Monday, March 30, 2009
Hate the anonymous.
People leaving comments on anything(be it blog, forum, online review, etc) as an anonymous user.
Whats there to hide?? Whats there to be afraid of?
You got the bearings to post a comment, why not have the same bearings to leave a contact or at least a name? It would definitely make any follow-up discussion easier.
Everytime I leave comments on other's blogs or forums
eg: http://comicsworldsingapore.blogspot.com/ <---------ya shameless advertising
I leave my full ID.
If i can have the dignity to do that, i dont see why others can't.
There fore im changing my settings to "registered users only" who can post comments.
Please register yourself before posting. Its free.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Transformers: Stormbringer
Transformers: Stormbringer is the second book in the new Transformers graphic novel/comic series by IDW. Though not a direct continuation of their first book "Infiltration" which takes place on earth, Stormbringer presents a side story of sort about a growing interstellar threat that would be expanded upon in the various character 1 shot spotlight issues later on. Events in this graphic novel switch between flashbacks to Cybertron's tormented past through the eyes of Optimus Prime and present day events that take place shortly prior to the events in book 1 Infiltration.
This book gives readers their first look at the larger war beyond Earth in the new IDW storyline. Cybertron is a dead, wasted world, victim of some distant cataclysm that elder Transformers, including Optimus Prime and Megatron were present at(2007 movie copied this).
Both Autobots and Decepticons appear to have large, star-spanning armies fighting battles of attrition on multiple fronts throughout the universe. Similar Decepticon infiltration cells to the one seen in Infiltration are present on other inhabited planets aside from earth. The Autobots' main base is a space station orbiting a planet at least nineteen megacycles away from Cybertron via fold space travel.Prime's inner thoughts establish that the long war between the Autobots and Decepticons was directly responsible for the cataclysm, and in flashback we discover that a single demonic figure, ThunderWing, was somehow the focus for or avatar of the event; this being was so powerful that only the combined might of the Autobots and Decepticons could stop it in the past.
Fast Forward to the present day. A crew of autobots on a routine science patrol pick up strange energy readings emanating from the surface of the supposedly dead and abandoned Cybertron. Upon investigation, they are ambushed and captured by a band of Decepticon cultist who are plotting to revive the dreaded ThunderWing whom they believe would bring about a galaxy-wide "purification" via destruction. These events soon come to the attention of the respective faction leaders. Optimus Prime himself decides to see to the matter personally, intending to face down his inner demons as well. Megatron on the other hand would have nothing less than the total decimation of Cybertron just to destroy ThunderWing. If it took the whole of Cybertron to stop ThunderWing's apocalyptic rampage in the past, how would a small valiant team of autobot warriors led by Optimus Prime himself hold back this storm of destruction? The plot thickens and soon with the discovery of the mysterious energy source that re-activated Thunderwing, the attention of both Autobots and Decepticons are drawn to earth, the only other source of "Ultra-Energon"
Story - 9/10
From the get go, Stormbringer's story is the mirror opposite of Infiltration's. Where Infiltration has a very slow build up to establish the setting and characters, Stormbringer drops you right into the action. The first page already wide shot image of ThunderWing engulfed in flames as a cryptic narration plays out over the scene. A few pages into the story and the one word that will pop to mind is "EPIC". The entire tale is both a spin off and a lead-in to another far reaching Transformers story arc, one that goes beyond the boundaries of just earth and encompasses the entire galaxy. The tale is told in a non-linear fashion. Mysterious events unfold in the present day, interspersed with flashbacks to the past that slowly reveal the true nature of the threat both Autobots and Decepticons face. Gratuitous action is blended with quote-worthy dialogue and a fast paced narrative the likes of which are found in blockbuster movies.
A novel feature of this Transformers tale is that it delves into aspects of philosophy in a way usually reserved for graphic novels aimed at more mature audiences, and not so much a comic based on a toy line and cartoon. The writer also includes a lot of introspective narration to allow one to not just feel for the characters but to be totally immersed into the characters, their thoughts and what drives their actions. Graphical and narrative motifs, like the burning silhouette and a warning message about "reaping the whirlwind" are a recurring theme throughout and help to bridge the flashbacks into the present day going ons. The pacing is also just right. Sufficient time is allowed for proper development of the main characters and progression of the story. It is not long and draggy, bring only 4 chapters long, nor is it too brief or rushed.
