Showing posts with label Comics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comics. Show all posts

Buffy: The Vampire Slayer Seasons 8 & 9 - Parting Thoughts and Looking Ahead


Buffy: The Vampire Slayer is one of my favorite shows of all time. It premiered when I was in like 3rd grade, and ran until I was I sophomore in high school. To say it was part of my formative years is an understatement of the highest order. It was the precursor to Smallville - which started out as basically the same show - and maybe even other greats like Alias and Veronica Mars. Buffy was one of the first shows I saw, or even know of, that featured a female lead not as a gimmick a la Charlie's Angels, but simply because. Yes, she was a hot blonde, the cheerleader girl in a horror movie. But unlike those girls, she KICKED ASS. Literally. She was a hero who was strong, who was deeply flawed, who spoke her mind, who made mistakes, and who saved her world on an almost weekly basis.

Buffy: The Vampire Slayer is one of my favorite shows of all time. It ran for seven seasons, across two networks. It spawned a spin-off, and nearly two others. But it did need to end. Seven seasons is a long time, for any show, and few shows remain good or interesting after that. Nonetheless, when it ended I was in tears. It was like losing a friend, in a way. Flash forward to the beginning of my college experience, and I get the most wonderful gift! Buffy: The Vampire Slayer: The Comic!! It's totally canonical! Executive produced and occasionally written by Joss Whedon the Creator! Featuring writers like Jane Espenson (Sci-Fi Queen of Awesome), Brian K. Vaughan (my personal hero), and Drew Goddard of LOST. And THIS time, there would be no pesky TV budget to hinder the story! They could do whatever they wanted!

And boy did they. Dawn was a giant. And a centaur. And a doll. There were vampires. And vampires who could become panthers, wolves, and bees. There was - literally - a Giant Mecha Dawn who had a battle with Giant Dawn in downtown Tokyo. There was lesbian sex. There was flying, crashing, Dimension-Spawning Super Sex. There was time travel. Buffy and Angel got super powers. There were bugs in space ships. There were ancient hindu goddesses. There were possessed Hello Kitty Vampire Dolls. This was both awesome, and also troublesome.

Basically, and Joss admitted this himself, they were drunk on freedom. They were reveling in the unlimited medium they were playing on. And they went too far. It was too much. Some basic things were totally glossed over (such as what exactly Twilight was and what the endgame was there), and left the series feeling less thought-out than it really was. There was a lot of controversy too; particularly Twilight-gate and Lesbian Sex.

Do I regret buying and reading every issue? Not for one single second. There was a crossover with futuristic Slayer Fray, and an explanation as to why her world is the way it is! There were some great character moments, and it was truly wonderful to see people like Oz pop up a little. Am I glad that Season Nine will be a return to basics? HELLZ YESZ.




















Buffy Season Nine will see Buffy doing what she does best: SLAYING. Not leading an army. Not flying. Patrolling the streets to keep people safe from evil. Will there undoubtedly be more than just vamps? Yes. Will there be some sort of apocalyptic threat Buffy must rise to defeat? Duhdoi. But we have been guaranteed a tighter focus - both on characters and in general. I really appreciate that, just as I appreciate the fact that the creators heard our input and learned from it.

Also, Buffy Season Nine will be running concurrent with a new Faith and Angel series, with a similarly tight focus. This series should fill in some of the gaps with what happened to Angel, and see a renewed fight for redemption.

All in all, I have high hopes. And may Great Muppety Odin protect them.

