Monthly Archives: June 2013

Classic toys: Johnny West

johnny west box

Not to be confused with Jonny Quest, or James West of its contemporary TV series “Wild, Wild West,” but Johnny West was another of those classic toys of my childhood.

Introduced by Marx Toys in 1965 to compete with the popular G.I. Joe action figures for boys, Johnny West was a cowboy character who quickly found a spot around the imaginary campfires of boys around the world. Westerns, particularly on TV, were popular at the time and Johnny West capitalized on that trend.

johnny west and accessories

Johnny West was a hard plastic action figure that wasn’t as posable as G.I. Joe, frankly. But Johnny West did have one weird quality that Joe did not: His hands and head were softer, almost rubbery material.

Which led to one of the many odd inspirations of my childhood.

At about the same time I was playing with my Johnny Wests I was watching the daytime TV supernatural drama “Dark Shadows.” At some point during the run of the show, a headless man terrorized the denizens of Collinswood.

As a little TV and movie fan, I just had to re-create those scenes.

So I decapitated one of my Johnny West action figures by cutting through his rubbery pink neck. To make the headless man effect extra gruesome, I used a red magic marker to make the stump of his neck bloody.

All too true.

Anyway, Johnny West outlived my interest and murderous playing style and saw many new characters introduced, including a cowgirl, Jane, cowkids, Native Americans and townsfolk.

Like my G.I. Joes, my Johnny Wests are long gone. They live on in my memory, though. Even the decapitated one.

‘Man of Steel’ easter eggs

Wayne-Enterprises-Logo

Director Zack Snyder and producer Christopher Nolan made it clear from the beginning that they didn’t intend to make “Man of Steel” an easter-egg intensive movie experience. Unlike the Marvel cinematic empire, there’s been little effort on the part of Nolan/DC/Warner Bros. to tie their movie universe together, even with little references sprinkled through the movie.

Which is pretty inexplicable to me. It feels like a kind of snobbery about comic book movies from people who have made billions of dollars making comic book movies.

However: There are a few comic book and movie easter eggs in “Man of Steel,” although one of them might be coincidental.

Besides Lois Lane, Perry White, the Kents and the Els, another couple of characters from the comics make an appearance. Among the kids on a school bus that Clark saves in one of the Smallville flashbacks were characters representing Lana Lang and Pete Ross. The Pete character, young Clark’s best friend in the comics, pops up again later in the movie.

richard schiff man of steel

Dr. Emil Hamilton: Played by Robert Schiff, best known as Toby from “The West Wing.” the scientist working with the military in the movie, discovering and dealing with not only the appearance of Zod but Kal-El as well, Hamilton is a character familiar to comic readers and fans of the DC universe animated TV shows as well as “Smallville.” Hamilton, of DC fixture STAR Labs, was a recurring character in the animated “Superman” series as well as “Smallville.” In the former, he was a scientist so worried about super-powered humans that he worked with a group trying to keep tabs on and control the supers. In “Smallville,” he was a confidante of Clark and Chloe Sullivan.

alessandro juliani smallville

Speaking of which: Alessandro Juliani, the actor who played Hamilton in “Smallville” had a small role in “Man of Steel,” playing Officer Sekowsky. This is the one that was probably a coincidence. I can’t imagine Nolan and Snyder going to the “Smallville” well to cast their movie.

lexcorpbuilding-man-of-steel

Contrary to rumors, Lex Luthor doesn’t show up in the movie. But hints of Superman’s best known villain do. In the final battle in Metropolis between Zod and Superman, Zod throws Lexcorp gasoline tanker trucks at the Man of Steel and – although my eyes didn’t catch it, but photos appear online – the LexCorp building is glimpsed in Metropolis.

The hardest-to-spot easter egg might be an acknowledgement of Batman in “Man of Steel.” During their battle, Superman and Zod rocket into space. In their fight, they damage a satellite in orbit. The Wayne Enterprises logo is briefly visible on the side.

And we already knew Nolan thought Batman was out of this world.

