Showing posts with label warrior women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label warrior women. Show all posts

Monday, August 23, 2010

Art Show: Would Someone Get This Big, Dapper Carpet Out of My Way?

A Journey to the Center of the Earth



Artist Unknown. [Golden Age Comic Book Stories, who's got a ton of other great Classics Illustrated covers in the same post. Seriously, if you only click through one link today, this should be the one.]

Hawaiian Dancer



By Katie Shanahan. I just fell in love with her stuff a few days ago, so this post is going to be a bit Shanahan-centric.

Best Friends



By Hannah Christenson. [Art Jumble]

After the break: Batman, a warrior woman, Thor and Co., the Hulk, Daisy Kutter, Steampunk Star Wars, and Fett... Boba Fett.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Art Show: Walking Dynamite!

Adventure



By Franklin Booth [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]

Mermaid



By Abrams [Never Sea Land]

Tales of Three Planets



By Rog G Krenkel [Golden Age Comic Book Stories]

The Human Bomb



By Dan and Sy Barry. There's a whole story that goes with it at Pappy's Golden Age Comics Blogzine.

The Spectacular Super-Girls



Artist unknown. Peter Parker's classmates from the Spectacular Spider-Man cartoon dressed as DC heroes though? Love it. [Brother Calvin]

Zatanna



By Danielle Corsetto. [Comic Art Fans]

Black Canary and Huntress



By Steve Bryant again.

Iron Man and Friends



By Mike Maihack.

Alternate Jabba



By Richard Whitters.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Age of Robot 6



This week's Gorillas Riding Dinosaurs column at Robot 6 is a review of Age of Bronze, Volume 2.

Five out of five pirate-hunting warrior-princesses.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Nations all over the damn world

Action Girl Pulp of the Day



By Arnold Kohn.

Lost Women

Season Five cast photos have been released. You can see the guys too over at Grant Gould's LJ.






Oops!

Kalinara picked up on something I totally missed when I mentioned the casting for the live-action Avatar movie. The Avatar heroes aren't white.

The Evolution of Women in Fantasy Movies



AMC has a brief survey of the role of women as they've appeared in fantasy films, starting with Jason and the Argonauts and moving towards Stardust. It's not a deep article, but their choices of representative films are interesting.

Whiteout

CBR has a couple of new stills from Kate Beckinsale's Antarctic murder mystery, Whiteout. You gotta scroll past the Watchmen ones to get to them though.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The Reaping (2007)



I mentioned when I talked about The Orphanage that I usually find that stylish films are trying to hide a crap plot. That's happened to me a lot, but I was really thinking about The Reaping when I wrote it.

It's not completely fair to call The Reaping's plot "crap." It's actually really interesting up to a certain point. It's a mystery story -- why is this small town in Louisiana experiencing plagues like the ones in Exodus? -- and as long as Hilary Swank is trying to figure it all out, it's good. Like I also said in that Orphanage review, my favorite horror movies are actually mysteries, so The Reaping starts off on the right foot.

Spoilers below

Where it starts to come undone is the over-the-top solution to the mystery. Swank plays a former minister who's lost her faith and now spends her time debunking "miracles" all over the world. So when she's called in to explain what's going on with the plagues in Haven, Louisiana, we're not quite sure if this is going to be a supernatural story or one with a mundane explanation. That's actually one of the cool elements of the mystery, but it works against the revelation. The movie tries so hard to stay grounded during the first couple of acts -- and succeeds, even amongst rivers of blood and skydiving frogs -- that when it goes all Omen and Rosemary's Baby at the end, it's jarring.

Even so, the movie manages to follow its own internal logic throughout, so I never felt betrayed by the revelation. Everything makes sense and flows out of what we've learned before, it's just that it's too much. It's too supernatural.

I think The Reaping might would've worked better as a novel. It really is a fascinating story, but seeing the last act played out onscreen with a bunch of special effects turns it into a different kind of movie. If I'd had to create the last act in my head, I think I would've been into it more.

And it's really too bad, 'cause I looooove Hilary Swank and she's all serious and kick-ass in this movie. Really, really too bad.

