Showing posts with label underwater cities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underwater cities. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Pass the Comics: The Fury of the Whirlpool

Ibis the Invincible's Descent into the Maelstrom



Where he fights some turtle-people and chuckles about Those Darn Scientists. [Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blogzine]

Ka-Zar faces The Wizard of Forgotten Flesh



It's only part one and Shanna's not in it, but it's got that sweet Russ Heath art. And lots of dinosaur-fighting and -riding and reptile-men battles and a voodoo priestess. [Diversions of the Groovy Kind]

Monday, February 07, 2011

Art Show: Cat Women

Skorpion



By Rick Burchett. [From the graphic novel he's working on with writer Christopher Mills]

Fanciful Submarines



By Andrew George Brown. [Lots more at Etsy by way of Wondermark]

From the Depths



By Matt Wiegle. [Seriously, if you're not reading his and Sean T Collins Destructor webcomic - from which this is a page - you're missing out.]

Aquaman: King of the Seas



By Braden D Lamb.

A Naiad



By John William Waterhouse. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]

Princess Pantha



By Alex Schomburg. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]

Ka-Zar, Shanna, and Zabu



By Brent Anderson. [Giant-Size Marvel]

Jungle Girl



By Red LYUBA. [More here]

Tigra



By Jason Barton.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Pass the Comics: In the Land of Submarines

Death is the Sailor



Moby Dick, only with a kraken and a creepy twist ending. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]

Yellow Submarine



Bully has what may or may not be random panels from a Beatles comic. It's sort of hard to tell with the Beatles.

Not that Land of the Lost



Long before Marshall, Will, and Holly met the greatest earthquake ever known, Isabel and Billy discovered the original Land of the Lost: an undersea kingdom "where all the things that disappear from Earth find their way." Isabel Manning Hewson came up with the idea and developed it into a radio program that she also wrote and narrated; then turned it into a book illustrated by Olive Bailey. Which of course led to a comics version written by Hewson and illustrated by Bailey.

The series assumes that its readers are familiar with the other versions and just recaps - as opposed to retells - the origin story in the first issue. Pappy posted that first story - featuring a lost nickel and a plot to kill the series' hero, a fish named Red Lantern - earlier this year.



More recently, Pappy followed up with the second story from Land of the Lost #1. In this one, the Land of the Lost's inhabitants plan a surprise party for Red Lantern and are visited by a mysterious, blind merman.

Creature from the Black Lagoon vs. Aquavelva Man



Read the whole thing at The Aquaman Shrine. It's a Bizarro strip, so it is - of course - awesome.

Black Orchid visits the Island of Fear



And stops a slavery ring in the process. [Diversions of the Groovy Kind]

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Pass the Comics: Our Endless War Against the Insects

I Found the City Under the Sea



With some help from Jack Kirby. [The Fabuleous Fifties]

The Lizard Man and Flight of the Terror Birds



You need to subscribe to Nuklear Power right now. When it's not showing you comics about dino-chefs who use succulent dinners to catch human prey...



...it's full of new Atomic Robo. None of the other websites you follow do that.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The Awesome List: You! The one who is moving now!

Deep Green



I almost have all the technology I need to complete my ocean lair. I've got the floating city, the personal subs, and even cool helmets for my henchmen. And now I've got something to power it all with. According to CNN:
The technology comprises of a turbine attached to a wing and rudder which is tethered to the ocean floor by 100 meters of cable.

Anchoring "Deep Green" and steering the tethered "kite" enables the turbine to capture energy from the tidal currents at ten times the speed of the actual stream velocity...

When operational, the turbine is expected to generate 500 kilowatts of power.
[Admiral Cal]

Tarzan GelaSkin



Dark Horse has been making these gel laptop protectors for a while now and I've just been waiting on one to scream my name. This one's not screaming, but it's whispering very persistently. (There's an iPhone skin too, but I don't need one of those yet.) [Comic Book Resources]

After the break: Pulp Month, Jade Van Helsing, and the goofiest Klingon.

Sunday, February 28, 2010

The Awesome List: These plants are protecting the city

A potpourri of fantastic stuff I've found around the web...

I'll need some extra butter, please



"The Japanese Spider Crab has a body the size of a basketball and its legs can straddle a car."

Let me repeat that. Its legs... can straddle a car.

Bioshock 2 Trailer



Is awesome.

If you need another reason to be environmentally conscious...



[Giant Monsters Attack!]

Munsters and Addams



Golden Age Comic Book Stories has a cool collection of images from both.

Not enough city officials take vampire prevention seriously

Monday, January 18, 2010

Movie News: Empires of the Deep; Your Highness

Empires of the Deep Update



Robert Hood has a large update on the Chinese undersea fantasy film Empires of the Deep, including the new director, plot synopsis (a young man and a mermaid quest for a hidden temple), and cast (including Monica Bellucci from the Matrix movies and The Brothers Grimm).

