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Shut up and eat your awesome…

March 20, 2013 by RJ Andron

It’s no secret that there has been an explosion in creativity with Youtube, and that the internet is awash with films that would never have seen the light of day in even fifteen years ago, no matter how good the film was. And what makes it even better is that the films look as good as, if not even better than, the multi-million dollar feature films that sell out the movie megaplexes. Case in point is this film:

Talk about high-concept! And it speaks right to the heart of nostalgia where every kid had sat watching Saturday morning cartoons wolfing down a bowl of cereal. Hell, there were Saturdays I practically lived on Count Chocula cereal. And the filmmakers here have taken the concept in directions that would make action-movie filmmakers choke up with pride that their art has been brought to the screen this way.

I know it’s just a trailer, but I would really love to be able to see a full movie like this.

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Filed Under: Fanfilms Tagged With: Comedy, Fanfilm, Film

Wouldn’t it be Cool if…

March 9, 2013 by RJ Andron

…life was really like this?

This video put out by TNT is a fun piece of marketing which really runs with the idea that people need drama in their lives. Everything that happens there is all about “blockbuster film.” I just wonder what the civilians were thinking as they saw this spectacle unfolding before their eyes. The look on the faces of the people who pushed the button says it all – they are awe-struck, nervous, and downright thrilled by the eruption of drama that they have – all by pushing that one little button.

I get this feeling every time I read a great book. I love the thriller genre, and I am having a lot of fun exploring the pulp genre of the 1930s and 1940s. It’s that feeling of being taken away and dropped into dramatic situations that you get to experience through the protagonist’s eyes, and trying to find out what happens next. How does the protagonist get out of the very deep hole the author has dropped him into? That’s all part of the fun – and something that I want to make sure happens in any story I create.

I want you to be able to pick up my story and thrill to the challenges faced by the characters, and follow them as they try to get what they want despite everyone else in the story trying to stop them. I want you to lose yourself in the worlds that my characters inhabit, whether they’re in the shadows of our own world, or in places that no one could imagine. I want you to shudder as the villains try to find ways to bring their own form of drama to the story, and fight to keep from skipping ahead to make sure the protagonist is all right.

In short, I want to add drama.

Sure, videos like this are over the top, and books and movies that show events like this occurring almost never happen to people in real life. That’s why we want the thrills – even if they’re from the nice safe distance of the pages in our hands, or the screen before our eyes. That’s why we look for stories that add drama.

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Filed Under: Creating Tagged With: Drama, First I Shall Entertain, Ideas

First, I Shall Entertain

February 23, 2013 by RJ Andron

When I was a lot younger, I lived to go to the local convenience store. Of course, it wasn’t called a convenience store at the time – it was a “Dairy Bar” – a combination convenience store/ice cream shop/laundromat/bottle recycling depot run by a crusty gent who made sure that the shelves were filled with what made him money. Nothing wrong with that, and in a small prairie town, the Dairy Bar proved to be not only an entrepreneur’s invention, it also was a community gathering place and entertainment hotspot.

What can I say? It was a really small town.

Every week, the owner made sure that there were fresh comic books on the spinner racks. Batman, Spider-Man, Captain Canuck, Scooby-Doo, Richie Rich and Casper the Friendly Ghost, and who knows how many other comics. And then there were the paperbacks that he brought in that I noticed when I was old enough to start digging into them – I must have been maybe 10 years old at that time. Star Trek novels, horror novels, movie adaptations, Conan, and later Executioner and science fiction novels, as well as Starlog and Famous Monsters of Filmland magazines. I must have spent a fortune at the Dairy Bar on books, comics, magazines, and video rentals – never mind the arcade games and candy that were in there. For a kid growing up in the Canadian prairies, this was like Disneyland available every single day, for less than a dollar.

A few years ago, I ran into the old owner. He remembered me as one of his best customers, even long after he had sold the place and gone off to enjoy a belated retirement, and he confessed that the Dairy Bar, had once been the small town’s movie theatre. Providing entertainment, it seems, was in that building’s DNA.

Sadly, the new owners had not done as well. They stripped the shelves, carrying only the “convenience items” and eschewing anything resembling entertainment. Videos were long gone, as were the books and the comics. Magazines? There were a few, but the racks sat mostly empty, a sad legacy for the years of reading pleasure that they had once provided.

Not even looking at the place through a rosy glow of nostalgia could make that dying husk of a store seem anything like what it once was. No longer a community gathering place, this one-time entertainment hotspot has been converted into a place waiting to be shuttered.

