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Subject: [ComicBooknet E-Mag] CBEM 482.05 - July31, 2004



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From ComiX-Fan . . .

SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL DAY 3 REPORT
The third day of the convention out here, hard as it is to
believe, is even much busier then before. The two big Marvel
panels are on this day. But DC, always trying to put one up on
their rival's hosted a few panels of their own.

But to start the day off, we'll go to small/independent press
Devil's Due.
 October will be the biggest month in Devil's Due's history.
 Two new titles were announced by some outstanding writers.
Breakdown will be a tale brought to you by writer Chuck
Dixon and artist Dave Ross, described as what happens if a
publicly known super hero breaks down? The other new title
will be Defex by Marv Wolfman and will be about wanted
characters who go out of their way to be heroes.
 With DreamWave's announcement of their Transformers/G.I.
Joe series, Devil's Due had it known that they are also
working on a G.I. Joe/Transformers title. Dan Jolley will
be writing this title. It involves Cobra and G.I. Joe going
back into the past.
 UDON was also on hand to talk about their current projects.
Aside from Street Fighter, UDON has also been given the
rights to produce comics based on both Darkstalkers and
Rival Schools. UDON also reported that they are working
with Capcom to do artwork for the video games that should
come out later this year.

Next came one of the DC panels. First up is the Wildstorm panel.
 Sleeper: Season Two will be by Ed Brubaker. Lynch is not in
a coma anymore. There will be more cat and mouse between
Tal and Lynch.
 In October, you'll be seeing the collected works of
Planetary's twelve issues called Absolute Planetary.
 Warren Ellis and S.H. Williams will be doing a detective
story called Desolation Jones.
 Talking about Ellis, he'll be doing a sci-fi tale called
Ocean. It will be set on Jupiter's moon Europa. It will run
for six issues.
 IPC, the sister company in the U.K. will be working with DC
on a library of characters from the '60s. Alan Moore and
his daughter Leah will be writing it with Shane Oakley
providing art.
 The second volume of the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
has now been put together in a trade paperback form, and a
third series is said to be in the works.
 After that panel, we got to talk to the people involved
with Identity Crisis.
 They said that rape was always a taboo story but felt that
it was about time to deal with it. Villains have always
robbed and killed in stories, so "wouldn't it be logical
that rape was eventually brought up?"

 The story was written to show that there are reactions to
putting on a cape and mask. "Super heroes are just as
vulnerable to pain and death just as a regular person is."
They risk their lives, and some times they come up on the
short end of the stick.
 Expect a collect edition to come out in November of 2005.

After that very emotional panel, the House of Ideas came on to
show a thing or two.
 October marks the 30th anniversary of Wolverine.
 The new Rogue ongoing title will deal more of Rogue and her
past. She'll be going back to Mississippi. We'll get to
find out more about her elusive past, and "some dark, nasty
things will come up."

 The new X-Men writer was announced in the room. Peter
Milligan will be taking over the title in December after
Chuck Austen's run ends. Salvador Larocca will still be
providing art.
 There will be a new Marvel Press book that is in the works
right now. It will be feature the scientist from the Weapon
X program and their views on the experiments that they are
performing.
 Northstar will be appearing in the pages of New X-Men.
Writers Christina Weir and Nunzio DeFilippis expressed how
they'd like to showcase more teachers and their
interactions with the students.
 Speaking of New X-Men, Michael Ryan will soon be taking
over the pencils of the title.
 Next year marks the 10th anniversary of the 'Age of
Apocalypse'. When asked if there will be a rehash of it,
Marvel's Publisher Dan Buckley said that "it may happen.
Just wait and see."

After the Marvel regiment left the room, DC came back in for
another panel.
 To start the day off right, Kurt Busiek will be writing
JLA.
 Wonder Woman will be in Identity Crisis #4.
 There will be a JSA/JSA team up. The present JSA will go
back into the past and team up with the original team.
 John Walsh, of America's Most Wanted, will be guest staring
in Outsiders #17 in October. The Outsiders will be hunting
down the head of a child slave ring.
 Joe Kelly will be doing a Space Ghost title. It will run
six issues, and goes into the origin of Space Ghost and his
villains. Watch for it in November.

Marvel ended the night with their annual Cup o' Joe Panel.
Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada rehashed a lot of the information
that was presented all of the panels from today and tomorrow, but
did reveal a few more tidbits.
 Robert Kirkman has signed a two year exclusive deal with
Marvel.
 Talking about exclusives, Marvel announced that Warren
Ellis also signed a two year deal. When asked about all of
the DC work that had just been announced from Ellis,
Buckley said that they are ok with Ellis working on a few
titles to them, but as long as it doesn't interfere with
his Marvel work.
 With these two exclusive deals being announced, Quesada
explained that he doesn't like exclusive deals but is
forced to do them after DC had done them.
 Marvel and DreamWave have signed a deal together. Pat Lee
will be doing some covers for Marvel. And there will also
be a Fantastic Four/X-Men crossover title from them.
 There will be more Supreme Power spin-offs to come later on
after the Doctor Spectrum mini.

Then finally came the DC/Humanoids panel.
 DC wants everyone to know that nudity is "okay with us."

 The following is a small list and go over of the titles
that Humanoids plans to develop.
 Metaravens is a very violent, bloody title. It is not
suitable for all ages. It's a French comic that is
translated. By the numbers, it's about an American
accountant who is kidnapped in Vietnam in the 1950s.
 Technopreist is a futuristic title.
 Spouting Off is a French title that is also being
translated. Basically, it's everything from movies to
whatever.
 Freddy Lumburd is the adult version of Tin Tin.
 The Beast Trilogy is written by Inky Vaulal.
 Trans Genesis 2029 is another very futuristic title.
 The Horde is a surrealist comic it's got a little bit of
comedy to it.
 I Am Legion is drawn by John Cassaday.
 Red Hand is a futuristic, barbarian story.
 The White Llama is a martial arts adventure. A young boy
who is the reincarnation of the Dhati Llama.
 The Embalmer is set in ancient times about an Egyptian
embalmer who are brought in to investigate a murder. The
artist is Chris Cross.
 Another title is Chuck Austen's Fly Wire. A ship is going
to another planet, and it's basically people are implanted
with chips in their heads. A detective doesn't have a chip
and he's considered cripple. It's how he overcomes this
impotence and shoves the mystery.
 Butch Dice signed a three year exclusive with Humanoids.

SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON INTERNATIONAL DAY 4 REPORT
Amazingly brief. Day four of the convention in sunny San Diego
and things are winding down.

Lots of anime and tons of kid stuff, but we know what you guys
are waiting for, so here it is: Joss Whedon's Serenity.

Creator Joss Whedon and the nine cast members of Firefly make up
the panel: Gina Torres, Adam Baldwin, Nathan Fillion, Morena
Baccarin, Alan Tudyk, Jewel Staite, Sean Maher, Summer Glau and
Ron Glass. Joss is adamant about not revealing spoilers. However,
he does give up some information.
 There are no plans to bring Angel back as a TV series.
According to Whedon the chapter is closed for most of the
characters (he confirms that Gunn dies).
 Whedon and the WB are in talks about making Buffy-verse
movies. Specific characters are not named, however, Joss
states some Buffy-verse characters still have stories to
tell. All plans on this vein are only in the talk stage
nothing definite.
 No spoilers for Astonishing X-Men. However, that series and
Serenity have Whedon's full attention at the moment.
 Some wishes do come true: Whedon and Dark Horse are in
talks about a Serenity comic which would be started
(possibly) in '05.
 Discussion of the possibility of a Serenity series of
films.
 +++++
From ICV2.com

Watchmen Movie Announced
Darren Aronofsky to Direct
 July 26, 2004
According to the Hollywood Reporter, Paramount Pictures will
produce a film based on Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon's
groundbreaking superhero comic Watchmen, which first appeared as
a 12-issue mini-series that began in 1986.
 Darren Aronosky (Pi) will direct from a screenplay by David
Hayter. This long awaited brings the prospect of a Watchmen movie
closer than it's ever been before. A Watchmen movie should
stimulate additional sales of the Watchmen trade paperback, which
is one of the best-selling graphic novels in comic book history.
Given the potential of the property, ICv2 will endeavor to
monitor the progress of this latest and most serious attempt to
make a film of the one graphic novel, which could become a
perennial bestseller along the lines of The Great Gatsby.

