Monthly Archives: February 2013

INTERVIEW: “ALIEN DAWN” Creator, Larry Schwarz

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“Alien Dawn” is the hot new sci-fi thriller on Nicktoons. Here is an interview with the show’s creator, Larry Schwarz. We talk about how the show originated and a whole lot more including the secret life of teens, asteroids, the hero’s journey, and the wonderful world of New York City. “Alien Dawn” takes you on a roller coaster ride as 16-year-old Cameron Turner quite literally finds the fate of the world on his shoulders. His dad has gone missing and he knows he didn’t just run out on his family. This is the thing, Cameron’s dad, Brad, is an astronaut hero who knows too much. He’s done his best to encrypt secret messages to his son in the graphic novels he created. With the help of his friends, Cameron might just be able to find his dad unless he digs too deep and is never heard from again himself.

Here is our podcast interview:

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“Alien Dawn” awaits you. Tune in to Nicktoons on Fridays, 10 pm EST/ 7 pm PST, and you can get more info at Nicktoons here.

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WATCH: ALIEN DAWN on Nicktoons, Fridays, 10 PM EST/ 7 PM PST

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Comics Grinder recommends a new show on Nicktoons that has it all: skateboarding teens in NYC who share one big problem that will require a huge leap of faith. You see, one of them is missing their dad. The only way they’re going to find him is to carefully study for clues through the pages of the comic book series he created. And this involves extraterrestrials in a very big way.

Yeah buddy, somebody’s dad is missing. You don’t think these guys are going to do whatever it takes to find him? Of course, they are. Even if their lives turn into something from “The X-Files.”

Press release follows:

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THE ANSWER! #2 Review

The Answer Dark Horse Comics 2013

“The Answer!” is something totally new and deserves a shout out. At first glance, you might think this is a reworking of an older title, which is fine, but this comic is brand spanking original with a lot of surprises to it. Enter Devin, a young woman who lives life to the beat of a different drummer. She’s smart, sexy, and, at 30, the greatest librarain you will ever know. She also happens to love puzzles.

Devin unlocks a mysterious puzzle and finds a fortune cookie type message inside: “enter the aperion dot net.” Huh? What does that mean? “Apeiron?” If you click on the link here that will take you somewhere, to more info about the comic. That link takes Devin to the ultimate game site for mental challenges. She crunches through the whole thing in about fifteen minutes and winds up with the highest score ever. That would be great except for the fact that her big win triggers an avalanche of mayhem. She’s got armed thugs after her and a strange superhero type with an exclamation point on his face. Who is who and what is what?

Mike Norton and Dennis Hopeless have created something with a lot of heart. We relate to Devin right away. It’s not easy to develop but they have succeeded in giving us a girl with that extra something special. Devin is a geek goddess and so much more. Mike Norton handles the art. He has a way of breathing life into relevant and likable characters. Devin comes across as very self-assured and authentic. Dennis Hopeless handles the writing. He gives Devin realistic, hip dialogue that we can hook into. In an early scene from the first issue, Devin explains how she can figure out most people in about twenty minutes and that doesn’t mean she wins anything, especially on a blind date. In that case, she ends up doing all the talking until the guy either decides to try to bed her or take her home.

The Answer Issue 1

What is very endearing about this comic is how we can easily become invested in the two main characters. Well, it’s mainly Devin since we can actually see her and we get to hear from her a good bit. Not so much with The Answer but, what we do see and hear from him, leaves us sympathetic. Mainly, no matter what chaotic mess they’ve gotten themselves into, we’re hooked and we want to see more. And there is definitley a plot to follow, complete with a mysterious secret society known as “The Brain Trust,” but that could end up being one big beautiful MacGuffin. You’ll find them in some of the best fiction, movies, and comics. If you’re new to the term, well, it’s definitely worthy of further consideration. It is best known and most associated with the films of Alfred Hitchcock. As the great master put it, a MacGuffin is often found in a thriller and “it’s the thing everyone is after.” You can view him discuss what a MacGuffin is with Dick Cavett here.

As you’ll see from the title they gave that Hitchcock segment, “Alfred Hitchcock was confused by a laxative commercial,” you’d never find it if you were looking for it. Hmm, that’s sort of the case with hunting for MacGuffins. Well, we’ll have to come back to this subject and explore it further. For now, just know they are a lot of fun and, if “The Answer!” is using one, you’re in good hands.

