Category Archives: geek culture

‘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.

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.

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.

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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.

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New Jenny.

I can live with that.

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.

‘Star Trek Into Darkness’ easter eggs

Kirk_surrounded_by_Tribbles

If you’ve seen “Star Trek Into Darkness,” you know that a lot of the plot revolves around events told, in a different manner, in an earlier “Star Trek” movie, “Wrath of Khan.”

I won’t go into that here – I touch on it in my review – but there’s more in the way of easter eggs than just those remake references.

william marshall richard daystrom

Daystrom. The meeting of Starfleet captains and admirals that’s interrupted by the attack by villain John Harrison (Benedict Cumberbatch) is to be held, Chris Pike tells Jim Kirk, at “Daystrom,” possibly a reference to the often-referenced Daystrom Institute. Richard Daystrom, as played by William Marshall, appeared in the original series episode “The Ultimate Computer” as the inventor of the title character, which (briefly) displaces Kirk in command of the Enterprise.

harry mudd

Mudd. There’s a throw-away reference to “the Mudd Incident,” undoubtedly a reference to Harry Mudd, the galactic con artist played by Roger C. Carmel who appears in two episodes of the original series.

Tribbles. There’s a tribble – the furry, prolific fan favorite creatures from the original series – that plays an important role in the movie. They’re from the original series episode “The Trouble with Tribbles.” Although the one in the movie looked even more sluggish than you might expect an ill tribble to look.

Christine Chapel. Carol, the blonde Starfleet officer played by Alice Eve, tells Kirk he’s gained a reputation with women and cites Christine Chapel, a nurse she knew. It’s obvious Kirk bedded her and doesn’t remember her. In the original series and movies, of course, Chapel is Dr. McCoy’s nurse and is played by Majel Barrett Roddenberry, wife of “Star Trek” creator Gene Roddenberry.

Section 31. In the later TV series, Section 31 is a top-secret division of Starfleet that handles investigations and special missions. It is name-dropped in “Into Darkness.”

There’s probably more that didn’t have to do with the new movie’s basis in “Wrath of Khan.” Spot any that I missed?

Into Darkness: ‘Star Trek’ past and present

star trek into darkness brig

All weekend, I’ve been trying to find a way to express my feelings about “Star Trek Into Darkness,” the new J.J. Abrams follow-up to his 2009 reboot of the classic TV and movie series.

I really liked the 2009 movie and liked what Abrams did with it:  By rebooting the stories but putting his own stamp on them by playing havoc with the timeline, he made it all seem fresh. True, the movie lacked a compelling villain and took a while to get started, but it was a top-notch effort.

Almost the opposite is true of “Star Trek Into Darkness.”

I should say that I actually liked the  movie pretty well. This being the second film, no long set-up to establish the setting and characters was necessary. The cast has settled into their roles with ease. I could watch Zachary Quinto and Chris Pine play Spock and Kirk until they are as old as Leonard Nimoy and William Shatner.

And what a villain. I’m going to be venturing into spoiler territory here, so be warned. Okay? As “John Harrison,” Benedict Cumberbatch is one of the best “Star Trek” bad guys ever. Half-way through the film, when a captive Harrison announces that he is, indeed, Khan, it seemed perfect and gratuitous at the same time. Cumberbatch matched Ricardo Montalban for arrogant menace. But to what end? While I likewise could watch Cumberbatch play this dangerous but fascinating superhuman in a new movie every few months, there was nothing about the way the character was written that added meaning to the fact that he was Khan. He could have been your garden variety genetically superior bad guy.

In fact, Abrams’ and his screenwriters’ best creation is also, in some ways, their most pointless. The weight of history made the Khan character important in “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.” This was a superheroic but tragic figure who had a reason to hate Kirk from – in the movie’s timeline – the captain having abandoned him 15 years before. In “Into Darkness,” Khan has a grudge against Peter Weller’s Starfleet admiral. And you know what? Weller’s Admiral Marcus was an asshole. In those scenes in which Khan was working with Kirk and Scotty to take Marcus down – and as much as I appreciated Kirk’s “I think we’re helping him” – I was actively rooting for Khan.

