“Better Call Saul” Extended Trailer!

Better Call Saul extended trailer!
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

Better Call Saul extended trailer!

Shaft is an on-going series published by Dynamite. Shaft created by Ernest Tidyman.
Writer: David F. Walker
Artist: Bilquis Evely
Colorist: Daniel Miwa
Cover Shown: Denys Cowan, Bill Sienkiewicz & Ivan Nunes
Who’s the black private dick that’s a sex machine with all the chicks? Shaft! Created by author Ernest Tidyman, and made famous in a series of novels and films, iconic hero Shaft makes his comic book debut in an all-new adventure. He’s gone toe-to-toe with organized crime bosses, stood up to the cops, squared off against kidnappers, and foiled assassination attempts. But who was John Shaft before he became the hardboiled investigator with a reputation as big as New York City itself?

*** Beware – spoilers may be found below ***
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
Shaft #1 should appeal to fans of the Shaft movies and is for mature audiences due to adult language.
Rating: 5 out of 5

Men of Wrath is a five issue mini-series created by Jason Aaron & Ron Garney published by Marvel.
Writer: Jason Aaron
Artist: Ron Garney
Colorist: Matt Milla
Letterer: Jared K. Fletcher
Ever since Great Grandfather Isom killed a man over some sheep, a black cloud has hung over the Rath family. Now, over a century later, Ira Rath, the coldest hitman ever to walk on Alabama soil, has taken a job that will decide the fate of his cursed family once and for all. Writer Jason Aaron (Southern Bastards, Scalped) and artist Ron Garney (Weapon X, Thor: God of Thunder) team up once again, to bring you the story of a Southern family, whose only heirloom is violence.

*** Beware – spoilers may be found below ***
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
Men of Wrath #1 is for mature readers due to mature language and violence.
Rating:


The Big Ugly by Jake Hinkson.
Ellie Bennett is an ex-corrections officer who has just served a year inside Eastgate Penitentiary for assaulting a prisoner. She’s only been out for a day when she accepts a strange job offer from the head of a Christian political advocacy group. He wants her to track down a missing ex-con named Alexis. Although no one knows where Alexis has gone, it seems like everyone in Arkansas is looking for her—from a rich televangelist running for Congress to the governor’s dirty tricks man. When Bennett finds the troubled young woman, she has to decide whether to hand her over to the highest bidder or help her escape from the most powerful men in the state.
Jake Hinkson writes noir… but always with a twist from expected conventions. In The Big Ugly our protagonist is a wrongly-convicted, tough ex-con who becomes a private-eye of sorts. No twist there, right? Oh, did I mention that our “hero” is a woman?
Ellie Bennett is a tough-talking, rough broad who is all woman. Ellie finds herself dealing with two-competing factions who want to “silence” Alexis – the woman Ellie has been paid to find. If Ellie refuses to cooperate she’ll end up back in prison at best and at worst in an unmarked grave with Alexis.
Ellie is in way over her head. Either Ellie cooperates and still ends up with one of the competing factions after her or she refuses and has both groups after her. Perhaps there is a third option…
The Big Ugly is for mature audiences due to mature language, sex and violence.
Rating: 4 out of 5

The Tagline: “Sometimes good people do evil things..“
The Overview: *** Beware – spoilers are found below ***
Hank [Bill Paxton] and Sarah [Bridget Fonda] are living the American Dream. Married and expecting a child, Hank works at the local feed store and Sarah is a librarian. Known and respected by folks in their small town, things seem wonderful for the young couple.
When Hank, his dim-witted brother, Jacob [Billy Bob Thorton] and Jacob’s alcoholic friend, Lou [Brent Briscoe] accidentally stumble across a downed plane buried in the snow, they find their morality tested. The plane contains a dead pilot and over four million dollars cash.
Hank wants to report their find to the police with hope there will be a reward. Lou wants to keep the money and say nothing. Jacob sides with Lou. Ultimately, they decide that Hank will keep the money for the three. If no one comes calling after the plane is found in the spring, they will split the money equally and leave town going their separate ways.
It is a simple plan. What could go wrong?
*** Even More Spoilers Below ***
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
Rating: 4 out of 5


