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 Wednesday, September 19, 2007
OK, One More Heroes Tidbit
Posted by maggie
The Target DVD set has a bonus disc featuring a panel on which appeared many of those involved. (The panel was actually held before the final installment was completed, apparently -- and no hints were dropped regarding the conclusion.) It's light fun: nearly 40 minutes of chat. Among the anecdotes: Masi Oka recounts his tryout for the part of Hiro and comments that, on the one hand, he was speaking in Japanese, so he could say pretty much anything he wanted. On the other hand, there is a line in the script when Hiro succeeds in stopping time. Oka says the line in the script reads [in Japanese], "Little tree." He expresses confusion, can't figure it out for a minute -- but eventually asks Kring if he can change the line to what had been intended: "Banzai!" Hee.
9/19/2007 1:48:51 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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How Many Computers Do You Have?
Posted by maggie
Not how many do you use -- but how many computers are sitting around in your house? Don and I started in the mid-1980s with a pre-mouse computer that I'm still hoping to get the files from before I take it to the hazardous waste site. Eventually, I got the black-and-white Mac laptop that was canceled before it went into full release (got it with the help of some kindly Mac person, who called me out of the blue when I complained that my order had been canceled). Later, I added a used color Mac laptop -- but didn't use it much. That was back in the day when I was (yes) unable to find clear instructions of how to widen a text box in Works. Then, I bought a desktop PC, which is still sitting on one of the desks in my house -- though I've used it fewer than 10 times in the past five years or so. Then, I bought a second one, this time placed in my living room. It's what I've used for scanning for years and years, generating an ever-evolving series of calendars (with Publisher), etc. It's been glitchy for the past three years or so, at one point attacked by spyware that Brent (bless his heart) managed to destroy a few months ago -- but I think there's actually a bad sector on the hard drive, which means all attempts at ScanDisc and defragging freeze eventually. And then I bought a third PC, just as a sort of add-on and inventory "machine," so's to try to keep track of My Junk. It's the one I'm using for ComicBase, complete with a bar-code reader for fast "inventory" update. But that was basically an inventory system, desk-locked, so I bought a fourth PC, this one a laptop that I've lugged about so's to be able to work wherever I went. It's danged heavy but does have WiFi, and it's where I've stored the digital photos from my Sony camera. However, it doesn't have a DVD burner, so ... Last night, I found an excellent buy at Sam's Club, which means I have a Dell computer sitting in my car, just waiting for me to beg Brent to help me lug it into the house. That means ... Oh, wait. I forgot. I have a Palm Pilot that lets me write in Microsoft Word and link it to the laptop. Does that constitute another computer? And my Super-Phone is actually called a Pocket PC, and I can post online from it via dial-up. So. That means ... Five PCs plus two hand-held minis. And you?
9/19/2007 12:09:59 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Heroes Commentaries Wrap up with Episode 23
Posted by maggie
And, as much as it's taken up this blog with nattering, at least I finished before Season Two begins. (Do we all have our recorders set for Monday night?) Wending my way through the disc with the last episode, "How to Stop an Exploding Man," there are many bonus features -- but, of course, they start with Tim Kring, Dennis Hammer, and Allan Arkush in the episode commentary itself. Someone asks someone else what his favorite moment of the series is, and the response is Claire's "I don't know. I'm just a cheerleader." (Who asked whom? Who knows? The commentary voices just aren't that different.) Someone else volunteers that it was the minute shooting wrapped at 5 in the morning. There's much admiration of Adair Tishler (who played Molly Walker): "this wonderful girl." And, later: "Watch a little girl steal a scene." And it's noted that Masi Oka was hired as "just a kid in a cubicle." "He was hired to be cute and enthusiastic," which is far, far less than what this installment calls for, so, again, there are admiring comments galore about Oka's mature performance. More admiration: It's really Hayden Panettiere running and diving out of the window in That Shot. (I do hope everyone is noticing how careful I've been to avoid divulging anything about the plot. Eventually, there will be new viewers of what-will-then-be-the-classic-series Heroes, including kids yet to be born.) (Kring, by the way, named Angela Petrelli for Angela Lansbury, thinking of the role that actress played in Manchurian Candidate.) Information includes: insights concerning scenes for which a ceiling was included in the set construction; the comment, "Don't think we don't watch the YouTube movies"; attention to whether performers are wearing their collars up or down; and a " Barnaby Jones shot." (What is a Barnaby Jones shot? It's suggested that we can Google it, but I had no luck.) And it took five and a half days to do the final confrontation scene at night. Set-up each night began at 7 p.m., filming started at 8 p.m., the kids could only film till midnight, the filming had to wrap at 5 a.m., and the area had to be completely clear by 6 a.m. Yikes. Tidbit: Adrian Pasdar ad libbed the line "You ready?" -- one of the most effective moments in the 23 episodes. Among the bonus features is a fascinating featurette on Tim Sale. Did you know he's color blind? A way was worked out, often using a gray tone added to his black and white work, through which he provided the art that was then colored by others. (He also commented wistfully on the artist's loft in which Isaac works: "Here I am in my garage.") Finally, one featurette draws a distinction I must remember: "Special effects" are effects that are rigged on the set -- for example, everyone holding still when Hiro stops time. "Visual effects" are effects that are generated after the shoot -- for example, computer-generated images of toys that are suspended in the air as Hiro rushes between them to save the little girl on the Tokyo street. A great series, commentaries and featurettes well worth watching: I can hardly wait for Monday night.
9/19/2007 11:01:58 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Heroes Commentaries on Episodes 21 and 22
Posted by maggie
After these, only the season ender to go (and then there's planning the evening of Sept. 24 around viewing the start of Season Two). Commentators for Chapter 21, "The Hard Part," are James Kyson Lee (who plays Ando), Noah Gray-Cabey (who plays Michah), and stunt coordinator Ian Quinn. It's not always easy to tell Quinn from Lee in the commentary, but Gray-Cabey laughs his way through his remarks delightfully. (And we learn that it's only by ongoing attention that Micah's hair retained that controlled wet look.) Until this commentary, I hadn't realized that Virginia Gray (Sylar's mom) was played by Ellen Greene -- who, despite decades of great performances may be best known as Audrey from the 1986 film version of Little Shop of Horrors, reprising the role she'd played on Broadway). I knew she'd looked familiar but wow! And, as others have cited throughout the commentaries, many of the special effects are handled via the low-tech method, such as was used in displaying Hiro's powers of freezing time (in which case, everyone just stood very still). In the case of an Ellen Greene scene, she was supported by a special device -- but, again, just held still. Commentators for Chapter 22, "Landslide," are Masi Oka (Hiro Nakamura), George Takei (Kaito Nakamura), and Matthew Armstrong (Ted Sprague). Takei, who grew up in the Los Angeles area, takes ongoing note of which Los Angeles sites are doubling for "New York City," especially taking exception to the Arco sculpture that dominates many of the outdoor scenes and that, of course, is not NYC. (I've just taken for granted that it was chosen because of its seeming reference to the double helix that features so strongly throughout the series.) Oka comments with justifiable pride on the swordfight sequences in which there was very little doubling, and this is one of the best comment tracks in the DVD release. One more episode to go -- and then we prepare for Season Two, Episode One, titled "Four Months Later." I can hardly wait.
9/18/2007 9:02:21 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Sunday, September 16, 2007
Footnotes to Mark Evanier's Blog
Posted by maggie
I link to Mark's blog every day and, this small world being as tiny as it is, I'd like to add a note to two of his recent posts.
(1) He recommends the book Son of Harpo Speaks! -- as do I. But some might be intrigued to know that my daughter, Valerie Thompson, handled the book design for the Bear Manor volume. (And just between us, she says Bill Marx was wonderful to work with.)
(2) Mark also provides links to two articles about Richard Beals, and I was delighted to read them. Valerie and I first met Beals at a Friends of Old Time Radio convention in Newark years ago and have always been impressed with his magnificent performances and professionalism. Not only is he the voice of Speedy Alka-Seltzer, he's also the voice of countless cartoon and radio children (Ralph Phillips in two Chuck Jones cartoons, two of Roger Ramjet's American Eagles, etc.). Valerie had the opportunity to play a bit part in a re-creation of a Suspense show in which he starred decades ago; I played Lois Lane to his Jimmy Olsen in a Superman re-creation. He's one of the world's best examples of turning a seeming disability into a triumph by determination and hard work.
9/16/2007 6:02:32 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Heroes Commentaries on Episodes 19 and 20
Posted by maggie
It's only with Episode 19, ".07%," that a commentary opens with the speakers identifying themselves clearly. Thanks, folks! Not only that, but it's also the first commentary in which it's pointed out that there have been a series of online comic-book stories that provide background for many of the characters and that show motivation. For example, in the story arc "War Buddies" (starting with Chapter 24 of the online comics) readers will learn that Linderman's philosophy was first articulated by Peter and Nathan's dad years earlier.
Thanks to voice similarities, I'm still not clear which of the commentators says, "I wonder if people on the boards realize we read them," but you can take it as a given -- especially for this series, which is so multi-media-involved.
If you're curious about the online comics (and I still haven't found a convenient format for reading them; print is easier for a while yet), you can start with the first installment and go on from there. (At the moment, the total has reached Chapter 50: "Blackout" Part Two.)
This commentary is fun for the insights into production of the show, including the ways scripts can be modified during filming and even when the commentators are seeing a pre-effects cut.
I was surprised to find that there were chunks of Episode 20, "Five Years Gone," that I didn't remember until rewatching. Perhaps I had the feeling that, as a possible future, it was something that wasn't going to happen? In any case, the commentary was fun, consisting as it did in the three actors making fun of each other in a relaxed chat. We learn that Sendhil Ramamurthy took three and a half weeks to grow his beard out to the "future" length -- and that the Oval Office set was the one used in the film Dave and was correct to scale. And that Jack Coleman says, "I think I look younger five years in the future." Fun.
9/16/2007 5:42:56 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Saturday, September 15, 2007
Heroes Commentaries on Episodes 17 and 18
Posted by maggie
With a weekend relatively free, perhaps I can wrap up commenting on the Heroes comment tracks. We shall see. In any case, I'm back at it. In an earlier post today, I've identified the speakers on the two episodes, but I must say that, even with the information, it's not always a slam dunk to identify who's saying what.
I think most of the remarks on the 17th installment ("Company Man") come from the director. At least, there's an extensive discussion of influences in how the script was shot: a discussion that could have been led by the episode writer but that tends to focus perhaps more visually. Really, folks, such occasional remarks as, "As the director, I found it helpful to recall The Desperate Hours," or, "As the writer, I took Cape Fear as a guide," would have been a big help. Other influences in the filming: Out of the Past and Dog Day Afternoon.
One scene that was dropped from the final filming was a sequence in which HRG rescued baby Claire from the burning building in which her mom had been assumed to have died. The information that he was the one who had saved Claire would have been a nice addition to the story.
Comments included that by this point special effects were being put together at a nightmare pace and that the burning house sequences had been carefully set up, repeatedly rehearsed for blocking, and painstakingly (literally) produced. (Matthew Armstrong as Ted Sprague did his own stunt work in the scene, and Jack Coleman remarks, "I'm here to tell you it was warm in there.")
With the 18th episode ("Parasite"), an amusing aspect of these commentaries is that the commentators play coy for a time about the identity of the performer playing Linderman -- whereas, as a viewer when the show aired, I'd figured it out as soon as the opening credits were shown. And people shouldn't be watching the commentary until they've seen the episode without it, anyway. Hee.
Commentary on "Parasite" ended up a bit more focused on the technical details of writing, casting, directing, and special effects -- including the comment that "Company Man" had wrapped up only shortly before it was broadcast. Appreciative remarks include that Jessica has much better posture than Niki and that, even if the camera isn't on her, Hayden Panettiere will cry, if the scene calls for her to be weeping. Influences on the final edit of the episode: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and The Constant Gardener.
An estimate of the number of people who work on each episode of the show: 250.
9/15/2007 2:31:28 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Speaking of Unfinished Series ...
Posted by maggie
While Mr. Age has a point about the repeated citing of Camelot 3000 demonstrating the infrequency of delays in shipping comics In Earlier Days, I think those of us who are more blase about such things have just become used to putting such matters out of our minds.
For example, today's fans may take it as no big deal that DC's Secret Six #1-7 never provided the resolution to a mystery that was part of the original point of that title (May 68-May 69). It was co-created by E. Nelson Bridwell and Frank Springer, and the mystery was the identity of team leader Mockingbird. It was not until 1988 that Martin Pasko and Dan Spiegle "solved" the mystery in Action Comics Weekly -- with an identification that was not what Bridwell had intended.
Believe me, Don and I were pretty hacked off about the matter in the 1960s; the original series was an entertaining exercise, loaded with clues. Gr.
9/15/2007 11:53:06 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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Heroes Commentary Credits
Posted by maggie
I've finally had a chance to transcribe all the on-disc credits for the commentaries on the later episodes of Heroes. Long question: Again, considering that the BBC for Doctor Who manages to haul two people into a screening room for every episode of that show -- sometimes long after the installment has wrapped -- to talk about it while they watch it, why couldn't Universal do the same for the first 11 chapters? Or will it finally do it in some down-the-line Super Producer's Cut and charge another bunch o' bucks for that version? (Sorry. Don't mean to be that grumpy; I don't imagine that that's in the plans.)
These are the credits as they appear (except that I spell out the word "assistant"):
Chapter 12 "Godsend." "With Jack Coleman, Leonard Roberts and Sendhil Ramamurthy"
Chapter 13 "The Fix." "With Greg Grunberg, Hayden Panettiere and Natalie Chaidez (episode writer & co-executive producer)"
Chapter 14 "Distractions." "With Milo Ventimiglia, Zachary Quinto, Greg Grunberg, Jeanot [sic; it's Jeannot] Szwarc (episode director), Jack Coleman andMichael Green (episode writer and co-executive producer)"
Chapter 15 "Run." "With Greg Grunberg, Kevin Chamberlin, Adam Armus and Kay Foster (episode writers and supervising producers)"
Chapter 16 "Unexpected." "With Greg Beeman (episode director and co-executive producer), Zachary Quinto, Sendhil Ramamurthy and Jeph Loeb (episode writer and co-executive producer)"
Chapter 17 "Company Man." "With Jack Coleman, Allan Arkush (episode director and executive producer) and Bryan Fuller (co-executive producer and episode writer)"
Chapter 18 "Parasite." "With Allan Arkush (executive producer), Jimmy Jean-Louis and Christopher Zatta (episode writer)"
Chapter 19 ".07%." "With Chuck Kim (episode writer), Andrew Chambliss (assistant toTim Kring) and Timm Keppler (assistant to Dennis Hammer)"
Chapter 20 "Five Years Gone." "With Greg Grunberg, Sendhil Ramamurthy and Jack Coleman"
Chapter 21 "The Hard Part." "With James Kyson Lee, Noah Gray-Cabey and Ian Quinn (stunt coordinator)"
Chapter 22 "Landslide." "With Masi Oka, George Takei and Matthew Armstrong"
Chapter 23 "How to Stop an Exploding Man." "With Tim Kring (creator/executive producer & episode writer), Dennis Hammer (executive producer) and Allan Arkush (executive producer & episode director)
9/15/2007 9:09:26 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, September 13, 2007
Pictures! I've Added Pictures!
Posted by maggie
Having spent a chunk of yesterday and today transferring pictures and video to other media, I've spent a few minutes this afternoon adding pictorial illumination to earlier postings. So you might want to go to the September 2007 category as a whole to the left and scroll down to see what other decorations have appeared. And I have photos that don't exactly go with what I've posted till now. Such as an end-of-Baltimore-Comic-Con shot of (left to right) Louise Simonson, Walter Simonson, and Steve Niles. And a shot of Marc Patten and Heidi MacDonald at Geppi's Entertainment Museum at the Diamond Summit Open House.
9/13/2007 4:06:43 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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For Posterity -- or at Least, for Office Use
Posted by maggie
Having figured out what to fix for supper (No, this isn't going to turn into What I Had for Breakfast -- See early postings from July) that would be least threatening to the root-canal work [spaghetti with hamburger sauce -- OK, it's What I Had for Supper] ... Time for a new paragraph. I spent yesterday evening and a chunk o' time this morning transferring material to other digital media so We Could Do Things with It. I ended up with slightly more than 300 photos of convention, Summit, and Geppi's Entertainment Museum and four DVDs of Summit material. What shocked me a bit was the quantity of news that I didn't post about. The problem at these things is that I'm simultaneously taking still photos, camcordering the program, and (now and then) jotting down notes of an assortment of types. Then I tend to post from those jottings -- forgetting the news, news, news that has filled the hours of presentations. So there'll be more to come, both online and in upcoming issues of CBG and Comics & Games Retailer. Just wanted to be sure you were aware of that. On the other hand, there's no good way to convey the fun of attending an auction presided over by Inkworks' Allan Caplan. He remains unflappable and entertaining at a moment's notice.
9/13/2007 8:51:04 AM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, September 12, 2007
In-Direct to Video
Posted by maggie
This morning, I tried to copy a couple hours' camcorder material to DVD, and the whole thing glitched. But, at lunch, I transferred half an hour of footage, and it went well. I don't know whether we'll ever post footage of the Allan Caplan-conducted auctions to benefit the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, but it's fun just watching them as I dupe them so that Brent can see what went on.
9/12/2007 1:45:13 PM (Central Daylight Time, UTC-05:00)
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