Archives For DC Comics

The Nolan’s have returned, just in time to save the most tired franchise in American pop culture.  If this trailer doesn’t make you want to go home hug your children, you have no heart.

This trailer also reveals relative newcomer Henry Cavill is in the cape (and beard), backed up A-Listers Russell Crow (Jor-El), Amy Adams (Lois Lane), Kevin Costner (Pa Kent), Diane Lane (Ma Kent), not to mention Laurence Fishburne (The Matrix), Michael Shannon (of Boardwalk Empire, most likely playing Zod), and Richard Schiff (West Wing).

I’m disappointed that there an absence of bald men. But starting with Ra’s al Ghul rather than the Joker served the Nolan’s well last time, so I’ll trust them. Maybe they’re leaving Luthor for the 2015 Justice League movie?

Either way, summer can’t come soon enough.

Fables

Chris —  September 5, 2012

Fables-Has-Gorgeous-Cover-Art-1
Here’s the big idea with Fables.  Imagine all of the Fairy Tales you grew up with were forced to live in an apartment building in New York City.  Snow White, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty are all divorced from the same Prince Charming.  The flying monkey from Oz runs the library.  Beast has to be a perfect husband, because every time he makes Beauty mad, his horns grow back.  Then there’s Big Bad Wolf, just known as Bigby.

War. Espionage. Romance. Political Intrigue.

not to mention

Princesses. Witches. Wooden Boys. Talking Pigs. Santa Claus.

What more could you want?

 

What Kind of (Bat)man Will You Be?

Chris —  August 23, 2010

The world’s greatest comic book character, Batman, is going through a bit of a reboot.  DC claims that the story of Bruce Wayne has reached an end, and now the cape and cowl fall to the original Robin, Dick Grayson.

The new Adventures of Batman and Robin has the punchy-ness of a 1970s cartoon, with all the grit of a post-911 world.  Much of the story revolves around the development of Grayson, trying to figure out who he is, and what it means to be Batman.  This is the same “Holy Gee, Batman!” Robin, the former circus performer whose big mouth could sometimes be as much trouble as The Penguin.

He struggles to get used to wearing a cape, and can’t make the groveled Batman voice.  He’s also charged with taking care of the new Robin, Damian Wayne, the product of a tryst between Bruce Wayne of Talia al’Ghul.  Damian was raised without a father by the league of assassins, knows no respect and no mercy.

The story ends with Grayson deciding it’s okay for him to smile under the mask.  The only way he can do his job, is to find his own way of being a man.

It’s a story simple enough for a comic book, but so true that everyone must face it.  We all grow up with expectations of our parents, heroes we wish to emulate, and social rules we learned as children.  While these are all helpful, they can also trap us.  We become a hallow imitation of others, or are driven by goals that do not fit our souls.  At some point, we all have to decide what kind of Batman we’re going to be.