The Cold Kiss by John Rector.
Nate and Sara, on the run from their past, are driving to Reno. When they’re approached at a roadside diner by a man offering $500 for a ride into Omaha, they can’t help but see it as a sign of blessings to come.
But in a few hours, that man is dead in their back seat . . . and he’s got a bag of money . . . more than either one of them know what to do with.
Forced off the road by a blizzard and trapped in a run-down motel, Nate and Sara make a life-altering decision that unleashes a nightmare. Before they know it, Nate and Sara are fighting for their lives and forced to confront every bad decision they’ve made along the way.
For two young lovers who may have used up all their chances, this is a final trip down a dark tunnel that might lead them to heaven, but drags them through hell.
First, let me give credit to Eric Beetner whose 60 Second Review turned me on to The Cold Kiss.
Rector takes what could have been cliche – nice young couple stumble on more money than they ever dreamed possible and their decision to keep it costs them more than they could ever have imagined.
In fact their decision to keep the money is just the first of many that take them deeper and deeper into a nightmare that might only end when they are dead.
The Cold Kiss is for mature audiences due to violence.
Rating: 4 out of 5

Code Zero: A Joe Ledger Novel by Jonathan Maberry.
For years the Department of Military Sciences has fought to stop terrorists from using radical bioweapons—designer plagues, weaponized pathogens, genetically modified viruses, and even the zombie plague that first brought Ledger into the DMS. These terrible weapons have been locked away in the world’s most secure facility. Until now. Joe Ledger and Echo Team are scrambled when a highly elite team of killers breaks the unbreakable security and steals the world’s most dangerous weapons. Within days there are outbreaks of mass slaughter and murderous insanity across the American heartland. Can Joe Ledger stop a brilliant and devious master criminal from turning the Land of the Free into a land of the dead?
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
Code Zero: A Joe Ledger Novel is for mature audiences due to excessive violence and sexual situations.
Rating: 5 out of 5

Sean Hutchinson and Mental_Floss present 15 Things About Payback That You Probably Didn’t Know.
Here are my three favorite things…
5. HELGELAND WAS INSPIRED BY GRITTY CRIME DRAMAS FROM THE 1970S.
He used films like The Getaway, Dirty Harry, and Charley Varrick for visual references. In fact, the restaurant that Stegman takes Val to is named Varrick’s as a nod to Charley Varrick.
11. HELGELAND WAS FIRED AS DIRECTOR BEFORE THE FILM WRAPPED PRODUCTION.
He and the studio disagreed over the original ending of Payback, and when a consensus couldn’t be achieved, Helgeland was fired. A new director was brought in to reshoot—these new scenes make up about 30 percent of the theatrical cut.
15. IN 2007, HELGELAND WAS ABLE TO RE-CUT THE FILM INTO HIS ORIGINAL VISION.
It was released as Payback: Straight Up—The Director’s Cut.

Dead Body Road is a six issue mini-series published by Image.
Writer: Justin Jordan
Penciler / Inker: Matteo Scalera
Colorist: Moreno Dinisio
There’s a man digging a hole in the desert. Let’s see just how many bodies will fit. Orson Gage’s bloody revenge saga ends here.

Dead Body Road #6 Justin Jordan and Matteo Scalera continue to create a comic that consistently entertains.
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
Dead Body Road #6 is a comic for mature audiences due to violence and language. If you’re a fan of crime/revenge stories then this is for you.
Rating: 5 out of 5
Dead Body Road is available in a Trade Paperback that collects all six issues.