But even so, no story is perfect. Hence the 9/10. The only flaw i can point out is the almost deux-ex machina-ish way the main threat Thunderwing is finally stopped in the end. It is a very smart way to tie this story into the other Transformers comic stories thats for sure, but after all the destruction that the Thunderwing creature caused, and what it had shown it was capable of, its defeat just came too abruptly and simply.
Characters 7/10
The writer, Simon Furman, continues his trend of making the characters very "fan friendly". In other words, all of his supporting characters have their personalities and looks based on existing characters in the transformers mythos. Some of them are based on robots that only appeared as obscure toys that only a hardcore collector would recognise.That is a good move since it will mostly be the fans of Transformers that would read the comic. A not too good move as well since it makes it difficult for a newcomer to get to know the characters because the supporting characters get no development whatsoever.
The main characters on the other hand are very nicely handled. All of them are very similar to how they were in the original cartoon but are now given more depth and made "rounder". Nobody is perfect anymore. For example, Optimus Prime. Once he a one dimensional, do no wrong, shining example of leadership and courage. Here he is a logic based military leader who's decisions in the past have come back to haunt him and make him question his own abilities to as a commander. Here, he has moments where he is unsure of himself, but despite his misgivings, despite mistakes of long ago, he pulls through using his courage and determination, unwilling to shirk his responsibility as Autobot leader. These are the little nuances that really make his character interesting and new, yet retain all classic the elements that made him appealing in the first place.
Jetfire, the Cultists, Optimus Prime, even Thunderwing himself are very interestingly fleshed out. Their thoughts and motives are revealed as the story goes along. Thunderwing especially is a character that i almost felt pity for. If i were to do any comparison, I'll go so far as to compare his side of the story with the tragic tale of the Incredible Hulk or Frankenstein's Monster without revealing anymore.
Dialogue is a little bit too complex at times but that style serves to better show the Transformers as alien beings. Already the alien robots are speaking perfect english(since the comic readers understand english mostly), so what better way to show their alien-ness than to give them a speech pattern unlike normal earth people? Also, all of the transformers have been re-designed to have cybertronian vehicle modes. Which makes perfect sense since many of them have never been to earth in this story and hence will not transform into earth vehicles.
Oh and speaking of people, There are no human characters in this story, a factor that would definitely have the hardcore Transformers Enthusiasts screaming for joy.
So we have a very interesting and well fleshed out set of main cast characters but cookie cutter, under developed supporting characters that only a long time transformer fan would recognise and know their personality.
Art 9.5/10
Don Figureoa handles art duties in this story, with Josh Burcham doing the colouring. And i must say, it was a match made in heaven. Both Figureoa and Burcham are veterans from the Dreamwave era of Transformers comics. An era most well known for its dynamic, over the top(sometimes bordering on absurd) anime-styled art and a tendency for stories to be more style over substance.(hmm reminds me of some 2007 Transformers movie by some Bay guy)
Here in Stormbringer, Figureoa and Burcham deliver possibly the best Transformers sequential art seen in a long time. The panels are easy to follow, and the shot angles chosen lend a very dynamic feel to the reading experience. Each robot is finely detailed down to wear and tear scratches and battle scars. Action scenes especially are clear and exciting. Figureoa preserves the "wow" factor of Dreamwave's Transformers while making his art style more realistic and gritty. The coloring too gives us well contrasted shadows and vibrant shades but without making them look cartoon-ish. In fact coupled with some creative scene lighting and background colors, a more gritty look becomes prevalent throughout the story(though not as gritty as in Infiltration)Overall 9.5/10
Possibly the best piece of Transformers work put out by IDW, Stormbringer is a perfect jumpin-on point for any reader looking to pick up Transformers comics. It is a easy to follow epic tale spliced with philosophical references and awesome characters. The terrific art and colouring adds to the overall enjoyment factor.
For those who loved the grand scale of the 1986 Transformers animated movie, this graphic novel would definately fill that hole that the 2007 Transformers movie left.
A real treat for any comic reader. Be it newcomer, or Transformers fan.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Movie adaptations - Question the source
They say its campy, its lame, plot holes abound and the characters are stupid looking.