As cool as the concept art is (and Hood's got tons of it), the amount of hype in the press releases is making me skeptical. They don't even have a movie yet and they're already planning a theme park? I'm guessing that means that the producers have said to themselves, "Wouldn't it be cool if there could be a theme park?"

I'm also guessing that the quality of the finished movie will be something along the lines of Dragon Wars, but I would love to be proved wrong.

Your Highness



What's with all the medieval movies lately? Not that I'm complaining, but we've got How to Train Your Dragon, Robin Hood, and now Your Highness. That last one is a comedy starring Danny McBride as a slacker-knight who teams up with his dashing older brother (James Franco) to rescue a damsel in distress (Zooey Deschanel). Natalie Portman is also in it as a butt-kicking heroine who joins the quest for mysterious reasons.

It would've gone in my Netflix queue just for James Franco, but Natalie Portman gets me to the theater.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

War-Gods of the Deep (1965)



War-Gods of the Deep is a pretty misleading title, but then, almost everything about this movie is misleading. It has some really awesome parts, but there's also a fair bit of disappointment.

For one thing, there are no war-gods. In fact, there's no war. That part of the title is apparently meant to disguise for US audiences that this is a British adaptation of Edgar Allen Poe's "The City Under the Sea." Which is itself a bit of subterfuge because it stars Vincent Price and is clearly meant to cash in on Roger Corman's series of Price-starring Poe adaptations. The sad part is, it doesn't even need a war or any gods. The story is just fine on its own, though it could use some tightening up in places.

The movie starts off brilliantly with a creepy voiceover of Price reading Poe's poem and the discovery of a body washed up on the British shoreline. The corpse is discovered by some fisherman and a visiting American engineer named Ben (Tab Hunter) who recognises it as the lawyer for Jill Tregillis (Susan Hart), the only other American in the village. For some reason, Miss Tregills (which I kept mis-hearing as Mister Gillis) stays in a creepy old mansion on the cliffs overlooking the sea. I think it's supposed to be a hotel, but that was never made real clear.

Anyway, Ben goes to tell Jill that her lawyer's dead, but when he sees her he's distracted by such important concerns as the presence of a painter named Harold Tufnell-Jones (played by David Tomlinson from Mary Poppins and Bedknobs & Broomsticks) and his pet chicken. Even with the murder mystery and the creepy mansion, I was concerned about the story because Ben just kept forgetting to tell Jill what he'd gone there to tell her. He manages to mention the lawyer's name at some point, so Jill thinks that Ben wants to visit the lawyer and escorts Ben to the lawyer's room. It's not until they reach the bedroom door that Ben suddenly decides to blurt out that he found the poor guy on the beach.

Tab Hunter's not exactly bad in the movie, but he doesn't do anything to raise his character beyond the unbelievable dialogue either. At another point, Ben goes on and on about how his work as an engineer requires him to be highly observent so that he doesn't miss any opportunity to seize profit for his employers. That line may have played better in 1965 than it does in 2009, but even so Ben brags about it like it's some kind of super-power.

Back to the awesome parts though: the power's out in the mansion so it's all candles and oil lanterns when Ben discovers and fights with a seaweed-covered gill-man who enters and escapes the lawyer's room through a secret panel. In a second attack, the gill-man captures Jill and disappears with her, leading Ben and Tufnell-Jones (and the chicken) to track them back to an underwater city where Vincent Price rules as captain over both the gill-men and an immortal pirate crew. Like I said, you really don't miss the "war." There's plenty of awesomeness to keep it going without that.

Unfortunately, the movie doesn't really make good use of its gill-men and immortal pirates in their Vincent Price-ruled undersea city. Ben and Tufnell-Jones are captured and the rest of the story takes it's lead from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea as our heroes keep trying to escape and Price tries to prevent them (he's in love with Jill, you see, because she looks exactly like his dead wife). The gill-men are stuck in the water outside the city, basically just an obstacle for the heroes to eventually overcome if they're to get back home. There's an underwater chase sequence where everyone's wearing cool-looking deep-sea suits, but it's too long and so crappily edited that it's impossible to tell who's chasing and/or fighting with whom.

Still, some of the effects are very good, the sets are fantastic, the gill-men look great, and the exterior shots of the underwater city and the cliff-side mansion are amazing. Price is also delightful as usual and Tomlinson always makes me smile, if only because I grew up with him and it feels good to see him in something "new."

Three out of five secret tunnels to the sea.

Sunday, November 08, 2009

The ABCs of Awesome

Since finishing that huge music meme, there's a hole in my Sunday blogging. Not sure what I'll eventually fill it with, but for today, I've totally gacked this idea from Cal.

Apes



Barbarians (fighting Apes)



Cephalopods



Detectives



Elasmosaurus



Frankenstein's Monster



Giant Things



Head Kicks



Islands



Jungle Queens



Keira Knightley



Lost Civilizations



Musketeers



Namora



Obelisks



Pirates



Quetzalcoatl



Ray Guns



Space Girls (with Ray Guns)



Treasure



Underwater Cities



Valkyries



Wonder Woman



X-Ray Vision



Yeti



Zorro

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