Two issues in and “The Answer!” is the answer to the next thrilling comic you’ve been looking for. “The Answer! #2” releases February 27.

Visit our friends at Dark Horse Comics and check out more about “The Answer!” over here.

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RUBBERNECK Movie Review

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“Rubberneck” is a very smart thriller. It will surprise fans of Alex Karpovsky (HBO’s “Girls) who have only known his comedic work. This is darker than you might expect too. Except for a few brief moments to indicate that his character, Paul Harris, has a sense of humor, we find here a slow-burn character study of a very troubled person. Everyone is hip to the obvious funny man going dark ploy which is not a problem here. You certainly don’t get that scary clown creepiness. This is a thoughtful low-key kind of scary.

Good mental health involves accepting yourself and the world around you. For Paul Harris, that proves impossible. The disconnect is so severe that it is only a matter of time before something goes horribly wrong. The script, co-written by Alex Karpovsky and Garth Donovan, brings this out with just the right amount of understatement. Paul Harris does not become the Other to the audience. He doesn’t lose his humanity, utterly and completely, even though he ultimately crosses a line. You can view Paul Harris as something close to the character, Alex Forrest, played by Glenn Close, in Adrian Lyne’s “Fatal Attraction” (1987). But it adds up very differently. More like the enigmatic work of Michael Haneke.

We begin with a holiday office party. Paul chats up a new co-worker, Danielle, played by Jaime Ray Newman. They joke around about the other scientists at the lab and end up in bed. When Paul tries to date Danielle, he is rebuffed. Months pass and he can’t let that go. He cherishes the occaisonal crumbs of office banter he gets to share with her. All that changes when Danielle strikes up a friendship with another co-worker, Chris, played by Dennis Staroselsky.

There are very few connections for poor Paul to rely on. He has his sister, played by Amanda Good Hennessey. And, in an interesting twist, a sex worker, played by Dakota Shepard. Both women show him as much kindness and understanding as they can. But Paul’s inner turmoil goes much deeper than his fragile support system can handle.

Many key scenes are filmed in an actual sceintific laboratory which provides that extra layer of atmospheric realism to the film’s raw and voyeuristic aesthetic. Once we settle into the premise of Paul knowing far more than he should know and not emotinally equipped to handle it, every test tube, Bunsen burner and lab coat will potentially scare you. The melancholic and eerie score by James Lavino, used sparingly and to great effect, rounds out the dramatic tension.

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This is a thinking person’s thriller with no easy answers. Paul is not an easy Other to dismiss. He is too much a product of what we all consume and, in his case, that proves too much to bear.

“Rubberneck” is the offbeat thriller you’ve been looking for. It is available on VOD starting February 19. It is in select theatrical release as of February 22: New York: February 22 at Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center; Boston: March 1 at Brattle Theater.

Visit the official “Rubberneck” site here.

Watch a clip from “Rubberneck courtesy of Tribeca Film here.

Follow “Rubberneck” on Twitter and Facebook.

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RED FLAG Movie Review

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“Red Flag” is a significant film for its writer/director, Alex Karpovsky (HBO’s “Girls”). It shows us a talent with a personality we gravitate to. It’s not his “Annie Hall” but it’s a step in the right direction. There’s a scene with him concluding that all his problems stem from his fear of death which his a nice tip of the hat to the master. Karpovsky might not be begging for comparisons to Woody Allen but they are there and he seems to be up to the challenge. He gives us an honest take on being a self-absorbed rising comic/filmmaker with no time for anyone else but himself.

We begin with a break-up scene. Karpovsky’s exit is fairly cut and dry. He is literally rushing out the door of the house he shared demonstrating all the emotion one would have at being late for work. He’s supposed to take the dog with him but, in his haste, he can’t motivate the dog to join him so he promises to come back for him later. His lover, Rachel (Caroline White), can only stare out into the distance and fight back her tears.

Karpovsky’s alter-ego, Alex, knows how to keep a chilly distance. But, even for his character, that drive away finally gets to him and he cries. That is what Karpovsky does very well. He gives us a guy who knows how to keep his cool a little too well but, when emotions rise to the surface, can be as vulnerable as a little lamb.

Every true artist desires most to follow through, to evolve, to fulfill their destiny. In the course of this film, Alex claims he has gone from seeing just a few little stars in the sky to seeing whole constellations. He gets it. He knows what he wants. Or is he just saying that to get back into the good graces of his beautiful and charming girlfriend that he mistreated? Could it be that he was a jerk afraid of commitment and now he’ll say anything? This is more borrowing from the master, the character dealing with his idea that marriage equals death.