Well i say, THATS EXACTLY LIKE THE ORIGINAL MANGA.
Ok seems the movie combines the more aliens and scifi setting in the "popular"(see long winded and draggy) anime Dragonball Z with the setting and plot from the manga Dragonball.
Here's the math.
http://www.onemanga.com/Dragon_Ball/
X + Y =
Dragonball Evolution movie. A crappy, camp-fest. Over the top, overblown, budget special effects headache inducer with silly characters and cheesy villians.(ok they did not include Goku's balls and the panties obsession. THANK GAWD!!!)So it brings me to the main point of my post. Which is this.
Why do people complain about a movie adaptation(of whatever) when its the SOURCE MATERIAL thats...........thats like that lor.
Don't get me wrong. There have been movie adaptations that the the fans AND the general public AND reviewers loved.
eg:
Games-
Graphic novels -
Manga-
Cartoons -
But most of the case, its usually pleases only 1 of the 3(be it th fans OR the public OR the reviewers)
Then you have those movie adaptations that is totally OFF from the original source material. Some have been well liked despite bearing only scant similarities with the original
eg: Blade, Wanted
But some have been hated(and i totally agree with the hate)
eg: Initial D, Man Thing
The third category is this
those that are complained about BUT stick close to the source material's essence.
Here are 3 of the most complained about movie adaptations i've seen
example
1) Transformers(Public loved it. Most fans and reviewers hate it. I loved it)
SO WHATS THE PROBLEM??
The original cartoon(season 1 only. Cos season 2 and 3 were a major improvement) was JUST THAT
. The Epitome(see Godlike) of voice acting and animation(for the 80s) but with simplistic easy to follow stories, pre-set character sterotypes, erratic fights(its not easy to animate robots grappling) and a lack of in depth themes(all themes covered in the 13 episodes of season 1 can be summarised as "Good triumphs over evil". HOW DEEP IS THAT?!?!?!? MY baby brother can tell you that)
2) Doom(fans and reviewers and public all hate it. I liked it)
Well lets look at Doom 95(the original and sequels) and Doom 3(the remake).
The ONLY change i can see in the movie that is not in the source material is the origin of the monsters being some extra chromosome thing(dont an extra chromosome lead to down syndrome??) and not demons from Hell. Other than that, the movie has everything else from the game.
3) Speed Racer(public hated it. Reviewers give or take. Fans loved it. I loved it).
Just some quotes of reviewers
-implausibility and the lack of identifiable peril in the driving sequences
-colorful and loud but story lacking depth.
-praise for the cinematography and the "playful and busy" musical score
- un-needed chimpanzee tricks, tiresome kid-brother high jinks, unbelievable Ninja martial arts by the whole family and a raft of vicious yet harmless villains
And here are my counter points.
-Its a kids cartoon thats being adapted. No one died in the cartoon, hence the lack of a peril in the races in the movie.
- the cartoon was episodic. Meaning that each episode was a self-contained story aside from the season premiere or ending 3 episode story arc. And like other cartoons of the 70s, the plots were simple yet timeless.
-Yes, the overall look and feel, plus the musical score in the cartoon was definately ahead of its time.
-The chimpanzee and kid brother capers were an "every episode must have" staple. Yes the whole family in the cartoon can kick ass and do. and once again, its a 70s kids cartoon, the villians are vilianous but will most likely tie you up over a pool of sharks and wait for you to escape than just shoot you in the face.
So there you have it. The public disliked the movie FOR BEING TRUE TO THE ORIGINAL in terms of essence and spirit of the show. Yet public, opinion of the speed racer cartoon till this day is rather high.
4) The Spirit
.
The movie had all that, within a single movie.
So whats the problem?????
So the question is this.
Why do people complain about movie adaptations' faults when those same "faults"(i dont regard them as faults but rather elements making up the entire essence of the source material) are present in the source material??
Selective memory?? Denial?? Whats your take?
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Pic of The Week
Yes i learnt drawing in the army. YAY
Originally born out of sheer boredom, this small time obsession with committing my visual thoughts to paper soon grew.
Been drawing for a few months. Progressed from simplistic jap anime-ish figures to more american graphic novel style.
I am still far from being an artist, and i do not expect to make a career out of it. Call me a "drawing guy". Still learning, still trying.
