Gerardo Moreno’s New Jack Carter Painting

Gerardo Moreno is back with his new Jack Carter piece. Prints of this painting are available here. I’ve always enjoyed Gerardo’s Stallone art, and know that I can see more of his art here.
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

Gerardo Moreno is back with his new Jack Carter piece. Prints of this painting are available here. I’ve always enjoyed Gerardo’s Stallone art, and know that I can see more of his art here.

The red highway shown in the diagram above is Interstate 95. The stretch of Interstate 95, Florida is not only designated as the #2 most dangerous highway in the United States, but also…
“…has the distinction of being the deadliest highway in America, with a rate of 1.73 fatal accidents per mile…”
I regularly drive a stretch of I-95. Thankfully, although there are often accidents on this highway, the piece I drive isn’t as bad as the…
…stretch of (I-95 that) even has its own attorney, ready to sue anyone.

Don’t you dig this Gold Key cover mock-up for Gravedigger?
Chris Mills explains how the faux cover came about:
I had so much fun mocking up that Gold Key Comics-styled Femme Noir cover yesterday, that last night I dusted off the terrific, painted Gravedigger: The Scavengers variant cover by my friend Fred Harper, and knocked out this retro/faux Gravedigger piece. There’s something kinda subversive about seeing the squeaky-clean Gold Key trade dress & logo on this hardboiled title…
Don’t forget that Gravedigger: Hot Women, Cold Cash by Chris Mills and Rick Burchett is available! It gets my highest recommendation.

John Carpenter’s The Thing is a classic in the horror genre. Most fans consider it Carpenter’s high-water mark.
What many don’t know is that The Thing that was released to theaters was very different from what was originally planned and filmed. When Carpenter saw a rough cut he realized that the movie didn’t work. It lacked tension (can you believe that?), the pace was slow and MacCready (played by Kurt Russell) was just another face in the crowd.
Luckily a six-week break had been built into the shooting schedule. During that time Carpenter…
…restructured the film, wrote what was essentially a new Second Act to conform to the editing he had done (including new death scenes for two characters), adopted MacCready as his spiritual doppelganger, and scrambled to get all of it shot on location in Stewart, B.C. Coming face to face with his own greatest fear – fear of failure – he was able to make THE THING undeniably his…
Stuart Cohen was a co-producer on The Thing. Cohen was on location during filming and in his blog, details the changes that Carpenter brought about to turn a movie that didn’t work into a horror classic.

My guess is that at some point you’ve thought about how cool it would be to be invisible.
Yeah, me too.
I always thought that the ability to become invisible would be one of the best super powers ever. After seeing the video below, I’m going to have to rethink that.

Although I haven’t seen The Great Gatsby movie, I have seen enough trailers and clips for it to know that The Great Gatsby is visually stunning.
Now thanks to Chris Godftrey we can see a major reason why The Great Gatsby looked so amazing.

One of our most popular posts is 10 Bets You Will Always Win.
So we followed up with Another 10 Bets You Will Always Win.
It has been a while so here is 10 New Bets You Will Always Win!

Posts involving mysteries and unsolved crimes are always popular. Today I present 10 Creepy Mysteries Involving Unidentified People by Robin Warder via Listverse.

Recently Annapurna Pictures and Skydance Productions announced that the Terminator movie franchise was going to reboot with the first of a projected trilogy to premiere in the summer of 2015. Arnold Schwarzenegger was in talks to star.
Over at the MTV Movies Blog, Kevin P. Sullivan posted Terminator 5: Everything We Know About the New Movies. In his piece, Sullivan posts his thoughts on the direction the new film should take. Here are his major points and my thoughts:
Arnold has to be human. Sullivan contends, and most would have to agree, that because Arnold ain’t a spring chicken, it would be hard to accept him as a Terminator. My first reaction was, Sullivan is right. But then I reconsidered. With the right make-up and stunt doubles Arnold could realistically play a Terminator again… if that’s the direction the movie goes.
(Arnold) has to be the model for the T-800. Sullivan asks, “If Schwarzenegger’s character is human, how do you explain his uncanny resemblance to the Terminator that hunts Sarah Connor in the first film and protects her son John in the second?” This could be a problem except for the fact that the new Terminator films are a reboot. As long as this is clear to the average movie-goer, then the earlier Terminator movies’ continuity are no longer a problem.
This deleted scene is getting reconned. Two things stop the above deleted scene from being a problem: 1) It is a deleted scene and so has no place in the any Terminator continuity and 2) the new film is the start of a reboot — past continuity doesn’t come into play.
It’s either set it in the past… …or in the future. Well, yeah. I like the thought of a Terminator film set in the 1940’s or 50’s. I also like the idea of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson playing a part. I especially liked the idea that “Schwarzenegger would play the man who stops the futuristic assassin using period-appropriate technology, thus impressing the robotic overlords and becoming the model for the T-800.”
I’ve always enjoyed the Terminator movies (and the first two remain all-time favorites) so I look forward to seeing how this will all play out.
Thanks to Kevin P. Sullivan for the Terminator food-for-thought. – Craig

When I was a kid I loved getting an icey. Sometimes called slusheys, they came in many flavors.
Coke was my favorite. Dairy Queen called these frozen concoctions Mr. Mistys, but they didn’t have a Coke Mr. Misty.
I know what you’re thinking. You can still get a icey / slushey / Mr. Misty if you don’t mind going for a walk or drive, but wouldn’t it be nice if you could make them at home?
Funny, you should ask because… you can.

In honor of the 40th anniversary of its release, Warner Bros. released a special 2 disc edition Blu-ray of Enter the Dragon.
CBR.com had a post that is no longer available. Enter the Dragon’s producers Fred Weintraub and Fred Heller, cinematographer Gil Hubbs and co-star Bob Wall were interviewed. In it, Fred Heller talked about how comic books influenced the look and feel of Enter the Dragon:
Heller: Comic books played a big part in Enter the Dragon. When we first started thinking about the look of the film, there was a comic strip called Terry and the Pirates, and that became sort of the genesis of the whole look of the film. It was about a Dragon Lady and Chinese pirates, and it was a wonderful moment in time about adventure. But it has a wonderful, brilliant color scheme of golds and blues and reds, and if you think about Enter the Dragon, that’s what we did. And that was very, very conscious. It just felt like it would be very right for the film.

Steve Niles was recently interviewed by Kevin Knight at Eat.Geek.Play. (Sadly, that interview is no longer available. But we do have Steve Niles’ Twitter for your viewing pleasure. – Craig, 2021)

Gerardo Moreno is back with his new Wolfman piece. You can see more of his art here at Gerardo’s site. His Wolfman print is also available through Fine Art America.
(This has been a public service announcement — I don’t make a commission on any prints sold. – Craig)

Hey, it’s been a week, perhaps we should check in on Riddick.
Good thing we did or we might have missed the new poster above!

I just learned that Bob Carter passed away yesterday at the age of 83. Mr. Carter was better known to his thousands and thousands of fans as Sammy Terry.
If you grew up in the midwest (especially Indiana) in the 1960’s, odds are you couldn’t wait for each weekend to roll around and for Sammy Terry to present his unique brand of humor coupled with a monster movie or two.
From 1962 until 1989, Sammy Terry hosted Nightmare Theater [later called Shock Theater] and made personal appearances at events throughout the state. Sammy was a big part of many kids’ childhoods, mine included.
Although I’m glad his Sammy Terry character will live on, I’m sad to report the passing of Bob Carter.
A public memorial will be held Friday, July 5, 2013 from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Singleton Mortuary, 7602 Madison Ave., Indianapolis, IN 46227.