We can draw some parallels to the fate of the Dairy Bar and the North American entertainment sector. Books and publishing have been taken over by the literati snobs who demand craft for craft’s sake, while they ignore the purpose books are written – to be read and to entertain. Movies and television have fallen into the death grip of celebrity/reality/paparazzi voyeurism fighting with endless procedurals/sitcoms/award-bait for viewer’s eyeballs. Radio has abandoned the field to classic-rock-retreads mashed with autotune hell and scattered pockets of bloviation masquerading as talk radio. And let’s not even talk about the fanboy disaster that is the modern comics industry.

If you have been thinking that there’s something wrong with entertainment these days, you’re not alone.

Entertainment has stopped being…entertaining.

Entertainment is the lifeblood of culture, and without entertainment, culture dies.

There are still hints of a heartbeat out there in the culture, a culture that refuses to simply lay down and die. Independent web series, self-publishing, indie comic books, web comics, the new pulp movement, fan films, human wave SF, among others – all the torches picked up by individuals who want to be entertained and, finding nothing worthwhile out there, have instead started to create the entertainment that they want. They have remembered the first, and only commandment of media.

And their commandment is also my commandment: “First I shall entertain.”

Every work created is made for an audience – even if that audience is just the creator himself. It is the audience that ultimately judges the creation by giving over their time and treasure to experience it. And if the creator has failed to give them value in return, then the audience is not shy about letting him know it.

Now, I have been writing and creating a long time. There are a lot of notebooks and computer files that I have filled over the years, all in the desire to tell stories that I enjoy. I create the stories that I want to hear and see, and I’m more than happy to have other people come along for the ride.

Saddle up. We’re going to get entertained.

Mike Kaluta's Shadow

Mike Kaluta’s Shadow. Back when comics were entertainment first.

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Filed Under: Creating Tagged With: Comics, Film, First I Shall Entertain, Indie, Nostalgia

Steal this Idea – Restarting the Batman Films

February 18, 2013 by RJ Andron

With the Dark Knight Rises being released last year, superhero fan discussions inevitably turn to what the next incarnation of Batman films will be like. And it’s no wonder, the Goyer-Nolan trilogy pulled in a boatload of cash and did more to resurrect DC’s film franchises than Tim Burton, Joel Schumacher and George Clooney did to bury them with the horrible films of the 1990s. May we never return to those dark, dark days…

So, what can we do with a Batman movie that would be fun, and commercially successful?

Well, ever since the 1990s-era Bruce Timm Batman, fans have responded well to the darker modern-noir style of the Batman character. Even animated interludes like The Batman and Batman: the Brave and the Bold which were more kid-friendly still kept a fairly grim caped crusader and did the occasional episode that delved deep into Batman’s origins. The Goyer-Nolan take on the Dark Knight has been to try to bring Batman into our world as if he were a real superhero – and the fans have overwhelmingly had positive response.

So let’s not mess with success.

The Batman – The World’s Greatest Detective

Now, one of the elements that really came out of the 1970s when Denny O’Neill was writing Batman was the notion that he was the world’s greatest detective, and had spent years of his life perfecting his practice of criminology. This is something that has been missing from pretty much every Batman film that’s been tossed up on the silver screen, so let’s see if we can play with the concept and really show off a Batman whose intellect is as powerful as his fists.

Villains: In order to have a villain that is capable of matching Batman’s intellect, we’re going to want to look deep into his rogues’ gallery. Let’s first eliminate any character who has been in the Goyer-Nolan series, so that lets out Scarecrow, Ra’s Al-Ghul, Joker, Two-Face, Bane, Talia al-Ghul and Catwoman. Though really, we’re not losing too much by tossing out Bane.

Out of who’s left, we have a couple of options. The Riddler, and Dr. Hugo Strange.

Fan Poster for Dark Knight Returns, featuring the Riddler.

Fan Poster for Dark Knight Returns, featuring the Riddler.

As far as the Riddler goes, the Mighty Frank Gorshin casts a pretty long shadow. His interpretation of the Riddler from the Batman TV series of the 1960s has pretty much set the stage for all subsequent Riddler interpretations, including the horrible Jim Carey version.  We can play with him a bit and see if we can come up with a different interpretation, but if we stray too far, then fans won’t recognize him as the Riddler. And then we end up with the same problem as Bane in the Dark Knight Rises – where the portrayal of him as anarchist was at odds with the steroid-powered mercenary that we saw in comics.

