Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Animated Stormbringer, Wendy Pini and Red Sonja

My friend Mike sent this over to me and I thought it best to share it right away.

Back in her college days, Wendy Pini (Elfquest) had begun a most ambitious project of bringing Michael Moorcock's Elric to the screen as an animated feature.  She ended up spending years on this, working up concept drawings, storyboards, sound effects and music cues.  It was quite an undertaking for any studio much less a single person.  It kinda became this ongoing obsession that she eventually had to lock up and walk away from back in 1973.

View Wendy's production portfolio for Stormbringer
Wendy offers up the story of this chapter in creative life via this website as she displays much of the work she produced for this project.  It's amazing to see the breadth of talent she possessed at that young age and the illustrations for Elric as an animated piece are mindblowing.

View Wendy Pini's Stormbringer presentation.

Elric is a 'strange' sort of fantasy, not as accessible as LotRs which was quite popular in the 60's and early 70's and was later produced as an animated feature by Ralph Bakshi.  If her Elric movie was ever made I wonder how that would have changed the direction of fantasy.  If it was a high profile Disney style production (not that they would have touched this with a 10 foot pole), I think it would have been amazing.  Bakshi had more of an underground flair but I think this would have been a better direction than he ended up going with with Wizards.  But I doubt he wouldn't have given up reign on a project like that to a young talent like Wendy Pini.  Bakshi's influence would have been all over that and Wendy's concepts are too good I wouldn't' want that to be diluted or altered in any way.  If her Stormbringer film was made at the time and was successful, I think fantasy would have been less fluffy.  Moorcock's battles of Law vs Chaos and related concepts were a bit more underground even for an underground literary genre such as fantasy.  But it may have fit well in the 70's.

Alas, we'll never know but it's interesting to contemplate.

After college she ended up hanging out with Frank Thorne and dressing up as Red Sonja, though there's definitely nothing wrong with that, before moving on to her famous Elfquest.

Original cosplayer Wendy Pini as Red Sonja

Bonus feature:


Friday, June 28, 2013

Best Movie About Role-playing: Westworld

Guide to role-playing
Back in the early 70's there was a small explosion of some true to genre science fiction films that Hollywood was cranking out, no doubt due to the success of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and The Planet of the Apes (which spawned four sequels).  Films like Death Race 2000, The Omega Man, Silent Running, Soilent Green, Logan's Run, Rollerball and many others.  These were true Science Fiction stories, and like all good true science fiction, posed questions about man's relationship to himself, the universe and machines.  All of this was shattered in 1977 when Star Wars, a science fantasy film, rolled over the genre like a Jawa Sandcrawler.

One of those early 70's sci-films was called Westworld a film about a resort that, for one thousand dollars a day, you can live out your fantasies in one of three fully-immersive environments, Medievalworld, Romanworld and Westworld.  The movie was written and directed by Michael Crichton (Jurassic Park, Andromeda Strain) and introduced his 'theme-park horror story'.  The twist is that all the other participants in these 'worlds' with the exception of the guests, are robots.  Of course "Nothing can go wrong".

So what does this have to do with Role-playing?

Westworld has all the elements and is a perfect analogy of a role-playing game.  Spoilers ahead, so if you need to go watch the movie do so now.

Players and PC rolled into one
The move starts with two guests, played by James Brolin and Richard Benjamin, head to Westworld to live out their fantasy of living a real wild west experience.  Brolin had been to Westworld once before (the experienced role-player), for Benjamin, however, this was his first experience (a role-player newbie).  Once they don their western garb provided by the resort Brolin kinda helps Benjamin through the ropes of getting into this role of a fantasy experience.  Benjamin has a hard time of 'letting go' and getting into the fantasy.

Bad-ass NPC
Their first stop, like any good role players, is the saloon.  Here they run into the antagonist of Westworld, the Gunslinger played by Yul Brenner who challenges Benjamin.  Here it's great to watch Benjamin's character, a Yuppie from Chicago, attempting to get into this fantasy role of cowboy and finally guns down Brenner.

Once the two friends loosen up to this 'new' fantasy world they do what any good role-players do; they start drinking, whorin' and shooting up the town.

Six-Gun's Enough!
It's really great how the first two-thirds of the movie parallels the general path of most players actions in role-playing games.  With a free open 'world' the first things that happens is that players, get drunk, whore around and cause trouble in the towns they visit.  A great point to note here is that after Brolin and Benjamin kill the sheriff in a jail-break, the role of sheriff of taken over by none other than Dick VanPatten, another guest with thick  glasses (totally out of place in the western scene) bumbling about.  A great visual of players entering these archetypical roles and projecting personae onto their characters.  In Medievalworld, the guest there hits on the queen and voluptuous wench while eating and drinking to his delight of a no-consequence world.