‘Man of Steel’ spoiler-filled review

Man-of-Steel-Henry-Cavill

I went into “Man of Steel” with low expectations, which might be the way to approach any superhero movie that isn’t a Marvel production or directed by Joss Whedon.

I was pleasantly surprised. I liked the movie. it’s better than “Superman Returns” from 2006. It’s leaps ahead of “Green Lantern” – although that’s the very definition of damning with faint praise – and I think I liked it maybe even better than Christopher Nolan’s Batman finale.

There’s no point in rehashing the plot. You know that director Zack Snyder and producer Nolan remade the Superman story with a darker, edgier feel.

So here’s some observations. And a big spoiler warning if you haven’t seen “Man of Steel” already.

I’m glad they didn’t go too edgy. Superman isn’t Batman. The movie strikes about the right tone, to me, of making Superman an outsider and Clark feeling like he has to keep a lid on his real self.

Part of that feeling was communicated by Kevin Costner’s Pa Kent. Costner is solid and affecting throughout the flashbacks. I do feel like the screenplay makes a mistake in one scene: After people start gossiping about Clark when the boy saves the other occupants of  a school bus that crashes into a river, Clark and Jonathan Kent have a conversation that they’ve plainly been expecting to have: What would happen when people find out that Clark is “special?” Young Clark asks, in effect, if he should have let the other kids die and his father says, in effect, “I don’t know. Maybe.” I don’t believe Pa Kent would have expressed that thought out loud even if he felt it because of his fear for his son’s secrets being exposed. It’s a false note, but maybe it’s instrumental in Clark’s later decision to come forward when Zod is threatening the Earth. In other words, even bad advice from Jonathan helped Clark make the right decision later.

I thought Henry Cavill and Amy Adams were fine as Clark/Superman and Lois and the supporting cast was good. I feel like the movie suffered, like all opening chapters do, from having to move characters around like chess pieces until they’re in place for the real climax of the movie – or for the sequel.

The climax of the showdown between Superman and Zod has been controversial. The idea that Superman would kill Zod is a hard thing for some people to take.

But my feeling about the climax is that Superman was justified in snapping Zod’s neck. Zod, desperate and bitter that his plan to recreate Krypton on Earth had failed, was lashing out, preparing to fry a family with his heat vision. Superman was grappling with him, trying to direct his gaze away from the family. He even begged him not to kill them. But Zod refuses and Superman kills him.

Short of Superman plucking Zod’s eyes out – and what an image that would have been in a comic book movie – I’m not sure there was another way.

Now considering the untold thousands of people who likely died in the movie thanks in great part to the battles between Superman and Zod in Smallville and Metropolis, Superman’s effort to save a small group of people might seem paltry. But while we have no idea how many people died when buildings were toppled and explosions were set off, we did see that family in harm’s way and saw how high the stakes were at that moment. Superman made a decision, and it was a painful one for him.

Much has been made about the wanton destruction caused by Superman and Zod’s battles and I have to say it all disturbed me too. I agree with critics who say Superman should have tried to take the fight to an area with fewer bystanders.

I can say that I didn’t feel, as acutely as some other critics did, the lack of compassion Superman showed for bystanders. I agree that he seemed to let anger toward Zod color his decisions in battle, undoubtedly causing more destruction and perhaps death than should have occurred. But there was a scene in which Superman catches a soldier falling from a helicopter and even asks if he is okay. I feel like another, similar scene might have addressed the “callous” accusations.

I thought the movie did a pretty good job with telling Superman’s story without a long retelling of his origin and Smallville years. Flashbacks to formative incidents in his life – the onset of extra senses like X-ray vision and a school bus rescue – were handled pretty well.

I still don’t get the scene, in flashback, when young Clark is playing among Martha Kent’s laundry, puts a red towel around his neck and stands, fists on hips, in a classic Superman pose. Did the pose, in Nolan’s world without heroes to emulate, just pop into Clark’s head? I think it’s an effort to trade on that iconic Superman image without a good explanation. It’s a mistake.