Two out of five flesh-eating locusts.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Artist of the Day: Mark Schultz



Stuart Ng Books has a bunch of Mark Schultz art books for sale.

Resident Evil: Extinction (2007)



Resident Evil: Extinction wasn't at all like I imagined it would be. Considering the end of Apocalypse, I figured Extinction would be about Alice's trying to overcome her Umbrella programming in order to avoid betraying her friends. Once she'd done that, I anticipated some cool guerilla tactics as Alice and company finally took the fight to Umbrella's door. I got none of that.

Not that it's a bad movie; it's just completely different than I expected. Alice does overcome her programming, but she does it between movies. Extinction opens with her having left her pals in order to keep herself from harming them, but her will is already her own and she's never rejoined them. She does rejoin some of them in Extinction, but I wanted to be able to see her break free of Umbrella's control, so I'm disappointed. We get a taste of that as Umbrella momentarily regains control of her and she breaks free again, but it's not enough.

And as for her taking the fight to Umbrella's door... it looks like that's what the next movie'll be about.

What Extinction is is a post-apocalyptic horror flick. I compared Resident Evil to Aliens and Apocalypse to Escape from New York; Extinction is The Road Warrior. Some time between Apocalypse and Extinction the zombie virus got out of Umbrella's control and took over the world. Plants, animals, and humans are all affected and the last living humans have taken to roving the resulting desert in caravans. Meanwhile, Umbrella has been driven completely underground and is desperately looking for a cure. Their best hope is with Dr. Isaacs, the evil scientist from the end of Apocalypse. In order for Isaacs' cure to work though, he needs Alice, so Umbrella is scouring the globe looking for her.

Eventually, like I said before, Alice reconnects with her pals from Apocalypse who've joined one of those caravans and convinces them that a zombie-free haven exists in the Alaskan wilderness. The problem is that they'll have to caravan through zombies and Umbrella soldiers alike to get there.

There's a great scene where Alice is trying to convince the caravan's leader Claire (Ali Larter) to take the risk and go to Alaska. Claire disagrees at first, looking at her ragtag followers and saying that they don't need to get their hopes up. I love Carlos' (Oded Fehr) response, which is something like, "That's exactly what they do need." It's a simple truism, but it's also profound when you really consider it.

Anyway, "Road Warrior with zombies" isn't exactly what I was hoping for, but Extinction is still a good action movie and -- as I predicted -- it ends in a way that makes me anxious to see the next one. Please tell me I don't have to wait until 2010 for it.

Three out of five zombie ravens.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004)



I remembered liking Resident Evil: Apocalypse when I saw it in the theater, but I'd forgotten how much or even why. Having seen the original now, the Resident Evil franchise is becoming one of my favorites and Alice is definitely one of my top female butt-kickers. I'll let you know if that's still the case after I watch Resident Evil: Extinction this weekend, but I have high hopes.

I feel like I should sort of apologize for liking these movies, but you know what? Screw that. I don't know why people pick on them. It's not like you go see a Resident Evil movie expecting Schindler's List. These are zombie action flicks, but they're not dumb. The stunts and fight choreography are great, there's a coherent plot connecting the films, they follow their own internal logic, and the characters are interesting and relatable (even especially superhuman Alice).

Apocalypse picks up right where Resident Evil left off. A little before, actually, since we get to see some of the events that led up to that last scene from Resident Evil and how the zombie infestation spread outside the Hive.

If Resident Evil was Aliens with zombies; this is Escape from New York. With zombies. In order to contain the out-of-control zombie virus, the Umbrella Corporation has locked down Racoon City and isn't letting anyone out. Instead, they plan to use it as a testing ground for their zombie experiments; then nuke it when they're done and claim it was an accident at the nuclear plant. The only thing is that the daughter of one of their top scientists is still trapped inside the city walls, so the scientist plugs into the city's computer network to talk to Alice and some other folks also trapped inside. If they'll rescue his daughter, he'll arrange for them to get out before the bomb hits.

Complicating things is a continuation of the plot from the last movie where Alice learned about something called the Nemesis Project. We learn a lot more about it here because that's one of the experiments that Umbrella is watching, and it's a particularly nasty one. But Alice also has a connection to the Nemesis Project and we learn about that too.