Drawing is my hobby, my way of paying tribute to the thoughts in my head.
I would like to thank a very close friend in the army for sticking by me. Without his help, my new hobby may have been PSP playing and not drawing.
Pictures of the week. Ok actually week-n-a-half. Lots of things to do this week and a half. Bt still managed at least 1 new picture. All these pictures are NOT complete. They can never be complete, why? Because i am forever learning and as long as i learn how to improve, it means the pics will be improved upon. But for now, i'll post them up. Feel free to look and comment. Next week i'll post up a number of pictures showing my progress from day 1(note i learnt drawing without an instruction book). Click on pic to see full size
1) Finished up my Gundam Wing tribute picture(USa Graphic novel style)
-though may consider adding more details later on(when i learn how to draw more convincing gears and hinges). And maybe expand the group to include the lesser characters.
2) Yu-Gi-Oh(USA graphic novel style)x2 different shading styles
- I'm not a fan of YuGiOh. In fact i dislike it. Its like a Frankenstein son of DragonballZ and Magic Cards, with a third party of Pokemon for more excitement. But i do see the potential it has if it was re-done in a american graphic novel style. It could touch on a number of complex themes(shown to exist at but not expanded or even talked about in the manga and anime, instead they are cast aside for the more shallower/common themes of teamwork, friendship and winning) like schizophrenia(dual personality), morality questions of justified vengeance, the existence of a soul, the ouija board debate and question of Predestination just to name a few. Sadly, like i said, the potential exists but be it because of the publisher demands or the writer's own folly, such potential was not tapped. Instaed you get a "typical" shonen jump series. Here's my take on how YuGiOh would look i he american graphic novel style.
2 styles of shading. My more subdued style incorporating what my pal tought me, and the other a more dynamic higher contrast style. Biggest problem i had was his frakking hair. It is unreal. NOBODY can ever have hair like that.
They don't believe me. They never believe me. Those ignorant fools believe its all a game, a childish card game. It is so much more than that. To play this game, is to play with the devil himself, to dabble in hellish forces beyond human comprehension. There exists a dimension, a dimension of pure evil. Through the cards, inhabitants of that hellish dimension gain access to our world, to possess our souls. The psychologists pass off the demon possessed individuals as merely having an obsession, an addiction toward a harmless card game. Unknown to the learned men, those "addicts" are "compelled" to keep playing the dark game, compelled by a sinister power from beyond. To it, humans are mere playthings, like the cards are to us.
Why doesn't anyone believe me?! Those blind, deaf, mutes!
They say i have schizophrenia, split personality disorder. Obsessive compulsive behavior patterns and sociopathic tendencies, LIES! Obvious lies fabricated by the dark powers that be.
They want to play the game? I shall. And I shall beat every single last one of them, cast those demons back to the pit they came from. I will never stop playing. I shall harness their own power against them by mastering this game. I will rule the game.........the game will not rule me.
3) a Witch from Left 4 Dead (anime style)
Done jsut ths morning cos i was bored. Never intended for it to be a serious work, it was just a 20 minute doodle. But hey, maybe i'll improve on it sooner. Though i think the sketchy murky dark look sits pretty well with the pic
.
Mommy? Where are you?
You told me to stay put, you promised you'd come back.
Its scary here.
I hear the scary people all the time.
I hear the loud bangs, I am scared of loud bangs
I like the dark. , I cannot see the scary people when its dark.
You remember where you left me right?
I am so scared, i cannot stop crying
You said don't talk to strangers and i haven't.
They don't talk to me either
The tall guy is smelly and the fat man look funny
the other strangers don't talk much, they leave me alone.
But i don't want to be left alone.
I am hungry
Where did you go mommy?
Did the scary people get you?
I hear the bangs get closer
I hear the scary people roaring from far away
the strangers go and check out the noise
they don't come back too.
I will stay here in the dark so i cannot see the scary people
footsteps
light
Mommy?.........
Sunday, March 22, 2009
Watchmen Part 2- Ends justify the means?
Mostly about the ending. Anyone who has watched feel free to chip in.
