Books received 9/14/11 Pyr edition

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Blackdog
by K. V. Johansen
Cover by Raymond Swanland

Promo copy:

Long ago, in the days of the first kings in the north, there were seven devils…

And long ago, in the days of the first kings in the north, the seven devils, who had deceived and possessed seven of the greatest wizards of the world, were defeated and bound with the help of the Old Great Gods…

And perhaps some of the devils are free in the world, and perhaps some are working to free themselves still…

In a land where gods walk on the hills and goddesses rise from river, lake, and spring, the caravan-guard Holla-Sayan, escaping the bloody conquest of a lakeside town, stops to help an abandoned child and a dying dog. The girl, though, is the incarnation of Attalissa, goddess of Lissavakail, and the dog a shape-changing guardian spirit whose origins have been forgotten. Possessed and nearly driven mad by the Blackdog, Holla-Sayan flees to the desert road, taking the powerless avatar with him.

Necromancy, treachery, massacres, rebellions, and gods dead or lost or mad, follow hard on the their heels. But it is Attalissa herself who may be the Blackdog’s—and Holla-Sayan’s—doom.

Hearts of Smoke and Steam (Society of Steam, Book Two)
by Andrew P. Mayer
Cover by Justin Gerard

Promo copy:

Sir Dennis Darby has been murdered, the Automaton has been destroyed, and Sarah Stanton has turned her back on a life of privilege and comfort to try and find her way in the unforgiving streets of New York. But Lord Eschaton, the villain behind all these events, isn’t finished with her yet. His plans to bring his apocalyptic vision of the future to the world are moving forward, but to complete his scheme he needs the clockwork heart that Sarah still holds.
But she has her own plans for the Automaton’s clockwork heart—Sarah is trying rebuild her mechanical friend, and when she is attacked by The Children of Eschaton, the man comes to her rescue may be the one to make her dreams come true. Emelio Armando is a genius inventor who had hoped to leave his troubles behind when he and his sister left Italy for a life of anonymity in the New World. Now he finds himself falling in love with the fallen society girl, but he is rapidly discovering just how powerful the forces of villainy aligned against her are, and that fulfilling her desires means opening the door to a world of danger that could destroy everything he has built.

THE SOCIETY OF STEAM takes place in a Victorian New York powered by the discovery of Fortified Steam, a substance that allows ordinary men to wield extraordinary abilities, and grant powers that can corrupt gentlemen of great moral strength. The secret behind this amazing substance is something that wicked brutes will gladly kill for, and one that Sarah must try and protect, no matter what the cost.

Lightbringer
by K.D. McEntire
Cover by Sam Weber

Promo copy:

Wendy has the ability to see souls that have not moved on—but she does not seek them out. They seek her. They yearn for her . . . or what she can do for them. Without Wendy’s powers, the Lost, the souls that have died unnaturally young, are doomed to wander in the never forever, and Wendy knows she is the only one who can set them free by sending them into the light.

Each soul costs Wendy, delivering too many souls would be deadly, and yet she is driven to patrol, dropping everyone in her life but her best friend, Eddie—who wants to be more than friends—until she meets Piotr.

Piotr, the first Rider and guardian of the Lost, whose memory of his decades in the never, a world that the living never see, has faded away. With his old-fashioned charms, and haunted kindness, he understands Wendy in ways no one living ever could, yet Wendy is hiding that she can do more than exist in the never. Wendy is falling for a boy who she may have to send into the light.

But there are darker forces looking for the Lost. Trying to regain the youth and power that the Lost possess, the dark ones feed on the Lost and only Wendy and Piotr can save them—but at what cost?

Lightbringer is a YA urban fantasy/romance set in a world a breath away from our own. Similar in tone to Tithe and Unleashed, Lightbringer tiptoes down the line between love and horror as Wendy discovers herself and the darkest parts of the afterlife.

The Doctor and the Kid: A Weird West Tale
by Mike Resnick
Cover by J. Seamus Gallagher

Promo copy:

This is the rip-roaring steampunk sequel to popular The Buntline Special, filled with adventure, excitement, and more than a little gun-slinging action! The time is 1882. With the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral behind him, the consumptive Doc Holliday makes his way to Deadwood, Colorado, where he plans to spend the rest of his short life. But one night he gets a little too drunk and loses everything at the gaming table. He realizes that he needs to replenish his bankroll, and quick, so that he can live out his days in comfort. He considers his options and hits upon the one most likely to produce income in a hurry: he’ll use his shooting skills to turn bounty hunter. The biggest reward is for the death of the young desperado known as Billy the Kid. It’s clear from the odds the Kid has faced and beaten, that he is protected by some powerful magic. Doc enlists the aid of both magic (Geronimo) and science (Thomas Edison), and goes out after his quarry. But as he soon finds out, nothing is as easy as it looks.