The supporting cast in Apocalypse is better than the one in Resident Evil, which was pretty much just made up of military personnel, Alice, her partner, and the mysterious Matt. This time the military is represented by Oded Fehr (the best part of Stephen Sommers' Mummy movies) with the other characters being a woman cop who's conveniently just come off duty as an undercover prostitute and hasn't had time to change, her buddy on the force, a TV reporter hoping to win an Emmy with her footage of the crisis, a minor-league street criminal, and of course the scientist's daughter.

There are only a couple of things I didn't care for in the movie. One is that Alice, who's usually very sullen, is extraordinarily smiley with Oded Fehr. Maybe she's just got the hots for him, but I never really understood why. He's a handsome man, no doubt, but Alice doesn't typically get schoolgirlish around handsome men. It felt like they were trying to force a romance angle into the story when one didn't belong.

The other weird thing involves a SPOILER so skip this paragraph if you haven't seen the movie. At then end, when the head Umbrella guy is trying to get Alice to obey him by threatening her friends, he kills the scientist dude instead. His rationale is something like, "This guy is valuable to me. If I'm willing to kill him, do you think I'll spare your friends?" What I don't get though is, wouldn't the message have come across just as clear if he'd shot someone Alice actually cared about? Why shoot the valuable scientist? That's stupid bad-guying. END SPOILER.

Like Resident Evil, this movie ends not exactly on a cliffhanger, but with some pretty serious stuff unresolved. In spite of the couple of goofy moments, I'm more excited than ever to see Extinction now, except that I expect it'll end the same way and I'll have to wait another three or so years for the next sequel.

Four out of five zombie schoolgirls.

Monday, December 10, 2007

New Stuff to Watch For: Avatar by Lisa Paitz Spindler

Lisa Paitz Spindler is a science fiction writer among other things. I discovered her blog when she linked to some of my Wonder Woman posts, and I'm glad I did. The Wonder Woman link was part of a continuing feature she calls Danger Gal Friday, which is chock full of kickbutt ladies. Some of them (like Starbuck, Ripley, and Elizabeth Swan) I'm familiar with, but she's a lot more widely read than I am and includes plenty of women whom I now want to know a lot more about (Chaz Bergren, Parrish Plessis, and Jenny Casey, for instance). It's well worth browsing through.

And Paitz Spindler's tastes in heroines lines up with mine well enough that I'm really looking forward to seeing her published. She's got a few works in progress, but it looks like Avatar is done and her description of it makes me want to read it:

"When dispatched to distant Ico, Kinship spy Jana Rajam is captured and forced to share her mind with the memories of a long-dead warrior queen. Once escaped, Rajam finds herself thrown between a far-reaching conspiracy to reclaim a lost golden age and a bid to control a narcotic that could enslave or liberate the Iconnu.

"A queen must have a consort, and religious leader Brannon Bayne has spent a lifetime living up to the memories he carries of the ancient monarch’s renowned general. A half-breed caught between two cultures, Bayne must convince Jana to help him forge a peace before solar flares ravage the planet.

"AVATAR tells the story of a spy’s redeeming mission, a revered leader’s desperate journey, and a warring planet’s only hope."

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Warrior Women Thursday!

Today's image is yet another by Victor Santos. I'm gonna keep this one short, mostly because I'm a couple of days behind on news and about a week behind whatever the comics blogosphere is discussing.

Wonder Woman

That complete Wonder Woman TV series DVD set I mentioned finally has a price. Oddly though, the list price of $114.82 is roughly twice the cost you'd pay if you bought all three seasons individually. Boo!

The modern take on Wonder Woman in the upcoming JLA movie will apparently focus on her as "the member that acts as defacto humanitarian and face for the League." Which is valid, I guess, as long as she's not all preachy and strident about it.

Jungle Girls

Tippi, the real life jungle girl.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Warrior Women Wednesday!

Today's Warrior Woman illustration is by Matthew Allen Smith.

Wonder Woman

Philippos Fourty-Two is still thinking about Wonder Woman and asks, "What's with Wondie's current concept?" He (I think? Sorry if I got that wrong.) seems to have trouble putting his finger on what the problem is exactly, but notes, "it feels really arbitrary, & kind of odd."