In order to cope with his break-up, Alex decides he should throw himself into his work. In his case, that just means not reneging on his two week tour to promote his independent film. It will take him through the South which might help jolt his East Coast perspective. But even this minor tour seems too much for him as he does his best to enlist anyone to join him. His frantic search for any form of companionship leads him to someone at the bottom of his list. Henry (Onur Tukel) is likable enough but seems to be a complete mess. When Alex greets him at the airport, his first reaction is to take him to the men’s room and shear off the long hairstyle he was experimenting with.

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He listens to his half-baked concept for a children’s book and it’s enough to keep him amused. What we see of the film Alex is promoting is enough to keep us amused. Both stories within the bigger story help the characters in unexpected ways. This comes in handy once a third member is added to this madcap road trip. River (Jennifer Prediger) is delightful as the lonely groupie in search of love. And to put things over the top in complication, we have not heard the last from Rachel, the woman that Alex recently broke up with.

What will definitely add to the interest in this film is the fact that Karpovsky was actually committed to do a tour in the South to promote his film, “Woodpecker.” He didn’t like the prospect of being alone on the road, especially after his real life break-up, so he managed to turn what would have been a very depressing experience for him into this film. You would never have known there was a real “Woodpecker” tour simply from viewing this film as everything is very seamlessly put together to the credit of everyone involved.

Those little stars that Alex claims turn into whole constellations for him represent more than just figuring out a relationship. With any luck, Alex could figure it all out.

“Red Flag” is a laugh-out-loud road trip comedy worthy of your consideration. It becomes available on VOD starting Februrary 19 and goes into select theatrical release on February 22. You can also refer back to this previous post.

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LOGAN’S RUN Book Review: A Lost Science Fiction Classic

Logans Run original novel

“Logan’s Run,” the original 1967 novel, written by William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson, from which the 1976 major motion picture is loosely based upon, is a lost gem in science fiction. It’s been out of print since 1976 and deserves a return to the spotlight and easy accessibility. You have to seek out a used copy and those are all collectibles with prices to match. Wouldn’t it seem rather fitting to have this as an e-book too? It is an odd, poetic, and unique work.

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“Logan’s Run,” the original novel, was featured in a promotional item from Crown Publishers in 2012. The promotion was a poster entitled, “The Dystopian Universe,” that featured “a collection of the most memorable apocalyptic futures and digital wastelands ever put to print. Each represents a uniquely disastrous vision of a society fantastic and familiar enough to keep you exploring every corner of this literary galaxy for years to come.” This promotion included a new tilte, “Ready Player One,” among a pantheon of classics old and new: “The Hunger Games,” “Blade Runner,” “Logan’s Run,” “The Stand,” “Neuromancer,” “World War Z,” “The Giver,” “I am Legend,” and “Snow Crash.” There must be something to the original “Logan’s Run.”

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“Logan’s Run” is included in this promotion, as well it should, and yet “Logan’s Run” has been out of print for almost 40 years and not easily accessible. There is an appealing shaggy dog quality to this adventure story akin to a pulp detective novel that rewards thoughtful reading. Hollywood had to step in and chop the plot up to bits to fit into a vehicle for Micahel York, who plays Logan, and Jenny Agutter, who plays Jessica. The movie is famously known for being primarily filmed inside a Dallas shopping mall. The novel, on the other hand, is very wide in scope. People can shuttle all over the globe. It doesn’t take much consideration to sit in a tram and be bolted thousands of miles at one go. Now, compare the excitement of a shopping mall to crisscrossing the globe, and you can see how other aspects of the movie fall short of the original novel.

The movie version, as limited as it was, lost much, if not all, ground once “Star Wars” hit theaters the very next year, in 1977. If it had stayed true to the novel, it would have had much more to show for itself. Instead, key elements were streamlined and glossed over. In the movie, there is a controlled society where every citizen must die at age 30. In the book, the age limit is 21 which gives the story an intriguing edge. You have a society run by people who are just beginning to know themselves. The powers that be have set up a society of voluntary euthanasia at age 21 since it was a youth revolt that took over the world. Growing older is what led to the corruption in the first place so no more old age. Wisdom has been forgotten. Only the vitality of youth can be trusted.