*takes deep breath*
1)In the original comic, Ozymandias/Adrian Veidt, was revealed to be the killer who had killed the Comedian (this scene was moved to the beginning of the movie) because the Comedian didnt quite react to "the plan" the way Ozymandias expected.(instead of going along and helping in the plan, the comedian "had a change of heart")
2) THE plan. Ozymandias had created a giant, alien-ish squid (pic below)
with the help of the greatest geniuses in the world(whom he later killed to protect his secrets) and teleported it into New York City to unleash wanton destruction
His reasoning, was this. With the world on the brink of war, his theory is that the presence of a major alien threat from parts unknown will unite the world against it, thus ending hostilities between the nations, and forcing them to become allies rather than enemies. For the greater good, he’ll kill a few million people in New York, if you will. In his mind, the ends justified the means.
In the movie, there is a squid. Look carefully at the machine that DR Manhattan is helping build. It has a ver long name but its short form if you take the first letters of each word it spells S.Q.U.I.D.
Now dont you want to go watch the movie again?
NVM.
Anyway, this time in the movie, Ozymandians tricks Dr Manhattan into helping him build that machine which mimics Manhattan’s powers(all the while pretending that he was researching a way of creating clean, renewable energy for the world.) Ozymandias than uses the device to blow up various cities around the world, thus framing Doctor Manhattan and achieving the same goal as the squid idea — by forcing the warring nations of the world to unite against a common enemy: Doctor Manhattan.
So, now i pose the question. Do the ends really justify the means? Take this concept and let it move beyond the narrative into the movie as a whole and apply the inherant "ends justify the means" philosophy into the ends of the movie and the means by which they got there.
Both endings achieved the same ends. Both presented the similar ideas and philosophies. But both are widely different.
Everyone has their own opinion.
here's mine.
I'm happy that the messages were kept. The ideas were kept and, faithfully translated to screen, were quite easy to catch. Whats more, i prefered the movie ending honestly. Having Ozymandians "betray" one of his own fellow colleagues just made the emotional impact even greater. In this case, yes the end did justify the means.
Another thing about the ending i want to being up is Rorshach. In the end, he disagrees with Veidt, determined to reveal to the world the mastermind behind the disasters, but he is stopped by Dr manhattan.
Dr Manhattan, so firm in his logic that "this is the only way to achieve world peace" and Rorshach "never compromising even in the face of armaggedon". In the end, Manhattan is left with no choice but to kill Rorshach to protect the peace of the future world.
Now i want to know what is your interpretation of that very sad moment before Rorshach's death when he takes off his mask and starts sobbing.
In interviews, Alan Moore himself states that he "just FELT it was how the character would react". Ok, so no concrete answer from him.
Personally, in the comic, that part came across to me as a little like this. Rorshach himself came to the conclusion that Veidt was right, that if he were to reveal to the world, the peace would be shattered. After all he's been through, Rorshach cracks. The calm inhuman demeanor he portrays throught the story shatters as he realises he was wrong all along. Yet he was still determined to go through with his actions if not for Dr Manhattan stopping him.
Now at the point in the comic where Rorshach takes off his mask and shouts to Manhattan "DO IT!"(aka kill me) i get 2 quite different interpretations from comic and movie.
In the comic his "do it" was more a "lost all hope" kind of thing. It seemed as if he were begging for death and willingly submitting to it. His "Do it" came across like as a challenge to Dr Manhattan. Like "Please kill me". His tears came from the fact that he realised there was no way out, that he was wrong and that he wanted to be killed. (a little sub point is that he realised that this new world no longer had a place for him and he did not want to live in a peace built on a lie)
But the taking off of the mask kinda signified that Dr Manhattan was merely killing Walter Kovacs, and that Rorshachs(the ideas he represent) would live on.(which in the comic is quite vividly shown that it was his intent).
The movie kept the end. About the mask significance and the ideas living on. Going so far as to show the huge Rorshach blood blot in the snow to further emphasise that point. The "do it" however was slightly different. The various sub-points are still present but require a little more digging than usual. In the movie, his tears seeemd to be out of fear.
I loved it, the emotional impact. Under all the cold inhuman demeanor, behind his hatred toward the sins of humanity, his isolated underground life, Rorshach is still only human. By the end, he comes across as even more human than Veidt who throughout the story is presented most as "a man of the world". Rorshach's tears are of fear. Fear of death. In the movie, he doesnt want to die. But knows that if he doesnt die, he will reaveal to the world Veidt's lie. Dr Manhattan knows that too and must protect the new peace, logically speaking.
