DC Comics 75th Anniversary items

The publisher turns 75 this year and is issuing a variety of goodies to celebrate. Click the links to order discounted items from Amazon:

75 Years Of DC Comics: The Art Of Modern Mythmaking  

75 Years Of DC Comics: The Art Of Modern Mythmaking

Secret Origin: The Story of Dc Comics (Dol Ecoa)  
Secret Origin: The Story of DC Comics



DC Comics: The 75th Anniversary Poster Book  
DC Comics: The 75th Anniversary Poster Book
  
Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection 
Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection


The Art of Vintage DC Comics: 100 Postcards
 The Art of Vintage DC Comics: 100 Postcards  

2011 DC Comics "Pop-Up"" Calendar  
2011 DC Comics "Pop-Up" Calendar

Shazam!: The Golden Age of the World's Mightiest Mortal 
Shazam!: The Golden Age of the World's Mightiest Mortal

DC Comics Year by Year: A Visual Chronicle 
DC Comics Year by Year: A Visual Chronicle 

New documentary looks at Lennon's time in New York City

LennonNYC will air Nov. 22 on PBS. Details:
American Masters' LENNONYC takes an intimate look at the time Lennon, Yoko Ono and their son, Sean, spent living in New York City during the 1970s.
“New York became a part of who John and I were,” said Ms. Ono. “We couldn’t have existed the same way anywhere else.  We had a very special relationship with the city, which is why I continue to make this my home, and I think this film captures what that time was like for us very movingly.”
“The period that Lennon lived with his family in New York is perhaps the most tender and affecting phase of his life as a public figure,” said Susan Lacy, series creator and executive producer of American Masters as well as a producer of the Lennon film.  “Just as the generation that had grown up with the Beatles was getting a little older and approaching a transitional time in their lives as they started families, they saw this reflected in Lennon as he grew from being a rock star icon into a real flesh and blood person.”
“I have long been moved by the honesty and directness of John’s music,” said Michael Epstein, LENNONYC director, producer and writer.  “And, by using never-before heard studio talkback of John from this period, I think I was able to give the viewer a window into John Lennon that had not been put to film before.
Following the breakup of the Beatles, Lennon and Ono moved to New York City in 1971, where Lennon sought to escape the mayhem of the Beatles era and focus on his family and private life.  At the same time, he created some of the most acclaimed songs and albums of his career, most of them written at his apartment at The Dakota on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, including Mind Games, Whatever Gets You Thru the Night, I’m Losing You, and Woman. He also remained highly active in the anti-war movement as well as numerous other progressive political causes.
As much as New York made an impact on Lennon and Ono by offering them an oasis of personal and creative freedom, so too did they shape the city.  At a time when New York faced record high crime, economic fallout and seemed to be on the verge of collapse, Lennon and Ono became a beloved fixture in neighborhood restaurants, at Central Park, at sports events and at political demonstrations.
Lennon and Ono also bonded with millions of their fellow New Yorkers in their experience as immigrants.  The film traces their struggle to remain in the U.S. when the Nixon administration sought to deport them, supposedly based on a narcotics violation, but which Lennon insisted was in response to his anti-war activities.
LENNONYC features never-before heard studio recordings from the Double Fantasy sessions and never-before-seen outtakes from Lennon in concert and home movies that have only recently been transferred to video.  It also features exclusive interviews with Ms. Ono, who cooperated extensively with the production and offers an unprecedented level of access, as well as with artists who worked closely with Lennon during this period, including Elton John and photographer Bob Gruen (who took the iconic photograph of Lennon in front of the skyline wearing a “New York City” t-shirt).

New pop culture books

Click the pics to order discounted books from Amazon:

The Mammoth Book of Best War Comics Archie: The Classic Newspaper Comics Volume 1 HC Adventures of Superboy The Batman Annuals, Vol. 2 (DC Comics Classics Library) Marvelman Classic - Volume 1 Thun'da, King of the Congo Archive James May's Toy Stories: The Airfix Handbook Bond Cars and Vehicles The "Beatles" Christmas Book: Everywhere it's Christmas The Essential Superman Encyclopedia When the Comics Went to War

Picture: The Green Hornet

Roy Krenkel cover art

Golden Age Comic Book Stories presents a nice display of Krenkel covers and illustration art for Edgar Rice Burroughs paperbacks.


Marvel Comics -- sort of -- resurrects the Micronauts

I loved the Micronauts comics series that Marvel published back in the 1970s, early 80s. The series was inspired by the Micronauts toy line, but also included a Bill Mantlo-created series of characters not based on toys. Now it looks as if the company is bringing back some of those characters. Check this out:


Trailer for Doctor Who live show

Yet another why living in Britain must be more fun:



Poster for Wally Wood art exhibit in Spain

Via Booksteve:


Check out a fantastic new Jack Kirby website

I may be a tad late to the party, but if you haven't really heard about it, visit What if Kirby. It's a fabulous site, dedicated to high-quality scans or original art by the pioneering comics artist.

Jack White produces new album by Wanda Jackson

The Party Ain't Over, a collaboration between the rockabilly queen and White Stripes singer will be out Jan. 25.

Details from Pitchfork:

Jackson recorded the album with a backing band that includes White, White's wife Karen Elson, the Raconteurs' Jack Lawrence and Patrick Keeler, Patti Smith's son/Meg White's husband Jackson Smith, and My Morning Jacket's Carl Broemel. The tracklist consists of covers that White picked out, including a take on Amy Winehouse's "You Know I'm No Good" that Third Man has already released as a single.

Lost graphic novel by William S. Burroughs set for publication

"Ah Pook Is Here" by the legendary Beat-associated author has been published by Fantagraphics. Details:

Ah Pook Is Here first appeared in 1970 under the title The Unspeakable Mr. Hart as a monthly comic strip written by Burroughs and drawn by the British cartoonist and painter Malcolm McNeil in the English magazine Cyclops. When the publication folded, Burroughs and McNeill decided to develop the project into a full-length, Word/Image novel (the term ‘graphic novel’ had not yet been coined). Burroughs was 56 at the time, McNeill 23. 
The book was conceived as a single painting in which text and images were combined in whatever form seemed appropriate to the narrative. It was conceived as 120 continuous pages that would ‘fold out.’ Such a book was, at the time, unprecedented, and no publisher was willing to take a chance and publish a ‘graphic novel.’ Burroughs and McNeill finally abandoned the project after collaborating on it for 7 years.

Doctor Who sonic screwdriver Wii-mote

Apparently there are no current plans to release this stateside:

Picture: Adam West in Batmobile

The Beatles - Superman connection

Wogblog explores some interesting connections between the Fab Four and the Man of Steel.

Upcoming Marvel Comics collections

Newly listed on Amazon:

Marvel Masterworks: Golden Age Mystic Comics - Volume 1


Fantastic Four: Extended Family

Marvel Masterworks: The Mighty Thor - Volume 2


Captain America: Scourge of the Underworld


Thing Classic - Volume 1

Early pics from the Captain America movie

Via The Superficial: production shots show Cap on his vintage WWII motor bike. Presumably the stunt double in the pics will get a digital makeover in the final production.