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Vans Warped Tour, Presented By Journeys, And Valiant Entertainment Team Up For 2017 Artwork And Branding

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Comics and Punk Rock!

Valiant ComicsLos Angeles, CA and New York, NY, February 17, 2017 – The Vans Warped Tour® presented by Journeys® and Valiant Entertainment today announced a new partnership to bring Valiant’s award-winning library of comic book superheroes on the road with America’s longest-running touring music festival for an immersive collaboration spanning the summer 2017 season.

As revealed today at Entertainment Weekly, multiple fan-favorite characters from Valiant’s 2,000-plus-strong library will make Warped Tour history as the centerpieces of the 2017 tour’s “comic book” theme. All summer long, Valiant’s most iconic heroes – including X-O Manowar, Faith, Bloodshot, Livewire, Ninjak, and more – will adorn posters, promotional pieces, merchandise, and more at over 40 tour dates across the United States. The 2017 Vans Warped Tour® artwork was designed by acclaimed Valiant comic book artist Kano.

Additionally, Valiant will exhibit at select Vans Warped Tour® dates across the summer with a mobile comic book art installation and appearances by major comics creators – the first time that a major comics publisher has joined the touring roster of America’s longest-standing and most renowned touring music festival in more than a decade.

Valiant’s appearances on the 2017 Vans Warped Tour® will benefit the publisher’s ongoing charitable partners at The Keep A Breast Foundation – a leading nonprofit organization with a mission to empower young people around the world with breast health education and support

Vans Warped Tour® Founder Kevin Lyman said:

For 23 years, the Vans Warped Tour has been such a great platform for bands, brands, and creative minds.  It’s always fun to be able to do collaborations, and this partnership with Valiant Entertainment is very special from a creative standpoint.

Russell A. Brown, President of Consumer Products, Promotions & Ad Sales for Valiant Entertainment added:

This is a groundbreaking partnership on many levels, and we’re honored and excited to call the Vans Warped Tour our newest partner. The Vans Warped Tour is an institution, and comics are the next logical extension of their hugely influential footprint. There’s a huge reciprocity between music and comics, and we were happy to find that there are just as many fans in their camp as there are in ours. We look forward to doing awesome things together in 2017 and beyond.

Now in its 23rd year, the 41-date tour will commence June 16 in Seattle, WA and end on August 6 in Southern California.

The entire lineup for 2017’s Vans Warped Tour®, presented by Journeys®, will be released on Wednesday, March 22nd.

Tickets will also go on sale Wednesday, March 22nd at 10:00AM local time at vanswarpedtour.com.

As a bonus for early ticket buyers, the first 500 tickets sold for each show will be at the lowest price available and will include a digital download of the Official Vans Warped Tour® 50-song compilation.

Originally founded in 1989, Valiant Entertainment is one of the most successful publishers in the history of the comic book medium with more than 80 million comics and graphic novels sold and the third largest library of superhero characters in all of entertainment. In 2012, Valiant roared back to the fore with a relaunch that quickly established itself as the biggest debut of a new comic book publisher in more than a decade. The resurgent Valiant was also awarded a coveted Diamond Gem Award for Publisher of the Year after just seven months – marking the fastest time that any new company had been named to one of comics’ highest honors – and has been repeatedly cited as one of the most talked-about and trendsetting forces in comics by preeminent media outlets including The Atlantic, Buzzfeed, The Guardian, The New York Times, People, The Washington Post, and dozens more worldwide. Consistently rated year over year as the most acclaimed comic book publisher in the industry today, Valiant has received hundreds of awards, nominations, and critical accolades, culminating in 2016 with a record setting 50 Harvey Award nominations – the most ever received by a single publisher in the history of one of the comic book industry’s most prestigious awards. Valiant has announced a multipicture deal to bring Bloodshot and Harbinger to the big screen as feature film franchises, the first of which is slated for release in 2018 from Sony Pictures.

About Vans Warped Tour®:

The Vans Warped Tour®, presented by Journeys®, is well known as America’s longest running touring music festival of the summer. Since 1995, the tour has been a showcase for both established and up and coming talent, across a wide range of eclectic sub-genres.

The tour has also cemented its place in history by bringing alternative rock and skate culture from the underground to the forefront of global youth culture, while at the same time helping those in need through non-profit and eco initiatives.

Alternative Press readers voted the Vans Warped Tour as the “Best Tour/Festival” and Rolling Stone called it “America’s Most Successful Festival”.

