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Steven Thompson has been a longtime friend of this blog. He's also been faced with more than his fair share of work/health challenges over the past few years.

He does a lot of work editing/writing/blogging and needs a new computer to help him stay productive. And sane.

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New Star Trek: Into Darkness poster


Very sad news: Jonathan Winters

Sorry to hear that Jonathan Winters, one of the funniest, most brilliant  comics in American history, has passed away at age 87. There won't be anyone like him again.

Here's one of his classic bits:


See a new preview of Comic Book Creator magazine

This looks good: A new mag from TwoMorrows Publishing focusing on comics artists and writers. It's created and edited Jon B. Cooke, editor of the acclaimed Comic Book Artist magazine, which ceased publishing several years back.

Some background info:
 TwoMorrows Publishing is proud to debut our newest magazine, COMIC BOOK CREATOR #1 (84 FULL-COLOR pages, $8.95) devoted to the work and careers of the men and women who draw, write, edit, and publish comics, focusing always on the artists and not the artifacts, the creators and not the characters. Behind an ALEX ROSS cover painting, our frantic FIRST ISSUE features an investigation of the oft despicable treatment JACK KIRBY endured from the very business he helped establish. From being cheated out of royalties in the ’40s and bullied in the ’80s by the publisher he made great, to his estate’s current fight for equitable recognition against an entertainment monolith where his characters have generated billions of dollars, we present Kirby’s cautionary tale in the eternal struggle for creator’s rights. Plus, CBC #1 interviews artist ALEX ROSS and writer KURT BUSIEK, spotlights the last years of writer/artist FRANK ROBBINS, remembers comics historian LES DANIELS, talks to TODD McFARLANE about his new show-all book, showcases a joint talk between NEAL ADAMS and DENNIS O’NEIL on their unforgettable collaborations, as well as throws a whole kit’n’caboodle of other creator-centric items atcha! Join us for the start of a new era as TwoMorrows welcomes back former Comic Book Artist editor Jon B. Cooke, who helms the all-new, all-color COMIC BOOK CREATOR!

And here's a PDF preview of the first issue.


Pop culture roundup: Van Dyke Parks; Kate Bush; TARDIS fridge; Carmine Infantino; Spider-Man

An entertaining interview with the legendary Van Dyke Parks, who has an album of new material out soon.

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Singer Kate Bush was awarded a CBE (Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth this week for her services to music. If I understand correctly, a CBE is the third-highest honor, Knighthood being the top, awarded by royalty in Britain. It's two notches up from the MBEs the Beatles were controversially awarded back in the 1960s, when no one could scarcely imagine a Beatle ever being knighted, as Sir Paul McCartney was several years ago.

Anyway, Kate had this to say:

"I feel incredibly thrilled to receive this honour which I share with my family, friends and fellow musicians and everybody who has been such an important part of it all," she said.
"Now I've got something special to put on top of the Christmas tree."
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Turn your fridge into the TARDIS with this handy "skin" kit!

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The great comics artist/editor Carmine Infantino passed away earlier this week. I was out on vacation and didn't have a chance to put together a fitting tribute. But here's a nice look at Infantino's early career work for Timely comics.

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Who created Spider-Man? Stan Lee? Steve Ditko? Jack Kirby? All of the above? 20th Century Danny Boy takes a detailed look in a post that includes some spectacular Ditko art. But I'm teasing it with this image by Kirby:


Fab Friday: Vintage Beatles pictures





Arrested Development posters from Netflix

New episodes of maybe the funniest TV program ever arrive May 26 via streaming on Netflix. Here are some teaser posters.










New pics from Superman: Man of Steel




New character posters for Lone Ranger



Pop stuff: Alex Toth, Emil and the Detectives

What I've been reading, watching, hearing, etc.


Genius, Illustrated: The Life and Art of Alex Toth This is the second of IDW's massive hardcovers dedicated to the art and biography of Toth, an "artist's artist" in the word of comics. It picks up Toth's story in the early 1960s, when he drifted away from comics and entered the world of TV animation, designing the classic adventure 'toons of the Hanna-Barbera stable: Notably Space Ghost, Johnny Quest, the Herculoids and other fondly remembered by Baby Boomers series.

Toth's dazzling ability to convey character and action with an economy of lines was perfectly suited to this new medium. At the same time, he kept a hand in comics with occasional adventure, war and suspense stories for DC, Marvel, Charlton, the fledgling Warren line and others.

The book includes a wealth of art from these stories, often from Toth's original penciled and inked pages. A highlight is "The Case of the Curious Classic," a masterclass in comics storytelling that Toth wrote and illustrated for, of all things, DC's toy-associated Hot Wheels series in 1970. Over 16 pages -- each with a uniform, eight-panel grid -- Toth tells a rather complex, tightly plotted mystery tale that engages his love of classic automobiles and adventure and never lets the reader slip his grasp.

A couple of Toth's classic war stories -- "Burma Sky" and "White Devil...Yellow Devil" -- also are included in full, original art, along with his tutorial on how TV animation is produced from the 1970s "Super Friends" tabloid edition DC published in 1976.

The story of Toth's life woven throughout is nearly as triumphant as art. The artist was famously temperamental and troubled, which accounts for his inability to stay under the thumb of any one employer for long. But we see him mellowed and happy after a second marriage to a woman he adored. After Guyla Toth's death in 1985 there are dark times again and Toth becomes reclusive and, apart from occasional covers and pin-ups, inactive in comics art. But, again, there's light again as his grown children draw him, helping him enjoy another happy period at the end of his life.

A third book in this unprecedentedly detailed look at an American comics artist's life is still to come and will collect images from and provide more detail about Toth's years in animation.


Emil And The Detectives We bought and streamed this 1964 film for family movie night last weekend. It may be the only live-action Disney film I missed seeing as a kid, not sure how. But I do recall very much enjoying the book it's based on.

It's an unusual Disney production -- shot entirely on-location in Berlin (the Emil book was first published in Germany) and has a very European feel and look to it. The performances by kids and adults in the cast are all entertaining and excellent and the story doesn't feel dated at all -- just a simple adventure/mystery tale about a group of young boys who blunder into a bank robbery scheme.

It's a notch above many family and children's films we've screened -- new or old -- and well worth a look. The transfer looks great, too.

One note: You can't rent and stream the film via Amazon, but you can buy it for $9.99. It's also available on DVD. Not on Netflix, unfortunately.

Vintage photos: Hitchcock promotes "Frenzy" with floating dummy in Thames river