So let’s team him up with Dr. Hugo Strange. Strange has had a few incarnations ranging from mad scientist to genetic researcher to psychiatrist, but never really sat at home with the Batman universe. In several comic book incarnations, Strange was able to figure out Batman’s true identity as Bruce Wayne. He’s got a formidable intellect, and his psychiatric background gives him an edge when dealing with the inmates of Arkham Asylum. And let’s put him in the position of dominating the Riddler, who has always had psychiatric issues of leaving clues for Batman to find.

With the villains in place, let’s sketch out our story.

Theme:  Some secrets should remain buried.  With everything from secret identities to hidden lairs, Batman has always been about secrets, and as a detective, it is his mission to uncover those secrets.  Likewise, Hugo Strange is going to be about secrets with his own agenda and trying to find out Batman’s secret identity. And what are Riddles if not secrets waiting to be told?

But what if there are some secrets that shouldn’t be uncovered? Gotham City is one of the most corrupt cities in the nation. It doesn’t just breed criminals; it breeds super-criminals – what makes it that way?

And how could the Wayne Family be a part of Gotham society for generations without some secrets of their own?

So by building our story’s theme around secrets, we have a lot of rich storytelling territory to mine.

Setting: We’ve pretty much set up Gotham as our main playground, but which parts? Let’s look at them one by one.

  • Arkham Asylum: With Strange and the Riddler, Arkham’s a natural to be included. And it comes with lots of secrets of its own that we can play with. Its architect went insane and murdered construction workers on the asylum. Its founder euthanized his own mother, and personally executed a serial killer who killed his wife and daughter. Lots of Lovecraftian elements here, including an occult-inspired design.
  • Wayne Manor: Pretty much a given, especially if we’re going to be exploring the Wayne family secrets.
  • The Heights: Okay, I have no idea what else to call this part of town, but this is the area for the well-moneyed families of Gotham, where a lot of the older residents and their families built their fortunes on dirty money.
  • The Narrows: Where Gotham City’s poor live, and home to Crime Alley – the place where Thomas and Martha Wayne were killed. This is the Batman’s natural hunting grounds, where he can tackle street thugs and corrupt cops all at once.
  • Captain Gordon’s Precinct: This story works best at the early part of Batman’s and Gordon’s career, so we’re going to look at his precinct. And yeah, it will look a lot like the precinct house featured in the Batman: the Dark Knight film.

The Secret of the Batman – The Story

We’re just going to be playing around in broad strokes here, and a full-on story concept would take a lot more work. We just want to have some idea of what the story would look like from a distance.

Backstory: Gotham has always been corrupt. Always. The old-money families got their start with brokering political power and lining their pockets on city contracts. As the city grew, the city coffers financed the growth of several family fortunes, including the Waynes and the Arkhams. Neighbors and business partners once, the onset of Prohibition opened the doors to even more wealth, and for the Arkham matriarch, the lure was too tempting. She fought the upstart gangs for territory and market share, and she started looking for ways to extend her power. Encouraging a romance between her son and a Wayne daughter, she was unprepared for the backlash from the Wayne family. By the time the romance was over, Elizabeth Arkham had been murdered by her eldest son, and the Wayne daughter was sent to hospital for a “procedure” before being committed to a sanitarium to avoid prosecution for killing her own father.

The surviving Wayne family pulled back from city politics, and the City continued its slide into the hands of organized crime.

Today, Gotham is still corrupt, but there are rumors of a vigilante called the Bat Man. Gotham City PD are investigating.

Opening: Batman patrols Gotham’s streets, taking on the low-level street thugs and the corrupt cops, and the Mayor starts to demand action to keep the city from sliding into anarchy. As the head of Arkham Asylum, Dr. Hugo Strange heads up a police-civilian task force to track down the Batman.

As his assistant is the brilliant but troubled police detective Edward Nigma, nicknamed the “Riddler” for his habit of trying to show that he is smarter at crime-solving than anyone else in the room. And just to drive the point home, he always uses a big question mark on the chalkboard when lecturing the other cops. Naturally, he clashes with Captain Gordon. Gordon sees Nigma as being close to the breaking point. Still, Nigma is the official police presence on the task force, which is nicknamed “The Riddler Squad.”

With the civilian-police task force in place, the Batman now has to face off against the Gotham City PD.

Plot Point: Hugo Strange identifies Bruce Wayne as the Batman to the GCPD, and has planted evidence that implicates Bruce Wayne. Pursued by Nigma and the Riddler Squad, Bruce Wayne is cut off from his friends and allies, and from his tools. He only has a hidden Batman costume.