So much about “Into Darkness” seems overstuffed. My son observed after the movie, “It seemed like they were trying too hard.” He had just seen most of “Wrath of Khan” the night before and, while he’s not overly impressed with “Star Trek” in general, took note when “Harrison” introduced himself as Khan. But ultimately the shared plot and characters didn’t have much of an impact, on him or me.

“Into Darkness,” as fun and exciting as it is – and it is – seemed to be too laden with references and plot points and call backs to characters. We get the Prime Directive. Tribbles. All those cryogenic supermen (and not another single one gets thawed out). Carol Marcus, future mother (at least in the old movies/timeline) of Kirk’s son. And the whole sacrifice that doesn’t turn out to be a sacrifice at the end.

star trek II wrath of khan

I still remember going with a group of friends to see “Wrath of Khan” in 1982. We had been delighted to see “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” three years earlier but its leisurely pace (jeez, just dock the shuttle already) and uncharacteristic relationship between Kirk and Spock and McCoy – because of Spock’s efforts to purge his human traits – were disappointing. “Wrath of Khan” was like a rebirth.

And the suspense. Even in those pre-internet days, somehow we all knew the rumors that Spock might be killed off at the end of the movie. Director Nicholas Meyer even teased us when, early on, he has Kirk ask Spock, “Aren’t you dead?” after the training exercise.

By the time the end of the movie rolled around, and we saw Spock’s fate play out in front of us, we were deeply moved.

As affecting as the climax of “Into Darkness” was – and it was – it felt like just another plot twist. Yes, we knew that “E.T.” was going to come back from the dead when Elliott’s flower revived. Same with the tribble here.

I can’t say I didn’t like “Star Trek Into Darkness.” I did. I felt it hit all the right notes – albeit maybe a few too many – and was a great showcase for terrific actors – especially Cumberbatch and Quinto – and rousing action scenes.

But the movie didn’t improve on the original in the ways that really mattered.

Random observations:

As great as Quinto is as Spock, Pine equals him as Kirk. It was cool to see him, by the end of the movie, in the place where Shatner’s Kirk was when the series started.

I miss Bruce Greenwood’s Chris Pike already.

Does Zoe Saldana rock that ponytail or what?

Karl Urban is so good as Bones, I wish he had more to do in these movies. There’s just one scene where the Kirk/Spock/McCoy character triangle plays out as it did in the TV show and movies. I could have used more.

I was pleased there were so many space scenes in the movie, particularly since the trailers and commercials made it look like the plot revolved around urban (not Karl) action in London and San Francisco.

It was good to see Leonard Nimoy although his scene was perhaps the most gratuitous moment in the film if you don’t count Alice Eve showing off Carol Marcus’ “holy moley” figure. I didn’t mind either, but Nimoy’s scene in particular seemed pointless.

khan!!!!!!

Still no Shatner. I’ve come to accept that William Shatner will probably never appear in these movies. Apparently there was a nice Classic Kirk scene – mostly voice over, a holographic recording from beyond the grave – considered for the end of the first movie. I mourn that didn’t happen.

RIP Ray Harryhausen

harryhausen skeleton

Ray Harryhausen, who passed away today in London at age 92, was certainly inspirational. He sparked a love of movies and special effects among not only lifelong movie fans but boys and girls who grew up to be directors and, like their idol, special effects wizards.

But for me, Harryhausen was more than just the creator of great movie creatures like Medusa in “Clash of the Titans” or the sword-fighting skeletons in “Jason and the Argonauts.”

Harryhausen lent an air of respectability to the wildest fantasy stories kids could hope to see in movie theaters.

jason argonauts skeleton sword fight

That’s because Harryhausen and his writing and directing partners adapted classic stories – a series of Sinbad movies or “The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms,” based on his friend Ray Bradbury’s melancholy “The Fog Horn” – that were almost impossible for parents to say “no” to. Really, faced with the possibility of letting your kid see Harryhausen’s version of mythology or a “Godzilla” flick, what would you say?