My thought is that I like the concept of her having a secret identity and being a spy, but that gearing up for and being a part of Amazons Attack left zero room for the writers (or us) to settle in and get comfortable with it. It sounds like Gail's going to be sticking with the concept for a while though, so hopefully she'll be able to ground it. Right now, it was just sort of thrown at us and we've been asked to simply accept it without being invested in it as AA raged on.

No word on pricing yet, but rumor has it that the complete Lynda Carter series will be available on DVD in November. Looks like my procrastination in picking up the individual seasons has paid off. Yay, procrastination!

Tura looks at Golden Age Wonder Woman comics and wonders, "if maybe the comics code was such a bad idea after all." I can't tell if she's joking or not, but if not -- as wrong as she is -- at least she's honest about it. I keep hearing that as the subtext to a lot of criticism, but this is the closest I've seen to anyone's stating it outright.

Mary Marvel

I agree with Kevin Melrose that I'd totally buy an all-ages Mary Marvel series by Colleen Coover.

Jungle Girls

X-Y-Z-Cosmonaut's CosmoBlog has a gallery of posters, stills, and covers from various jungle girl comics, movies, and TV shows. Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

Dynamite's released previews of Jungle Girl #0 and #1, both of which (oddly) come out today. The dinosaurs are encouraging.

Cyblade

Josh Fialkov is a pal of mine, but my real interest in his Cyblade one shot is his description of it as "more or less a spy book" and I am all about spy books right now. I've never cared about Cyblade before, but Josh is a talented dude who routinely makes my sides hurt from laughing too hard, so yeah... gettin' this.

Friday, August 31, 2007

Balls of Fury

I really hadn't planned to review Balls of Fury, but a) it was really funny, so you should see it, and b) it actually has a kickass heroine in it, so it's the sort of thing I like talking about here.

Regarding the funny: no, you didn't see all the best parts in the trailers. The ads do spoil some moments that would've been funnier if you hadn't known they were coming, but there are still plenty of surprises. That said, the ads also do an excellent job of letting you know whether or not this is Your Kind of Movie. If you don't think it looks like Christopher Walken's Best Role Ever from the commercials, it might not be for you. But then, I pity you for your no-sense-of-humor-having. Throw in Lt. Dangle from Reno 911, Oswald from The Drew Carey Show, Lo Pan from Big Trouble in Little China, George Lopez from, well, George Lopez, John Doggett from X-Files, Ross' girlfriend Charlie from Friends, Mowgli from that '90s live-action Jungle Book, and Maggie Q from Mission: Impossible III and Live Free or Die Hard... you've got a lot to look at and laugh at.

I was particularly impressed with Maggie Q's role. She's a butt-kicker, but not at all your usual spy-comedy heroine. She doesn't do Damsel-in-Distress, but she also doesn't do Annoying, Over-Compensating Man-Hater. She's annoyed with the students in her ping-pong school who paw at her, but she quickly kicks their asses and moves on. She doesn't seem to hold it against all males and she certainly doesn't seem like she has anything to prove to anyone.

I don't want to make too much out of her though. She's certainly not the focus of the film; I just liked her and wanted to point her out. I will say though that her change-of-heart towards the main dude (she starts off disliking his slovenly self, but ends up falling in love with him) is completely forced and unbelievable. It happens because it's supposed to happen.

The critics aren't liking Balls of Fury very much, but screw 'em. I had a good time with it. But then again, I had a good time with The Last Legion last week, so what do I know?

Thursday, August 30, 2007

No respect for Green Arrow

I've been trying to warm up to Green Arrow because Black Canary has. If I can't like him, then it's possibly going to affect my opinion of her for marrying him, and I'd like to keep liking her.

So, when I read this, I was prepared to dismiss it and keep on trying to like Green Arrow anyway. After all, Devon lists several perfectly good reasons to not like GA, but adds "the constant political posturing foisted upon the character" to the list. That sounds like Devon's stretching for another reason not to like him. There's no doubt that GA's been a jerk in his most important relationships, but to claim that writers have "foisted" political posturing on him isn't fair.