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus
by Shannon Wheeler

Promo copy:

Shannon Wheeler is an ambitious cartoonist who turned a minicomic character into a long-running newspaper strip, Eisner-winning comic book series, Converse shoe commercial, one of the first webcomics, and an opera. His dedication includes hand-stapling 20,000+ mini-comics and shooting 3,000+ comics with a .22 rifle. It’s been a 20+ year adventure with Too Much Coffee Man.

The semi-autobiographical, hyper-intellectual, high-concept comic appeals to both inside and outside the comic book world. Even Henry Rollins says Too Much Coffee Man is “the only comic I would really pay attention to, because I like the idea. Too Much Coffee Man has a lot to say. He’s a great apocalyptic philosopher for our very troubled times.” Holy crap. That’s Henry Rollins.

The Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus, at over 500 pages, was a pain in the ass to put together. It was solicited and cancelled multiple times – becoming one of the most anticipated books around. Many editors were fired and a few of them went insane. Wheeler said “I stopped going to conventions and slept in my closet because too many people asked me about the Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus.” Wheeler is once again making public appearances. The book is real, it is in stores, weighs as much as a small child, and it’s getting attention.

Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus collects five books previously published by Dark Horse:
Too Much Coffee Man: Parade of Tirade
Too Much Coffee Man: Guide for the Perplexed
Too Much Coffee Man: Amusing Musings
Too Much Coffee Man: How to Be Happy
Screw Heaven, When I Die I’m Going To Mars
– as well as a number of unpublished brand new Too Much Coffee Man stories!

I revealed the events surrounding the first appearance of TMCM in a Nexus Graphica column.

Quote:
Back in 1991, Dallas was where I attended my first convention as a professional. I went to the Dallas Fantasy Fair with Shannon Wheeler to promote his first collection and my first editing gig, Children with Glue. To promote the book, Wheeler created and sold the first Too Much Coffee Man minicomic. He theorized, correctly, that if a person pays, however little, for something, they will treasure it more. The mini, which sold for 75 cents, far outsold Children With Glue and helped to elevate Shannon Wheeler to star status. The initial Too Much Coffee Man (TMCM) story spawned a pop culture phenomenon with a newspaper syndicated strip, a regularly produced comic book, a pop culture magazine, four collections, an animated Converse commercial, merchandising paraphernalia galore (mugs, coffee, t-shirts, and even toilet paper!) and most recently, an opera. Before the con, Wheeler initially produced fifty copies of the comic, which sold out long before the end of the first day. That night, we went to a Kinkos and made literally hundreds more. Wheeler ran out before the show ended on Sunday. Eventually, the original Too Much Coffee Man minicomic sales reached into the tens of thousands.

Watch RevolutionSF for a contest to win a copy of the Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus.

Hellboy: The Fury #2
Written and cover art by Mike Mignola
Art by Duncan Fegredo

Promo copy:

While Hellboy makes one last stand against the Queen of Blood the war between the forces of good and evil rages on the battlefield with heaps of dead monsters and knights!

Star Wars: Invasion—Revelations #1
Written by Tom Taylor
Art by Colin Wilson
Cover art by Chris Scalf

Promo copy:

As the invading Yuuzhan Vong penetrate deeper into the galaxy, the Jedi fight back!

But one Jedi in training has taken a different path: Finn Galfridian, under the guidance of the mysterious Master Dray, infiltrates Coruscant and discovers revelations about the leaders of the New Republic that could lead to disaster!

Conan: The Frazetta Cover Series #8
Written by Timothy Truman
Art by Tom Giorello
Cover art by Frank Frazetta

Promo copy:

Running from the army of Turan, Conan and fellow fugitive Olivia hide out on a small island in the Vilayet Sea, but they soon find themselves stalked by a huge, unseen terror in the jungles and threatened by a group of pirates! These may be the least of their concerns, though, because the ruins of a lost civilization stir when a full moon rises over the isle–and even deadlier creatures awaken!

A modern adaptation of Robert E. Howard’s beloved “Iron Shadows in the Moon” tale.

More in Part II

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part I was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus
by Shannon Wheeler

Promo copy:

Shannon Wheeler is an ambitious cartoonist who turned a minicomic character into a long-running newspaper strip, Eisner-winning comic book series, Converse shoe commercial, one of the first webcomics, and an opera. His dedication includes hand-stapling 20,000+ mini-comics and shooting 3,000+ comics with a .22 rifle. It’s been a 20+ year adventure with Too Much Coffee Man.

The semi-autobiographical, hyper-intellectual, high-concept comic appeals to both inside and outside the comic book world. Even Henry Rollins says Too Much Coffee Man is “the only comic I would really pay attention to, because I like the idea. Too Much Coffee Man has a lot to say. He’s a great apocalyptic philosopher for our very troubled times.” Holy crap. That’s Henry Rollins.

The Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus, at over 500 pages, was a pain in the ass to put together. It was solicited and cancelled multiple times – becoming one of the most anticipated books around. Many editors were fired and a few of them went insane. Wheeler said “I stopped going to conventions and slept in my closet because too many people asked me about the Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus.” Wheeler is once again making public appearances. The book is real, it is in stores, weighs as much as a small child, and it’s getting attention.

Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus collects five books previously published by Dark Horse:
Too Much Coffee Man: Parade of Tirade
Too Much Coffee Man: Guide for the Perplexed
Too Much Coffee Man: Amusing Musings
Too Much Coffee Man: How to Be Happy
Screw Heaven, When I Die I’m Going To Mars
– as well as a number of unpublished brand new Too Much Coffee Man stories!

I revealed the events surrounding the first appearance of TMCM in a Nexus Graphica column.

Quote:
Back in 1991, Dallas was where I attended my first convention as a professional. I went to the Dallas Fantasy Fair with Shannon Wheeler to promote his first collection and my first editing gig, Children with Glue. To promote the book, Wheeler created and sold the first Too Much Coffee Man minicomic. He theorized, correctly, that if a person pays, however little, for something, they will treasure it more. The mini, which sold for 75 cents, far outsold Children With Glue and helped to elevate Shannon Wheeler to star status. The initial Too Much Coffee Man (TMCM) story spawned a pop culture phenomenon with a newspaper syndicated strip, a regularly produced comic book, a pop culture magazine, four collections, an animated Converse commercial, merchandising paraphernalia galore (mugs, coffee, t-shirts, and even toilet paper!) and most recently, an opera. Before the con, Wheeler initially produced fifty copies of the comic, which sold out long before the end of the first day. That night, we went to a Kinkos and made literally hundreds more. Wheeler ran out before the show ended on Sunday. Eventually, the original Too Much Coffee Man minicomic sales reached into the tens of thousands.

Watch RevolutionSF for a contest to win a copy of the Too Much Coffee Man Omnibus.

Hellboy: The Fury #2
Written and cover art by Mike Mignola
Art by Duncan Fegredo

Promo copy:

While Hellboy makes one last stand against the Queen of Blood the war between the forces of good and evil rages on the battlefield with heaps of dead monsters and knights!

Star Wars: Invasion—Revelations #1
Written by Tom Taylor
Art by Colin Wilson
Cover art by Chris Scalf

Promo copy:

As the invading Yuuzhan Vong penetrate deeper into the galaxy, the Jedi fight back!

But one Jedi in training has taken a different path: Finn Galfridian, under the guidance of the mysterious Master Dray, infiltrates Coruscant and discovers revelations about the leaders of the New Republic that could lead to disaster!

Conan: The Frazetta Cover Series #8
Written by Timothy Truman
Art by Tom Giorello
Cover art by Frank Frazetta

Promo copy:

Running from the army of Turan, Conan and fellow fugitive Olivia hide out on a small island in the Vilayet Sea, but they soon find themselves stalked by a huge, unseen terror in the jungles and threatened by a group of pirates! These may be the least of their concerns, though, because the ruins of a lost civilization stir when a full moon rises over the isle–and even deadlier creatures awaken!

A modern adaptation of Robert E. Howard’s beloved "Iron Shadows in the Moon" tale.

More in Part II

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Citizen Rex
by Mario & Gilbert Hernandez

Promo copy:

A bizarre, sexy look into the future from comics legends Mario & Gilbert Hernandez!

When gossip blogger Sergio Bauntin investigates the illusive robot celebrity CTZ-RX-1, he provokes the city’s shady power players, who don’t want the story to get out! It’s a surreal sci-fi adventure as only Los Bros. Hernandez can do it!

This handsome hardcover collection also features new cover art by Gilbert, an extensive sketchbook section with behind-the-scenes material from Mario, and a special pin-up from third Hernandez brother Jaime (Locas, The Education of Hopey Glass)!

Solomon Kane: Red Shadows #4
Story by Robert E. Howard
Written by Bruce Jones
Art by Rahsan Ekedal
Cover art by Guy Davis

Promo copy:

Solomon Kane faces two of his greatest foes in Africa, as Bruce Jones (Conan, The Incredible Hulk) brings his thrilling “Red Shadows” adaptation to a close! Seeking to avenge the horrible murder of a young girl, Solomon Kane chases the feared swordsman Le Loup across the globe, where he finds the villain in league with Songa, the powerful leader of a deceived jungle tribe. Kane finds an ally in the frail, ancient form of magic man N’Longa–but will the old, deposed witch doctor really be able to challenge Songa and save Solomon’s life? Rising stars Rahsan Ekedal (Creepy, The Cleaners) and Dan Jackson (Kull, Star Wars) illustrate this thrilling adaptation of Robert E. Howard’s classic tale!

