Monthly Archives: June 2012

Look! It’s The Governor from AMC’s ‘The Walking Dead’

Here’s a first look at actor David Morrissey as The Governor from AMC’s “The Walking Dead” series, which returns this fall.

AMC has released the first shot of Morrissey as the scary and controversial character from the comic book series, expected to play a huge role in the third season of the series.

It’ll be interesting to see if AMC’s character has as many bizarre quirks as the character in the comic series. It looks as if he starts out with more body parts, at least.

AMC plans 16 episodes for the third season. I haven’t heard if they’re planning to break that into eight-and-eight episodes again, but that seems likely.

 

Game on: ‘Ready Player One’ is geektacular

I’m late to the party on this, considering that “Ready Player One” was published last summer. I’ve never been a big gamer and wondered if the story would leave me cold. But Ernest Cline’s science fiction novel is a really fun read.

Cline’s book, set in a dystopian mid-21st century United States — in a world racked by war, rolling blackouts and the constant threat of violence — tells the story of Wade, a teenager living in the slums of Oklahoma City. Wade, like most of the rest of the population, spends much of his waking life in The Oasis, a global, online virtual reality. Wade — or at least his avatar — attends school in The Oasis, plays games in the virtual world and hangs out with his only real friend, Aech (pronounced “H”), another gamer who he’s never met in the real world.

The Oasis — part babysitter to the world, part classroom, mostly escape from bleak reality — was the creation of James Halliday and Ogden Morrow, the Bill Gates and Steve Jobs of the 2040s.

Halliday, who has been living in seclusion for years, dies and posthumously announces, through a video broadcast over The Oasis, a virtual treasure hunt. Whoever finds a series of keys and opens a series of gates on some of the virtually limitless planets that make up The Oasis will win Halliday’s fortune — billions of dollars — and control of the virtual reality world.

Wade, Aech and a female gamer named Art3mis join thousands — maybe millions — of other “gunters” — short for Easter egg hunters — in their online quest for Halliday’s treasure.

A couple of Cline’s plot points set his book apart from standard sci-fi adventure:

Halliday’s hunt revolves around the game master’s favorite moment in pop culture: The 1980s, when he was a kid.

The game’s challenges entail Wade and the others beating classic 1980s video games, demonstrating their knowledge of classic tabletop games like Dungeons and Dragons and navigating their way through the plots of 1980s movies like the teen angst comedies of John Hughes and the geek classic “War Games.”

Because the gunters knew that Halliday was obsessed with the 1980s, they’ve studied up on the period before the game began. Wade has watched every episode of the Michael J. Fox sitcom “Family Ties” several times, for example, and knows 1980s action movies by heart.

Another fun wrinkle in the plot is the presence of the Sixers, professional gamers hired by a company that hopes to take over The Oasis and turn its free wonderland into a pay-per-play world.

Cline’s got a way with characters. Wade is a lonely geek who makes an instant connection with Art3mis, a mysterious young woman. Considering the relatively few characters, “Ready Player One” doesn’t feel claustrophobic.

The story makes the best of the internal rules of The Oasis: Wade can’t just jump in an imaginary spaceship and blast off for a nearby planet to search for clues. In The Oasis, even virtual reality has its price, in online points and credits.

I’ve heard rumblings that someone is going to turn “Ready Player One” into a movie. It’s a great idea and certainly possible now that “Avatar” has introduced audiences at large to the concept of virtual reality and, well, avatars.

It’ll be interesting to see if the makers manage to stuff the movie as full of geeky references as the book, though. Would it really be possible to negotiate the rights to everything from “Ghostbusters” to “Highlander” to “Risky Business?”

First ‘Iron Man 3’ photo plus ‘The Black Panther’ movie

In the wake of “The Avengers” — and until “Iron Man 3” comes out in May 2013 — all of us comic book movie fans are going to be bouncing off the walls with every little bit of news that comes out.

So how about the bits that have come out in the past 24 hours?

Above is the first official photo from “Iron Man 3,” released by Disney and Marvel a few days after those leaked set photos of the Iron Patriot a few days ago.

Looks like RDJ as Tony Stark, surveying his ever-growing line-up of suits.

I have to say, though, I’m more excited about today’s news that it’s likely that one of the so-far-unnamed Marvel movies coming out in the next couple of years could be … “The Black Panther!”

As more than a few websites have pointed out, the Black Panther — secret identity of T’Challa, king of the fictional African nation of Wakanda — fits very easily into the Marvel movie universe that has built, over the past four years, into “The Avengers.”

