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The Bum’s Rush #67
WARNING! None of the news or rumors you see here in The
Bum’s Rush should be considered FACT until it actually
happens. It might never happen. How do you know I’m not just
making all this crap up? I could, you know. You’ve been
warned!
A Man Called Calamity!
Near the end of May the multi-talented king of cartooning,
Calamity Jon Morris, announced
The Calamity! Project, a comic jam linked by a
common theme… CALAMITY! Artists were invited to submit short
comics (no more that 3-pages long) about “chaos, cataclysm,
conflict and catastrophe, disasters, death, doom and
destruction, mishaps and misadventures, wrecks, ruins and
fuck-ups, trials, tragedies and tribulations, bad luck,
unfortunate happenstance, and downright all-encompassing
kerfluffles.” The gauntlet was thrown down and I decided to
pick it up. Very, very slowly.
Almost immediately after The Calamity! Project was
announced I emailed my good buddy and constant collaborator,
Dave
Sherrill to see if he’d be interested in doing something
Calamitous with me. After several harassing emails, in which
I threatened, lied, begged and revealed the existence of
several incriminating photos, Dave relented… I mean agreed
to draw a story if I wrote one. And so I set about… not
doing anything at all. For weeks possible stories flitted in
and out of my brain, none of which struck me as being any
good whatsoever.
I’d all but abandoned the idea of participating the jam.
Strangely enough, that was when inspiration struck. I
quickly plotted out an idea, took a few hours to bang it
into a script and shot it off to Dave, hoping that he still
remembered who possessed what photos. I honestly felt bad,
as I hadn’t left Dave all that much time to get the thing
done before the July 15th deadline. That’s when Dave decided
to bring
Touched By A Bum’s Neal Langham aboard to ink the
pages.
Thankfully, Jon extended the project’s deadline until the
end of the month and so it was that at midnight of July 30th
I sent the finished pages of our story off, in hopes that I
was not too late. And fortunately for you, I wasn’t! Our
story,
“Nothing Important Happened Today”, was one of
the last to go up and features The Swell Bunch of Guys, who
also starred in the story Dave and I did for
The Big Ol' Book Of BIZMAR from
Young American Comics. So go check out the story
by a trio of Stumblebum’s Jon refers to as “a blockbuster
team” and while you’re there take a look at some of the
other amazing comics that were contributed to the Calamity!
And The Eisner Goes To…
I must apologize. Last week I wrote all about the news and
craziness that went down at the
San Diego Comic-Con and I completely neglected to
mention that the
18th Annual Eisner Awards (the Oscars of comics) were
held there on Friday. Man, I’m going to have to stop drinkin’
when I do this column. And I will… next week.
For now, here’s a list of the award winners:
Best Short Story
"Teenage Sidekick," by Paul Pope, in Solo #3 (DC)
Best Single Issue (or One-Shot)
Solo #5, by Darwyn Cooke (DC)
Best Serialized Story
Fables #36-38, 40-41: "Return to the Homelands,"
by Bill Willingham, Mark Buckingham, and Steve Leialoha
(Vertigo/DC)
Best Continuing Series
Astonishing X-Men, by Joss Whedon and John
Cassaday (Marvel)
Best Limited Series
Seven Soldiers, by Grant Morrison and various
artists (DC)
Best New Series
All Star Superman, by Grant Morrison and Frank
Quitely (DC)
Best Publication for a Younger Audience
Owly: Flying Lessons, by Andy Runton (Top Shelf)
Best Anthology
Solo, edited by Mark Chiarello (DC)
Best Digital Comic
PVP, by Scott Kurtz,
www.pvponline.com
Best Reality-Based Work
Nat Turner, by Kyle Baker (Kyle Baker Publishing)
Best Graphic Album-New
Top Ten: The Forty-Niners, by Alan Moore and Gene
Ha (ABC)
Best Graphic Album-Reprint
Black Hole, by Charles Burns (Pantheon)
Best Archival Collection/Project-Comic Strips
The Complete Calvin & Hobbes, by Bill Watterson
(Andrews McMeel)
Best Archival Collection/Project-Comic Books
Absolute Watchmen, by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
(DC)
Best U.S. Edition of Foreign Material
The Rabbi's Cat, by Joann Sfar (Pantheon)
Best Writer
Alan Moore, Promethea, Top Ten: The Forty-Niners
(ABC)
Best Writer/Artist
Geof Darrow, Shaolin Cowboy (Burlyman)
Best Writer/Artist-Humor
Kyle Baker, Plastic Man (DC); The Bakers
(Kyle Baker Publishing)
Best Penciller/Inker
John Cassaday, Astonishing X-Men (Marvel);
Planetary (WildStorm/DC)
Best Painter/Multimedia Artist (interior art)
Ladronn, Hip Flask: Mystery City (Active Images)
Best Cover Artist
James Jean, Fables (Vertigo/DC); Runaways
(Marvel)
Best Coloring
Chris Ware, Acme Novelty Library #16 (ACME
Novelty)
Best Lettering
Todd Klein, Wonder Woman, Justice, Seven Soldiers #0
(DC); Desolation Jones (WildStorm/DC); Promethea,
Top Ten: The Forty-Niners, Tomorrow Stories Special
(ABC); Fables (Vertigo); 1602: New World
(Marvel)
Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition
Aaron Renier (Spiral-Bound)
Best Comics-Related Periodical
Comic Book Artist, edited by Jon B. Cooke (Top
Shelf)
Best Comics-Related Book
Eisner/Miller, edited by Charles Brownstein and
Diana Schutz (Dark Horse Books)
Best Publication Design (tie)
Acme Novelty Library Annual Report to Shareholders,
designed by Chris Ware (Pantheon)
Little Nemo in Slumberland: So Many Splendid Sundays,
designed by Philippe Ghielmetti (Sunday Press Books)
Hall of Fame
Judges' Choices: Floyd Gottfredson, William Moulton
Marston
- Vaughn Bodé
- Ramona Fradon
- Russ Manning
- Jim Steranko
My heartfelt congratulations go out to all of this year’s
winners. Especially the ones I like.
