Batman vs Terminator

Batman vs Terminator.
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

Batman vs Terminator.

Today’s Buzzfeed question is What Famous Work of Art Are You?
I ended up as The Kiss because I am a true romantic.
The maniacal laughter you’re hearing is my wife upon reading the sentence above.

I’ve been a Dan Brereton fan since I first saw his work in The Black Terror. [Someone should publish a nice trade edition of The Black Terror, but we’ll save that for another post.]
Here’s a cool ad congratulating Brereton for winning the 1990 Russ Manning Award for Best New Artist. [And I have to say, I’ve always loved that Black Terror drawing.]

No. Your eyes do not deceive you.
That is Jack Burton and it appears that there is going to be a Big Trouble in Little China comic book.
Props to Eric Powell for the awesome teaser poster.

If you’re reading Hit by Bryce Carlson and Vanesa R. Del Rey [and if you’re not you should be] then you’ll want to check out this interview with them at Rhymes With Geek.

Remember when I was going on about how much I liked the Godzilla poster above?
And that I liked this Godzilla-sized version even more?
Well, I think the Godzilla trailer embedded below is even better than both and I would go so far to say as that the trailer below is the best Godzilla movie ever made.

I’m set for MegaCon.
I’ve got my hotel booked and my con passes purchased.
Now all I have to do is sort through the Comic Book Guests and Artist Alley lists to decide who I will I try to get a Stallone sketch from.
Then I need to try to find out their sketch prices and see how it fits my budget.
Then I need to update my reference for artists.
Then I need to pull together the items I need for autographs.
Then I need to check out the panels, to see which I plan to attend.
Oh, and I should probably look at the Media Guests just to make sure there’s no one I’d like to see.
Okay, maybe I’m not quite set for MegaCon, but I do have my hotel booked and con passes purchased.

If you’re still having withdrawal symptoms for Breaking Bad, you might want to check out Zsolt Molnár‘s (aka Zsutti) Breaking Bad posters. Zsutti created a poster for each episode.
Source: Buzzfeed.

Jeremy Treece has created art for comic books, trading cards, animation and independent films. Today we have Treece’s take on Sly Stallone.

The Mercenary Sea is an on-going series created by Kel Symons & Matthew Reynolds published by Image.
Writer: Kel Symons
Artist: Matthew Reynolds
Action and adventure set in 1938—The South Seas. Japan has invaded China. War in Europe is imminent. Ex-bootlegger Jack Harper captains The Venture, a refitted German U-Boat, with a crew of expats, mercenaries and treasure hunters. They do whatever it takes to stay afloat, often running up against pirates, headhunters, spies, and soldiers. They’re always one step away from the greatest score of their lives…or their certain demise.

The Pitch: ”Hey, someone in comics should do a pulp action comic, you know a real throwback about a ragtag group of mercenaries led by an Indiana Jones-type who loves adventure and righting wrongs.”
“Let’s do it!”
The Tagline: “Nice work if you can get it”
The Overview: Jack Harper is the leader of a group of mercenaries who make their living searching out adventure and taking jobs that bring them into contact with pirates, cannibals, treasure and the occasional job that pays real money.
In the first issue we meet Jack Harper (romantic adventurer) and his crew…
*** Beware – minor spoilers are found below ***
The Good
The Bad:
The Ugly:
I look forward to the next issue of The Mercenary Sea.
Rating:

Additional Source Material: CBR.com Interview with Symons & Reynolds.

Who directed the Psycho shower scene?
Most folks would say, “Alfred Hitchcock” since Hitchcock is the director credited with directing Psycho. Add to the fact that Hitchcock says he directed the scene and it would seem like case closed.
Ah, but things are seldom that easy, are they?
You see Hitchcock hired Saul Bass, the famous graphic artist, to storyboard the shower scene. And Bass was on the set for the seven days it took to shoot the scene. And Bass claims he directed the scene.
Vashi Nedomansky lays out a case to show that whether or not Bass directed the scene…
…it’s quite clear that the Saul Bass storyboards were followed explicitly to create the indelible images that made this spectacular scene.
Nedomansky’s Who Directed the PSYCHO Shower Scene? should be required reading for all movie fans.
Well done, Vashi.

It has been a long time since I’ve seen a new movie poster that I really liked. Who’d have thought that Godzilla would be the latest?
Not me.
The fact is, I do dig it. I like this Godzilla-sized version even more.

Jake Hinkson the author of the highly recommended Hell on Church Street, The Posthumous Man and Saint Homicide is the subject of an interview at CrimeSpree.
Hinkson talks about his influences, growing up in the South, his love of old films and more.
Here are a couple of quotes to entice you to click over…
Hardboiled crime fiction is about toughness. Noir is about weakness.
With Hell On Church Street, I found the voice of the main character right away. It jumped right out of me. I just loved the duality of Geoffrey Webb, his surface politeness and deep-seated contempt.
With The Posthumous Man, the voice of the main character was tricky because he’s a guy who, as the story begins, has just tried to commit suicide…. He dies in the emergency room for three minutes, and then wakes up to find that he has this bizarre second chance presented to him in the person of a deeply troubled nurse. He’s more philosophical than emotionally frazzled. I mean, after you’ve been dead, what’s there to be frazzled about?
There’s a line in Saint Homicide where Daniel says, “I simply don’t know what religion means to people for whom it doesn’t mean everything.”

The Saviors is an on-going series created by James Robinson & J. Bone published by Image.
Writer: James Robinson
Artist: J. Bone
You saw. You know. No way they let you go home, cover your eyes, put your fingers in your ears and pretend this never happened. You’re as good as dead.

In issue one Tomas Ramirez, a slacker content living in a small town, discovered that shape-changing aliens live among us. Tomas discovered their secret and they discovered his… that he knew.
Issue two picks up where issue one left off — Tomas is on the run in the desert from one of the morphing aliens. Things are looking bleak when a stranger new to town provides a chance for escape… if he can be trusted.
James Robinson lulled us into the story in issue one. Issue two flies at a breakneck pace as Tomas attempts to stay alive.
J. Bone’s art continues to be a joy.
The Saviors is a comic for mature audiences due to drug references and language. If you’re a fan of 50’s alien invasion movies [“I Married a Monster from Outer Space,” “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” etc.], ,or well written, well drawn comics, then The Saviors is for you.
Rating:
