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 Wednesday, July 25, 2007
Oh, Great
Posted by maggie
"There's no need for public alarm, because there's no specific threat."
Swell.
As I prepare to leave for the airport to go to San Diego, here's news that alarming things have been going on with regard to weapons on planes, including something at the San Diego airport. "Specific threat"? I think this sort of thing found at an airport is a specific threat. Geez.
And I thought my primary problem today would be the number of Northwest flights that have been canceled recently.
7/25/2007 4:34:12 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Matt Groening on Bootlegs
Posted by maggie
This morning on the BBC World Service broadcasts (which I hear via the PRI distribution on NPR radio stations), there was an interview with Matt Groening, and the topic of bootlegging Groening's material came up. (I hope my con-preparations-blurred mind has the following correct; I think I'm reporting correctly, though.)
While it's true that Simpsons characters and footage are bootlegged all over our media, Groening said that the one that takes him the most aback is that his handwriting has become a bootlegged font. He cited the instance that there's a sign at liquor-store checkouts warning about being of age in order to buy liquor -- in his handwriting.
7/25/2007 4:28:11 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Do You Love The Amazing Race?
Posted by maggie
My son and daughter-in-law (in their 30s) and their son (in his first decade) love it. They check the (excellent) summaries on Television without Pity, they talk about the strategies, and they even got me to watch two seasons of the show (because they love it and because TVwoP is so good). But argh! The show is many of my nightmares rolled into one. And now I'm packing for San Diego and having to unpack parts of the luggage to be sure I didn't forget to pack something that's already in the suitcase. What will I forget? My camera? My camcorder? My (oh, no!) cell phone? Moannn. Oh, well, at least I didn't get A Bad Elephant ( TARjoke, sorry). And I'm not racing anyone else to get to San Diego. And by this time tomorrow ... Well, if I'm not in San Diego, there's still probably nothing I can do about it. And you?
7/24/2007 3:26:33 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Yay! Just Got a Call about Ray Harryhausen!
Posted by maggie
Woo hoo! A publicist for the Ray Harryhausen-connected booth at the show (#4719, check it out) just confirmed I could have five minutes' worth of interview with the Stop-Motion Wizard on Friday! I'd completely forgotten I'd hoped for a chance to see him; I guess when you think things are too good to be true that you erase them from your hopes, sometimes. I'm approved for five minutes, hurrah!
7/24/2007 12:35:26 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Fantastic Four vs. Doctor Who
Posted by maggie
With an estimated budget of $130 million, Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer has come in for criticism that might seem to be unwarranted.
It should be clear that the film was aimed directly at the hearts and minds of 10-12-year-old boys of all ages and sexes. It was, after all, a science-fiction action-adventure film built on the background of entertainment that began in the early 1960s and had to accommodate the accretion of mythos that has accumulated since that entertainment’s introduction. That's tricky.
It had to be all-ages.
It had to have special effects to accommodate the SF plot elements that have contributed to the success of the attraction.
It had to involve or acknowledge about 45 years of backlog material.
Nevertheless, it had to be viewer-friendly for first-time audiences.
None of that is easy – but the FF film wasn't the only entertainment of the year that coped with those requirements. Produced by BBC Wales, in September 2003, the return of Doctor Who to British television was announced. That announcement included the notation that no budget had been set at that point. Since then, the series has gone through three successful seasons, and, though no details of the program’s budget have been announced, it's generally agreed that the TV show runs under tight fiscal controls. Consider, then (and, yes, I'll get to the point shortly), what holds true for both the $130 million FF sequel and the two-part end of the second season of Doctor Who, which aired in this country close to the time of FF2:
Target audience: All ages, starting as young as 5 (MPAA guidelines for FF were "PG" for "sequences of action violence, some mild language and innuendo"; they'd be roughly the same for the TV show, with perhaps less "adult" language)
Menace: Civilization-destroying in scope, based on forces that made their debuts in the 1960s — with repeated appearances since
Focal characters: A team with access to science-fictional tools to combat the menace
Romance: One of the primary story elements, leading focal characters to do what they do
Family: Another story element, leading focal characters to do what they do
Fanbase concerns: Faithfulness to decades of backstory
Special effects: Necessary for telling the tale
Setting: Earth
Events: Result in a turning point for the characters
Time to tell the story: An hour and a half
There are also (and this is the point) contrasts:
The chemistry between David Tennant’s Doctor and Billie Piper’s Rose Tyler is believable throughout the story. Reed and Sue? Do you believe in the relationship? (The image below is a promo for the season with the next Companion, by the way -- still running on cable -- with yet another strong relationship.)
The Doctor Who script sparkles, surprises, and maintains a tension through the climax, while who didn't sit through FF waiting for the next unsurprising speech or plot development?
Doctor Who aims for — and achieves — emotional high points in addition to the sheer adventure story. Did anyone in the FF audience hold his breath? Or let fall a tear?
No, I wasn't able to get a dollar (or pounds) figure for the cost of the two-part U.K. 2006 close of the new Doctor Who series’ second season: "Army of Ghosts" (July 1) and "Doomsday" (July 8). However, a BBC Worldwide spokesperson did tell me, "Fair to say it's a fraction of the Fantastic Four figure you provided."
So here’s my question: Why couldn't $130 million bring the theater audience of Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer a fraction of the entertainment I found in a TV two-parter? Any ideas?
7/24/2007 9:47:28 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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24 Hours until the Plane to San Diego
Posted by maggie
Up at 3 a.m. to continue packing. Which shoes will not kill me after a day on the exhibit floor? Should I take my newly purchased computer backpack, even though I hope to make my phone do the work of my computer, so I'll leave the computer at home? Is that a major mistake? What should I do about the silver sparkles my Eisner Awards outfit is leaving all over the house? (Oh, well, answer to that is simple: EAoutfit goes in its own plastic bag. If only all the other questions were as easily answered!)
7/24/2007 9:36:48 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, July 23, 2007
Two Days to San Diego
Posted by maggie
What a great time to start a blog, right? I hope you’ll join me in the wonder world of bloggery, finding entertainment in my errors, correcting the facts I get wrong, and scanning my posts for the facts that will (I hope) lie embedded in the words, words, words. To begin with, let me provide a brief explanation of my blog title. Old-timers may remember that “Beautiful Balloons” was the title that my late husband, Don, and I used for our column in Buyer’s Guide from the start. It was a reference to the song containing the lyric, “Up, up, and away in my beautiful balloon,” the fact that comics communicate via speech balloons, and that Superman’s catch phrase was, “Up, up, and away!” Get it? Got it! Good!
7/23/2007 3:49:41 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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