Hulk Smashy
The Stumblebum Crew’s love of
Katie
Cook predates Stumblebum Studios itself. And we’re not
the only one’s who love her. The cute, quirky and insanely
talented artist behind
The Monsters’ Republic of Monstairia webcomic has
been a fan-favorite on
LiveJournal and across the internet for a few years now.
But just when we thought we couldn’t possibly dig her more
she goes and creates one of the best new webcomics around,
The Smashy Adventures of The Hulk. Just watch as
The Hulk looks for love, gets a
MySpace
account, watches clouds with The Thing, goes to Comic-Con
and meets his father. It’s like Katie herself says, she
doesn’t own The Hulk, she just makes him cute.
Speaking of Katie, Stumblebum and Comic-Con, check out the
latest edition of
The Weigh In for Katie’s own account of going to
the San Diego Comic-Con.
Dark Horse Versus The Martians
Dark
Horse Comics is under attack! Not by little green men,
but by
Pendragon Pictures who claim that Dark Horse’s hardcover
adaptation of
H.G. Well’s War Of The Worlds replicates a number
of scenes and images from their own movie version, also
entitled
H.G. Well’s War Of The Worlds.
To that end, Pendragon Pictures have created the
Martian Invaders website which details the complaints
featured in the lawsuit and features a vast number of still
images from the movie compared to frames of the comic book,
along with analysis of both. The site also prominently
features a poll in which readers can judge for themselves
whether their appear to be significant similarities between
the comic and Pendragon’s movie.
Now let’s look at that question for a second. “Do you see
significant similarities between the DARK HORSE COMIC and
PENDRAGON PICTURES' "H.G. WELLS' THE WAR OF THE WORLDS?”
That question is quite obviously worded in such a way that
the majority of visitors to the website, whether they
believe that the comic is actually ripping off, shot for
shot, actual scenes from the movie or not, will answer that
yes, they see significant similarities. How could you not
when both the comic and the movie are both faithful
adaptations of the same original source material? Whether
they are significantly similar shouldn’t really be the issue
should it?
I’ve looked at the images presented by Pendragon and while I
certainly do see a number of similarities in terms of layout
and composition of shots I cannot bring myself to believe
that this is anything more than coincidence. Look hard
enough and I’m sure you could do almost the same thing with
any number of different media ventures that were based on a
single source material. Hell, I bet you could compare the
Pendragon movie to the Spielberg’s big-budget
War of the Worlds and find a number of
“significant similarities”.
Another thing that makes me doubt the validity of
Pendragon’s claims is who worked on Dark Horse’s book in the
first place, namely Ian Edginton and
D’Israeli. It’s not as if these two are brand new
talents in the industry who are so new to the game that they
must resort to copying directly from what is, at best, a
direct-to-DVD, B-movie. These guys are critically acclaimed
talents who have been creating comic books for several
years. I know, I know… that never stopped Rob Liefeld. But
seriously, these guys are talented and it’s strikes me as
bizarre that they would need to stoop to copying off of a
movie that I, until I came across this story, had no idea
even existed.
But perhaps that’s the point of the lawsuit in the first
place. Could it be that Pendragon is merely trying to gain
more attention for its movie? They certainly seem to have a
penchant for overstating the facts (once claiming the movie
had a budget of $42 million!) and creating
controversy. Not to mention that, while Edginton and
D’Israeli have gone on to create sequels to their
adaptation, like
Scarlet Traces and
Scarlet Traces: The Great Game, the Pendragon
movie has met with a mostly negative reaction. It’s entirely
possible that this is all a publicity stunt hoping to cash
in on the fact that there is no real way to prove whether
the comic book version ripped off the movie or not. It’s all
a matter of opinion.
What’s yours?
Better Late
Image Comics Solicitations for
October 2006
The Only Comics That Matter
Last Week –
Batman #655 by Grant Morrison and Andy Kubert
This Week –
Agents of Atlas #1 by Jeff Parker and Leonard
Kirk
Battler Britton #2 by Garth Ennis and Colin
Wilson
Y: The Last Man #48 by Brian K. Vaughn and Goran
Sudzuka
Next Week –
Casanova #2 by
Matt
Fraction and Gabriel Ba
Beyond #2 by Dwayne McDuffie and Scott
Kolins
Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E. #7 by Warren Ellis
and Stuart Immonen
If you know of any interesting news, rumors, lies, etc.
about comics and think I should know about it too just email
me at thesuperleezard@yahoo.com.
Read more dumb crap written by me at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard.
My semi-daily webcomic, Der Wundervolle Bean, will be coming
to an end soon. But you can still check it out here
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean.
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