Strangers in Paradise Treasury Edition
Coming From HarperCollins in October
 July 26, 2004
Abstract Studios' Publisher and creator/writer/artist of
Strangers in Paradise, Terry Moore, told ICv2 at Comic-Con
International in San Diego that HarperCollins will be publishing
the Strangers in Paradise Treasury Edition in October. This 12" x
8" 240-page hardcover will be a retrospective of the first ten
years of SiP, with much of the book in color.
 Roughly 60% of the content will never have been published
before, including the original "rough draft" 30-page first issue
of SiP (in black & white), behind the scenes information, how
Moore got started and how SiP came to be, director's notes and
even nude preliminary sketches.
 Strangers in Paradise, with a very loyal fan base as one of the
longest-running independent comic titles (closing in on 70 issues
to date), is being released in a new format; SiP Pocket Book
Collection 1 premiered at Comic-Con. Four volumes are planned,
each at a $17.95 cover price for 360 pages or more, covering
sixteen to twenty issues without editorial interruption. All
feature new artwork on the covers, as well as on the spines,
which, when all four are placed side by side, form one piece of
continuous artwork.
 SiP Collection 2 is due out in September, with Collection 3
coming in November and Collection 4 in December, allowing the set
to be available for holiday sales as a package.
 SiP, thanks to the high quality of story and art and the book's
well-deserved popularity, is now being published around the world
in eight languages (so far).

FCBD 2005
Two Possible Dates
 July 26, 2004
The Free Comic Book Day steering committee met at the recently
concluded San Diego Comic-Con International, and based on
successful results for the third consecutive year (see "Free
Comic Book Day Success Stories"), agreed to proceed with plans
for continuing the annual event in 2005.
 As was the case this year, two dates will be presented to
retailers for a vote, allowing them to choose between the first
weekend of May, which was the date for the event for its first
two years, and the weekend coinciding with the release of what
will probably be the biggest comic movie release of the summer.
The two dates will be May 7th and June 18th, the release date for
Batman Begins. Diamond Comic Distributors will solicit and
tabulate the retailer votes.

Bandai to Publish Manga
Based on Established Properties
 July 26, 2004
 At the San Diego Comic Con International, Bandai Entertainment
announced a new line of manga, which will debut in 2005. Bandai
will join ADV, Media Blasters, Central Park Media, Viz and
Tokyopop in combining anime distribution, which typically
involves the production of an American adaptation of the original
Japanese series, with the publication of English language manga
editions.
 Bandai's Jerry Chu told ICv2, "We want to publish a limited line
of books based on high profile properties. We're commissioning
original stories based on established properties." Chu was not
ready to name any of the properties Bandai is considering for its
manga line, but he did indicate that Bandai was interested in
cross-promoting anime and manga, adding more weight to the
logical inference that Bandai will choose its manga titles (where
possible) from its extensive list of anime properties.
 In many cases Bandai Entertainment will be able to cross-promote
its anime/manga properties with toys and video games produced by
Bandai's sister companies Bandai America and Bandai Games.
Bandai plans to commission artists and writers in both Japan and
the U.S. to produce original stories for the new manga line.
Chu told ICv2 that in an effort to distinguish its titles Bandai
was considering providing dust jackets for its line of trade
paperbacks (trades with dust jackets are more common in Japan
than in the U.S.). Although he wasn't ready to provide the
standard cover price for the new manga line, Chu told ICv2 that
Bandai's manga would be "priced competitively."

Stan Lee's Alexa
She's the Hero, Not the Hero's Girlfriend
 July 28, 2004
Komikwerks and ibooks are preparing to publish Stan Lee's Alexa,
a 48-page full color graphic novel with art by Steranko, Dave
Gibbons, Dan Jurgens, John Royle and Chris Malgrain. Drawing on
his vast experience in publishing, Stan Lee has set this tale of
a female superheroine in the world of comics, where Alexa Moran
works as one of the top artists at a major comic book company
known as The Fantasy Factory. When two 20-foot-tall giants appear
in New York city, Alexa's boss wants to put them under contract
as real live superheroes, but there are a few problems: Alexa
knows that she opened an interdimensional portal allowing the
giants into our reality, but she doesn't know how she did it or
how she received the powers that she is beginning to realize she
has.

Look for "Stan the Man's" latest graphic novel series to arrive
next February in squarebound, 48-page, full color format with a
cover price of $6.95.

Hollywood Options Three More Comic Book Properties
The Spirit, Courtney Crumrin, & Death: The High Cost of Living
 July 28, 2004
Hollywood Studios promoted a record 18 different films at this
year's San Diego Comic Con International and it appears that it
acquired the rights to an equal number of comic book properties
over the past few weeks as well. Among the latest comic book-
related projects acquired by Hollywood are Will Eisner's The
Spirit, Ted Naifeh's Courtney Crumrin, and Neil Gaiman's Death:
The High Cost of Living.
Odd Lot Entertainment (The Wedding Planner) and Batfilm's Michael
Uslan (Batman Begins, Constantine) have acquired the rights to
Will Eisner's classic comic strip The Spirit, which was created
in 1940. The Spirit, who battles a raft of sexy femme fatales in
his adventures, would appear to be a natural for Tinseltown, but
creator Will Eisner hasn't felt comfortable giving up control of
his most famous creation until now.

Neil Gaiman will have a considerable control in how Death: The
High Cost of Living is brought to the screen since according to
Variety he will make his feature film debut as a director of the
movie version, which is currently titled Death's Day. Warner
Bros. had the rights to Gaiman's popular graphic novel for years,
but fellow Time/Warner studio New Line Cinema (LOTR) has now
acquired the project and appears set to allow Gaiman to direct.

Competition among the studios appears to be a factor in Fox's
acquisition of Ted Naifeh's Courtney Crumrin graphic novels,
since the deal will give Fox a teen fantasy property at a time
when the Harry Potter franchise has proven to be a consistent
moneymaker for Warner Bros. Fox has acquired the rights to
Courtney Crumrin and the Night Things, Courtney Crumrin and the
Coven of Mystics, and Courtney Crumrin in the Twilight Kingdom,
all of which are published by Oni Press.

El Superbeasto Direct to DVD
From Rob Zombie's Spookshow
 July 29, 2004
DPS Film Roman will produce a direct-to-DVD animated feature
based on Rob Zombie's character, El Superbeasto, from Rob
Zombie's Spookshow comics. The DVD will be distributed by Anchor
Bay Entertainment, sister company to Film Roman.
Zombie will write and executive produce the feature. His high
concept description of the property is "Austin Powers meets The
Munsters by way of Hard Days Night." No release date for the
feature was announced

Alessi To Provide DIP Financing
For CrossGen
 July 29, 2004
Founder Mark Alessi has been granted permission by the court
supervising CrossGen's Chapter 11 bankruptcy to lend the company
$75,000 as a partial advance against $150,000 in proposed debtor-
in-possession financing. The DIP financing will receive a
priority lien against CrossGen assets. The financing is described
as critical to preserve the value of the assets for CrossGen's
creditors. A final hearing on the full $150,000 proposed
financing will be held on August 3rd.
Alessi provided extensive equity and debt financing to the
company prior to its bankruptcy.
 +++++
From Blair Marnell in his ALL THE RAGE Gossip Column at:
http://www.SilverBulletComicBooks.com
Write to him at: BlairM@silverbulletcomicbooks.com

                          RUMOUR BARRIER

"I accept that the following material is rumour and gossip,
intended to entertain only."I won't repeat the information inside
as fact. I understand if I want the truth, I will go to Silver
Bulletins."I enter freely with my mind open and my blinkers off."

