Extra Sequential Podcast Episode Sixteen

78 mins. During the increasing heat, Mladen and I yak about a plethora of awesome Batman comics, Ellen Degeneres, the lack of Parisian skyscrapers, how reading comics and novels differ and unusual eBay items.

LISTEN TO IT BELOW, DOWNLOAD IT HERE, OR ON ITUNES OR MIXCLOUD

2:45: NEWS

Dennis Leary as Captain Stacy in the upcoming Spidey film, the Green Lantern film trailer, Ninja Turtle’s co-creator Kevin Eastman’s fire sale and the first photo of Karl Urban as Judge Dredd.

17:50: WHAT WE’VE BEEN READING

Batman Inc. #1, Batman: The Return, Batman #704, Superman/Batman #78. As for non-Bats titles, we discuss manga horror Parasyte, Assassin’s Creed, Dungeons and Dragons, Nikopol (videogame), and the huge collection Sundays with Walt & Skeezix.
36:05: FEATURE THEME: DETECTIVES

We talk about the different categories of detectives as seen in comics, including the private investigator, the supernatural detectives, and the quirky genius obsessive.
We mention Mammoth Book of Best Crime Comics, Batman in Hush, The Long Halloween and Dark Victory, classic Dick Tracy, Hairbutt the Hippo / Elephantmen, Dylan Dog, Hellboy, Image Comics’ hit Chew, Death Note, Naoki Urasawa’s Monster, new Aussie series The Dark Detective: Sherlock Holmes, the gorgeous looking Blacksad and Max Allan Collins’ intelligently written female detective Ms Tree.

Green Lantern Trailer

And it’s here, more than a few months before the film debuts mid-2011. If you go and see the latest Harry Potter film, you’ll also see the brand new trailer for the Green Lantern film starring Ryan Reynolds as test pilot Hal Jordan, Blake Lively as love interest Carol Ferris, Peter Sarsgaard as huge-headed Hector Hammond and Mark Strong as Sinestro. It’s directed by Casino Royale’s Martin Campbell and is an origin film for the classic ring wielder. With a script from comics scribes Marc Guggenheim and Michael Green, and overseeing from DC’s golden boy Geoff Johns I had high hopes for this film. Then we all saw the very uninspiring glowing green costume on the cover of Entertainment Weekly. That thankfully seems to have changed since then.

The trailer seems a little too comedic and not as serious as the GL comics are (and they are serious in the way that only good superhero comics can get away with). However, the talent behind and before the camera is impressive and maybe this trailer, seeing as its the first official one, is just testing the water and going for the broadest strokes possible. With Kilowog, Tomar-Re and the GL’s planet/base Oa, it appears to be faithful to the page though.

You can check it out here or below.

Green Lantern Film Footage

I used to watch Entertainment Tonight years ago, back when it was actually about new film and TV shows. Then it became all gossip focused and dull. However, they have redeemed themselves with this scoop. Yep, the first footage of the new Green Lantern film, showing Hal Jordan, Carol Ferris, a costume more in keeping with the comics version, and a Kilowog cameo. Oh yeah. The film, directed by Casino Royale’s Martin Campbell opens on June 17, 2011.

Green Lantern Film Posters

The character posters from Comic Con have now been unleashed upon the internet. They don’t reveal much, but it’s probably wise to have a subtle and slightly intriguing way to initially promote the film to non-fanboys who may be getting sick of superhero films. Below are posters of Ryan Reynolds as Hal Jordan/Green Lantern, Blake Lively as Carol Ferris/Star Sapphire, Mark Strong as Sinestro and Peter Sarsgaard as Hector Hammond.

Directed by Martin Campbell (Casino Royale) the film opens on June 17 next year. Here’s the official synopsis.

In a universe as vast as it is mysterious, a small but powerful force has existed for centuries. Protectors of peace and justice, they are called the Green Lantern Corps. A brotherhood of warriors sworn to keep intergalactic order, each Green Lantern wears a ring that grants him superpowers. But when a new enemy called Parallax threatens to destroy the balance of power in the Universe, their fate and the fate of Earth lie in the hands of their newest recruit, the first human ever selected: Hal Jordan.