Star Wars: Jedi—The Dark Side #3
Written by Scott Allie
Art by Mahmud Asrar
Cover art by Stéphane Roux

Promo copy:

On Telos IV, a priestess has been assassinated, and the planet is on the verge of civil war. Only Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn and his Padawan Xanatos can protect the planet’s leader-who just happens to be Xanatos’s father-and stop the insurgents. But Xanatos is succumbing to his own long-buried resentments and may soon be more of a hindrance than a help.

Twenty years before his fateful meeting with Anakin Skywalker, Qui-Gon Jinn had his first encounter with the dark side…

Dollhouse: Epitaphs #1
Story by Andrew Chambliss, Maurissa Tancharoen, and Jed Whedon
Written by Andrew Chambliss
Art by Cliff Richards and Andy Owens
Cover art by Fiona Staples

Promo copy:

The fight for free will starts now!

Alpha was the perfect product of Rossum Corporation’s mind-altering technology, until he snapped, burdened by the dozens of personalities they’d downloaded into his brain. Now the technology has gone viral, turning the entire population into murderous automatons, and it’s up to the psychotic Alpha and a small group of survivors to save mankind.

* Straight from the Dollhouse one-shot written by show writers Tancharoen and Whedon, this new series continues the tale of survivors taking up arms against Rossum.

* Fellow Dollhouse show writer Andrew Chambliss (CW’s The Vampire Diaries) makes his comics debut, joining Tancharoen and Whedon

* Joss Whedon’s Dollhouse continues only in comics!

B.P.R.D.: Hell on Earth–Monsters #1
Written by Mike Mignola and John Arcudi
Art by Tyler Crook
Cover art by Francesco Francavilla

Promo copy:

While the Bureau’s off fighting giant bat-eared beasts in Texas, Liz Sherman is kicking hillbilly ass in a trailer park!

More in Part I

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part II was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Graphic Novels/Comics received 9/4/11 Dark Horse ed. Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Citizen Rex
by Mario & Gilbert Hernandez

Promo copy:

A bizarre, sexy look into the future from comics legends Mario & Gilbert Hernandez!

When gossip blogger Sergio Bauntin investigates the illusive robot celebrity CTZ-RX-1, he provokes the city’s shady power players, who don’t want the story to get out! It’s a surreal sci-fi adventure as only Los Bros. Hernandez can do it!

This handsome hardcover collection also features new cover art by Gilbert, an extensive sketchbook section with behind-the-scenes material from Mario, and a special pin-up from third Hernandez brother Jaime (Locas, The Education of Hopey Glass)!

Solomon Kane: Red Shadows #4
Story by Robert E. Howard
Written by Bruce Jones
Art by Rahsan Ekedal
Cover art by Guy Davis

Promo copy:

Solomon Kane faces two of his greatest foes in Africa, as Bruce Jones (Conan, The Incredible Hulk) brings his thrilling "Red Shadows" adaptation to a close! Seeking to avenge the horrible murder of a young girl, Solomon Kane chases the feared swordsman Le Loup across the globe, where he finds the villain in league with Songa, the powerful leader of a deceived jungle tribe. Kane finds an ally in the frail, ancient form of magic man N’Longa–but will the old, deposed witch doctor really be able to challenge Songa and save Solomon’s life? Rising stars Rahsan Ekedal (Creepy, The Cleaners) and Dan Jackson (Kull, Star Wars) illustrate this thrilling adaptation of Robert E. Howard’s classic tale!

Star Wars: Jedi—The Dark Side #3
Written by Scott Allie
Art by Mahmud Asrar
Cover art by Stéphane Roux

Promo copy:

On Telos IV, a priestess has been assassinated, and the planet is on the verge of civil war. Only Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn and his Padawan Xanatos can protect the planet’s leader-who just happens to be Xanatos’s father-and stop the insurgents. But Xanatos is succumbing to his own long-buried resentments and may soon be more of a hindrance than a help.

Twenty years before his fateful meeting with Anakin Skywalker, Qui-Gon Jinn had his first encounter with the dark side…

Dollhouse: Epitaphs #1
Story by Andrew Chambliss, Maurissa Tancharoen, and Jed Whedon
Written by Andrew Chambliss
Art by Cliff Richards and Andy Owens
Cover art by Fiona Staples

Promo copy:

The fight for free will starts now!

Alpha was the perfect product of Rossum Corporation’s mind-altering technology, until he snapped, burdened by the dozens of personalities they’d downloaded into his brain. Now the technology has gone viral, turning the entire population into murderous automatons, and it’s up to the psychotic Alpha and a small group of survivors to save mankind.

* Straight from the Dollhouse one-shot written by show writers Tancharoen and Whedon, this new series continues the tale of survivors taking up arms against Rossum.

* Fellow Dollhouse show writer Andrew Chambliss (CW’s The Vampire Diaries) makes his comics debut, joining Tancharoen and Whedon

* Joss Whedon’s Dollhouse continues only in comics!