Youth have destroyed the elders. Machines think for humans. The whole natural order of things has been disrupted to its very core. The government’s hub of activity is housed in a supercomputer, humanity’s brain. It resides within Crazy Horse Mountain. And things are so screwed up that the brain thinks it’s Crazy Horse. An important part of keeping the order belongs to the government agents, the “Sandmen,” who are entrusted with capturing any citizens who rebel against dying at 21 and try to run for it. But the system is threatened when one of the agents, Logan, begins to think for himself and, along with a runner, Jessica, seeks out the legendary Sanctuary, a rebel alliance led by a man who has lived beyond his legal age, Ballard.

This is another example of how the movie diverges from the book. In the novel, Ballard has figured out a way to turn off his palm flower. It never went black to alert authorities that he’d reached his expiration date. Ballard is a heroic rebel that has grown into a legend, and is a real threat to the government. The movie gives us Peter Ustinov as Ballard. It is a wonderful performance but this Ballard is senile and as menacing as a pussycat.

Logans Run artwork

The book also provides us with a number of interludes not found in the movie that lift the narrative with greater energy, nuance, and irony. What William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson do is revel in the power of youth. They show us its unbounded energy and raw power. They make a case for its right to be taken seriously while also depicting its intoxicating allure. But, as is the case in any dystopian novel, you can always end up with too much of a good thing.

And there is simply more action in the book, intricate detailed action. There’s a whole scene where Logan and Jess attempt to allude their captors by blending in with an American Civil War re-enactment run by robots. It’s hilarious on one level and wonderful commentary. The book also makes much use of “devilsticks.” They are only hinted at in the movie as a band of rebels hold them like staffs. In the original novel, they are both weapon and transportation, like a witch’s broom. Imagine the visuals. It’s not like the movie had a meager budget. They could have had devilsticks do more than just stand there if they had wanted to.

I keep saying “original novel” because it’s such an important distinction. There have been countless “Logan’s Run” spin-offs. There was a TV show. And more comic books than you can imagine with more on the way. All of them have spawned from the movie as if it guaranteed success. This has left the original novel in something of a pristine state.

Let’s consider a passage from the book and you’ll get a sense of its urgency and sutblety. Here’s a depiction of one of the harsh terrains that Logan and Jessica encounter:

The firey wheel of the moon sun blistered its slow way across the Dakota sky, crowding the thin air with waves of shimmering heat. Deadwood was dust and ghost town stillness. The squat, wind-worked buildings along the main street had long since been scoured of paint, and their weathered boards reared up crookedly from the red earth.

“Logan’s Run” is an adventure story, a fable, and social commentary. The characters are bit players in a cosmic tale. Nolan and Johnson don’t concern themselves so much with fleshing out these characters and that is purposefully done. You know only what you need to know. They speak in a rather clipped fashion but not in an amateurish stilted manner. And they are thrown into numerous situations but they’re not an awkward jumble. It’s more like a grand opera or monumental painting. It’s good to keep in mind that Nolan and Johnson have been around the block a few times. These men are part of science fiction legend dating back to the Southern California Writer’s Group. They go back to a tradition of working together on projects, projects that included, among other things, scripts for “The Twilight Zone.”

Seek out “Logan’s Run.” Maybe you’ll find an old beat up copy in a used bookstore or on eBay. Ask, even demand, that it be reprinted and made available for e-books. And discover its unique quality. The movie missed the boat on this one. But it’s not too late to read the book. Any way you look at it, we are well overdue for a new edition.

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Filed under Book Reviews, Books, George Clayton Johnson, science fiction, William F. Nolan

Interview: Steve Kriozere and FEMME FATALES

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"Bad Medicine" episode: Director Darin Scott, Actress Christine Donlon, Writer Steve Kriozere

“Bad Medicine” episode: Director Darin Scott, Actress Christine Donlon, Writer Steve Kriozere

Steve Kriozere is a writer/producer with an impressive resume that includes work on “NCIS,” “Castle,” and “Femme Fatales.” If you have not gotten a chance to try out “Femme Fatales,” it is a show worthy of your consideration. You can leave any preconceived notions at the door, and start out with “Femme Fatales: The Complete First Season,” which is now available and you can purchase here. You can read a recent review of the show here.