Best Non-2010 Pop Culture I Found in 2010


Hola amigos! Welcome to another edition of A Main Nerd Tellurian Things, your favorite source for potentially-polarizing and largely ramblicious opinions on all things pop culture!  Originally I was going to do a post on my top five movies of the past year, but I have decided to wait until I see True Grit.  From what I’ve heard, it has the potential to rank highly on that list.  So for now, I’ve decided to comment on the best pop culture I found out about this year – sometimes years behind the curve.
Movies
I saw a lot of movies this year.  So there were a lot of contenders for this category.  Donnie Darko very nearly took this spot, but I’m gonna have to give it to Kill Bill.
Now, I don’t claim that this movie (I’m considering the two of them to be a single unit) is perfect.  I definitely think Volume 1 is the stronger, more entertaining of the two.  That being said, Volume 2 had the training scenes with Master Pai Mei, the fight with Elle, and the confrontation with Bill.  I certainly understand when people say the end is anti-climactic – and compared to the House of Blue Leaves sequence, it kind of is – but I think it’s perfect because emotionally it is both more satisfying and more necessary.  Anyway, I think this movie is smart, funny, bad-ass, and somehow also has an emotional core that allows you to relate to and care about most of the characters – even the villains.  I can’t believe I waited so long to see this.
Television
As many movies as I saw this past year, I saw infinitely more television.  Like, for each movie I watched, I watched at least one season of TV.  I am unashamedly addicted to television, and I hope that never changes.  So with this much TV being watched, narrowing down a top pick was… daunting to say the least.  I mean, this was the year I started watching Community, True Blood, Psych, possibly Mad Men (I don’t remember if it was late ’09 or early ’10), and Airbender, among others.  So, for the sake of my sanity, I’ve decided to break up this category into two subsets: Live Action, and Animated.
Live Action: Arrested Development
I saw part of this show when it was on.  Like, half of the episode where Charlize Theron leaves.  And I totally didn’t get the appeal.  I – like the rest of the world – simply wasn’t ready for the unadulterated brilliance of this show.  I love the running gags (especially “Mista Eff,” “FOR BRITISH EYES ONLY!!” and when the Charlie Brown music plays every time George Michael is sad.  Not to mention the chicken impressions.), I love the completely moronic and immoral characters, I love the meta references, and I love Ron Howard.  It’s pure gold, and I’m so glad I got to finally experience it for myself.
Animated: Cowboy Bebop
I’ve already blogged about how much I love this series.  I love the western-in-space premise.  I love the noir elements.  I love the “big plot” (which only consists of about five episodes), and I love the stand-alone episodes.  Which is not normal for an arc-heavy guy like me.  I love the characters.  Ironically, though animated they are more fleshed out than most live-action characters.  They’re flawed, but they’re real.  They’re heroic, but they make big mistakes.  They rarely get along but they’re family.  This show is virtually perfect in my eyes, and I do not regret buying the whole series with my Christmas money.
Music
I love music – a lot – but I’m not really one of those people that “can’t live without it.”  I certainly was, especially during my angsty teenage years, but as I’ve gotten older I’ve really learned the value of silence.  And of becoming more selective of the music I do listen to.  In theory anyway.
I guess my point is that I don’t have a lot of music.  I’ve never filled up my 20 GB iPod, I’m shamed to say.  And I’ve made even less of an effort to hunt for new music – at least until I started this blog.  So there were fewer candidates in this section.  The winner?  Without a doubt, the award goes to Janelle Monae.  I’m obsessed with her.
I love that she is so weird.  Her albums are one long story about an android in the future who falls in love with a human, is hunted by bounty hunters, and who becomes the prophesied savior of robotic kind.  Seriously.  I love her crazy hair, her tuxedo, and her sweet dance moves.  I love that she really truly believes that music can save a life.  And I love her music.  Do yourself a favor and listen to her.
Books
I wish I read more.  So much more.  I recently found a list of speculative fiction, and I think I’m going to make it my mission to read them all.  That being said, I read quite a bit this year, especially this summer.  I started the Sword of Truth series (then bailed six books in because it was pretentious, preachy, and lacking in subtlety).  I read some great Christian literature, including some by CS Lewis and John Piper.  I read some silly zombie books and started the Interview With a Vampire series.  But ultimately my favorite book I read this year was The Hunger Games. A story of a future America devastated by war and transformed into twelve districts run by a wealthy and cruel capital, 24 teenagers from across the districts are chosen to compete in a reality TV fight to the death, designed to remind the districts that the capital is boss.  The protagonist is a strong, resourceful, jaded and deeply scarred girl named Katniss, who is among the most BAMF main characters I’ve ever read.  I love the idea and the execution, so much that I read the first book in about 5 hours.  I will probably go read number two after I post this.
Comics
It was a solid year in comics.  Some decent events, some great new properties blowing up, and just generally solid direction for most of what I’m reading.  Without a doubt my favorite new comic has been Morning Glories, but this year I also discovered The Unwritten.  I’ve already written a fairly incoherent post about it, so I won’t go into too much detail, but allow me to say this: it has me intrigued.  Like a lot.  It has managed to creep me out, keep me guessing, and vastly entertain me.  An essay on the nature of story, and so much more, I highly recommend this series for any fan of great classic fiction (and/or comics).