Harryhausen’s stop-motion animation techniques – not the first, since the process pre-dated him with “King Kong” – were also the kind of effect you could show your parents and prompt awe. Look, we would say: He moves the small model of the gorilla a fraction of an inch, then exposes a frame of film, then does it over and over and over again. This was moviemaking at its most artistic and most craftsman-like at the same time. Anyone could recognize it as hard work. Even parents.

famous monsters 118 harryhausen

Magazines like Famous Monsters of Filmland – edited by another Harryhausen pal, Forrest J Ackerman – let us revel in the process and marvel over those detailed models.

Harryhausen is being memorialized all over the web tonight, and there’s not a lot I can add to that. Except for a few personal favorites:

Harryhausen worked on “Mighty Joe Young,” the 1949 follow-up to “King Kong,” and made a giant gorilla downright cuddly. Who wouldn’t love a simian who rescued tykes from a burning orphanage?

harryhausen medusa

Beginning with “The 7th Voyage of Sinbad” in 1958 and running through “Clash of the Titans” in 1981, Harryhausen made history his own, giving us cyclopses (cyclopsi?) and minotaurs and sabre tooth tigers and fantastic and eerie creations like Medusa, with her snaky body and hair.

The world changed and the world of moviemaking changed and by the time “Clash of the Titans” came out, two “Star Wars” movies had been released and the world was turning to a more sophisticated type of computer-controlled-camera-and-model animation that itself would be replaced within just a few years with computer effects.

But Harryhausen’s legacy was long since in place, as evidenced by the sly references to his work, including the restaurant named after him in “Monsters Inc.”

Harryhausen made us believe that legends, gods and monsters walked among us. And until his death today, they truly did.

 

Images of my childhood: Spock poster

star-trek-spock

This poster adorned my wall and the walls of many other young fans of the original “Star Trek” series.

Leonard Nimoy as Spock, phaser in hand, shuttle craft in the background.

I don’t know much of the history of this image – a publicity shot from the original series – but by the time the series had blossomed into a fan phenomenon in the early 1970s, somebody was making a lot of money selling this poster.

New ‘Star Trek’ trailer has the action and controversy

star trek into darkness enterprise

It wouldn’t be a “Star Trek” movie without some huge doubts and bitter recriminations. And that’s before the movie even opens.

The new trailer for “Star Trek Into Darkness,” due out in May, has lots of action: Kirk and Spock and Uhura and company tear around – and fly around – shooting guns and facing off with Benedict Cumberbatch as the villain, who a lot of people thought would be Khan but probably isn’t.

The complaints I’ve read so far online seem to be based on concerns the movie is too earthbound, that there’s not (at least immediately obvious from the trailers so far) a lot of spacecraft battle scenes that were never done better than in “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.”

You know what? I’m okay with that. A lot of episodes of the original series and even long stretches of the movies were not set in space, but planet-bound. If it’s a good story, it’s a good story. Example: “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home,” which plays out, for the most part, in 1980s San Francisco.

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Random thoughts about the trailer:

The overwhelmingly dominant color palate is the ice-blue, steely look of a lot of modern thrillers. It does add to the foreboding effect.

“The man who did it is one of our top agents,” the Starfleet official played by Peter Weller says at one point. Cumberbatch – is that a Starfleet uniform he’s wearing? – would appear to be something other than Khan, newly reawakened from a centuries-long nap. Or is he?

Cumberbatch (“Sherlock”) looks cool as hell. But he’s awfully threatening-y, isn’t he? Maybe too much. Is this guy gonna break into monologuing? “I will walk over your cold corpses,” indeed.

The scene with the Star Fleet vessel piloted by Kirk slipping sideways through some canyon or other has ticked off people who think it’s a rip-off of “The Empire Strikes Back.” Well, it has been 32 years.

The Enterprise takes a beating, falling through the atmosphere and plunging into the bay. We’ve seen that before. In fact, in “Star Trek III,” it was entirely destroyed.

star trek into darkness alice eve

Alice Eve as Carol Marcus. Wonder why they put this shot in the trailer?