B.P.R.D.: Hell on Earth–Monsters #1
Written by Mike Mignola and John Arcudi
Art by Tyler Crook
Cover art by Francesco Francavilla

Promo copy:

While the Bureau’s off fighting giant bat-eared beasts in Texas, Liz Sherman is kicking hillbilly ass in a trailer park!

More in Part I

Attack the Block: From The Cutting Room Floor

Back in late July, Blastr ran my interview with Attack the Block‘s writer/director Joe Cornish and star John Boyega. As is common with interviews, roughly half of what was said ended up on the cutting room floor. Since I’m a huge fan of the film and several interesting bits didn’t make the final interview, I deliever the remainder for your edification.

RK: Why the night shoot?

JC: I realized that a lot of my favorite films are all at night or in the dark: The Warriors, Evil Dead, Blade Runner, and Alien. It occurred to me that they’re all strong looking films because you can never just what for the sun to come out and put a balance board down and shoot. You have to light and think about lighting in every single shot. It forces you to design everything and it forces you to think about lighting and atmospherics. Plus I personally just like almost real time, contained narratives like The Warriors, Assault on Precinct 13, and Evil Dead. They take place over one night. It’s more claustrophobic and moment-to-moment action so you never have moments when characters tell you what happened yesterday or what’s gonna happen today or about something that happened in their childhood that you know is going to be repeated at the end of the day.

Since this was your first film, major or minor, where did you lack confidence?

JB: Thinking back it just felt like “Oh, I really wanted to learn.” I’m not sure about the lacking confidence. We were a young cast and we all had that vibrant energy. We were very enthusiastic to do it. Everybody had big talking. The production team really showed—I don’t know if they were putting it on—us that they knew what they were doing and we totally trusted them.[Executive producer] Jenny [Borgars] was so passionate about what the story was about and how we were gonna to do it. We felt cool let’s do it. I’m a teenager so I’m naive. Whatever, let’s do it. Have some fun.

JC: It was nothing but nerves and fear. I was experienced in TV but I always wanted to make a film. I’d been waiting 20-25 years to do this. So yeah, I had a huge amount of trepidation, ambition, and expectation. But it was fun. And working with these guys ’cause they were knew as well, it was an adventure for all of us. Plus it was just fun. It was aliens and chases, so it was nothing too heavy. It was kinda like play. Though if both us knew that movie would come to the States, get distributed in the States, and we’d be sitting here talking to you. If we had know that then, we’d probably would have been a whole lot more self conscious. We were in our own little bubble. We thought we going ot be premiered in a supermarket on one of those little TV screens above the dishwasher aisle.

What confidence during the casting stage?

JB: I’ve been working as an actor before Attack the Block as a stage actor. [Lack of confidence centered mostly around the first audition when I saw people] that looked like me [but] more better, more muscular. Sitting there with cups of water [gargling sounds]. Blah.. blah.. blah.. doing their vocal exercises and I’m just there with my Marvel t-shirt. But when you went in there, the environment was cool and the [garbled] was very supportive. I had a great time and just went for it.

Have either one of you lived in the blocks?

JB: I live in the blocks now. Joe lives like 15 minutes away from me.

JC: We filmed [in the blocks]. We call them estates in the UK, housing estates. Here you call it public housing or projects. It’s much more mixed in the UK. Because London was heavily bombed after the Second World War, the places where it was bombed were replaced by these big public housing projects. The interesting thing about London is that it’s very mixed. You’ll get a millionaire living next to someone on housing support. They’ll shop in the same shops and walk the same streets. That’s what Attack the Block is about. Now that there is a recession and jobs are harder to find, you get even more of a kind of mix. That’s the inspiration. In this block, there all these different types of people, all these backgrounds, all these socio-economic positions. They are separated by these kind of fake barriers. I was interested in using an alien invasion to bring those different characters together to point their commonalities between people rather than the differences.

JB: I watched The Wire (Season 4) as research for Moses. It’s amazing how much it’s similar. Not in terms of the area but in terms in the kind of attitude, the way they see the world. The way Moses is closed of to everyone else and believes everyone’s against him. That kind of thing. It is very similar so I sometimes find it surprising when people say “Aren’t they so different?” The thing is that they aren’t really that different. It’s crazy how much the characters in Attack the Block shared that same kind of energy with The Wire. But it’s just that we have aliens.

Is there a Hollywood remake in the works?

JC: [No serious discussions] I wouldn’t mind that. I’d kind of dig it. One thing I can never do is watch Attack the Block like a movie ’cause I made it. There would be something kind of exciting. I’d like to see someone else’s take on the story. I wish they would. Hurry up and pay me.

The interview actually started with this exchange after the duo commented on someone’s t-shirt.

Are there Attack the Block t-shirts?

JC: I still haven’t seen an ‘Attack the Block’ t-shirt.

JC & JB (together): It’s gotta happen.

What about action figures?

JC: Don’t talk about action figures.

JB (excited): I’m really up for that.

JC: [The aliens] would make some really cool plush toys. We really wanted that.