Hal is a gifted and cocky test pilot, but the Green Lanterns have little respect for humans, who have never harnessed the infinite powers of the ring before. But Hal is clearly the missing piece to the puzzle, and along with his determination and willpower, he has one thing no member of the Corps has ever had: humanity. With the encouragement of fellow pilot and childhood sweetheart Carol Ferris (Blake Lively), if Hal can quickly master his new powers and find the courage to overcome his fears, he may prove to be not only the key to defeating Parallax … he will become the greatest Green Lantern of all.

Under the posters is a great video from Comic Con in which Reynolds recites the Green Lantern oath. It can’t be easy to make it sound cool on the big screen, but Reynolds sure does here.

Green Lantern’s Movie Costume

And with one image the collective hopes of fanboys deflate. With Ryan Reynolds, a comic-conscious celebrity on board as test pilot Hal Jordan and enthusiastic comic scribe Geoff Johns behind the scenes, many had huge expectations for next year’s Green Lantern film to be faithful to the rich DC source material. That could still be true, but today’s image (the first official one) of the man in costume shows an altered version of one of the best costumes in comics. It’s all made via CGI and this sinewy look could just be Hal’s ring generated costume in mid-transformation, or maybe his rookie duds, with the more familiar comic costume being shown on screen after Hal’s acceptance into the GL Corps. However if that’s the case would they really release an unfinished look on the cover of a very popular magazine? Maybe, but if the film makers are paying attention to internet reaction, they’ll realise it’s not too late to change it and get fans back on their side.

Check out more photos of the (non-costumed) cast right here.

Abin Sur Cast

The Green Lantern cast is expanding. According to Empire Online, New Zealander Temuera Morrison (Jango Fett from the Star Wars prequels) is playing Abin Sur, the alien who crashes on Earth and passes his ring to test pilot Hal Jordan (played by Ryan Reynolds). Taika Waititi (apparently also known as Taika Cohen) who starred in and directed comedy fave Eagle vs Shark is playing Jordan’s best pal (assumedly that’d be mechanic  Thomas Kalmaku, from the comics).

Filling out the main cast is Mark Strong (Sherlock Holmes) as Sinestro, Blake Lively (Gossip Girl) as Carol Ferris and Peter Sarsgaard as Hector Hammond. It started filming today, in New Orleans and is directed by Martin Campbell (Casino Royale).

Green Lantern opens June 17 next year. With Marc Guggenheim (Flash) and Michael Green (Superman/Batman) as co-writers lending the film some solid comic book credibility, this could be the film to prove that Warner Bros. know how to make a good film based on a DC Comics character who doesn’t have pointy ears and an annoyingly gruff voice.

From Green to Yellow to White

And of course, who could forget his blue threads? Sinestro (he with the evil wispy moustache and former mentor of Hal Jordan) has a new colour in his wardrobe it seems.

Unfortunately, living in the world’s most isolated city means that occasionally I miss my weekly comics shipment (and so do all the other fanboys and girls who call Perth home). This week was such a week. Thanks to a delay in Singapore this week’s goodies (of which there were a lot) will most likely arrive 2 days late, ie, Saturday. Blackest Night #7 was one I was looking forward to picking up, and apparently it has quite the ending, but I think I can piece together Geoff Johns’ surprise from the just released cover image for Green Lantern #52. Sinestro as a White Lantern? I’m not sure how I feel about that. I guess I’ll just have to wait and see it in context in the page of Blackest Night’s penultimate issue, which will then launch in to the Brightest Day mini-series.

Green Gleason

Patrick Gleason is one of my favourite artists and I was fortunate enough to meet him at my first Comic-Con 2 years ago. A busy guy, but very humble – and also friends with one of my other fave artists, Doug Mahnke. I read last week’s Green Lantern Corps #45 on the train journey home this week and thought I’d share a few pages from Gleason’s handiwork. He’s always had a soft, rounded and fluid approach to his pencils and that’s why he’s been doing such dazzling works with the Green Lantern titles for the last few years. His pencils fit in so well with all the swirling light constructs and weird alien races. On to the pretty pictures then.

Green Lantern #50 Preview

Green Lantern #50 from writer Geoff Johns and one of my fave artists Doug Mahnke is released on the same day as Arcana #1 (Jan 27). Courtesy of DC’s blog, here are two uncoloured pages from the issue by Mahnke.