About Valiant Entertainment:

Valiant Entertainment is a leading character-based entertainment company that owns the largest independent superhero universe in comics. With more than 80 million issues sold and a library of over 2,000 characters, including X-O Manowar, Bloodshot, Harbinger, Shadowman, Archer & Armstrong, and many more, Valiant is one of the most successful publishers in the history of the comic book medium. Today, the company’s characters continue to be forged in publishing, licensing, film, video games, and beyond. Valiant consistently produces some of the most critically acclaimed comics in the industry and has received numerous industry awards and accolades, including a Diamond Gem Award for Comic Book Publisher of the Year. In 2015, Valiant announced a multi-picture deal to bring Bloodshot and Harbinger to the big screen as feature films. Visit them online at ValiantUniverse.com

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5 Favorite Movies From The Year I Was Born: 1978

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In American film, 1978 stands in the shadow of a film called Star Wars. It shook up everything in 1977. But the real effects of that shift in movie making would not be felt for a least another year when series like Alien and Star Trek first appeared on the big screen, only to be followed by an increasing wealth of genre pictures in the years to follow. But even at the Academy Awards, films like The Deer Hunter and Coming Home lack the cultural staying power of Rocky, Annie Hall, and the Godfather films; though both 1978 Oscar winning films have their admirers.

But for me, there are five important films released that year which had a lasting impact on my love of movies. None are particularly high art, but I come back to them year after year and dutifully upgrade my copies of them every time the home video industry promises me better picture quality. And while I could easily have been born in a better year for film, the fact these movies came out at the same time is, in some way, telling.

5Superman

While not my earliest movie memory, the impression of Lois Lane being crushed in the Earth stuck with me – even if it was sometimes only in my nightmares – cementing a tradition of Superman films leaving a lasting impression. But that original film, directed by Richard Donner and ghost-written by an uncredited Tom Mankiewicz, became a more rewarding experience with each passing year. Its definitive treatment of Krypton, its idyllic version of a mid-50s Smallville that could never be, and the fast-talking energy of Metropolis so well realized each of the major Superman settings that every subsequent treatment must make the choice to embrace the work done here or attempt radical departures.

For me, it was my introduction to Superman well before I could read comics and a family favorite when a video store sprang up in the neighborhood. As a child, I simply loved seeing Superman in action. Flash forward a few years and my image of Superman, now under the influence of Dan Jurgens and Roger Stern, could no longer appreciate the Superman of the 70s. But then as an adult, elements I found too coarse and jokey when I was a teenager ring so true and right today; even Ned Beatty’s buffoonish henchman character, Otis.

In some ways, especially considering the effort it takes to make a Superman films these days, it is a miracle the film exists at all. It took nearly five years to make and was known, at the time, as the most expensive film ever produced. Before Donner came along, the film was intended to echo the campiness of Batman ’66; a tone which crept in following Donner’s departure. But he saw the value in treating the characters with respect and in giving the original superhero myth a straight treatment. That decision was also backed by the discovery of the only actor who could play the Man of Steel in 1978. With Christopher Reeve, Donner found an actor who could encompass the character’s warmth, authority, strength, and playfulness. While the flying can be realized today easily and credibly, no other Superman screen treatment ever offered a better take on this most cherished of origin stories.

4Halloween

I’m not a huge fan of horror films, but Halloween (when I finally saw it) impressed upon me the vision of one of horror’s greatest masters, John Carpenter. Instead of shocks, the film achieves a constant presence of unease, punctuated by the occasional appearance of the Other. Though he would subsequently receive a name – and a confusing and pathetic back story – in this, he is The Shape: a void of humanity spawned from a seemingly ideal suburban reality. And unlike the slashers who would follow him, he had a level of patience aiding the film’s atmosphere. While there is some underlying passion to his murders, they almost seem incidental to the true idea behind the film: evil is real, omnipresent, and random.

I suppose part of the reason the film feels so real to me is because it was shot in one of my teen-aged stomping grounds. South Pasadena, California subbed in for the fictional Haddonfield, Illinois. Laurie Strode’s home sits across the street from the library, just a short walk from the storefront in which The Shape finds his iconic mask. Nowadays, that storefront is a restaurant across the street from an unassuming chiropractors office – a house familiar to horror fans as the Meyers home. But like Superman, there is a verisimilitude to the film’s world that would exist even if I didn’t live a short drive from Haddonfield.