Attack the Block: From The Cutting Room Floor was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Attack the Block: From The Cutting Room Floor

Back in late July, Blastr ran my interview with Attack the Block‘s writer/director Joe Cornish and star John Boyega. As is common with interviews, roughly half of what was said ended up on the cutting room floor. Since I’m a huge fan of the film and several interesting bits didn’t make the final interview, I deliever the remainder for your edification.

RK: Why the night shoot?

JC: I realized that a lot of my favorite films are all at night or in the dark: The Warriors, Evil Dead, Blade Runner, and Alien. It occurred to me that they’re all strong looking films because you can never just what for the sun to come out and put a balance board down and shoot. You have to light and think about lighting in every single shot. It forces you to design everything and it forces you to think about lighting and atmospherics. Plus I personally just like almost real time, contained narratives like The Warriors, Assault on Precinct 13, and Evil Dead. They take place over one night. It’s more claustrophobic and moment-to-moment action so you never have moments when characters tell you what happened yesterday or what’s gonna happen today or about something that happened in their childhood that you know is going to be repeated at the end of the day.

Since this was your first film, major or minor, where did you lack confidence?

JB: Thinking back it just felt like "Oh, I really wanted to learn." I’m not sure about the lacking confidence. We were a young cast and we all had that vibrant energy. We were very enthusiastic to do it. Everybody had big talking. The production team really showed—I don’t know if they were putting it on—us that they knew what they were doing and we totally trusted them.[Executive producer] Jenny [Borgars] was so passionate about what the story was about and how we were gonna to do it. We felt cool let’s do it. I’m a teenager so I’m naive. Whatever, let’s do it. Have some fun.

JC: It was nothing but nerves and fear. I was experienced in TV but I always wanted to make a film. I’d been waiting 20-25 years to do this. So yeah, I had a huge amount of trepidation, ambition, and expectation. But it was fun. And working with these guys ’cause they were knew as well, it was an adventure for all of us. Plus it was just fun. It was aliens and chases, so it was nothing too heavy. It was kinda like play. Though if both us knew that movie would come to the States, get distributed in the States, and we’d be sitting here talking to you. If we had know that then, we’d probably would have been a whole lot more self conscious. We were in our own little bubble. We thought we going ot be premiered in a supermarket on one of those little TV screens above the dishwasher aisle.

What confidence during the casting stage?

JB: I’ve been working as an actor before Attack the Block as a stage actor. [Lack of confidence centered mostly around the first audition when I saw people] that looked like me [but] more better, more muscular. Sitting there with cups of water [gargling sounds]. Blah.. blah.. blah.. doing their vocal exercises and I’m just there with my Marvel t-shirt. But when you went in there, the environment was cool and the [garbled] was very supportive. I had a great time and just went for it.

Have either one of you lived in the blocks?

JB: I live in the blocks now. Joe lives like 15 minutes away from me.

JC: We filmed [in the blocks]. We call them estates in the UK, housing estates. Here you call it public housing or projects. It’s much more mixed in the UK. Because London was heavily bombed after the Second World War, the places where it was bombed were replaced by these big public housing projects. The interesting thing about London is that it’s very mixed. You’ll get a millionaire living next to someone on housing support. They’ll shop in the same shops and walk the same streets. That’s what Attack the Block is about. Now that there is a recession and jobs are harder to find, you get even more of a kind of mix. That’s the inspiration. In this block, there all these different types of people, all these backgrounds, all these socio-economic positions. They are separated by these kind of fake barriers. I was interested in using an alien invasion to bring those different characters together to point their commonalities between people rather than the differences.

JB: I watched The Wire (Season 4) as research for Moses. It’s amazing how much it’s similar. Not in terms of the area but in terms in the kind of attitude, the way they see the world. The way Moses is closed of to everyone else and believes everyone’s against him. That kind of thing. It is very similar so I sometimes find it surprising when people say “Aren’t they so different?” The thing is that they aren’t really that different. It’s crazy how much the characters in Attack the Block shared that same kind of energy with The Wire. But it’s just that we have aliens.

Is there a Hollywood remake in the works?

JC: [No serious discussions] I wouldn’t mind that. I’d kind of dig it. One thing I can never do is watch Attack the Block like a movie ’cause I made it. There would be something kind of exciting. I’d like to see someone else’s take on the story. I wish they would. Hurry up and pay me.

The interview actually started with this exchange after the duo commented on someone’s t-shirt.

Are there Attack the Block t-shirts?

JC: I still haven’t seen an ‘Attack the Block’ t-shirt.

JC & JB (together): It’s gotta happen.

What about action figures?

JC: Don’t talk about action figures.

JB (excited): I’m really up for that.

JC: [The aliens] would make some really cool plush toys. We really wanted that.

