The Expendables Extended Edition

On October 12, 2011, HDR.com posted information about The Expendables extended edition Blu-Ray that is coming out in December!
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

On October 12, 2011, HDR.com posted information about The Expendables extended edition Blu-Ray that is coming out in December!

SFGate.com posted their choices for the Best Stallone Films along with the films that readers picked. You can see the choices above or here.

On October 11, 2011, Broadway World.com posted that there has been progress in getting the long-awaited Rocky musical moving forward. The hope is for a 2012 production in Germany and then a run on Broadway in 2013.

I’m a fan of The Three Stooges. [And since you’ve asked my favorites are Curly, Shemp, Moe and Larry, in that order.] On April 4, 2012, the Farrelly brothers‘ movie which takes the Three Stooges characters into new adventures opens.
While it’s an interesting idea, I wonder if it’ll work. Do I hope it’s a success? Why, certainly. Nyuck, nyuck, nyuck.

If you like apocalyptic films [I do! I do!], then check out the trailer to The Divide. This one looks pretty intense. Count me in!

IFanBoy recently posted their choices for the perfect cast of an adaption of the classic crime comic series 100 Bullets. I think that their choices are excellent…

Here’s the first photo that I’ve seen of Arnold, Sly and Bruce on location in Bulgaria for filming of The Expendables 2. Can you dig it? Yeah, I thought you could.

I know that many of the folks who swing by here are fans of The Night of the Living Dead, so I thought it’d be a good idea for me to post a link to Grzegorz Domaradzki’s new NOTLD poster. Click over and you can buy a limited edition silk-screen of it or simply admire a larger version.

Did you know that when the first men to land on the moon returned to Earth that they completed a report for customs? That’s right, NASA astronauts, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins completed a customs form upon their return. A spokesman for NASA has confirmed the authenticity of the document and you can see a full-moonsized version at Space.com.
I was ten years old when we first landed on the moon. I can remember watching black and white images beamed to us from 240,000 miles away as all of the adults in the room and Walter Cronkite on the tube got giddy. It was is pretty cool stuff.
We were on the moon! How long w0uld it be until we had flying cars like Nick Fury? How long until astronauts were going to Mars and beyond? Perhaps even a five year mission to go where no man had gone before was in order.
But getting back to the custom’s report, I never knew about it before a few days ago. I do remember that when Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins returned to Earth that they had to wear special biological containment suits and were kept in quarantine for three weeks to be sure that they didn’t bring back a virus or germ that could start a zombie-apocalypse.
Ok. I made up the zombie-apocalypse part, but the astronauts were kept in quarantine and did have to wear the biological containment suits. Even at ten years old, I remember thinking that the end of the human race would be like a cool episode of The Twilight Zone if the astronauts accidentally brought back a virus or germ that killed us all.
Think about it, our greatest human triumph leads to our extinction. Now that would be a cool episode for The Twilight Zone, except it really wouldn’t be so cool in real life, would it?

Dave Wachter returns this week with his take on Sly from Get Carter. I met Dave a couple of years ago and became an instant fan. Dave is a tremendous artist, but more importantly an all-around decent guy. You can see more of Dave’s art at his site. – Craig

Halloween is nearly here. If you’re into scary/fun decorations then you might want to make Halloween silhouettes for your windows. Trick or Treaters will love to see what appear to be witches, zombies, the Grim Reaper and other scary folks in your windows!

I love the retro feel to this poster for J. Edgar starring Leonardo DiCaprio and directed by Clint Eastwood. My guess is the movie will be even better.
Saturday Night Live presents rejected screen tests for Top Gun!

Although this poster isn’t the greatest I’ve ever seen, I am looking forward to seeing the latest Mission Impossible sequel.

Recently CBR.com posted the results of a poll of comic book readers to determine the top 100 Marvel and DC characters. Using just their list of the top 50 for each company, I present my top 10…
10. Namor – 539 points (7 first place votes): There was a summer when I was a kid in elementary school that I thought that Namor was the coolest cat walking swimming. He looked like Spock, was a Prince, could breathe on land and sea. Yeah, Namor was the man.
09. Black Widow (Natasha Romanova)- 452 points (3 first place votes): I’ve read fewer stories with the Black Widow than any of the other characters in my top ten, but I like this character. The first time I really noticed her potential was in a black and white magazine that featured her in a story drawn by Paul Gulacy. Around the same time, Frank Miller put her to good use in Daredevil.
08. Green Arrow (Oliver Queen) – 1495 (17 first place votes). Denny O’Neil and Neal Adams, Mike Grell, Trevor Von Eden and Jock all have worked their riffs on the Green Arrow. I’ve enjoyed all versions… especially those without the trick arrows.
07. Luke Cage – 633 points (3 first place votes): I can still remember picking the first issue of Luke Cage: Hero for Hire off the newsstands, reading it and thinking, yeah, this is how it would in real life if someone got super-powers. When I was in junior high I had a “shop” class and one of the things we had to create were business cards. It had to be for a business that wasn’t real and we couldn’t use our own names. My card read “Blackjack Joey – Hero for Hire.” So you can see the influence that Luke Cage had on me. Bonus points to anyone who can figure out where Blackjack Joey came from.
06. Question (Vic Sage) – 382 points (6 first place votes) Although I never read the original Question stories, I really dug the Denny O’Neil / Denys Cowan / Rick Magyar stories. Add in the covers by Bill Sienkiewicz and you have a top ten character.
05. The Punisher (Frank Castle) – 995 (17 first place votes) I’m talking about the real Punisher. You know the one who appeared in the mini-series and graphic novels by Steven Grant, Mike Zeck and John Beatty. You can throw in a bit of Miller and Romita Jr’s riffs, but count me out when the Punisher becomes a substitute teacher or starts hanging out with Microchip or any other sidekick.
04. Daredevil – 2280 points (71 first place votes): If Frank Miller wrote Daredevil and either he or David Mazzucchelli drew the series, I’d be a lifetime subscriber.
03. Wolverine – 2728 points (54 first place votes) Wolverine during Claremont, Byrne and Austin’s run was the coolest character ever. His biggest fault was he became too popular and was everywhere. Miller’s mini-series was cool. Chaykin has done some neat stuff with Wolverine as well. Unfortunately, too many people tried to work their magic on Logan and I lost interest. I’d still return to read stories about the runt if the right creator took the reins.
02. Nick Fury – 619 points (7 first place votes): I remember buying an issue of Nick Fury: Agent of Shield off the stands when I was elementary school. I’d never seen a comic that looked so cool. Steranko was is amazing. When I attended my first comic convention, the first items I purchased were a complete run of Steranko’s Nick Fury comics [and an issue of his publication, MediaScene]. Someone find a way to get Steranko to do covers for a Gulacy drawn, Doug Moench written Nick Fury series set in the 1960’s. The time is right.
01. Batman (Bruce Wayne) – 6585 points (313 first place votes) It doesn’t matter who draws Batman [Neal Adams, Marshall Rogers, Jim Aparo, Frank Miller, etc.], what kind of stories [funny, serious, set in any time period or genre], Batman works. That has to make him the #1 character… at least in my book.