First of all, GA's agenda is far more social than political, but more importantly is that his passion for those issues have been a part of his character for way longer than his relationship buttholery. Why does Devon think that that part's been "foisted" on him while accepting that the womanizing, child-abandonment, and lying are all natural parts of his character? My first thought was that passion about social injustice is actually a positive thing and so it makes Devon's point better if that's not really part of who GA is, but just something that writers stick on to further their own agendas. And that kind of logical trickery makes me want to toss Devon's whole argument aside.

But I can't, because by the end of the essay, I agree with him about why Black Canary shouldn't have agreed to marry Green Arrow.

"...Oliver Queen tells his ex, Black Canary, the reason he wanted to become a better man so he could get her back and then, proposes to her...Black Canary proved day-in and day-out she was better off without him. He never made the choice to actively become better off without her. He never asked himself whether or not she was better off without him.

"We've all taken our own personal walks through hell, confronted personal demons and the like. We've all taken personal rolls of the dice and taken bets on ourselves. It should be done out of a fundamental belief in self. In this undertaking, one should become a better person for self, first and foremost. Not from a place of rejection. Kids, do NOT try this at home. That way lies failure."

I think I disagree that this is further evidence that Green Arrow's an a-hole, but it certainly does make him an unhealthy choice for a husband. I applaud Barbara Gordon for basically saying as much in the most recent Birds of Prey (#109). I also totally get that Black Canary -- who, in spite of Green Arrow's many faults, is still in love with him -- wouldn't be so receptive to that advice. But I love that Barbara said what needed to be said. Black Canary can't hear it now, but she'll likely remember it later when it's too late to take the advice.

There's been a lot of talk about how Green Arrow -- the Oliver Queen version anyway -- isn't on the cover of the first couple of issues of the new Green Arrow/Black Canary series. And how the solicits for the book hint vaguely at "what's happened to Green Arrow." It makes me kinda sad that I'm actually hoping something awful happens to him and that Black Canary's heart is broken quickly and soon, rather than lingeringly and after a nasty relationship that goes on for a while. They were once a nice couple, but that was when she was the type of character who could just quietly support him. She's grown and improved though since then and nowadays, I can't imagine that happening. As Devon says, she's better off without him.

Edited to add: She's better off without Green Arrow as he's currently written. As I explained here, I used to really like Green Arrow and even defended him against other critics, but the way he's been portrayed recently by Judd Winick and others makes him indefensible. I hope that changes.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Warrior Women Wednesday

I've been keeping half-an-eye on the development of the JLA movie, but I just realized yesterday that this is the closest we're going to get to a Wonder Woman movie for a while, so maybe I'd better pay more attention. Kevin Melrose has the latest skinny, linking to the same Christian Bale interview I did about how Bale and Routh aren't likely to be in the thing, and also linking to IESB.net who debunks the rumor that the whole thing will be CGI motion-capture.

According to IESB, "it will not be an all out 'motion capture production.' Heavy motion capture will be used for the OMACs, the underwater sequences and such. So, all in all, this will be a traditionally made film with some motion capture characters, pretty much like every big fantasy movie these days." (IESB also claims that Tom Welling has been approached to play Superman, but Superman Homepage contradicts that with a statement from Smallville producer Alfred Gough who says, "Hasn't happened, won't happen, [Welling] is under contract to Smallville through season 8.")

Speaking of Super-folks, the Fortress of Fortitude has a great essay about the history of Supergirl and includes some excellent suggestions on how DC might help young girls reclaim the superheroine from creepy, old guys.

"DC can keep Kara in the Teen Titans or Legion of Super-Heroes, but they should cancel the solo title and reintroduce it as part of the revitalized Johnny DC line. Bring back Streaky, Comet and teen-age romance. Give Supergirl back to the little girls, and once again make her a character that represents everything a young one can aspire to. Not every character has to be complex, brooding and kewl."

Edited to add: Even though I like the Fortress Keeper's thoughts about what kind of Supergirl stories DC should be telling, I really don't see why they couldn't do those while still continuing to publish the current version as well. Just because Marvel Adventures: Avengers exists doesn't mean that New Avengers shouldn't. If there's a market for both, why not publish both?

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