When confronted, Rorshach knew his time was up and that there was no way out. He was helpless in the face of inevitability.
One thing which i think the movie would have benefitted is this.
In the comic, after Silk Spectre and Nite Owl leaves Ozymandias' fortress, Ozymandias looks back at the screens and starts to have slight second thoughts about the rationality of his actions. He sees the deaths reported by the news, then drops to his knees in tears as the scene pulls into the inscription on his statue "I am Ozymandias King of kings. Look upon my works e Mortals and tremble."
If they just added that little scene in, it would have been perfect. Whats more, they added the scene(not in the comic) of Nite Owl confronting Ozy again before leaving. Openly telling Ozymandias about how he defiled the concept of "a greater good" and how his legacy of world peace would be built on a lie and the deaths of millions. This scene combined with the previous comic scene would have made a better closure for the character of Ozymandias.
Wow, thats long.
Ok, just my opinions.
Sunday, March 15, 2009
watching WATCHMEN
Cos its a great movie.
OK this is not a full review, just some thoughts and feelings and feelings of my thoughts on said movie.
Its too short. I have read the book and i will say that the movie only covers half of what the book covers.
HOWEVER I must applaud the director and producer for something. They themselves admitted this, that the movie was too short. Zack Snyder himself said the original script would have turned up a 6 episode mini series or 2 movies. The director and Dave Gibbons(the artist) agreed to cut it down to 1 movie. A single movie of 180 to 200 minutes. Producers thought it was still to long and cut it down to the current 163 minutes. So basically there is at least half and hour worth of stuff cut out.
The good thing is that the director is not just treating Watchmen as a movie, but as an ongoing PROJECT.
Slated to coincide with the DVD release are 2 other watchmen related releases.
1) Tales of the Black Freighter - a anime film adapting the "comic within the comic" that was in Watchmen. It's inclusion is vital to helping develop especially Ozymandias' personal sub-plot and character development as many parallels can be drawn between the Black freighter story and Ozy's.
2) Under the Hood - The original featured a biography of sorts by Hollis Mason(the original Nite Owl) about the first masked vigilantes, how they got together, the trials they faced and how it all ended. Basically an entire history back story setting up the events in the Watchmen present day story itself. This is now going to be presented as a "documentary"(though ya a "false" documentary) recounting the lives of the original "Minutemen" which was a very important sub-plot in the comic.
This movie is just the main course. To have a complete meal, you need the starters, main course, a accompanying drink and the dessert at least.
In other words I recommend watching this movie, then waiting for the director's cut DVD to come out and watching the other 2 features which will be on the DVD as well for the full Watchmen experience
So
In many ways, the book and the film are entirely different things. But in actual fact, they are one in the same to about 95%. Only that certain things are enhanced or dimmed. Most of the flaws are not the fault of the writer or director but rather of the medium itself. A book medium being very different from a movie medium
3 main Things that are dimmed
1) One thing that was dimmed were Dave Gibbon's(the original artist) visual motifs and symbolism.
The book uses a lot of little visual motifs that have a certain symbolism to what is going on. eg: the graffiti images of lovers embracing, the first-person point of view of people moving through rooms and looking into reflective surfaces, the Rorschach blots that turn up in places other than Rorschach’s face etc. All of it is meant to tie people’s lives together, even though some of those never meet, and to tie past and present together in a very metaphysical sense. In the movie, you don't get a chance to slowly scan through each scene and go "ah, wasn't this visual cue seen earlier? What is it's significance? etc etc" the turn back the film and pour through the earlier visual cue. You don't get to do that.
In this movie, some of the visual cues still remain but they require a quick mind to pick up on them. Some of the visual cues have been substituted with dialogue references though.
2)Another thing that was dimmed
Alan Moore likes to use this technique. He sort of overlays events in one location with the sound from another. eg: the sound of a TV broadcast seems to be commenting on a sex scene, or some conversation between prostitutes in the street seems to be a bickering commentary on a fight that is happening, or a scene from the past or future. Everything comments on everything else, and everything is connected. There is no "what happens next" because the book can be flipped forward or back and the connections can be slowly discerned and made, unlike a movie.
addition: Ok, where Alan moore uses this technique in his narrative, Zack Snyder(the director) uses a similar style but employing not narrative and background chatter, but in situ dialogue and songs playing in the background.