The following is an interview with Steve Kriozere where we discuss what “Femme Fatales” is all about from various points of view. We also talk about “Elvis Van Helsing,” (review here) an offbeat horror graphic novel that Steve co-wrote with Mark A. Altman, who is also a writer/producer involved with, among other projects, “Castle” and the co-creator, with Steve, on “Femme Fatales.” We wrap up with a discussion on the writing process and what lies ahead for “Femme Fatales.”

We begin by discussing the tricky position that this show finds itself in. It’s a show on Cinemax. That carries a unique set of issues. For instance, the concept of “less is more” can be a hard one for the network to grasp. The creators and writers on the show must find ways to deliver the goods, the sexual content, in new and creative ways while also building up a show. Here’s the thing, this is, at its heart, a clever show. There are so many things going right with this show, from its charismatic host, Tanit Phoenix, to its exploration of genres and, well, embrace of geekdom. The show, at the end of the day, retains its potential which, by all rights, should remain forever elusive.

The full interview with Steve Kriozere follows and includes the podcast at the end.

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DOUBLE INDEMNITY Movie Review

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Barbara Stanwyck and the Billy Wilder 1944 classic, “Double Indemnity,” are forever linked. Barbara Stanwyck is the ultra-sexy little spitfire that gives this noir masterpiece its heat. Talk about femme fatales. Stanwyck was the queen of them all. Fred McMurray seems to be the only man who can handle her..or can he? This movie is the beginning of noir where doomed characters get on a track that stays “straight on the line” all the way to “the last stop, the cemetery.”

Ernest Hemingway. Dashiell Hammet. Raymond Chandler. James M. Cain. These writers ushered in what was to become noir. Hemingway with his austere style. Hammet with his gentleman’s elegance. Chandler with his refined style. Cain with his grit. Billy Wilder, the young brash director, took the Cain novel and, with Raymond Chandler, brought to life a whole new tradition in film of the hard-boiled plot, viewed in low light and shadows, with characters of questionable morals. No judgement was made on how these characters chose to live. But, as luck would have it, there was a price to pay for such sinful behavior. If nothing else, the Hays Code, the Hollywood morality police of the time, would see to that. Some even think that the morality restraints helped, in their own clumsy way, to make art. It seems to have worked out that way for this film.

The noir world is both strange and familiar. It is not supposed to mirror the good citizen and yet it reveals his or her darker side. Back when “Double Indemnity” was still struggling to be cast, few in Hollywood wished to be associated with such characters. Fred MacMurray was reluctant even though it led to his greatest performance. Even the more daring Barbara Stanwyck was unsure about it. Now, it is hard to imagine the movie without her. She exudes a strange sexuality in this film that ranks up there with other great dark sirens, like Marlene Dietrich, Joan Crawford, or Bette Davis.

The chemistry between MacMurray and Stanwyck is rather surreal. They never seem like a good match. It’s not that you couldn’t imagine them in bed together. The film convinces you of that. But, even for 1944, you can sense how wrong it is for those two to have ever gotten involved, aside from the fact Stanwyck’s character, Phyllis, is already married and she and MacMurray’s character, Walter, are plotting to kill her husband. It feels more tawdry than in a Hitchcock film. And maybe more real, more intense. That’s certainly what Billy Wilder hoped to acheive in order to put his rival, Hitchcock, in his place.

Rounding out the picture is a dazzling performance by Edward G. Robinson, as Barton Keyes, who it is believed was a character patterned after Billy Wilder himself. He’s a fast talking little guy who always gets his way. Wilder did a similar thing when he cast Jimmy Cagney in 1961’s “One, Two, Three.” Keyes is an insurance man through and through and has taken Walter under his wing for many years, too many years. Walter is good at selling insurance but is basically drifting through life. In the best twist of all, it is the love between Keyes, the mentor, and Walter, his reluctant pupil, that is the only true sign of humanity to be found in this film

Delicious strangeness. That’s what noir is about. Unlikable characters behaving badly, very badly, that we root for in the end. And why? That’s the strangest thing of all: because they are us.

Be sure to check out Fred McMurray in another role where he gets to play a baddie that rivals his role in this film. That would be another Billy Wilder classic, 1960’s “The Apartment.” As Jeff D. Sheldrake, MacMurray appears to have lost all his morals and placed the burden upon the weak shoulders of Jack Lemmon.

And you may have heard that Raymond Chandler and Billy Wilder did not get along at all during their time together as co-writers to the script for “Double Indemnity.” But you’ll be happy to know that, while Billy Wilder got his revenge on Chandler by depicting him as the troubled alcoholic in his next film, 1945’s “The Lost Weekend,” Chandler went on to write another iconic noir film, 1946’s “The Blue Dahlia.”

