The Comic Books and Comic Book movies thread

The Dark Horse Conan (well, what I've read) has been pretty good. :good:

Have you read any of the Robert E. Howard’s originals. If not, you should.*** :D



A year! :O

I should consider myself lucky that I only got community service for uploading Glitter.*****

*** Everybody should.
***** you should have got life for that.
 
I would add that the work on Conan that was continued by L. Sprague De Camp after Howard's suicide is also very enjoyable.

I was wondering about those stories. Funny, I've known about Howard's life for a long time so when I saw the movie about his life, The Whole Wide World, I expected the ending, but it's funny when other peeps have watched it and they always talk about how the ending surprised them.

Speaking of L. Sprague de Camp, I did read his bio on Lovecraft. Does that count for something?
 
The Dark Horse Conan (well, what I've read) has been pretty good. :good:

Have you read any of the Robert E. Howard?s originals. If not, you should. :D

I have not. I just recently found out that Dave Lapham did a run on Conan (and Kull), so I'll definitely check those out.

Ditto the originals.
 
fables.jpg


Wow. Such a quietly consistent book. Beautifully done. Willingham is so confident and comfortable with characters that we all know and love. I don't need to rush out and buy single issues on this, but I do pre-order the trades. They are like the best warm cup of tea in front of a fire. Pure comfort food for the soul. I have to compare these to Sandman, which I loved...but always felt was too smart for the room. This is like Sandman for regular folks.(PLEASE don't slam me with complaints. I loved Sandman...it just felt sometimes that you needed a lit degree.) Anyway, it's a beautiful book and if someone ever gets smart(Showtime/HBO...or Fx/AMC) it will make a tremendous series. Hopefully with Once Upon a Time doing well it will force the issue.

And this

butcher-1.jpg


I am already on record with my love/awe of the BOYS, this mini covering the backstory of Billy Butcher could have been 'as expected'. And, to a point, it was. But things that you knew were so much sadder/maddening when played out. I think this helped to flesh out what could have been a very monochromatic character(see Ennis' Punisher for an example of that/sorry Adgy). Turns out that Butcher knows what a 'orrible bastard he is, and his relationship with his father lets you see where that came from. His 'goodbye' to dad is horribly appropriate(and inaproppriate at the same time). Just hammers home the sadness that this great story has an end in sight. Expect much praise from me as that moment gets nearer.

spoilers...they show Terror as a pup and do a nice job of letting you understand why BB has a wee dug. I still have not forgiven Ennis for that...
 
What people with a Lit degree aren't regular people? :P

I am quite behind on those Fables TPBs. :facepalm:

How many have come out?
 
no...I meant no disrespect. Sandman was just too smart sometimes. I am ashamed to even type that. The latest tpb of Fables is #16.
 
Not anymore. It is one of the rare comics that I regret stopping reading. I was a huge fan during the Vertigo heyday and enjoyed the first, I dunno, 100 issues or so.
 
The Director Of THOR 2 Is …
Ain't It Cool News: The best in movie, TV, DVD, and comic book news.

Alan Taylor, who hasn’t directed anything for the big screen since 2003’s indie drama “Kill The Poor,” will helm Marvel’s big-budget actioner “Thor 2,” according to Deadline Hollywood.

Taylor is likely best known as an HBO director, having lensed episodes of everything from “Oz,” “Sex and the City,” “The Sopranos,” “Six Feet Under,” “Big Love,” “In Treatment” and “Bored To Death” to period dramas like “Rome,” “Deadwood,” “Carnivale,” “Boardwalk Empire” and “Game Of Thrones.”

So he has a lot of experience with both contemporary and non-contemporary settings. His work blending CGI with live action on the period series has been splendid.

Away from HBO he’s directed installments of “Homicide: Life On The Street,” “Now and Again,” “The West Wing,” “Keen Eddie,” “Lost,” “Law & Order,” “Mad Men,” “Nurse Jackie,” “Rubicon” and “The Playboy Club.”

Before now, Taylor’s best-known big-screen work was likely the 2001 switched-identities Napoleon comedy “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” starring Ian Holm. (Maybe it’s the feature experience that got him the job over Timothy Van Patton?) His first feature was 1995's "Palookaville."

Taylor replaces Patty Jenkins (director of the Charlize Theron serial killer vehicle "Monster"), who apparently fell out of the project following creative differences with Marvel execs.
 
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