Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category

Sac Con, CosPlay, Furries and Clave’s Doppelganger

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

I went to the Sacramento Comic, Toy and Anime show (Sac Con) with Kevin Trivedi two weekends back. The show was fun and there was a lot of great stuff for sale, but I wouldn’t have blogged about the show if it weren’t for the presence of three strange phenomenon: CosPlay, Furries and Clave’s Doppelganger!

For the uninitiated, “CosPlay” is simply an abbreviation of the words “Costume Play,” and refers to the act of dressing up as characters from Science Fiction, Fantasy, Comic Books, Anime and video games. This phenomenon isn’t new—people have been dressing up as superheroes and characters from Star Trek and Star Wars for decades—but those who associate themselves with the CosPlay scene tend to skew younger and have a greater affinity for Japanese pop culture. I found this to be true at Sac Con: while there were a few exceptions, most of those in costume were teenagers. They were so young there was even a game of Red Rover going on out front when I got there:

CosPlay enthusiasts playing Red Rover at Sac Con

Of course, just because you’re a teenager into CosPlay, that doesn’t mean you’ll necessarily limit yourself to characters from Japan. Here’s a kid dressed up as the Mad Hatter from Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, which wasn’t even out at the time of the show:

CosPlay enthusiast dressed as the Mad Hatter from Tim Burton's 'Alice in Wonderland'

The nice thing about people who dress up for comic book conventions is that they’re always quite happy to take have their picture taken, so I was able to get a photo of a group of kids who didn’t even know each other. I told them we old people are fascinated by their strange customs:

Group of CosPlay enthusiasts at Sac Con

CosPlay outfits can be quite intricate, as seen in this Link / Epona duo (Link is the hero of the Legend of Zelda video games from Nintendo; in the popular installment Ocarina of Time, Epona is Link’s horse). The kid dressed up as Link wasn’t content to let his own face substitute for Link’s, he actually wore a Link mask that more closely resembled the character’s blocky, Anime-style features. The Epona costume was even crazier, worn and operated by only one person using hand-stilts for the front legs!

Epona and Link at Sac Con

Epona at Sac Con

Epona FAQ

As weird as CosPlay may seem to us old people, the Furry phenomenon is even weirder. Furries are fans of fictionalized anthropomorphic characters that also create their own costumes, either of existing Furry characters or characters of their own design. Some Furries enjoy pornography featuring anthropomorphic characters and even have sex in costume, although the Wikipedia article I linked above downplays this aspect of the subculture. Still, being aware of Furry sex makes seeing Furries a bit awkward:

A Furry at Sac Con

The last weird thing I saw at Sac Con was a doppelganger of my young protégé Clave! Although he cut his hair last year, Clave used to have long, wavy red hair, not unlike local cartoonist Griffon Lyles, seen here with fellow cartoonist Devon McMindes:

Devon McMindes and Griffon Lyles at Sac Con

Griffon even has a similar drawing style to Clave’s, as seen in this self-portrait:

Griffon Lyles self-portrait

Like I said, Sac Con was a lot of fun, and there are several such events in Sacramento every year, so check out their web site and go to the next con, if only to be a voyeuristic creep like me! I can’t be the only cultural tourist at these things!

“I Am an Amanuensis” 67: Po

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

“‘I’m not a fat panda. I’m the fat panda.’”

The lovable Po in Dreamworks’ Kung Fu Panda.

Amanuensis –noun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

Fight Tonight Over Nestlé Bottled Water Plant!

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

As reported in Sacramento Press yesterday, the City of Sacramento issued a stop-work order on construction of a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Sacramento, and at a 6pm meeting tonight the City Council will consider “amending the city’s zoning code to immediately require special permits for beverage bottling plants.”

The stop-work order is based on questions of whether or not Nestlé filled out the appropriate paperwork to build the plant, and Brendan O’Rourke, who works for Nestlé, says they did. The larger issue being asked by City Councilman Kevin McCarty and the advocacy group Save Our Water Sacramento is whether Nestlé should be allowed to bottle water in Sacramento at all (full disclosure: I am friends with some of the members of Save Our Water Sacramento). While some of the water will be shipped in from nearby springs, the majority of the water Nestlé wants to bottle, an estimated 81 million a year according to an article by McCarty in Sacramento Press, will be taken directly from Sacramento’s municipal water supply, despite California being in its third year of drought. This water will then be resold to Californians (to avoid regulation by the FDA) at a profit of 10,000%!