3The Lord of the Rings

I both love and hate Ralph Bakshi’s 1978 attempt to film J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. Narratively, he made a number of wise decisions in transferring the expansive world of Tolkien into screen drama: cutting most of the early chapters and emphasizing the action-adventure element Aragorn’s story offers. But at the same time, the film moves at supersonic speed in its first half, only to slow to a crawl once the fellowship brakes into three story threads. Merry and Pippin are escorted out of the film by Treebeard while Frodo becomes a guest in his own story, disappearing almost an hour before the film ends. In his place, we’re left to watch a muddy and indistinct Battle of Helm’s Deep realized with partial animation and tinted black-and-white battle footage.

Though well intentioned, Bakshi’s ambition was well beyond what he – or anyone – could achieve in the late 1970s. A believer in rotoscoping, Bakshi filmed his entire script with live actors in rough approximations of the character’s costumes. The intent was to fully animate The Lord of the Rings from this reference footage. When the money dried up, he was forced to use some of that footage in place of missing animation. The technique does not work at all. But even the finished animation undercuts Bakshi’s intent with the characters looking and moving like caricatures; a result he expressly wished to avoid.

But before I had the willpower to read Tolkien, this film offered me an early glimpse into Middle-Earth. Enchanted by the Rankin-Bass version of The Hobbit, I wanted to see more and a Tolkien-loving uncle soon provided me with this vision; which, if nothing else, helped make sense of all the Led Zeppelin songs constantly playing at my home. And for all its faults, it proved to me just how deep and dark the world of Tolkien could be and that animation itself could have a harder edge.

2Hooper

Hands down, Hooper is my favorite Burt Reynolds movie. It’s also my favorite Hal Needham flick. The Needham/Reynolds collaborations played constantly on KTLA in the 1980s, so I became quite familiar with Smokey and the Bandit, Stroker Ace, and Cannonball Run. But Hooper stands out as a favorite because it is clear Needham’s most personal film.

Stick with me here.

Sonny Hooper, like Needham, is an aging stuntman. He drinks hard, works hard and braves death for the sake of something as meaningless as a movie. As the story begins, Hooper finds himself facing a new young hotshot and an egotistical director. Once it becomes clear the film within the film will require a literal death-defying ending, Hooper learns another hard landing will leave him a quadriplegic.

Needham, a stuntman before he made his directorial debut with 1977’s Smokey and the Bandit, surely felt a kinship to Hooper as he himself aged out of stuntwork. And with its bar brawls, car chances and a jump across a collapsing bridge, Hooper is in many ways a celebration of the old-time stuntman.

Like Needham’s better movies, the experience is more visceral than intellectual. And though the character’s main antagonist is a director who seems himself as an intellectual – according to legend, the director character is based on Reynolds’ interactions with New Hollywood filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich – the film is still a delight for those who like to think about their movies. Because, really, a thoughtful film can feature a Firebird racing the clock against a collapsing oil refinery.

The events of Hooper have an authenticity to them, even as they seem wildly stylized. And by the point Reynolds looks into the camera, says “fuck it” with his eyes and clocks the director, it’s impossible not to sympathize with him.

1Invasion of the Body Snatchers

Despite my ambivalence toward horror movies, I have a fondness for the 1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers and the 1956 original. I put that down to living close to actual locations used in the films. Ask me which is the better movie and I’m forced to go with the 1978 version, directed by Philip Kaufman and starring Donald Sutherland, Leonard Nimoy, and Brooke Adams. Like Halloween, there is a special moodiness to the piece. Where the 1956 version is a warning against the Red Menace, 1978 seems to find its fears in the newly established doubts in the American government and the New Age practices popular in Northern California at the time. By virtue of the blighted San Francisco location, it establishes a credible reality.

It also features one of the best horror casts ever assembled. The leads, like the crumbling San Francisco around them, feel lived in and real; even as one of them resembles a Vulcan. Veronica Cartwright and Jeff Goldblum round a group of people facing the terrifying notion that their friend and family are no longer the people they love.

There are a handful of shocking moments when semi-formed pod duplicates are found or any time a duplicate finds a person and unleashes a horrifying scream. But overall, the film evokes that general sense of unease in the years after Manson, Watergate, and Jim Jones.


What is your favorite film from 1978. Comment below.