Evergreen: Hal Jordan Turns 50

Green Lantern Hal Jordan is 50, although since he got rid of the grey hair, you can’t really tell. Embodying the welcome return of superheroes in comics, after years of western and romance titles, Hal was the first of many re-imagined DC characters that came to define the Silver Age and entice a new generation eager to be raised on a steady diet of spandex. Spurred on by the success of Barry Allen as the new Flash, editor Julius Schwartz thought the Green Lantern concept was also due a facelift. In the 1950s nothing was cooler than pilots and Elvis, but Elvis already had a costume. So, whereas Hal’s predecessor Alan Scott was the bearer of a ring made from mystical green flame, Hal was basically an intergalactic cop, charged by the Guardians of the Universe (who resembled the Smurfs’ ancestors) with the ultimate hi-tech weapon – a power ring. His creators, John Broome and Gil Kane gave pop culture a great leading man in his debut in 1959’s Showcase #22. Hal is effectively the springboard for a literal universe of engrossing concepts, like the centre of a creative brainstorming session. The Green Lantern Corps, the Lanterns of different hues, G’Nort -it’s all there, and it all started with an eager man without fear, years before a certain blind lawyer would claim the title.

I’ve always had an affinity for Hal, rather than Alan. Not surprisingly because I grew up with him as the Green Lantern. He has one of the coolest costume designs of any superhero, and he has a ring that’s powered by sheer will. The other standard tropes of flight, a secret identity and being a member of a superhero club are all just icing on the emerald cake.

Recently a nerdy associate and myself were discussing which group was cooler – the Green Lantern Corps or the Jedi. Both use willpower to combat evil, both have simple uniforms (green spandex vs robes) and strange weapons (power rings vs lightsabers) and both are effectively galaxy spanning peace keepers that have existed for millennia, embodied by a wide variety of strange alien races. I can’t deny that the Jedi are cool (which self-respecting nerd ever could?) but I must say that the GL Corps beat them hands down; not merely because they existed first, but because they are emotional beings, as opposed to the stoic Jedis. Because of their human, or alien, failings and triumphs, space and now emotion itself has become the stage for some of comics’ greatest dramas, all with Hal as the central figure, and Jordan is the poster boy for the GL Corps with good reason – he was the first human recruit and he’s the best there is at what he does (sorry Wolvie!).

Growing up in Perth, (the most isolated city on the planet) meant that I was very unfamiliar with comics as a child. However the upside was that I was safe from nuclear fallout. Scrounging any superhero distraction I could get meant hours sitting in front of the TV every Saturday morning foregoing all distractions, such as breakfast and blinking. Super Friends, and later Super Powers as cheesy as they could be, were nonetheless a revelation to my square eyes. Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman I were already familiar with, but when new characters I’d never seen before appeared, such as The Atom, Aquaman and of course, Green Lantern I was mesmerised. It was a rich fantasy world that I wanted to inhabit as often as possible, and the week’s wait till the next sweet Saturday morn seemed like an eternity in The Phantom Zone. However, little was I to realise at the time that the glowing box in my living room was not indicative of the much grander vision being played out every month in Hal’s printed adventures.

Hal’s solo escapades in Green Lantern lasted twelve years after launching his titular series in 1960 and became the place for bold ideas at the time, including Hal’s boss, and love interest Carol Ferris, a rare strong female character and Tom Kalmaku, an Inuit mechanic and Hal’s best friend. John Stewart would arrive soon after. John was DC’s first African American superhero – an architect who became a ring wielder after being recruited by the Guardians as Hal’s backup protector of Sector 2814, or Earth, as we call it.

These creatively mature decisions proved to be indicators of the future direction of Green Lantern. When writer Denny O’Neill and artist Neal Adams (John Stewart’s creators) took over Hal’s next adventures in the 1970s he teamed up with Oliver Queen, AKA Green Arrow in the wisely named Green Lantern/Green Arrow, a truly ground breaking series. This team-up title has become known for its social relevance as the two similarly coloured superheroes traversed America battling more than just bad guys. O’Neill and Adams presented a realistic presentation (in both scripts and art) of the hard travelling heroes’ battles against racism and drug abuse, while simultaneously trying to rationalise the space operatics of superheroing with real world issues of their time (and ours).

Throughout the 80s Hal appeared in Action Comics Weekly as well as his own series, which has later re-named Green Lantern Corps, before being re-presented post-Crisis in the mini-series Emerald Dawn, but as Hal entered the next decade, he’d soon be facing a backlash from readers eager to keep the status quo.