Aaaaaand that’s it for that.  I’m looking forward to this year in pop culture, pretty much across the board.  Hopefully I’ll be here to vomit my opinions of it into the aether.
Coming soon: My top five movies of 2010, and – I’m really excited about this – a series of posts by guest authors.  I haven’t gotten all the details ironed out, but expect to see some of my good friends sharing their thoughts here, and maybe,maybe, seeing mine on some other blogs.  I’ll let you know as soon as I do.

The Unwritten - An Initial Reaction


is awesome, and you should read it.
Imagine a world where Harry Potter was thought to have been based on a real person, named Harry Potter.  And then, it was somehow revealed that the Harry Potter the books are based on, is literally the Harry Potter from the books.  As in, Harry Potter transcended the reality of his books, into ours.  The word made flesh, as it were.  And there you have the premise of The Unwritten, except it’s Tommy Taylor instead of Harry.  Or do you?
Now, I’ve only gotten through the first few issues at this point, but I’m so excited about it I felt a burning, itching, swollen urge to blog about it.  (Did I just use STD language to describe my desire to blog?  What has this semester done to me?)
From what I can tell, The Unwritten is going to be very “meta.”  I mean it is a story about Story, a myth about myth.  And I love that.  That was essentially the premise of Final Crisis, which is one of the best things I’ve read in recent memory.  Story is all around us.  It’s how we relate our experiences to each other – via conversation, via Twitter, via Facebook, and everything else.  It encompasses everything.  And to quote Jamba Juice via Natalie Portman, “It’s everything we believe in.”  Or to quote Grant Morrison, “The stories we tell ourselves are real because they’re important to us. The type of stories we tell might determine our survival.”  I freaking love that.  Stories are real because we love them.
The Unwritten, obviously, takes that literally.  Tommy Taylor becomes REAL.  And he becomes a Messiah – at least to some.  I have no idea where the plot is going to go, but I’m excited.  I hope it takes the “all myths are true” approach.  I want to see Tommy encounter Madame Thenardier in France or Hamlet in Denmark.
So anyway, I guess that’s all I have to say at this point, but I’ll keep you posted on if it continues to awe me.
UPDATE: It does.  The mythology is continuing to build.  We’re beginning to see stories come to life, mostly where they were written.  We’re beginning to see how stories can change the world – for good or for bad, in the life of a nation or the life of a child.  We’re beginning to see what can happen if a story becomes distorted into something it shouldn’t, and the consequences that can have.  And we’re beginning to see the conspiracy coalesce, and Tom come to terms with his own powers.  It’s been great so far.

Morning Glories - An Initial Reaction


Is awesome, and you should read it.
I had literally heard nothing about it.  I don’t really follow Image comics that closely.  I’m more of a DC/Marvel/Vertigo kind of guy.  But I was on IGN reading their weekly comics reviews as always on a Thursday, when I saw their review for Issue 2.  And they described it as “LOST meets Runaways.”  Literally my favorite show with one of my Top Five comics of all time.  Brian K. Vaughan has worked on both, but that’s neither here nor there.  I immediately went to look for the first two issues, only to find them sold out OF THEIR THIRD PRINTING.  That.  Is.  Awesome.
Luckily I was able to find it at my comic book store back in Katy, and devoured it.
So what’s it about?  The jury’s still out.  It’s definitely setting up for something epic though.  But I will attempt to describe it without giving too much away.
Basically it’s about six teenagers who are sent to a boarding school.  But things take a mysterious twist when they discover that every student at the school has the same birthday, they aren’t allowed to talk to their families, and there’s some sort of energy ghost/demon/entity living in the basement.  There’s some pretty snappy dialogue, art that reminds me of Adrian Alphona, and definitely the promise of greatness to come.  I highly recommend getting in on the ground floor of this one kids.