Complicating matters is that Strange convinces the Mayor to put a bounty on Bruce Wayne’s head, and this encourages the Gotham citizens to chase after Bruce Wayne as well.

Nigma pursues Wayne and Batman relentlessly, but Wayne manages to continually foresee and evade Nigma’s elaborate ambushes. Hugo Strange also mentions that with Bruce Wayne captured, old wrongs will be righted.

Turning Point: Hugo Strange invades Wayne Manor, and has the police escort Alfred Pennyworth out of the manor. He and Nigma then proceed to tear the manor apart, but Strange is unconcerned by evidence that points to the Batcave. Captain Gordon fights to keep the Batman on the move. Wayne meets with him and they strategize, just before Nigma bursts in on them. Nigma throws Gordon into jail for aiding a known fugitive. Nigma goes over the edge here, and it’s obvious that Hugo Strange is pulling Nigma’s strings.

In this part of the story, Bruce Wayne discovers that Strange is the descendant of Elizabeth Arkham, and that he is eager to claim the Wayne fortune, which he claims was stolen from the Arkhams following Elizabeth’s murder.  He also finds that he has support of many of Gotham’s decent upstanding people who are tired of having their city run by thugs and criminals.

Climax: Batman and Captain Gordon arrive at Arkham Asylum, ready to do battle with Hugo Strange. The GCPD are on site as well, looking to take down the Batman, whom they also believe to be Bruce Wayne. Batman has to be able to take down Strange and Nigma and his Riddler Squad and somehow salvage his greatest secret – his secret identity.

Is this a Reboot?

While the general concept of a reboot is making thing completely fresh and changed from what has gone before, Batman films and animation have a winning formula, and we would be foolish to completely change what has gone before. And as much as I like the 1960s Batman with the Mighty Adam West and Burt Ward, the general fan base is not quite ready for return to camp.

The story I’ve sketched out looks at restarting Batman in “Year 2” to follow off of Frank Miller’s “Batman: Year One” graphic novel. Some of the features of this approach are:

  • It maintains the darker, realistic feel of the recent Batman films, but also allows for some deeper psychological looks into the various characters including Batman, Gordon, and the citizens of Gotham. How does the discovery of Batman’s family history impact him?
  • Allows for a smarter Batman, and smarter villains, while still keeping a fairly high action quotient.
  • The challenge is really significant for Batman, where he faces his entire city and where his secret identity is blown early on. What will be really interesting is how a talented writer could have Bruce Wayne regain his secret identity without resorting to the old trope of dressing Alfred up in the Batman suit. I have some ideas, but I’m not telling.
  • This is an origin story without actually doing an origin story. We get to see Batman developing into the legendary crime fighter we know he will become, but we also get to see the scope of the challenges he faces on his chosen path.

 

The disadvantages are:

  • We have a lot of backstory, and doing historic scenes or flashbacks will take the viewer right out of the film, so a script is going to have to introduce the backstory in a smart way.
  • Our Riddler is very different from the classic Riddler concept of the fellow in the green suit covered in question marks.  But at the same time, it is a more interesting Riddler to me, and he would work well as an antagonist for Captain Gordon in much the same way as Hugo Strange works as Bruce Wayne’s antagonist.

So, that’s a starting point. What do you think? Add your comments below.

Batman: Arkham City Sketch by Man1D. Used under Creative Commons

Batman: Arkham City Sketch by Man1D. Used under Creative Commons

Batman and his associated characters are the property of DC Comics. No challenge to any intellectual property rights of DC Comics is made or contemplated.

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Filed Under: Superheroes Tagged With: Batman, Genre Fiction, Reboot, Superheroes

Stuff to check out: The Shadow Fan Podcast

February 10, 2013 by RJ Andron

New pulp author and Pulp fan Barry Reese has been producing the Shadow Fan Podcast, where he talks about his favorite pulp character (and mine) – the Shadow. The series has eighteen half-hour episodes released to date, where he talks about the Shadow in all forms of media, from the classic pulps of the 1930s and 1940s all the way up to the comics being released to a new generation of fans today.

The discussions cover the characters, story reviews, and the future of one of the earliest “dark” crimefighters to prowl the media. If you have a chance, check it out here: http://theshadowfan.libsyn.com/ or on iTunes. Visit Barry’s site at http://barryreese.net/

Highly recommended.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Podcast, Shadow Fan, The Shadow

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