Most fans would like to skim past the part of Hal’s history involving the 90s, but the decade isn’t all cringe inducing. Thanks to the momentous Death of Superman two years earlier, Hal was subjected to the same fate as his peers in 1994, when he received an extreme makeover, and a younger replacement. Truth be told, I loved Kyle Rayner and didn’t see him as a usurper at all. I still remember the excitement of the glow in the dark cover of GL #50 (Vol. 3) heralding a fresh approach to the mythos. Due to the fact that in my neck of the woods, comic shops started popping up for the first time, my perspective was not dimmed by Silver Age nostalgia. That’s why I’m fond of Kyle as GL and Wally West as Flash. They’re the characters I read about; the characters that introduced me to this life-long obsession with sequential art.

Seeing Hal become Parallax on a power trip, and then the wrath of God, after being redeemed as The Spectre didn’t initially make a lot of sense to me, but it was unlike anything I’d read or experienced at that time. These heroes were such a leap from their animated counterparts, they may as well been in a different language, and I loved it. Reading comics in the 90s (what I like to call ‘the best of times and the worst of times’ for the comics biz) in my teenage years was a true eye opener. I was knee deep in something mysterious, but something that spoke to my need for epic, unexpected stories. Hal’s transformations from do-gooder to social crusader to space explorer to obsessed madman to justice incarnate to well, wherever Geoff Johns takes him next, post-Blackest Night. It’s been a fascinating ride by anyone’s imagining, and an imagination is something we loyal fanboys and girls have a Mogo-sized helping of. I think that’s another reason why Hal has lasted 5 decades. He has the ability to imagine – just like us. I don’t think I’ve met a reader of comics who isn’t a creative type in some capacity themselves. Unlike films or TV, comic books demand more of the reader. We are an active participant, partaking in a unique give and take with the men and women behind the keyboard and the pencil. Like the Guardians giving a seemingly non-descript company man such as Hal Jordan the key to literal wish fulfilment, we as readers, are inspired to unlock the gates of our imagination. We see more than a soldier and leader behind Hal’s mask. We see a man with the means to combat fear and darkness. We see a dreamer, and that’s an idea we can grasp with both hands.

DCU Online Green Lantern

Below are newly revealed pics from Sony of Hal Jordan Green Lantern from the upcoming DC Universe Online game. Here’s the skinny.

Hal Jordan acquired the power ring and lantern from a dying alien whose spaceship crashed on Earth. The alien’s objective was to find an individual who is “utterly honest and born without fear” all which describes the character of Hal Jordan.

Hal is the premier Green Lantern in the famed Green Lantern Corps, an intergalactic police force. Armed with his ring, which creates hard light constructs powered by his imagination, Hal patrols Earth with his mantra:

“In brightest days, in blackest night,

No evil shall escape my sight.

Let those who worship evil’s might

Beware my power, Green Lantern’s light!”

DCUO GL 1

DCUO GL 2

DCUO GL 3

DC On iTunes

The following DC titles are now available on iTunes, while Green Lantern: First Flight and Watchmen: Director’s Cut are also available on DVD, Blu-Ray and On Demand. Here’s 2 preview clips for your vieiwing pleasure.

The new Superman: Red Son Motion Comic is available here.

Green Lantern: First Flight can be bought here and Watchmen: Director’s Cut can be purchased here. Ain’t technology grand?

Green Lantern: First Flight Review

Green Lantern: First Flight DVDGreen Lantern: First Flight is the best looking DC animated film yet and should easily convince anyone that the live action film is well deserved. Writer Alan Burnett, who has been working with Superman and Batman in comics as well as animated form over the last few years, does a tremendous job of offering a streamlined version of this much loved space opera.

At the moment Green Lantern is one of the hottest characters around, thanks to Geoff Johns and his epic building Blackest Night event. The focus in this animated adventure is not about such complexities, as one film wouldn’t be enough, but it does a great job of providing all the information needed for the Lantern curious.