I don’t know if “Man of Steel” will be a success or lead to more DC movie adaptations. I’d like to see this world return and I’d be fine if Henry Cavill and Zack Snyder were part of it.

TV crush: Yvonne Craig

batgirl cape

It’s safe to say Yvonne Craig sparked more than a few transitions from boyhood to manhood for male TV viewers in the 1960s

That’s because Craig made a heck of an impression on us as Barbara Gordon, also known as Batgirl, in the “Batman” series.

Craig, born in 1937, was a ballet dancer before appearing in a variety of TV series, including “The Man from UNCLE” and “The Wild, Wild West.”

Yvonne_Craig_Star_Trek

Her appearance as a green-skinned seductress in the “Star Trek” episode “Whom Gods Destroy” – the second chartreuse woman in the series – is no doubt responsible for the presence of a green-tinged woman in the 2009 “Star Trek” movie.

But all it took was for Craig to join the “Batman” cast for her to forever be a fanboy favorite.

Craig, as Batgirl, was added to the cast for the final season in 1967.

yvonne_craig batgirl full

The impression her outfit – sparkly purple suit with yellow cape and hip-hugging yellow utility belt – made on a nation of us was truly great.

Here’s to Yvonne Craig.

Unsung actors: William Boyett

william-boyett-

William Boyett was one of those actors whose face – and even voice – was very recognizable. Yet few of us knew a name to attach to that enduring TV and movie presence.

Boyett, who passed in December 2004 at 77, had a long career playing stern or foreboding authority figures.

He’s best known as Sgt. MacDonald on the Jack Webb TV series “Adam-12.” Boyett had appeared on Webb’s “Dragnet” and became part of the actor/writer/producer’s repertory company of sturdy, dependable performers.

In the final decades of his life, he made a big impression on audiences who might not have known him as a man infected with a freaky alien presence in “The Hidden,” a wild 1987 science fiction thriller. If you haven’t seen it, seek it out. It’s worth the effort.

If Boyett was as much of a straight-arrow, by-the-book guy as the cops and military officers he portrayed, he’d be puzzled by my choice for favorite of his roles.

MST3K last clear chance

That would be a 1959 educational short, “Last Clear Chance,” in which he played a state police officer who tried to warn a family with young, first-time drivers about the dangers of crossing railroad tracks without looking properly. Of course, tragedy struck by the end of the short film.

It all added up to one of the best “Mystery Science Theater 3000” (MST3K) shorts.

Here’s to Bill Boyett, one of our favorite unsung actors.

Magneto on the job in ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’

michael fassbender days future past

Michael Fassbender’s Magneto was one of the best things about “X-Men: First Class.” A few people opined online that they’d pay to watch him hunt Nazis for an entire movie.

So a little Fassbender is nothing but a good thing in “X-Men: Days of Future Past.”

Director Bryan Singer is tweeting pictures of the cast and from the set, and today he released the Fassbender.

The movie comes out in July 2014.

The movie revisionists: Everything you know is wrong

man of steel big

Think you know the story of Superman?

Well, maybe not.

When “Man of Steel” comes out June 14,  director Zack Snyder might have a few surprises even for longtime fans of the man of … er, steel.

Most of us don’t know what to expect from “Man of Steel” yet, but it’s certain that a few elements of the Superman mythos will be tweaked at the very least.

That’s not surprising, because most filmmakers like to bring something new to their versions of familiar stories. That’s why “The Amazing Spider-Man” retold the origin of the webslinger only about a decade after we saw it before and tried to infuse new elements – chiefly a mystery about Peter’s parents – into it.

It’s not just superhero stories that get revamped. When director John Carpenter made “The Thing” in 1982, he made the “walking alien carrot” much less of the traditional monster familiar from 1951’s “The Thing from Another World.” the first adaptation of John Campbell’s story. Carpenter made the alien menace a much more paranoia-inducing shapeshifter.

By the way, spoilers ahead for some current movies if you haven’t seen them.