Now, on to the rumours . . .

[NOTE: this column may be slightly edited for language. - D.L.]

Confusion Never Stops - Update:ART!
By Blair Marnell

I literally just got back from San Diego, a day later than I
expected to. And as much as I'd like to pass out, I've got a
column to write. So, here we go.

If you've never been to the San Diego Comic Con, picture a cross
between ShoWest, the E3, Anime Expo and every comic convention
you've been to. Then double it twenty times. That should give you
a pretty good idea of how big the con has become. Once again,
Hollywood was out in force. Some of the movie companies even
dropped the pretense of genre related films in their quest to
reach the coveted target audience. For example, New Line Cinema
paired Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle and Cellular with
Blade: Trinity and LOTR: The Return of the King Extended DVD
during a two hour panel on Friday. Though to be fair, at least
Cellular looked interesting.

The movie and video game companies were both here in greater
numbers than ever before, which led to some intriguing rumors.
More on that in a bit. But first, here's some of the news &
rumors that were heard on the show floor:

Counterstrike

This year's con seemed like a reversal of the previous SDCC, with
Marvel announcing several exclusive contracts with comic creators
as well as numerous upcoming projects. DC Comics was almost quiet
by comparison, leaving many to wonder whether DC had any plans to
counter Marvel's latest moves.

From what I've heard, the answer is yes. The most popular rumor
going around was that DC is in the early stages of gathering
creators for a new line of books featuring Superman, Batman and
Wonder Woman. The word "Ultimate" was never used, but the books
were described as top creators telling stories "without the
constraints of continuity." According to the rumors, some of the
creators involved are already under exclusive contract with DC,
with several BIG names from outside the company also onboard. It
was also broadly hinted that the new line would be run through
Wildstorm.

If it all goes down, expect a 2005 launch date.

This Has A "Up, Up And Away!!" Factor of Six Out of Ten

Many Happy Returns

In other DC news, I've heard that Jeff Loeb will be writing a six
issue Wonder Woman miniseries, with Adam Hughes providing the
covers and the interior art as well. Additionally, the Geoff
Johns/Adam Hughes Batman storyline is still on, but has been
pushed back until after the Wonder Woman miniseries has been
finished.

Also, keep an eye out for this week's Wizard. It reportedly has a
feature story on the new Justice League ongoing series, with an M
& M creative team for the first arc. Long time JLA fans should be
happy very soon.

This Has A "Paradise Island" Factor of Eight Out of Ten

Panther Sighting

I've heard that the writer for Marvel's upcoming Black Panther
project is Reggie Hudlin. Hudlin is best known for directing the
House Party movies, and has also worked on The Bernie Mac Show.
He's also working with Aaron MacGruder (Boondocks) and Kyle Baker
(Why I Hate Saturn) on a graphic novel entitled Birth of a
Nation.

Hudlin's Black Panther is said to be very much in the spirit of
Priest's run with the character. John Romita Jr. is still onboard
for the interior art, and the project is expected to hit in 2005.

This Has A "Vibranium Alloy" Factor of Seven Out of Ten

Riding A Dark Horse

Dark Horse Comics made a number of announcements at San Diego.
Here's a quick run down:

 The Incredibles will be adapted in a four issue miniseries.
Story by Brad Bird and art by Richard Curtis.
 Paul Dini's Jingle Belle has relocated from Oni to Dark
Horse. A new Jingle Belle four issue miniseries will hit in
November, written by Dini and art by Jose Garibaldi and
Stephanie Gladden.
 A new Concrete miniseries is slated for December.
 Jeremy Love (Fierce) is writing and drawing a Shadow Rock
graphic novel.
 Ron Marz and Luke Ross are reteaming for a new project:
Samurai. It's scheduled for a late 2004 release.
 John Landis (The Blues Brothers) is developing a comic
entitled Teenage Vampire.
 Katsuya Terada's The Monkey King will be released in March
2005.
 Broken Saints, an online comic done in Manga/Anime style
will debut in 2005.
 And finally, April 2005 will see the release of Hipira: The
Little Vampire by Katsuhiro Otomo and Shinji Kimura.