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Filed under Femme Fatales, film, Movie Reviews, movies, Noir

Review: ELVIS VAN HELSING

Elvis Van Helsing Kriozere Altman

With distinctive wit, writer/producers Steve Kriozere (“NCIS”) and Mark A. Altman (“Castle”) present “Elvis Van Helsing.” This was intended to be a TV show so that provides added interest to the graphic novel that resulted in 2010. In this case, the graphic novel stands alone very nicely as offbeat horror.

Elvis Yang is a 20-something who would be quite content to have no goals for the rest of his life, just be a whirling dervish. However, during his six years (and counting) as an undergrad, he has demonstrated flashes of sheer brilliance. It has attracted the likes of Bob Woodward and Stephen King. If Elvis needs something, these guys have his back.

Elvis Van Helsing Stephen King 2010

Kriozere and Altman have faithfully captured that wating, that unfocused yearning, for greatness experienced by an endless array of “losers” quietly aging on a multitude of campuses. But Elvis is supposed to be different, right? He’s the slacker that makes it, right? Kriozere and Altman leave you guessing.

Elvis Van Helsing Steve Kriozere Mark A Altman 2010

The artwork by Jason Baroody and the production by Zach Matheny are sympathetic to this kind of deadpan goofy humor. Even after Elvis discovers his true calling as Elvis Van Helsing, heir to a distinguished traditon of killing off vampires, demons, and various ghoulies, the action remains disconnected and low-key. Kinda cool, huh? That said, the art is not dull. It’s dynamic in its own way, in an ironic cool way. I’d call it a “sarcastic flatness.” Or maybe it’s an endearing flatness. Either way, it works.

Why do I like “Elvis Van Helsing”? Well, because it’s the sort of thing I would be proud to say I had written. It runs the risk of being misunderstood but it is a risk worth taking. If you’re going to take an offbeat path, then embrace it, baby. And that’s what this creative team does with this graphic novel.

Elvis Van Helsing graphic novel 2010

It’s also important to point out that this story, while unconventional, it not just random. You’ve got a well crafted plot with characters that have key roles to play. The whole dynamic between Elvis and the couple who adopted him is intriguing. He’s an Anglo surfer dude and his parents are a traditional Korean couple. Their idea of letting loose is singing karaoke after dinner, especially Elvis songs. Evis’s best friend, Randy, is a perfect foil as an even less focused version of Elvis, if that’s even possible. And then you’ve got two beauties competing for the mind and soul, if not heart, of Elvis: Vanessa, a Vamparella type; and Ariel a seductive and mysterious blonde who will only meet after midnight.

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The payoff to this graphic novel is that you have a journey worth taking. Ultimately, you get a story about a dude way over his head, on some excellent adventures that leave you wanting more. Along the way, Elvis Yang becomes Elvis Van Helsing, the heir to the greatness he’d been searching for but was clueless about. Has he grown wiser? Was he wise all along? That is the enigma worth exploring.

“Elvis Van Helsing” is an offbeat horror graphic novel that provides twists and turns to an overall engaging story.

“Elvis Van Helsing” is published by AIT Planet Lar. You can purchase a copy here. Check out the video trailer here.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Comics Grinder will publish an exclusive interview this Wednesday with Steve Kriozere, the co-creator with Mark A. Altman, of the hit show, “Femme Fatales.”

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Filed under Comics, Comics Reviews, graphic novels, Horror, Humor

Nicole Georges (Calling Dr. Laura) at Atomic Books, Feb 21

Nicole Georges Cassie Sneider tour 2013

If you’re in Baltimore, Maryland, on February 21, you must go to Atomic Books and see Nicole Georges and Cassie Sneider on their raucous tour, along with Monica Gallagher and Sally Madden.

Calling Dr. Laura 2013

“Calling Dr. Laura” is the story about how Nicole Georges came to grips with finding out her dead father was really alive. It sounds like a really good story already, doesn’t it? And to hear Nicole tell it, you’ll want to get this book. Nicole matter-of-factly states that she first got the idea that her real father was still alive after a palm reading. That is confirmed by her family. This leads Nicole to seek advice from conservative talk show maven, “Dr. Laura.” This book is one of those idiosyncratic works that will get under your skin. Watch this video of Nicole explaining how it all went down here.

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