3) the back story and sub plots
Ok, the back story will apparently be featured in the "Under the Hood" (mock)documentary to be released the same time as the Watchmen DVD. But that doesn't mean its gone totally in the movie. There are a number of flash backs that re-tell the back stories but they go by so fast that you have to pick it up yourself.
If the back story in the book is like a hundred apples falling around you and you slowly pick up the pieces and eat, the back story in the movie is like a hundred apples being thrown at you in quick succession. You don't catch it, it flies by.
Subplots, like mentioned earlier, probably comes together with the 30+ minutes that was cut from the film
Few Things enhanced
1) The main characters. The characters used to be just analogies. Visual representations of human psychological stereotypes and ways of thinking. Their interactions throughout the book are a analogy as to how those different schools of thought and philosophies would clash or coincide. Now in the movie, they are less as analogies and more as actual characters, actual people. They have been truly humanised. Even the subtle changes to the plot, the ending especially, are all in a bid to give the characters more human expressions and for the "blade to cut deepest", Everything is given a very "personal" feel. I loved this change. The director took the characters and made them so much more. You can think about the various schools of thought, stereotypes and philosophies that they may represent and yet you can immerse yourself in the plot and really feel for what the characters are going through.
2) The ending. I wont spoil it here. But I feel this ending is better. Seriously the ending for the comic was......lame. Create an artificial alien life form, teleport it into New York and explode it killing millions and uniting the rest of the world to combat an alien threat that doesn't exist. Aliens?? Come on!!!!
The new ending allows for less "suspension of believe". It is more logically feasible than the comic ending and it allows for deeper wounds and more personal repercussions.
3) The enjoyment factor
Looking again at the comic, it is not without its flaws. Fight scenes are a single panel or only glossed over or referenced to, shot angles are boring and visually static. The book sometimes reads more like a social commentary than a story. The movie, gets rid of the boring. It is action packed, it is exciting. The social commentary and satire are still there but it is balanced with pure movie fun.
So, was it a good movie?? YES
Was it a good adaptation of the comic?? I don't know. Without having the full experience of EVERYTHING(namely the movie, the cut scenes, the anime and the documentary) it is hard to tell since even the director admits the movie is an incomplete adaptation.
However, with all the backstory and subplots flying in your face, only fans well versed in the comic already might be able to catch all that ball. Only the well versed fans will watch and go "oh my gawd thats sooo just like in the comic" or "woa he rembered that bit of visual reference". Such little things might be lost to the general viewer. So go with an open mind and don't just heck care THE LITTLE THINGS. Cos its the little things that count. Catch everything!! Every bit of conversation has significance to later events, every action, every background sign. Hell even the music has special significance to the scenes.
I shall break down one scene for easy reference. The very first scene in the movie of the murder of the Comedian.
The music playing is "unforgetable".
1) It references later events in which it is show how the Comedian has impacted the lives of our main characters through the years, who the comedian is and why he does what he does. In a way, though he may be dead, his legacy lives on in, making him "unforgettable".
2)Another purpose for that scene is this. If you feel like laughing while the comedian is getting the crap beat out of him and the soulful slow song is playing in the background, as the comedian is hurled through the air ever so gracefully as the song reaches its climax, then that scene has served its purpose. Its only right for one to laugh at a comedian eh?
3) You can see it(the song) as the Comedian's own inner dialogue, as he looks back and reflect on his past, especially about his past with Sally Jupiter(the woman in the picture). And it will make more sense after you find out the events that lead up to his death(revealed later in the film)
4) the lyrics
"Thats why, darling, its incredible
That someone so unforgettable
Thinks that I am unforgettable too"
Also reflect how Sally Jupiter thinks about the Comedian.
THAT is The most interesting thing for me about the movie. the various multiple meanings behind each scene and the hidden significance of the various going-ons per scene. From dialogue, visual cues to hand gestures, recurring visual motiffs and background music
So WATCH THE MOVIE. Its definately worth it.
Saturday, March 7, 2009
Megatron: Ascension
A fan video i made using scenes from the "Megatron: Origin" graphic novel.