Top Five Comics of All Time


This has been surprisingly difficult to come up with.  I mean, my number one is really obvious to me, but the other four were quite difficult to come up with, and may not be in exact order.
5.  Ex Machina – Brian K. Vaughan
Imagine a world exactly like ours.  No super heroes, no aliens, none of that.  And then one day, this guy shows up in a jet pack who can talk to machines, and starts fighting crime.  Badly.  The cops hate him, the government hates him, most people hate him.  Until he stops the second plane from hitting on 9/11.  After which he becomes a celebrated hero, and is elected the first Independent mayor of New York City.
That’s the premise behind Ex Machina, but it’s mostly an excuse to explore both sides of the political spectrum with relatively little bias.  I’ve only read the first two volumes (which is why it isn’t higher on the list), but they’ve already explored gay marriage and censorship.  I mean the FIRST issue was all about the N-Word.
This series is witty, and intelligent, and political, and fun.  It’s definitely not your typical super hero comic.
4.  X-Factor, Vol. 3 – Peter David
Since the 90s, X-Factor has been a series about B- and C-list mutants.  Which I think is brilliant.  I mean, in addition to giving some exposure to the lesser-known members of the X-verse, it basically allows David to do whatever he wants.  Who’s gonna care if he makes Rictor gay?  Who the heck is Rictor??
In this third incarnation, X-Factor eschews its super hero roots and follows a different path – NOIR.  A group of mutants – and a few non-mutants – open up a detective agency.  They get hired by clients (and occasionally criminals) to solve crimes.  Of course, they frequently get roped into super-powered brawls, but that’s to be expected.
This comic has banter like you wouldn’t believe.  The characters face real problems (and some un-realistic ones too).  The characters are fully-formed and well-developed.  And did I mention it’s NOIR??
3.  Runaways (Vol. 1 and 2)  – Brian K. Vaughan
See a pattern forming?  I do.  So, Runaways is the story of six normal kids who find out that their 12 normal parents are actually super villains who rule L.A. with an iron fist.  Over the course of the first two volumes, they try to take down their parents, get roped into some crazy hi-jinks, and evade Social Services and the rest of the adult super human community.  And in the process, become a new family.  Awwww.
What sets aside Runaways – to me – is the dialogue.  It is easily one of the wittiest, and certainly most pop-culturally relevant, comics I have ever read.  But unlike other authors *cough – Whedon – cough – Millar – cough – Bendis -cough* the jokes and references are always funny, and the characters don’t just yammer on and on and on.  Each character has a very distinct voice, and a very relatable set of issues to sort through.  This comic is so much more than your average teen-age super team.  It’s coming-of-age, it’s dysfunctional, it’s hilarious, it’s real.
P.S. I don’t consider any issue not written by Vaughan canon (aka the whole of volume 3 and the transitional Whedon issues)
2.  Watchmen – Allan Moore
How could I not include this classic?  I would have to say this is probably the most influential comic series in history.  I mean, it’s virtually flawless.  I could ramble forever about it, but I’ll try to give you the highlights.
The art. Normally a comic consists of primary – and bright – colors.  Especially for heroes.  Look at Superman and Wonderwoman’s costumes.  Villains, on the other hand, tend to wear orange, purple, and green.  Pretty much the entire pallet for Watchmen is secondary colors, and it’s very muddy and dark.  Very different.  Furthermore, there is virtually no variation in panel layout.  It’s pretty much 16 panels per page, every page.  Also the issues tend to be symmetrical.
The story.  Wow.  Talk about dark.  There is a very palpable sense of terror that builds throughout the series.  There is gratuitous violence, sex, and language, so beware if that’s not your jam.  But the underlying idea – taking super heroes and exploring the SERIOUS ISSUES they have…that was pretty revolutionary.  The idea that people get into the vigilante game and wear these costumes is because it turns them on? Or because they have rage issues?  Or to release sexual tension?  That’s definitely not normal.