Books received 8/30/11

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Petrograd
Written by Philip Gelatt
Art by Tyler Crook

Promo copy:

Introducing the untold tale of the international conspiracy behind the murder of Gregorii Rasputin! Set during the height of the first World War, the tale follows a reluctant British spy stationed in the heart of the Russian empire as he is handed the most difficult assignment of his career: orchestrate the death of the mad monk, the Tsarina’s most trusted adviser and the surrogate ruler of the nation. The mission will take our hero from the slums of the working class into the opulent houses of the super rich… he’ll have to negotiate dangerous ties with the secret police, navigate the halls of power, and come to terms with own revolutionary leanings, all while simply trying to survive! Based on historical documents and research, Petrograd is a tense, edge-of-your seat spy thriller, taking the reader on a journey through the background of one of history’s most infamous assassinations, set against the backdrop of one of the most tumultuous moments in 20th century history.

Beautiful book on a fascinating subject. More on this later.

The Third Section
by Jasper Kent
Cover by Paul Young

Promo copy:

The third novel in Jasper Kent’s enthralling, chilling and acclaimed historical vampire sequence — The Danilov Quintet.

Russia 1855. After forty years of peace in Europe, war rages. In the Crimea, the city of Sevastopol is besieged. In the north, Saint Petersburg is blockaded. But in Moscow there is one who needs only to sit and wait — wait for the death of an aging tsar, and for the curse upon his blood to be passed to a new generation.

As their country grows weaker, a brother and sister — each unaware of the other’s existence — must come to terms with the legacy left them by their father. In Moscow, Tamara Valentinovna Lavrova uncovers a brutal murder and discovers that it is not the first in a sequence of similar crimes, merely the latest, carried out by a killer who has stalked the city since 1812.

And in Sevastopol, Dmitry Alekseevich Danilov faces not only the guns of the combined armies of Britain and France, but must also make a stand against creatures that his father had thought buried beneath the earth, thirty years before.

I thoroughly enjoyed the creative first installment Twelve and the second volume Thirteen Years Later currently sits on my must-read pile.

C
by Tom McCarthy

Promo copy:

Opening in England at the turn of the twentieth century, C is the story of Serge Carrefax, whose father experiments with wireless communication while running a school for deaf children. Serge grows up amid the noise and silence with his brilliant but troubled older sister, Sophie: an intense sibling relationship that haunts him as he heads off into an equally troubled larger world. As Serge goes from a Bohemian spa to the skies of World War I, and from a German prison camp into the tombs of Egypt, we follow his life through the tumultuous course of the nascent modern era. Tom McCarthy—acclaimed author of Remainder—has created a truly singular character, and a world that sparkles with historical breadth and postmodern originality.

Ravensoul (Legends of the Raven, Book 4)
by James Barclay
Cover by Raymond Swanland

Promo copy:

What would you do if a stranger came to your door claiming to be your best friend. A best friend who you saw die ten years before? The Unknown Warrior has spent the last ten years mourning the dead of the legendary mecernary band The Raven. Reluctant ruler of Balaia he has also resided over the gradual recovery of the land after the devastation of the Demonstorm. The one other surviving member of The Raven, Denser has spent the years rebuilding Xetesk to be the dominant college of magic. But something is very wrong. There are rumours of the dead coming back to life. And the Elves are fleeing their homeland. Something unutterably awful is happening. Something that has spread across all the dimensions. Something that threatens the very essence of the world, that has terrified the spirits of the dead. Brought them back to Balaia. And amongst them The Raven. Desperate, facing a fight that cannot be won.

Half Empty
by David Rakoff
Cover by Mark Matcho

Promo copy:

In this deeply smart and sneakily poignant collection of essays, the bestselling author of Fraud and Don’t Get Too Comfortable makes an inspired case for always assuming the worst—because then you’ll never be disappointed. Whether he’s taking on pop culture phenomena with Oscar Wilde-worthy wit or dealing with personal tragedy, Rakoff’s sharp observations and humorist’s flair for the absurd will have you positively reveling in the untapped power of negativity.

Books received 8/30/11

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Petrograd
Written by Philip Gelatt
Art by Tyler Crook

Promo copy:

Introducing the untold tale of the international conspiracy behind the murder of Gregorii Rasputin! Set during the height of the first World War, the tale follows a reluctant British spy stationed in the heart of the Russian empire as he is handed the most difficult assignment of his career: orchestrate the death of the mad monk, the Tsarina’s most trusted adviser and the surrogate ruler of the nation. The mission will take our hero from the slums of the working class into the opulent houses of the super rich… he’ll have to negotiate dangerous ties with the secret police, navigate the halls of power, and come to terms with own revolutionary leanings, all while simply trying to survive! Based on historical documents and research, Petrograd is a tense, edge-of-your seat spy thriller, taking the reader on a journey through the background of one of history’s most infamous assassinations, set against the backdrop of one of the most tumultuous moments in 20th century history.

Beautiful book on a fascinating subject. More on this later.