Dunno why, just felt like doing it.
Anyone can watch, enjoy and comment.
I wanted to make it full animation with voices but
1) I dont know how to use Flash
2) I can't hire the voice actors i want.
Note: Enable javascript
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Transformers: Infiltration
Transformers Infiltration. The first in a new (well started in 2005) series by "4th greatest" comic company IDW. Following the bankruptcy of Dreamwave(the previous publisher of transformers comics), the rights to Transformers comic was bought up by IDW. But instead of continuing the plot-hole ridden, convoluted, inconsistent, story set up by Dreamwave, IDW decided to craft their own Transformers comic continuity.
As for their looks, anyone familiar with the cartoon can immediately identify who is who. Unlike the 2007 movie, the characters in this comic mimick
Anyway If i didn't have my prior knowledge of Transformers, i would not have enjoyed this book as much as i did. However, the human characters were for once, not as annoying as previous ones. I actually liked Verity Carlo and Hunter. Especially the part in the decepticon base where Verity comes face to face with Megatron. We see the independent, headstrong, almost bitchy Verity was all just a facade. Inside, she's just a scared little girl with a troubled past.(and this facade falls away even more in Escalation, revealing her inner vulnerabilities). Hunter?? well, he just clicked with me. I'm a fanboy of Transformers just as he's obsessed with Aliens and Robots. So ya, go refresh your transformers knowledge of the basic "who is who" before going into this book. I would have given it a 9/10 but thats only cos i already have quite a substantial knowledge of transformers already. But from a Transformers "newbie" point of view, i shall give it 7/10 for rushed introductions to familiar characters.
and very anime-esque expressions(big eyes with dot pupils to show surprise, constipated look of concentration or stress etc etc) on humans but aside from that, the proportions of the human characters are still kept realistic.(don't expect them to look like Ash ketchum. lol.)
The Bots. The bot designs are what really shine. Like Don Figueroa before him, EJ su has re-designed the bots with modern alt-modes and the bots actually look like they can transform into those alt-modes without "morphing". He approaches the look of the robots with more an engineering design touch as opposed to from an artist's touch.
The parts slide and shift believably to transform the bot. This shows that the bots can be designed realistically to transform WITHOUT altering their look too much from the original G1(I guess the 2007 movie designers never looked at Figureoa's or Su's art).
They all have joints where they are supposed to have joints and this time even the face and mouths are individual moving parts and not some magical soft plastic that acts like flesh like in previous transformer shows and comics. So you'd think that now with the robots looking VERY robotty, they will have very machine-like expressions on their faces? WRONG. EJ Su, doesnt show the robots' emotion through contorting of the facial features like how a human does(or how dreamwave and marvel did for that matter with their bots). He uses the robots' body language, tilting of the head, shadows and frame angles to great effect in showing a decent range of emotion, effectively bypassing the "dull surprise"(<---check this up on tfwiki.net if unsure) that so plagued dreamwave(Pat Lee's especially) art.The colouring by one John Rauch just enhances the gritty feel of the art. The colouring even looks on par with other graphic novel miniseries like "The Ultimates". Sure its not as great as Alex Ross or Stephan Seijic. But it definitely ain't Jose Delbo or Rob Liefeld. In terms of Transformer art, EJ Su, though a newcomer, deserves to be up there among the likes of Don Figueroa and Guido Guidi.
Check it out now at any comic book stores. THIS is Transformers(not that wham bam brainless action thing called a movie)
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Aliens Vs Predator - Re-match
Well the Alien does show intelligence, but not in a "logic" sense of intelligence. It does things without conscience, without actual "thought", living and doing only because it feels like. It is pure Id, instinct and impulse. Assimilate, Grow, feed, reproduce, destroy potential threats, ensure species survival. It does not think about doing these things, they are just that ingrained into the Aliens physiology. They are animals, pure "id". And that is one extreme of relying too much on one's feelings and foregoing logical thought. we become animals. Feed, Fight and F**K(see reproduce) etc. Many of their actions shown in the film can be considered illogical but that is the whole point, and the whole meaning and essence of the name "alien". They are just that illogical that they are "strange" and "alien" to us. As Humans we have the capability for logical thought and should use that to balance our feelings lest we become animals.