It’s essentially Hal Jordan: Year One but there’s no Rocky-style training montage. Less than 10 minutes after the film begins Jordan has received his ring from the dying alien Abin Sur and is off to Oa, where he’s partnered with veteran Lantern, Sinestro. It’s been described elsewhere as Training Day in space, and that’s a tidy fit. Hal is the first earthman to receive a power ring, which enables its wearer to make constructs of whatever they can imagine. The Green Lantern Corps (an intergalactic peace keeping force) have been around for aeons, thanks to the Guardians, a race of little blue creatures who fashioned the rings and oversee the Corps.  Jordan’s not a popular new recruit, and the myriad of aliens know Earth doesn’t have a good track record. However Sinestro offers to show Jordan the ropes. This is when Jordan grasps what the ring is capable of, and its weakness to the colour yellow, as well discovering that Sinestro is sick of the system and has secretly been trying to take over the Guardians’ job as rulers of the universe.

gl hologramThe problem with this film is the same thing that makes it so enjoyable for fanboys. It is a non-stop ride. Viewers will get more from it if they’re already somewhat familiar with the GL concept. The basics are offered, but with no real explanations. The bonus features offer more answers to the mythos though, with Geoff Johns chiming in about Blackest Night, and summaries of the Guardians and Sinestro. There’s also an excellent look at September’s Superman/Batman: Public Enemies film, which looks rocking. It re-unites the original animated voices of Superman, Batman and Lex Luthor and sticks closely to the first few issues of the Jeph Loeb and Ed McGuiness series. With its ramped up action and guest stars galore, this could possibly be the best of these movies. Also included are previous looks at the earlier films, Justice League: New Frontier, Batman: Gotham Knight and Wonder Woman, the latter of which GL director Lauren Montgomery also directed. Trailers for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Ban 10: Alien Force, Bakugan and Batman: Gotham Knight round out the extras on the first disc.

Disc 2 has the best extras, with more Geoff Johns, but this time he reveals his history on the character and how he sees Hal and co. This feature also includes heaps of eye candy, with art from Ivan Reis, Dave Gibbons and others. It’s an interesting, though brief, look at Johns, as he mentions the doubts many had on Hal’s future, his research at Edwards Air Force Base, and how he got his internship with Superman director Richard Donner. The classic Green Loontern episode from the Duck Dodgers in the 24 ½ th Century TV toon from a few years ago is here too. Duck Dodgers accidentally receives a Lantern suit and ring from the drycleaners and must rescue the Corps from the clutches of Sinestro. It features many light hearted cameos, including Kevin Smith as Jordan! What is becoming a regular extra is Bruce Timm Presents, where the veteran animation producer and character designer chooses two fave episodes from the DC animated banks. Here it’s the Once and Future Thing Part One and Two from Justice League Unlimited. This is a welcome extra, but an introduction by Timm on who he is and why he chose these episodes would make sense.

Each Lantern suit is slightly different not only from its comic book counterpart, but also from each other. Carol Ferris, Tomar Re, Ch’p, Arisia, Kilowog and The Guradians appear the same in both appearance and personality, but other familiar characters are strangely different, such as the Weaponers of Qward, Abin Sur, Kanjar Ro and Boodikka, voiced by Tricia Helfer.

gl lit scream 2I can see this film being one which separates audiences. It’s perhaps too much for DC novices, but it looks splendid,  and is filled with action and many (off-screen) deaths. 77 minutes isn’t long enough for an introduction into the sprawling GL mythos, though the extras help reveal more. The music by Robert Kral is the best of these movies, and I’m glad to see Sinestro eventually get his fancy yellow suit.

The voice acting is great too. Christopher Meloni (Law and Order: SVU) handles Jordan well, as does Michael Madsen with Kilowog, and Victor Garber (Alias) is pitch perfect as Sinestro, with menace and arrogance in equal measure. Garber’s role is the largest one in the film and he steps up with relish.

First Flight won’t be for everyone, but it’s close to the comics for the most part and its mix of space faring adventure, cop show and dazzling visuals should be enough for fans of DC and good animation. Considering this is the second direct-to-DVD release from DC this year, with one more to come in 2009, its pretty impressive. They keep churning them out with no loss of quality.

Green Lantern: First Flight is available on DVD, Blu-Ray and On Demand now.

boodikka

labella ball 3

bood tom

Sinestro and Hal Flying

Green Lantern: First Flight Preview

DC’s latest animated film debuts on July 28 on DVD, Blu-Ray and On Demand, and below is a sneak peek at the film, starring Hal Jordan and Sinestro. Looks good.

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