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The Bum’s Rush #50
Okay, last week I said I was going to talk about the first
month’s worth of
One Year Later titles from DC Comics. I lied. I also
said I was going to do something a little special for this,
the 50th episode of the most amazing weekly column on
the internet. That, my friends, was not a lie… mostly.
As our esteemed editor, Dana Place pointed out to me the
other day, the one-year anniversary of Stumblebum Studios
(in it’s current weekly entertainment magazine-type format)
is just around the corner, hitting the same week as The
Bum’s Rush #52! That’s right - 52 weeks, 52 columns about
comics and other pointless ramblings. It’s all beginning to
make a little too much sense. So I’ve decided to do the
really real Bum’s Rush Anniversary Spectacular then
instead of now. You may think this is all some clever
marketing ploy to get you to keep coming back again and
again, but really I have no idea what I’m doing.
Still, I did promise something special for this week’s
column and I’d hate to disappoint all my tens of rabid fans
out there. So without further ado, I give you…
The Following Preview Has Been Deemed AWESOME For All
Audiences
Last year, Stumblebum Studios decided to take part in the
worldwide event known as
Free Comic Book Day, a day of... duh... free comic
books. Every year dozens of companies take part in this
event, creating special free comics that are given out at
comic retailers all over the globe in an effort to promote
comic book awareness and draw in new readers. To make the
event even more special many of these retailers have special
guests appear at their stores for signings. For the event,
the Stumblebum Crew created the
Twilight Tales dime novel and debuted it on Free Comic
Book Day at Dallas’ best comic book store,
Titan
Comics. I actually wrote about that event in one of my
earliest columns which you can read right
here.
Well, folks, we’re at it again. Only this time we’re not
doing a dime novel. We’re putting together an honest to god
comic book. And because I absolutely love not sleeping at
all I am writing and drawing this 16-page story. It’s
been ages since I’ve done any serious drawing (well, there’s
Der Wundervolle Bean… but come on) and I’ve never
even drawn more than two or three actual comic book pages in
my entire life, so it’s an experience to say the least.
Lending a hand (lest I go out of my ever-loving mind) is the
lovely and talented
Dave
Sherrill, who will be inking my penciled pages. No doubt
he will be able to effortlessly translate all my scribbles
and scratches into actual pictures that look like what
they’re supposed to, thus salvaging the book and my dignity.
But, you might ask, what is this mysterious and no doubt
soon-to-be-optioned-as-a-major-motion-picture comic book all
about anyway? I’ll tell you! Nazis, my friend, Nazis. But
not just any old Nazis. Space-Nazis! Nazis on Mars! What’s
that? You’ll take a hundred copies? I knew you would. The
story, titled Mars: 1938, is a pulp adventure tale
featuring an Indiana Jones-like adventurer named Guy Van
Zandt who must contend with Martians, Nazis and hideous
monsters if he wants to make it off the red planet alive!
Here for your enjoyment is a batch of concept drawings I did
in preparation for the story. You’ll notice that, about
halfway through, there is a pretty abrupt style change.
While I was writing the story and doing the concepts I
decided to draw the book in much more cartoony style, which
I thought looked really neat and would be a little bit
easier to draw. Which, given the deadline is now little more
than a month away, is a very, very good thing indeed. Plus,
I’ve been watching way too much Cartoon Network and
Nickelodeon, both of which were an obvious influence on the
style I’ve adopted, not only for Mars: 1938, but
also, to a degree, my
Der Wundervolle Bean comic strip.
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I hope you enjoyed this little sneak peak at Mars:
1938. I’ll be sure to keep you updated on the book’s
progress over the next few weeks as we draw ever closer to
the impending doom… I mean… deadline.
Don’t Forget! Pull Dan Slott’s Thing!
Help Dan Slott save The Thing by adding the comic to
your pull list (a list that you can set up with your local
comic book store in order to reserve a copy of the books you
buy on a regular basis). And of course there’s the “Pull My
Thing and Win a Prize!” contest, as described by
Slott himself:
“There’s one grand prize, the whole kit-and-kaboodle, and
it’s going to the best pitchman on the message boards! We
need people pounding the virtual-beat, getting the word out
about our pull list campaign, and letting people know what
they like about the title. I’ll be scouring all the boards
and declaring a winner by the end of June.
What I’m looking for is the person who’s doing the best job
promoting “Pull My Thing and Win a Prize” - but
without being pushy or derailing any threads. And you gotta
bring the love [laughs].”
The grand prize being an original page of Thing art
by regular series artist Andrea DiVito, as well as copies of
all three She-Hulk trades, the GLA trade, the
GLA Christmas Special and the Spiderman/Human
Torch: I’m With Stupid digest, all written and signed by
Dan Slott himself.
If you need help finding a comic book store near you just
use the Comic Shop
Locator.
Quick Bits
Warning! Nothing you read here in Quick Bits should be
considered FACT until it actually happens. Which it might
not. How do you know I’m not just making all this crap up? I
could, you know. You’ve been warned!
- Speaking of Dan Slott’s Thing… hehehe… issue
#5 was Andrea DiVito’s final issue of the series as the
artist is moving on to illustrate the six-issue
Annihilation mini-series. Replacing DiVito on the
book is none other than Kieron Dwyer! I’ve loved Kieron
since I first saw his work on the Superman books
back in the nineties and his more recent work on books
like Avengers and
Last of the Independents was jaw dropping. As
if I needed a reason to love this book even more.
- Yet another new ongoing series spinning out of the
upcoming Civil War mini will be Heroes for
Hire. Personally I loved the version created by John
Ostrander and Pascual Ferry in the late 90’s… but I was
probably the only one.
- DC’s Solo series, featuring a different
artist every issue doing 48 pages of whatever they
wanted, has been cancelled with issue 12 (which will
feature artist Brendan McCarthy). It’s a shame because
it was a really cool book showcasing some amazing
talent. Unfortunately they promised some pretty big
names upfront when the series was first announced, but
their issues never materialized. I think if they’d have
thrown a HUGE superstar artist in there every few issues
the series probably could have survived. Still, how many
HUGE superstar artists can even do a regular 24-page
comic in a timely fashion these days?
- Word is that the Wolverine movie will be a
prequel to the current X-Men movies. Just as long
as there’s some ninjas, man.
- Oh, God! Onslaught Reborn?! By Jeph Loeb and
Rob Liefeld?! Why doesn’t somebody admit this is
a damn April Fools joke already? Please! And then they
have to go and make me feel bad for being totally and
completely opposed to this book by announcing that
proceeds will go to The Sam Loeb College Scholarship
Fund, named for Jeph Loeb’s son who passed away in 2005.
Gah, screw it! There’s no way on earth I would buy that
book. I can hardly believe it’s being published. Just go
here to read more about this insane project and
check out the craptacular art by Liefeld.
- Seriously though, if you are interested in donating
money to The Sam Loeb College Scholarship Fund directly,
just write to
SAMLOEB4@aol.com.
NEXT WEEK: Maybe next time I really will talk
about DC’s first month of One Year Later titles? Ah,
who am I kidding, I don’t know what the hell I’m gonna talk
about.
Send me hate mail at
thesuperleezard@yahoo.com
Read more stupid crap I write at
www.livejournal.com/users/superleezard
Check out my (semi) daily comic, Der Wundervolle Bean, at
www.livejournal.com/users/der_magic_bean
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