Five Favorite Films From The Year I Was Born: 1989

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1989 isn’t just a terrible Taylor Swift album (@ me). It was the year Michael Jackson was named the “King Of Pop.” Tiny Tim ran an unsuccessful New York City mayoral campaign. It was the year that Jason Voorhees took Manhattan and Freddy Krueger had a “dream child.” The Berlin Wall fell in 1989, and George H.W. Bush became the 41st U.S. President. It was also the year I was born into a family of movie buffs. Here are my 5 favorite films from the year I was born.

5Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure

I don’t know where I would be in life without my unmatched “talent” for air guitar. My abilities with the phantom-ax are all thanks to Bill S. Preston, Esquire and Ted “Theodore” Logan. Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure is a science fiction comedy that gives two slackers a time machine. With this technology, they travel through time collecting historical figures to help pass a high school presentation. It’s one of those movies I’ve seen countless times, but rarely pass on another viewing when it’s on cable. Few films have tapped into the sci-fi genre this heavily and delivered a more enjoyable experience.

4Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade

The second most important trilogy in my personal film history (after Star Wars, duh). Stephen Spielberg and George Lucas’ third installment of Indiana Jones is my favorite. Harrison Ford returns as the heroic archaeologist, with Sean Connery as his father. Mysteries, history, and Nazi-punching action; there’s no better movie for father-son bonding. Last Crusade was a step away from the dark tone in Temple Of Doom. resulting in a lighter, but still heavy hitting, period piece about keeping treasure away from Germany.

3Back To The Future II

There was an explosion of sequels in 1989, however none were more important than Back To The Future II. If I had a dollar for every Saturday I’ve gotten sucked into a Back To The Future marathon, I could probably afford the box set. No other science fiction film captures the energy and heart of the 80’s better than this time-traveling sequel. I can’t tell if this flick got so much right about the future (other than fax machines), or we all watched it so much it shaped the future. Being born in 1989 definitely played a part in my affection for sequels, Part II is my favorite installment.

2Vampire’s Kiss

Nicolas Cage is a mad man, I have an unhealthy obsession with him. This is the only movie in my list that I didn’t grow up watching. I only discovered this psychotic trip about six years ago. Not a day has gone by that I haven’t quoted it at least once. Most famous for providing the best Cage memes, Vampire’s Kiss is the best bad movie ever made. There’s not a single moment where viewers know for certain if it’s meant to be taken seriously or a total joke. It doesn’t matter though, it’s a thoroughly entertaining mess the entire time. I still regularly watch this movie and discover something insane or hilarious every time. I cannot fully express with words how insane Vampire’s Kiss is, watch it over beers with a group of friends.

1Batman

Tim Burton’s first trip to Gotham is one of the most important pieces of cinema I’ve ever laid eyes on. This picture made me who I am today. I’m aware of its flaws; time hasn’t been the kindest to Batman, but I love it to my core. Michael Keaton will always be my Bruce Wayne of choice. Jack Nicholson’s Joker will never be surpassed (sorry Heath). I’ve been practicing his laugh for over 20 years. This was the start of it all for me, once I absorbed this masterpiece of nostalgia I never turned back; I was a nerd for life. No other film version of Gotham City has felt like home with Burton’s vision engraved in my brain. An amazing soundtrack by Prince to top it all off, and you have all the ingredients that make up Brandon J. Griffin.


I most certainly left out some crucial movies, what are your favorites from 1989?

Tilda Swinton Favorite to be Next Time Lord on Doctor Who

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According to an article posted on Metro, the next titular Time Lord on Doctor Who may just be fan favorite Tilda Swinton. Fans have been hoping for a female or ginger Doctor since the announcement that Matt Smith was leaving the show. With Peter Capaldi’s announcement that this series would be his last, those hopes have been revived.

Ladbrokes currently has Swinton at 7/2 odds, up from the previous 10/1 odds. Doctor Who actor Paul McGann has supported the idea of Ms. Swinton as Capaldi’s replacement.  The question begs: Is it time for a female Doctor?

For the last several years, Doctor Who has encountered a “woman problem.” The current run has been criticized for using women as nothing more than flirtatious window dressing. Clara’s character never clearly manifested in a way that connected with fans. Her storylines were discombobulated and her personal history continually felt chaotic.

When Smith left, many fans jumped on board asking for a female, but the narrative at that point did not seem to fit a new gender iteration of the traditional hero. At the time, however, the plot did not lend itself to a female. Smith’s romantic flirtations with Clara and her feelings for him clouded 12’s regeneration.