Other.  So there’s a really cool story-within-a-story that got omitted from the theatrical version of the movie, which is a shame because it’s awesome.  Each issue of the series also contained a purely prose section with all sorts of neat background information.  And the end.  I still think it’s a little silly, but it was clearly planned from the beginning, so props for that.
Overall, this is a definite must-read for anyone who wants to get into the graphic novel game.  I can’t imagine you being disappointed.
1.  Y: The Last Man – Brian K. Vaughan
Yes, it is another BKV comic, and no I won’t deny that he is my literary hero and I want to be just like him when I grow up.
So Y starts with every male mammal on the planet dying simultaneously.  Except for Yorick Brown and his monkey Ampersand (which is what “&” is called).  So Yorick, his special agent bodyguard 355, and snarky lesbian Dr. Mann travel the country – and eventually the world – in hopes of figuring out what caused the “gendercide” and ifmankind can be brought back.
Ultimately, Y is two things.  One, it is a true coming of age story.  Yorick is an emotionally-crippled borderline shut-in at the beginning of the series.  He’s a man-child who is suddenly “the greatest man on Earth.”  Two, it is an in-depth exploration of women.  In a society with no men, women are forced to take up ALL the slack – from farming to policing, piloting to engineering.  What happens to the Catholic church with no priests?  Or the Muslims? Or the Jews?
This comic is incredibly interesting.  It’s poignant, it’s funny.  There’s snark, there’s romance, there’s violence.  There are enough pop-culture references to make your eyes pop.  It is – in my opinion – completely flawless.  I would not change anything about any of the 60 issues.
READ IT.
Honorable Mentions:
1) Young Avengers – almost made the cut for pretty much exactly the same reasons as Runaways.  There are definite similarities between the two – for example, the including of gay characters, and two of them being “siblings.”  Ultimately though, YA is much shorter at this point, and is way more integrated into the Marvel Universe (which means more editorial tampering).
2) V for Vendetta – easily in my top ten movies, I enjoyed the comic, but not as much as I would have thought.  I actually found it pretty boring.  There’s a LOT going on, which isn’t bad, but I like how the movie stream-lined it for me.  I also found the art less than enjoyable.  And all the 80s anarchy stuff didn’t seem very relevant, at least not compared to government scare tactics and stuff.  But it’s still legit, and worth the read.
3) League of Extraordinary Gentlemen – SO much better than the movie.  I can’t even begin to describe how much.  There’s more hard-core stuff in the comic, but it’s just superior in every single way to that travesty of a movie.  There are more references to 19th Century literature than I could wrap my mind around, which was cool as long as Wikipedia was handy.  The only flaw was how abruptly it ended.
4) Scott Pilgrim – I loved the movie so completely in every way that I found the comic slightly underwhelming.  I mean, the movie is incredibly (read: panel by panel) faithful to the source material.  And as much fun as the book is, a movie is better because of a) SOUND and b) moving, color pictures.  This is a story about our technology dependent, raised-on-TV-and-video-games generation, so having technology tell the story just makes more sense to me.  But they’re both amazing
5) Anything written by Grant Morrison.  His (fairly literal) deconstruction of Batman absolutely blew my mind.  This man does NOTHING without having the end in mind.  His run on X-Men was the most radically different, intelligent, interesting take on the team since the 70s.  And even if Marvel pretty much erased ALL of his contributions to the mythos, it was still impressive.  All-Star Superman is easily the BEST take on Superman I’ve ever read, and if you think Superman isn’t relatable after reading it, you probably aren’t very relatable yourself.  Final Crisis is basically a huge experiment in story-telling, and really an essay on Story itself.  This guy is crazy (seriously he’s like a wizard. Like for a religion.), but he’s brilliant.
There are so many more comics I could recommend, but these are my favorites that I think build a solid foundation for anyone interested in reading comics that are more substantial than your average book.