There have been little Easter eggs, or at least references, to the Panther (co-created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby for a 1966 issue of “The Fantastic Four”) in previous Marvel films. A SHIELD map of the world in “Iron Man 2” had an indicator over the approximate location in Africa of Wakanda. And the shield (of another kind) slung by “Captain America” was made of vibranium, the ultra-rare metal found only in Wakanda. The sale of vibranium is the source of Wakanda’s riches and its high-tech society.

And T’Challa has been an Avenger — including a stint during the classic Kree-Skrull War series — and would fit right into an “Avengers” sequel.

The Panther — named before the founding of the 1960s political party, he was the first black comics superhero — has had a long history in the comics and is currently appearing as a member of the group in the Disney XD “Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes” animated series.

Here’s hoping the rumors are true and a “Black Panther” movie gets announced, maybe even at this summer’s San Diego Comic-Con.

By the way … there are some other really cool characters out there that would also fit right into an “Avengers” sequel or their own Marvel movies.

Sweet Christmas! That’s right! I’m talking about Luke Cage, none other than Power Man (AKA the Hero for Hire).

Here’s hoping.

The Great Newspaper Comics Challenge Part 15

It’s a very special time! No, Calvin, not bath time! It’s time for our regular look at what’s funny in newspaper comic strips. Because surely all the fun didn’t go out of the funny pages when Opus left “Bloom County” for other pastures?

In “Classic Peanuts,” Charlie Brown uses Snoopy as a substitute for his kite. Snoopy doesn’t end up in a tree, but he does crash to the ground with a “crunch.” Then Snoopy wakes up and realizes he was having a bad dream. Posthumous points to Sparky Schulz for the surprise and the visuals.

Speaking of Calvin, today’s “Baby Blues” made me smile as the kids quiz Dad about where his car keys are, how you start the car and long his nap was expected to last. Shades of “Calvin and Hobbes” letting the car roll down the driveway and into a ditch.

And speaking of trouble-making kids and meta humor: In “LiO,” the protagonist blows a hole in the panel of the comic with a bazooka (!) and Hagar the Horrible peers through. Nice!

“Dilbert” gave me a warm feeling. Wally outlines his plan for his career. Wonderful.

“Blondie” finds Dagwood, armed with a bow and arrow, hunting a ham. It’s a “Hunger Games” joke. Get it? Sigh.

 

Craig Johnson’s old sheriff ‘Longmire’ in books, TV

For a grizzled old sheriff in a small Wyoming county, Walt Longmire is getting a lot of attention lately.

“As the Crow Flies,” author Craig Johnson’s latest novel about Longmire, came out a few weeks ago and “Longmire,” a new weekly series about the character, debuts tonight on A&E.

It’ll be interesting to see how A&E does with the series. Robert Taylor plays Longmire and, in the few clips I’ve seen, looks like he might be a good fit for the character, a laconic modern-day cowboy who’s a dogged detective but wears his heart on his sleeve.

As the series of books opened, Longmire was still recovering from the death, from cancer, of his beloved wife. His daughter, Cady (played by Cassidy Freeman in the A&E series) is an attorney in Philadelphia trying to help her father get back on track. Longmire’s lifelong friend, Henry Standing Bear (Lou Diamond Phillips in the series) is not only his anchor but his backup when dealing with the dangerous types — meth makers, murderous backwoodsmen, escaped convicts — that drift through the county.

A big part of the series is its spirituality. Not in the organized religion sense, but in Longmire’s discovery of the Native American beliefs of Henry and his fellow Cheyenne people as well as the Crow and other nations that populate the area.

The tie between Longmire’s small-town policing and the world of the reservation is especially strong in “As the Crow Files,” Johnson’s latest book. Longmire and Henry investigate the death of a young Native woman who fell from cliff while they watched. Her infant was clutched in her arms and survived the fall. Now Walt and Henry have to piece together who would push a woman and baby off a cliff and why.

At the same time, Walt is preparing for Cady’s upcoming Wyoming marriage to Michael Moretti, brother of Vic Moretti (ideally cast with Katee Sackhoff of “Battlestar Galactica” fame), Walt’s tempestuous deputy, a former Philly cop.

As in all the Longmire books, there’s an undercurrent of humor. Walt and Henry and Vic are dryly funny characters.

Besides the humor, there’s a somber feeling to Longmire as well as the aforementioned spirituality. Henry’s beliefs, which might come across as mysticism to some, gradually seem more plausible to Walt, who gets spiritual guidance at just the right time in many of the novels.

The A&E series, which seems intended to appeal to the type of audience that likes “Justified,” the FX series about a Kentucky lawman, might do a good job capturing the character-heavy drama of Johnson’s stories. It’s hard to imagine how it will capture the humor and spirituality. We’ll see tonight.