Jennifer Wood and Mental_Floss present 30 Things You Might Not Know About Die Hard.
Here are my three favorites…
5. CLINT EASTWOOD PLANNED TO TAKE A STAB AT THE PART.
Originally, it was Clint Eastwood who owned the movie rights to Nothing Lasts Forever, which he had planned to star in in the early 1980s. That obviously never happened.
7. BRUCE WILLIS WASN’T EVEN THE STUDIO’S THIRD CHOICE FOR THE ROLE.
If Die Hard was to be a success, the studio knew they needed a bona fide action star in the part, so they set about offering it to a seemingly never-ending list of A-listers of the time. Rumor has it that Sylvester Stallone, Harrison Ford, Robert De Niro, Charles Bronson, Nick Nolte, Mel Gibson, Richard Gere, Don Johnson, Burt Reynolds, and Richard Dean Anderson (yes, MacGyver!) were all considered for the role of John McClane. And all declined it.
9. BRUCE WILLIS WAS BARELY EVEN SEEN ON THE MOVIE’S POSTERS.
Because the studio’s marketing gurus were unconvinced that audiences would pay to see an action movie starring the funny guy from Moonlighting, the original batch of posters for the film centered on Nakatomi Plaza instead of Willis’ mug. As the film gained steam, the marketing materials were altered, and Willis was more prominent in the promos.

Chris Farnsworth, the author of the excellent Nathaniel Cade series about a vampire secret agent of sorts… well, here’s how Fransworth describes Cade…
Turned into a blood-drinking abomination in 1867, Nathaniel Cade was offered a choice by President Andrew Johnson: serve the United States, or end his unnatural existence. Cade has served every president since, he is the most closely guarded of White House secrets: a superhuman covert agent who is the last line of defense against the nightmares that threaten the American dream.
If like me you’ve read and enjoyed all of the Nathaniel Cade novels you’ll probably get a kick out of Interviewing Authors interview with Chris Farnsworth which you can read or listen to.
Blood Oath [Nathanel Cade Book 1]
The President’s Vampire [Nathaniel Cade Book 2]

I first heard about Ciudad back in March of 2012. At that time Ciudad was being prepped as a movie for Dwayne The Rock Johnson and as a graphic novel co-written by Anthony and Joe Russo and Ande Parks.
Ciudad sounded like something action fans would love…
Johnson will play a “black market mercenary” hired by a drug lord to rescue his kidnapped daughter in one of the most “dangerous and corrupt cities in the world.”
Since then Fernando León González came on to draw Ciudad and The Rock is no longer attached to the movie. [What about Thomas Jane or Vin Diesel or… ]
Cuidad the graphic novel is now available. I’ve ordered my copy. If you’re interested you can too. If you’re still on the fence CBR.com has an interview with the Russo Brothers and Andre Parks as well as an extensive preview!
Bleeding Cool offers up Ciudad’s High-Octane Action Blows Readers Away, Just In Time For The Holidays.

Fans of revenge stories and crime fiction will want to check out Big Man Plans coming from Eric Powell, Tim Wiesch and Image Comics.
BIG MAN PLANS—A REVENGE STORY THAT WILL SHOCK YOU… An all-new crime series with retribution at its heart…
In BIG MAN PLANS, even the most marginalized in society can exact revenge if they don’t care how they do it.
The two have discussed the project since late 2012, going back and forth over texts, emails, and phone calls. “This project was born out of drunken conversations Tim Wiesch and I had while I was a vagabond living in his basement for a month,” admitted Powell. “This is what happens when kids of construction workers get really drunk for a long period of time and are given a creative outlet. This book is nothing but brutality and in a weird way the most noble project I’ve done…
Wiesch added: “This is going to be dark. Very, very dark. What’s been amazing is working with someone who doesn’t flinch when you offer up an incredibly visceral or painful part of the story but instead wants to help push it even further.
“When we were coming up with the story, we were looking for a way to embody a truly marginalized version of a man without just playing with worn-out tropes and comic clichés. Someone that would never be even remotely considered tough, let alone as the violent specter of revenge and death that we were looking for. No super powers, no crazy martial arts. Just a man driven beyond his own limitations by rage.”
Source: Image Comics.

Chris Higgins and Mental_Floss present Two Short Films About JFK’s Assassination that are worth a view.
Umbrella Man is six and a half minutes; November 22, 1963 is just short of fourteen minutes.

The trailer for Son of a Gun looks good, but it’s also one of those trailers that make you feel you’ve seen the whole movie.