This Has A "Maximum Diversification" Factor of Eight Out of Ten

Moviemania

Throughout the con, there were several movie producers who
traveled the show floor and expressed interest in developing
various comic books into film and television series. Some of it
was just talk. but there were a few that went into serious
negotiations. Additionally, there were least seven comic
properties (both mainstream and small press) which were picked up
prior to the con, with official announcements to be made in the
weeks and months ahead.

This Has A "Barbarians At The Gate" Factor of Seven Out of Ten

Game On

The video game industry had a much larger presence at this year's
con. Attending companies included Atari, Capcom, Electronic Arts,
Konami, Nintendo and Sony. It's interesting to note that their
booths in San Diego were extremely scaled back versions of their
E3 displays. Prior to the SDCC, several companies (most notably
Atari & EA) were rumored to be dissatisfied with the E3 and the
high cost that it entails. Some companies spend millions of
dollars on their E3 displays. Now, with the emergence of the
SDCC, video game companies can reach a wider audience without
spending nearly as much they had previously. This has not gone
unnoticed by the companies themselves.

And there's already talk that some companies might skip next
year's E3 altogether.

This Has A "Powerups To The People! " Factor of Six Out of Ten

Zone Alert

Sony and Dreamwave are continuing the video game into comics
trend with the upcoming Killzone miniseries. Dreamwave founder,
Pat Lee explains:

Killzone is a project that we're working with Sony on. They
came to us with it, and we thought it would be a really
interesting idea if we took on this new property. They're
putting it out as a video game fairly soon. We're pretty
excited, it's the type of project that we've always been
interested in. We're telling a war story with a video game
franchise. It's gonna be a blast.

The video game comes out in October for Playstation 2. Sony is
positioning it as the premier first-person shooter for
Playstation 2. Something to compete against Halo. The first
issue of the comic book comes out in November. It's gonna be a
three issue series, written by John Ney Rieber. The art is by
an amazing penciler named Travel Foreman (Cla$$war). He's an
up-and-coming guy known for his realistic style, which fit
perfectly for Killzone.

This Has A "Stay on Target" Factor of Seven Out of Ten

Red Star Rising

Chris Gossett (The Red Star) recently worked on an upcoming film
that may interest comic and genre fans. Gossett elaborates:

It turns out that Richard Taylor and a few of my buddies down
in New Zealand (who worked on Lord of the Rings) are fans of
The Red Star. And Richard told me "If you the time, would you
like to come down and work a couple of months on King Kong? It
would be good to have you." They were wonderfully respectful
of our work on The Red Star. Richard is someone who brought
such innovation to film (as the LotR visual effects
supervisor) and he really appreciated our innovation in
comics. So, I went down there a month before Comic Con, and
had to come back. It went really well. I can't tell you
anything about King Kong, all I can say is that the WETA
workshop and Peter Jackson are approaching King Kong with as
much love, passion and attention to detail as they did the
Lord of the Rings Trilogy. They're putting their full heart
into it, and you know what happens when they do.

Gossett also had a few thoughts on The Red Star video game and
the next trade paperback:

I'm really happy to say that we have our first video game
coming out in September for the PS2 and X-Box. We have it here
at the San Diego con and a lot of people have been having a
great time playing it. We've gotten nothing but positive
feedback on the game itself. It's a really fun first game.
It's very arcade style. A trend in video games these days is
to make a really complex interface, really slow interface. The
Red Star features classic gameplay. It's run and shoot. We
wanted people to be able to pick it up and play. And just have
fun with it. That's what we have here.

The third Red Star trade comes out just after this show. That
will collect the second volume (five issues). It's about 160
pages long and oversized, as we're known for. It completes the
current story-arc and there's a really nice extended
sketchbook section in the back along with commentary on how we
make The Red Star and our unique production process.

This Has A "Swatting At Airplanes" Factor of Nine Out of Ten

continued . . .



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