Some fans of the “Iron Man” comics were irritated when this summer’s “Iron Man 3” made huge changes to the character of the Mandarin, the longtime antagonist of Tony Stark.

iron man mandarin comics

The Mandarin went from an Asian menace armed with magic rings …

mandarin iron man 3

To a figurehead, a stalking horse played by a down-at-the-heels British actor.

Sometimes it’s more than changing characters. Sometimes it’s all about changing the background of sets of characters.

khan

The classic 1982 “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” was a sequel to an episode of the original series and emphasized the bad blood and shared history of Khan, the genetically superior warrior, and Jim Kirk.

kirk-khan

In this summer’s “Star Trek Into Darkness,” however, there was no history between Kirk and Khan. And I think the movie suffered for that.

With “Man of Steel,” the rumors have been flying about changes Snyder and producer Christopher Nolan might have made.

Does Superman’s Kryptonian birth father, Jor-El, live? Or are the clips of Russell Crowe talking to Henry Cavill just indicative of an amazingly lifelike hologram?

Is Zod (Michael Shannon) sprung from the Phantom Zone or does he arrive in a space ship? Sure looks like a Kryptonian ship in the background to me.

We won’t know the answers for a few days. But we can already guess about fairly interesting cosmetic changes to two longtime characters from the “Superman” stories.

perry white and jimmy olsen

Daily Planet editor Perry White and cub reporter/photographer Jimmy Olsen have been staples of the comics for a half-century.

jenny olsen rebecca buller laurence fishburne

Snyder, interestingly, cast Laurence Fishburne, an African-American actor, to play White, who has traditionally been, well, white. I love Fishburne and I think this is a big win.

But it’s less clear who’s playing Jimmy Olsen in the movie. In fact, it’s becoming more clear that Jimmy Olsen isn’t in the movie. Actress Rebecca Buller seems to be playing Jenny Olsen.

Jimmy_Olsen

Traditional Jimmy.

rebecca-buller-jenny-olsen

New Jenny.

I can live with that.

101 best-written TV series of all time?

the-sopranos

The Writers Guild of America released its list of the 101 best-written TV series of all time today, and the list is guaranteed to generate some discussion.

I mean, it’s a cool idea and all, and everybody likes lists. But is anybody qualified to say “The Sopranos” is better than “Seinfeld?” I mean, how can you even compare those two?

(Cue funky “Seinfeld” music as Tony Soprano and family sit down in a diner in the final scene of the series.)

I think I’d rank “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” a hellmouth of a lot higher on my list. I can guarantee you that “Sex and the City” and “thirtysomething” don’t belong higher on the list than “Buffy” or “The Rockford Files” or “Freaks and Geeks.”

What do you think of the list?