Certainly, Sacramento has already made money off of the proposed plant; Nestlé says they’ve already paid “‘$3.7 million [. . .] in [the] form of permitting fees, construction costs, due diligence payments and [other associated] costs [. . .],’” and Mayor Kevin Johnson was quoted in another Sacramento Press article as saying the new plant could create “‘40 to 60′” jobs. But do the costs outweigh the benefits? 40 to 60 jobs is certainly not a lot, and any money Sacramento has made so far will pale in comparison to what Nestlé will make reselling tap water. Last week Save Our Water Sacramento hosted a special screening of the as-yet-unreleased documentary Tapped at The Crest. The film is pretty horrifying, detailing the problems with the bottled water industry: besides those already discussed, citizens in a city with a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Maine were cut off from their water supply for two days while the plant’s supply kept going; bottled water faces far less stringent safety requirements than bottled water and has been found by various studies to be contaminated; people who live near plants that create the plastic bottles for bottled water have a higher risk of getting cancer; and of course, water bottles that are not recycled often end up in the ocean, forming islands of plastic trash larger than Texas that are killing wildlife and affecting the food chain.

However, there are already two water-bottling plants in Sacramento, according to yet another Sacramento Press article (boy, they are on this issue!). And the best way to stop bottled water might be to simply stop drinking it. While I’m definitely a bleeding-heart liberal, I’ve drank my fair share of bottled water over the years (Tapped slackened my thirst for the stuff, however). A comment left on one of the Sacramento Press articles called local opponents of the Nestlé plant “NIMBYs,” an acronym that stands for “Not In My BackYard” and refers to people who enjoy the use of certain products or processes, such as nuclear power, but whom nevertheless refuse to let the uglier aspects of the product or processes, such as nuclear waste, come anywhere near their backyard. Those uglier aspects then end up in parts of the country or world where people are too poor to keep them out.

In any case, whether you oppose or support the Nestlé plant, your voice can be heard tonight if you show up at the City Council meeting, and that’s what democracy is all about!

Happy Birthday Clave

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

Joe Quesada Knows What the Kids are Into

Friday, September 18th, 2009

Discussing his recent run on Captain America in the October 2009 issue of Wizard magazine, comics writer Ed Brubaker says Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada told him, “‘“Kids reading comics today, they don’t care too much about Nazis, so having Captain America’s archvillain be a Nazi is less interesting than having him [. . . be] some corporate madman from ex-Communist Russia.”’”

I’m not sure which “kids” Joe Quesada is talking about here.  Does he mean kids ages 8-16, who were born after the Cold War ended, the kids who were very young when terrorists killed more American civilians on September 11th, 2001, than the Soviets ever managed to kill during the entire Cold War, the kids who grew up in a Nation reacting to that horrible event?  Those kids?  Or does he mean the older “kids” who grew up during the Cold War and still read superhero comics?

I know I shouldn’t take this statement too seriously; it is, after all, hearsay in a puff piece by Wizard, which tends to be just one big uncritical advertisement for whatever is going on in Corporate Comics these days anyway.  Still, this is the sort of ridiculous, unchallenged statement that appears all the time in the media, whether in serious journalism or in entertainment rags like Wizard, and it drives me crazy.

Another ridiculous, unchallenged statement I love to hate also comes from Joe Quesada regarding Marvel Comics, although this line of bullshit certainly didn’t start with him.  It’s the statement that Marvel Comics, unlike DC comics, takes place in the “real world” (you can see Quesada say this after being prompted by Stephen Colbert.  Say it ain’t so, Stephen!).  When Marvel shills say this, they don’t mean that Marvel tells nuanced, detailed stories about ordinary individuals struggling to find meaning in their lives in the face of social pressure, poverty, disease, wars and, ultimately, death (that’s what Adrian Tomine’s comics are about), but rather that many Marvel characters live in New York City, as opposed to the fictionalized New York of Superman’s Metropolis or Batman’s Gotham.  That’s it.  In the Marvel Universe, just like the DC Universe, there are still people who gain super powers from random events who then don skin-tight costumes to fight crime, aliens and demons.  That doesn’t mean that there aren’t fictional places in the Marvel universe, either; there’s Atlantis, Genosha, Latveria, and Wakanda, to name several.  It just means that Marvel wants to distinguish itself from a competitor that offers products nearly identical to their own, so they take one tiny difference that isn’t really a difference at all and then blow it up to make themselves look better.  And no one calls them on their shit.