The Third Section
by Jasper Kent
Cover by Paul Young

Promo copy:

The third novel in Jasper Kent’s enthralling, chilling and acclaimed historical vampire sequence — The Danilov Quintet.

Russia 1855. After forty years of peace in Europe, war rages. In the Crimea, the city of Sevastopol is besieged. In the north, Saint Petersburg is blockaded. But in Moscow there is one who needs only to sit and wait — wait for the death of an aging tsar, and for the curse upon his blood to be passed to a new generation.

As their country grows weaker, a brother and sister — each unaware of the other’s existence — must come to terms with the legacy left them by their father. In Moscow, Tamara Valentinovna Lavrova uncovers a brutal murder and discovers that it is not the first in a sequence of similar crimes, merely the latest, carried out by a killer who has stalked the city since 1812.

And in Sevastopol, Dmitry Alekseevich Danilov faces not only the guns of the combined armies of Britain and France, but must also make a stand against creatures that his father had thought buried beneath the earth, thirty years before.

I thoroughly enjoyed the creative first installment Twelve and the second volume Thirteen Years Later currently sits on my must-read pile.

C
by Tom McCarthy

Promo copy:

Opening in England at the turn of the twentieth century, C is the story of Serge Carrefax, whose father experiments with wireless communication while running a school for deaf children. Serge grows up amid the noise and silence with his brilliant but troubled older sister, Sophie: an intense sibling relationship that haunts him as he heads off into an equally troubled larger world. As Serge goes from a Bohemian spa to the skies of World War I, and from a German prison camp into the tombs of Egypt, we follow his life through the tumultuous course of the nascent modern era. Tom McCarthy—acclaimed author of Remainder—has created a truly singular character, and a world that sparkles with historical breadth and postmodern originality.

Ravensoul (Legends of the Raven, Book 4)
by James Barclay
Cover by Raymond Swanland

Promo copy:

What would you do if a stranger came to your door claiming to be your best friend. A best friend who you saw die ten years before? The Unknown Warrior has spent the last ten years mourning the dead of the legendary mecernary band The Raven. Reluctant ruler of Balaia he has also resided over the gradual recovery of the land after the devastation of the Demonstorm. The one other surviving member of The Raven, Denser has spent the years rebuilding Xetesk to be the dominant college of magic. But something is very wrong. There are rumours of the dead coming back to life. And the Elves are fleeing their homeland. Something unutterably awful is happening. Something that has spread across all the dimensions. Something that threatens the very essence of the world, that has terrified the spirits of the dead. Brought them back to Balaia. And amongst them The Raven. Desperate, facing a fight that cannot be won.

Half Empty
by David Rakoff
Cover by Mark Matcho

Promo copy:

In this deeply smart and sneakily poignant collection of essays, the bestselling author of Fraud and Don’t Get Too Comfortable makes an inspired case for always assuming the worst—because then you’ll never be disappointed. Whether he’s taking on pop culture phenomena with Oscar Wilde-worthy wit or dealing with personal tragedy, Rakoff’s sharp observations and humorist’s flair for the absurd will have you positively reveling in the untapped power of negativity.

Books received 8/30/11 was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon

Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch – Sept edition

Weird month. While the months are usually frontloaded, September takes it to the extreme with 40 new titles on the first and only 4 more for the remainder of the month.

Nice though slim selection this month with the return of most of the James Bond and Dirty Harry catalogs plus the Netflix premieres of Airplane and The Cleveland Show. Yeah the latter is crap, but someone out there will care.

* denotes streaming for the first time via Netflix
* denotes streamng in HD
* denotes close captioning available

Premiering September 1:
*Airplane!
American Psycho
*Beauty and the Beast (1987)
The Blair Witch Project
The Butterfly Effect
*The Cat O’Nine Tails
Conan the Barbarian (1982)
*Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles
Dark Mirror (2007)
Dazed and Confused
*The Dead Pool
*Death Valley (2004)
*Deep Blue Sea (1999)
*Diamonds Are Forever
*Dirty Harry
Earthquake (1974)
**The Enforcer (1976)
*For Your Eyes Only
*Forget Me Not (2009)
The Last of the Mohicans (1992)
Leviathan (1989)
*Licence to Kill (1989)
*Live and Let Die
*The Living Daylights
Lone Wolf McQuade
The Long Goodbye (1973)
*The Man with the Golden Gun

*Moonraker
*Never Say Never Again
*Nicotina
*Octopussy
*On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
Quigley Down Under
Shallow Ground
*The Speed of Thought
*The Spy Who Loved Me
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
*Thunderball
*A View to a Kill
*What Women Want
*You Only Live Twice

Premiering September 2:
*Buried (2010)

Premiering September 8:
Middle Men My review

Premiering September 9:
*Saw: The Final Chapter

Premiering September 27:
*The Cleveland Show Seasons 1-2

Info courtesy of

Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch – Sept edition was originally published on The Geek Curmudgeon