1.             THE SOPRANOS

2.             SEINFELD

3.             THE TWILIGHT ZONE

4.             ALL IN THE FAMILY

5.             M*A*S*H

6.             THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW

7.             MAD MEN

8.             CHEERS

9.             THE WIRE

10.            THE WEST WING

11.            THE SIMPSONS

12.            I LOVE LUCY

13.            BREAKING BAD

14.            THE DICK VAN DYKE SHOW

15.            HILL STREET BLUES

16.            ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT

17.            THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART

18.            SIX FEET UNDER

19.            TAXI

20.            THE LARRY SANDERS SHOW

21.            30 ROCK

22.            FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS

23.            FRASIER

24.            FRIENDS

25.            SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE

26.            THE X-FILES

27.            LOST

28.            ER

29.            THE COSBY SHOW

30.            CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM

31.            THE HONEYMOONERS*

32.            DEADWOOD

33.            STAR TREK

34.            MODERN FAMILY

35.            TWIN PEAKS

36.            NYPD BLUE

37.            THE CAROL BURNETT SHOW

38.            BATTLESTAR GALACTICA (2005)

39.            SEX AND THE CITY

40.            GAME OF THRONES

41.            THE BOB NEWHART SHOW – TIE

                YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS* – TIE

43.            DOWNTON ABBEY* – TIE

                LAW & ORDER – TIE

                THIRTYSOMETHING – TIE

46.            HOMICIDE: LIFE ON THE STREET – TIE

                ST. ELSEWHERE – TIE

48.            HOMELAND

49.            BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER

50.            THE COLBERT REPORT – TIE

                THE GOOD WIFE – TIE

                THE OFFICE (UK)* – TIE

53.            NORTHERN EXPOSURE

54.            THE WONDER YEARS

55.            L.A. LAW

56.            SESAME STREET

57.            COLUMBO

58.            FAWLTY TOWERS* – TIE

                THE ROCKFORD FILES – TIE

60.            FREAKS AND GEEKS – TIE

                MOONLIGHTING – TIE

62.            ROOTS

63.            EVERYBODY LOVES RAYMOND – TIE

                SOUTH PARK* – TIE

65.            PLAYHOUSE 90

66.            DEXTER – TIE

                THE OFFICE (U.S.) – TIE

68.            MY SO-CALLED LIFE

69.            THE GOLDEN GIRLS

70.            THE ANDY GRIFFITH SHOW

71.            24 – TIE

                ROSEANNE – TIE

                THE SHIELD – TIE

74.            HOUSE – TIE

                MURPHY BROWN – TIE

76.            BARNEY MILLER – TIE

                I, CLAUDIUS* – TIE

78.            THE ODD COUPLE

79.            ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS – TIE

                MONTY PYTHON’S FLYING CIRCUS* – TIE

                STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION – TIE

                UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS* – TIE

83.            GET SMART

84.            THE DEFENDERS – TIE

                GUNSMOKE – TIE

86.            JUSTIFIED – TIE

                SGT. BILKO (THE PHIL SILVERS SHOW) – TIE

88.            BAND OF BROTHERS

89.            ROWAN & MARTIN’S LAUGH-IN

90.            THE PRISONER*

91.            ABSOLUTELY FABULOUS (U.K.)* – TIE

                THE MUPPET SHOW – TIE

93.            BOARDWALK EMPIRE

94.            WILL & GRACE

95.            FAMILY TIES

96.            LONESOME DOVE – TIE

                SOAP – TIE

98.            THE FUGITIVE – TIE

                LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN – TIE

                LOUIE – TIE

101.            OZ

 

Unrealistic comic book drawings? Ridiculous!

storm new x-men

So there’s some Internet buzz about the new comic book X-Men team being made up of all women.

And here’s Storm, leader of the group.

Nobody ever said comic book superheroes and superheroines were realistically drawn. And i enjoy some fanboy objectification as much as the next geek.

But really.

So I think we know this Storm’s mutant power: An extra strong spine to deal with that figure.

Unsung actors: Eddie Paskey of ‘Star Trek’

star trek eddie paskey

Besides the featured cast of the original “Star Trek” series, even beyond such recurring performers as Grace Lee Whitney as Janice Rand, there’s a familiar face in the background of most episodes of the series.

If you’ve watched many episodes, you’ve noticed actor Eddie Paskey, usually in a red shirt, a bad sign for “Star Trek” crew members.

star trek paskey w doohan

Yet Paskey appeared in 57 episodes of the original “Star Trek” series. He often played crewman and security officer Mr. Leslie, and the “Star Trek” wiki Memory Alpha says he appeared more often than Sulu or Chekov.

Paskey even died in one episode – true to his “red shirt” status – although he was alive and well in the next.

Paskey, now 73, left the series in its third season due to bad headaches from a medical condition complicated by the bright lights of the set. He operated his family’s auto-detailing shop and makes occasional “Star Trek”-related convention appearances.

Although Paskey is a familiar face from his many background appearances on the show, I didn’t know until I looked him up online that he had another pivotal role in the series: He was the driver of the truck that struck and killed Edith Keeler (Joan Collins) in the series’ greatest episode, “City on the Edge of Forever.”

And he was the hand double on the show for James (Scotty) Doohan, who was missing a finger.

If that’s not enough to guarantee a lifetime of appearances on “Star Trek” convention stages, I don’t know what would be.