One last thought: offering a product nearly identical to one’s competitor is probably one of the motivations behind Disney’s recent purchase of Marvel Comics.  Disney, like Warner Brothers, owns or co-owns a television network (ABC for Disney, The CW for Warner Brothers), various movie studios (Touchstone Pictures for Disney, Warner Brothers for Warner Brothers), and a slew of animated properties (Disney for Disney, Looney Tunes for Warner Brothers), but until now, no superheroes (DC Comics for Warner Brothers, and now, Marvel Comics for Disney).  And while I’m sure publishing superhero comics is profitable (Wizard wouldn’t exist otherwise), Disney is probably less interested in publishing quality funny books for the kiddies than they are in making superhero movies and taking advantage of the worldwide marketing opportunities those movies provide.

09-09-09

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Continuing my study of dates and numerology, I must ask: why aren’t any scary movies being released today? The Omen remake was released three years ago on 06-06-06, but given his penchant for all things backwards and upside-down, you think Satan would be all over 09-09-09, too!  From his album I Am a Wonderful Man, comedian Michael Ian Black on Satan:

I got worried about the devil though, because, it seemed to me, that he was putting all his marketing money into the vinyl record industry.  But then CDs came out, and the devil was like, “Fuck!  All that research and development money down the drain!”  And then there was no more evil.  Which was so great.  Now if only we could do something about herpes.

Speaking of Satan and unwanted visitors, my divorce became official two years ago today, which means I’ve gone 730 days without an outbreak of crazy!

One last item on dates and numerology:  I was recently told that there are actually two dates for celebrating Pi Day: March 14, or 3-14, the traditional day of celebration for American nerds and lovers of pie, and July 22, or 22/7 for Archimedes’s representation of pi, which is celebrated in those parts of the world where the date is written day/month, rather than month/day as it is here in the States.

“I Am an Amanuensis” 62: J. K. Rowling

Friday, August 21st, 2009

“‘Then you will find yourself easy prey for the Dark Lord!’ said Snape savagely.  ‘Fools who wear their hearts proudly on their sleeves, who cannot control their emotions, who wallow in sad memories and allow themselves to be provoked easily — weak people, in other words — they stand no chance against his powers!  He will penetrate your mind with absurd ease, Potter!’”

J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.  New York: Scholastic, 2003.  Page 536.

Amanuensis –noun.  A person employed to write what another dictates or to copy what has been written by another.

The Ugly Truth: Katherine Heigl Walks Among Us

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Following the grand tradition of late 70s television dramedy Eight is Enough, the protagonist of the new movie The Ugly Truth, played by Katherine Heigl, works for a fictional news agency in Sacramento, California. In Eight is Enough the fictional news agency was the newspaper The Sacramento Register, while in The Ugly Truth it’s a fictional news channel.

Surprised?  I was when I heard the news today on Jeffrey Callison’s radio show Insight, broadcast by our local NPR affiliate, Capital Public Radio.  But apparently the dogged reporters at Good Day Sacramento had already broken the story, asking someone promoting the movie if Good Day Sacramento was the inspiration for the film’s plot.  They were joking (sorry, I couldn’t find the video), but there were also rumors that the characters in the movie played by Cheryl Hines and John Michael Higgins were based on real-life retired married co-anchors Dave Walker and Lois Hart.  Heck, while we’re at it, couldn’t Gerard Butler’s character, a chauvinistic media personality, be based on Rush Limbaugh, who got his start in Sacramento?

The movie’s getting mixed reviews, so I’ll probably wait till it comes out on DVD.  Unless I hear next that Deirdre Fitzpatrick is in it . . .

Speaking of Mark S. Allen . . .

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

He seems to be taking styling cues from a certain Austrian fashion reporter, nein?

Mark S. Allen versus Bruno

Sacramento is Officially Doomed

Sunday, July 19th, 2009

Mark S. AllenIn his “Bites” column for the July 16, 2009 issue of Sacramento News & Review, columnist Cosmo Garvin points out that since The Sacramento Bee will no longer be publishing movie reviews by their film critic Carla Meyer, “[. . .] Mark S. Allen will now be the most influential film critic in the region.”

We’re doomed I tell you, DOOMED!

Incidentally, I saw Mr. Allen while out at a restaurant a few months ago, and he was a lot smaller than he appears on TV.