Capaldi’s run, however, has been criticized for providing a less than empathetic rendering of the character. Many have attributed the problems to Moffat as show runner, while others have argued that Capaldi’s matured age is at fault. Regardless of the reason, the stiff, often emotionally disconnected Doctor has repeatedly been a problem for fans.

A female Doctor might be just the answer to revive the franchise in the eyes of the newer, modern fans. With Missy being such a fan favorite, it’s clear that a woman can bring a new perspective to Time Lord mythos. Bringing in the right female who can balance emotional maturity with the sense of weariness that we’ve been seeing in the current iterations might be an excellent way to bridge the gap that’s been forming slowly between fans and their favorite dual hearted alien.

If the Doctor is regenerated as a woman, who would be your pick?

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King Kong Is Massive In Latest ‘Kong: Skull Island’ International Poster

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A new Taiwanese poster from Kong: Skull Island has been unviled by Screen Rant, and it highlights just how massive the ape really is in this new incarnation. Check it out below.

Kong Skull Island

What are your thoughts on the poster? Are you looking forward to the film? Comment below!

“Warner Bros. Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ “Kong: Skull Island” reimagines the origin of the mythic monster in a compelling, original adventure from director Jordan Vogt-Roberts. In the film, a diverse team of explorers is brought together to venture deep into an uncharted island in the Pacific—as beautiful as it is treacherous—unaware that they’re crossing into the domain of the mythic Kong.”

Kong: Skull Island hits theaters on March 10.

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‘Logan’: Patrick Stewart On What Makes The Film Unique & Working With Hugh Jackman Again

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In a recent interview with Collider, X-Men star Patrick Stewart, who playes Charles Xavier, talked about what makes Logan unique.

“When I saw the first screenplay – the first draft – I was stunned. Shocked. Surprised. And delighted, because diversity has been such an important part of my life and work for over 50 years. ‘Please, please, give me something new and different to do. Don’t make me repeat the same thing over and over again.’ And this was certainly different… Page by page, I saw this developing. I was intrigued and excited by the prospects that stayed with me until the last moment on camera.”

Additionally, the actor commented on working with Hugh Jackman, Dafne Keen, and the director, James Mangold.

“To be, once more, working with Hugh [Jackman], who I’ve been working with from the very beginning, with James [Mangold], who I’d only done one day’s worth of work in the past, but I enjoyed it, and then to be in the company… Dafne Keen, who is the youngest member of the cast and is quite extraordinary. Working with her and with Hugh was a huge highlight.”

What are your thoughts on Stewart’s comments? Are you looking forward to Logan? Drop a comment down below and let us know!

Plot synopsis:In the near future, a weary Logan cares for an ailing Professor X in a hide out on the Mexican border. But Logan’s attempts to hide from the world and his legacy are up-ended when a young mutant arrives, being pursued by dark forces.”

Logan stars Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/ Logan, Patrick Stewart as Charles Xavier, Dafnee Keen as Laura Kinney/X-23, Boyd Holbrook as Donald Pierce, Doris Morgado as Maria, Richard E. Grant as Dr. Zander Rice, Stephen Merchant as Caliban, Elizabeth Rodriguez as Gabriela, and others.

The film hits theaters on March 3, 2017. 

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Indie Review: ‘Road to The Well’ a Crafty Noir With Echoes of Early Coen Brothers

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Road to The Well is a small neo-noir from writer/director Jon Cvak, and a deliciously mean-spirited thriller in the vein of the Coen Brothers’ debut film, Blood Simple. It doesn’t have the leanness or the near perfection of that film (and it isn’t simply some knock off), but despite its flaws, Road to The Well is a sure sign of new talent in the world of bare-bones indie filmmaking.

Frank (Laurence Fisher) is an office drone of a shapeless business who barely hides the disdain for his job beneath a facade of percolating frustration. His boss, Tom, wants him to take a project “up north” for the company despite the fact he wants nothing to do with the gig. His home life isn’t much better, especially when he finds his girlfriend with Tom in a compromising position at an office party.

One night, about the time Frank’s life is being upended, an old friend named Jack (Micah Parker) turns up and the two head out to the bar. Jack has decided to become a drifter in recent years, happy to bounce from place to place and live life as a nomad. It is free-spirited Jack who entices Frank to go talk to the girl sitting up at the bar. Nothing seems quite right, which is the modus operandi for the entire film.

