Mars (C&C sufferer Mike McCready of Pearl Jam). This year features Duff McKagan's Loaded as openers. Here's video from last year's classic rock jam.

6. Go to sleep. I cannot stress how important this step is.

That's Really Super, Supergirl

It's a pulpy geektastic twofer this weekend, as X-Men Origins: Wolverine hits theaters today and it's Free Comic Book Day on Saturday. It also makes for a lame excuse to put together a gallery of female superheroes, now up over at film.com.

It's an extensive list, with over 40 entries, but I still feel like I'm missing a couple. Can you think of any more? I've got five different iterations of Catwoman*, three of Batgirl, and two of both Supergirl and Sheena (Queen of the scantily clad Jungle).

*Most folks have a favorite and I guess mine would be the first depiction I saw, Lee Meriweather, from the 1966 movie based on the classic TV series.

But I think my favorite find is a shot from the kids live-action series Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, which was part of Saturday morning's The Kroftt Supershow, which I watched religiously as a child. The series featured one Deidre Hall as Elektra Woman, who was about to take off as Dr. Marlena Evans on Days of Our Lives. Like most Sid & Marty Kroftt productions, it was good, campy fun:



Superheroine songs:
"That's Really Super, Supergirl" - XTC
"Wonder Woman" - Elvis Costello
"Barbarella" - Bob Crew
"Silk Spectre" - Tyler Bates

PS - I'm quite fond of the Helen Slater Supergirl photo I've employed here, if only for the Popeyes Chicken product placement (LOVE THAT CHICKEN!), but it also allows for both the most necessary XTC of the title, and a chance to pimp out Eric Snider's great piece on the film (Eric's Bad Movies: Supergirl).

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Mad Men - Setting the Second Season

The 1960 election, Miles Davis' Sketches of Spain, The Apartment, The Twilight Zone... all these cultural touch points and more were covered in the first season of Mad Men, through the setting of 1960. As most fans of the show now by now, the second season of Mad Men (starts this Sunday, July 27,) begins on Valentine's Day 1962 -- roughly 14 months after season one's ended. Creator Matthew Weiner has said he's not interested in picking up immediately where the story leaves off, as he recently told NY Times Magazine, "There’s more storytelling in moving ahead and taking a season to find out what happened." You could also say it helps give a bit of distance to a year already mined for cultural and historical events, giving each season room to breath in that regard.

So what do we see in store for season two, you ask? Making predictions of a series that I love and respect is a bit of a thorny rose to pluck. Part of me wants to theorize about what has happened and where it's all leading to this season, but for the most part, I'm afraid I'll be partially right in my prediction and ruin it for myself. So instead let's just take a glance at some possibilities for the series to explore based on the setting of 1962.

Looking at that year a few things jump out that parallel characters or possible events on the show. One interesting event is Marilyn Monroe's accidental death/murder/suicide. The actress' tragic fall touched a lot of people, but probably no one more than our favorite redhead Joan Holloway (Christina Hendricks). Both women relied on their looks and at one time were mistresses for powerful married men. Marilyn had the Kennedys, Joan had her boss Roger Sterling, and one imagines Marilyn's death would give Joan at least a moment's pause -- perhaps even an epiphany (even if delayed).

The more interesting historical parallel I see, however, is between Bob Dylan and Don Draper. Or should I say Robert Allen Zimmerman and Dick Whitman? The obvious connection here is that both men created new identities for themselves, cutting off a past which didn't groove with their current occupation. This season, as Dylan transforms the Village from a beatnik jazz haven to a full blown folk music community, one has to believe that at least one Dylan song will make their way into an episode somewhere. His debut (Bob Dylan) doesn't hit the shelves until March of that year, but his presence in New York is already building. As Scorsese, or even Weiner's old boss David Chase, can tell you, there's lots of subtext to be mined from having a Dylan song playing in the background of a scene -- a lot without being obvious.

Other bits from 1962 that might make it's way into the series:

Film: Stanley Kubrick's Lolita is released in New York on June 13, 1962, with quite a bit of controversy, due to it's pedophilia-related content. Other intriguing films that make the time period include The Manchurian Candidate, To Kill a Mocking Bird, Splendor in the Grass and Breakfast at Tiffanys (which gets a veiled reference in the premiere episode this Sunday).

History: The Cuban Missile Crisis - Doesn't reach it's fever pitch until November, coinciding with either the final or the penultimate episode. Since it gripped the nation, it seems it would get at least a passing reference.

Comic books: Stan Lee's Fantastic Four (Nov. 1961, with Jack Kirby) and Spider-Man (Aug. 1962, with Steve Ditko) are introduced, beginning what some call the Marvel Age of comics. Just like The Twilight Zone, Comics were a medium to talk about society's ills without really talking about them, so a similar reference would be appropos. I'd think Cosgrove, of all people, has a comic hiding in his drawer, somewhere. Doesn't have to be this season, but someone's going to (metaphorically?) find that comic and comment on it. (Comic-Con stars tomorrow, so how do I not include this?)

Sports: Wilt Chamberlain scores 100 points in a game against the New York Knicks - One of the greatest sports feats of all time also helped usher in an era of African American acceptance in the NBA. Even a passing reference in the series could illustrate that despite the still rampant racism, 1962 was a year that saw African Americans making upward moves that involved more than pushing buttons on an elevator.

How about you? You see anything that the world of 1962 had that might make it's way into the world of Sterling Cooper?

Also: Sunday at 11PM ET (8PM PT,) creator Matthew Weiner will be answering your questions on AMCtv.com. You can log in now and leave your questions (about 1962, perhaps?)

Previously: Mad Men, Season 1: A Zippo-shaped Time Machine