Frank and the girl hit it off a little too quickly and before long wind up in the backseat of his car; without spoiling anything else, a crime is committed, and Frank and Jack must dispose of a body. That’s the simplest way to set up Road to The Well; there are plenty more details and developments which led these two men to this precarious situation, and the bulk of the film involves Frank and Jack finding a place to bury their corpse, running into old friends and making new, very strange, very dangerous ones along the way.

Cvak’s screenplay and direction is terrific in its ability to create mood, develop a sense of dread, and keep the performances and individual scenes consistently bizarre and uneasy. Even when all sense of logic sometimes abandons the film – certain sections feel disjointed or seem to be missing important pieces of information – the dedication to tone keeps the story from spinning out of control. Like when Frank and Jack visit another old friend, sneak their way onto some land he owns to hopefully bury the body, and have a wacko encounter with the nosy neighbor, a retired Army vet (Marshall R. Teague) intent on killing himself. The whole segment is completely detached from the central plot, but its also captivating and weird and a masterful bit of self-contained storytelling. It works, and works well, again blending elements of the Coen Brothers with a Lynchian sense of off kilter madness.

The revelation near the end can be seen from the beginning of the film, but the performances – especially from Fisher and Micah Parker, who channels a young and sinister Benicio del Toro at times – keep even the more obvious plot developments interesting. Although certain moments in the story are telegraphed, this screenplay is honest and sharp.

Road to The Well is a curious picture told with real confidence, an artistic eye for detail, and some impressive, painterly composition from cinematographer Tim Davis. The Coen influence is heavy, but there are (visually) elements of Shane Carruth’s uber low-budget thriller Primer here, and ample stylistic references to David Lynch seeping through the screen. It’s worth seeking out (it’s available on iTunes, Amazon, DVD, Vudu, Google Play, Xbox and Playstation), and it’s probably a good idea to keep the the name Jon Cvak in your memory banks.

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Kevin Smith Attached To ‘Spawn’ Spin-off ‘Sam and Twitch’ For BBC America

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It seems that after helming episodes of both The Flash and Supergirl, geek-laureate Kevin Smith is jumping into another comic book based TV show, reports Deadline. This time its Spawn spin-off Sam and Twitch for BBC America.  Sam and Twitch was a gritty noir/crime series that had a popular run written by comic book superstar Brian Michael Bendis.

BBC America president and GM Sarah Barnett had this to say:

They were originally introduced in Spawn, and it’s Todd McFarlane’s comic book series about these big-city homicide detectives who face a series of super grizzly crimes that are connected to the occult. I bumped into Kevin Smith at Sundance and he is beyond himself excited about this, about the show

So what do you guys think? Personally, a Sam and Twitch show could be great, and BBC productions are usually high caliber (think Sherlock and Luther). I am excited. Tell us what you think and comment below!

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Slavery, Rainbows, And Science Fiction: A Birthday Tribute To LeVar Burton

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Happy birthday to actor, director, producer, and author, LeVar Burton who turns 60 today. Burton doesn’t look a day over 30, though, because black don’t crack. I’m just saying the man looks good. LeVar Burton might not be a household name to many people, but the actor played three iconic roles over the past 40 years. These roles have shaped generations of people, including me! In celebration of LeVar Burton we look at these three roles and the impact they left.

There’s a theme of teaching, togetherness, and sharing that runs through so much of what LeVar Burton does.

Roots

Most actors never hear their name when it comes to Emmy nominations, but LeVar Burton began his career with one. Burton’s first ever professional audition was for a role in the slavery-era ABC miniseries Roots. In Roots, Burton played Kunta Kinte, a young African who is stolen by slavers and taken to America. Burton plays Kinte during the slave’s teenage years which is essentially a hellish nightmare.

Roots aired for eight nights on ABC back in 1977. The mini-series put slavery and the struggle of African-Americans on television like never before, becoming one of the most-watched TV events of the decade. The Emmy’s nominated Burton for best actor in a mini-series, and the young actor’s career was off to a fast start.

Reading Rainbow

Now free from fictional slavery, Burton spent the next few years making appearances on TV shows and in films. In 1983, Burton became producer and host of Reading Rainbow. The show dedicated to reading featured a book every episode and told stories in a variety of ways including skits and animation. Many celebrity legends like Patrick Stewart, Matthew Broderick, and Helen Mirren lent their talents to Reading Rainbow.

In 2006, after 23 seasons and 155 episodes, PBS canceled Reading Rainbow. I consider this a national travesty since this show did more for reading than most schools. For many kids, Burton’s bright, smiling face is permanently etched as the face of Reading Rainbow which introduced new worlds every week. Since its cancellation, Burton and his company RRKIDS launched a successful Kickstarter campaign and Reading Rainbow is now a app across multiple platforms providing free reading materials for children.

Star Trek

Joining the voyage of humanity through space, Burton took on the role of Lt. Commander Geordi LaForge in Star Trek: The Next Generation (ST:TNG). As the blind chief engineer of the Enterprise, Burton’s LaForge tackled issues of people with disabilities and fell short in love repeatedly (what’s up with that ST:TNG writers?) LaForge’s quiet contribution to ST:TNG was as the human counterpart to Data. In many ways, Geordi was the human Data would likely become, except for some reason Data was luckier with the ladies — what is up with that ST:TNG writers?!

Burton’s LaForge so beautifully presented the human reality to Data’s android fantasy of humanity. LaForge often answered Data’s questions about being human, and the engineer’s responses were much like our own. Some responses were simple matters of decency and common sense, while others were difficult for any of us to answer and Data was left to learn the answer for himself.

There’s a theme of teaching, togetherness, and sharing that runs through so much of what LeVar Burton does. As Kunta Kinte he shared the pain of his ancestors. As host of reading rainbow he shared knowledge and taught us to explore the world within our minds through reading. Geordi LaForge literally kept the ship together and served as the balanced center of a world of cosmic extremes. Throughout his career Burton directed some of the finest episodes of ST:TNG, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager. In all of them, these same qualities permeate the scenes and story. So, on this day of his birth, Monkeys Fighting Robots would like to thank LeVar Burton for sharing his talents with the rest of the world.

levar burton-star trek-reading rainbow-roots

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Review: ‘Mother Panic’ Injects Some Punk Rock Attitude Into The Batman Family

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Socialite Violet Paige returns to Gotham City followed by a media frenzy. The heiress of a fortune left to her by a father who died in a suspicious accident, Violet is a social media star, gaining fans and critics alike. But she hasn’t just returned to Gotham to care for her sick mother. Like many of Gotham’s populace, Violet hides a secret life and secret abilities. And as she takes to the streets as the city’s newest vigilante, Mother Panic, she will not only embark on a personal quest, but dive into the world’s infamous underworld, and gain the attention of Gotham’s most famous protector and his extended family, and perhaps become a legend herself as well.

Mother PanicMother Panic #3
“A Work in Progress Part 3”
Written by Jody Houser
Art by Tommy Lee Edwards
Mother Panic created by Gerard Way, Jody Houser and Tommy Lee Edwards

Writing

This issue includes a moment I had been waiting for, the true crossing of paths between Mother Panic and a member of the Bat family. And boy was it good. In a great sequence, Violet comes face to face with Katherine Kane aka Batwoman and they trade blows (and a little flirtation) in a scene that showcases that writer Jody Houser is great at writing action. It’s a witty, fast moving fight scene that pushes the story forward and reveals how formidable Mother Panic really is. She holds her own against a seasoned Gotham City vigilante, and that knowledge is not lost on neither Batwoman nor Batman (who watches from the Batcave as often does). I love this idea of connecting Mother Panic into the Bat-mythos, as she adds an attitude of punk rock flair that reminds me of the early days of the Damian Wayne Robin days.

But there is more in this chapter that just setting up more attitude, as we get to see Violet in her first true heroic moment as she rescues a group of children from the villain Gala (who is also seemingly being set up to be a new Gotham Rogue and Mother Panic’s first nemesis).

Mother PanicArt

The best thing I can say about Tommy Lee Edwards is that he might be drawing the best Gotham City in any comic at the moment. It’s all shadows, strangely colored skies, and rough lines perpetually cast in darkness. His page design and panel layout continue to impress; just look at the excellently paced fight scene above and you will see what I mean.

He also draws a great Batman, and I truly hope we see more of the Dark Knight in this title (which I am totally guessing that we will)

Conclusion

This could easily become a mainstay Bat-title, and you would be making a mistake not jumping on it now. It’s got a larger connection to the DCU than any other Young Animal book, and that connection seems like a natural fit. Pick it up now.

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