Keep in mind here, the guests are having sex with robots.

Hitting on the tavern robot ..er.. wench
The robots in the town are all the NPCs that the players (the stars of the story) run into. They are there only for the guests (players) interaction with their stereotypical roles and dialogue and simple purpose - to add life and color to the guest's (player's) experience of the world.

Your Game Master's brain
The robots are controlled by a master control center that represents the Game Master.  Here they re-program the robots on the fly to adapt to the guest's (player's) actions; altering their preconceived 'storylines' to please the guests (players), but also tossing in pre-programed events such as the bar-fight.  All fantasy RPG tropes are visited here.  Note that GMing on the fly is displayed by the technicians of master control, allowing the guests (players) to do what they desire but reacting to it and keeping it contained within the 'safe' notions of the control center (GM).

The guests (players) revel in their fantasies as there are no true consequences to their actions.  Killing NPCs, sleeping around, breaking the laws, the guest loose themselves in these actions but their feet are still rooted in their real world.  It's quite well captured this dual existence of the player and the PC.

Random roles really begin to start messing up everyone's
preconceived ideas of the session.
But here comes the third act.  Here the guests (players) and the control center techs (the GM) are surprised at what happens next.  And what happens next is the unexpected.  Here the random dice rolls take over and surprise both groups of participants creating this fantasy experience.  Within the movie, the robots start acting on their own and begin killing the guests.  In game terms, the random dice start rolling events and actions that neither player or GM were expecting.  Here the movie rolls into unexpected territory - unplanned and deadly.  The guests (players) begin reacting uncertainly for their lives, the techs (GM) does their best to roll with what's happening trying their best to regain control of their 'game'.

At this point enough reality seeps into the fantasy world to make it interesting, thrilling and deadly.  It is here that the lone survivor, Benjamin being relentlessly perused by the Gunslinger, runs 'off map' and into the other 'worlds'.  It is here that he gets his $1000 a day role-playing value!

I saw this movie when I was a kid and Brenner's emotionless robotic Gunslinger scared the crap outta me.  Watching this movie now, sure things seem dated but in a retro fun way, but watching this with the eye of a role-player was a revelation.  The movie is a perfect parallel to the RPG experience and worth spending an hour and a half watching.  If any movie needs a modern reboot, this is the one.

Never trust a robot to do a man's job.



Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Threads: Your Mutant Future Prelude

Most of us old school gamers grew up during the final decade of the cold war.  With Ronald Raygun's Hollywood style of politics towards the Soviet Union in it's final throws, us kids had at our disposal not only D&D but thrilling post apocalyptic visions of Mad Max, Thundar the Barbarian and Judge Dredd.

The end of the world didn't seem so bad and fit our fantasy filled brains with mutants and magic and the ruins of humanity's society.

But the reality, no doubt, would have been much more grim than that and I think we all knew that.

Or would it be...?

In the mid-eighties, both here in the states and in Great Britian, the powers that be released two movies aimed to show the horrors of a nuclear war; the American television drama called "The Day After" and the BBC drama called "Threads".

I'll briefly talk about The Day After first then get in to the BBC's more disturbing Threads. (some great additional commentary on The Day After can be found here).

In America, radiation sickness isn't too bad.
In The Day After, you get the star studded cast of Jason Robards, JoBeth Williams, John Lithgow, and Steve Guttenburg living their lives before and after a nuclear attack in Lawrence Kansas.  The TV movie was hyped up to be a horrifying look at the affects of a nuclear war with parental discretion advised.

Perhaps it was horrifying.  But having grown up playing war games and fantasy rpgs and reading comics, I knew the affects to be much more dramatic than a few Hollywood stars loosing their hair due to radiation sickness.  I wasn't impressed at the time and felt it was a sugar coated, over expositioned version of the realities of a nuclear war so as not to strike any real fear into the populous, but only to get them to chat about seeing the movie around the water cooler for a day or two but being a catalyst for no real change.

The last shot in The Day After as America doesn't
loose it's humanity.
What do you expect from the country that brought you Duck and Cover?  In fact, the movie has only moved a few steps from the Duck and Cover days.  The whole things come off as a disaster movie and, IMHO, melodramatic and a bit lacking.

To their credit, the producers display a disclaimer after the film that says that things will actually be much worse than those depicted.  So why not show the worst?

That was left to the BBC.

Now Threads on the other-hand...

If you want to see a provocative, disturbing realistic portrait of a nuclear war I urge you to check out this film from the BBC released roughly during the same time as the US version.

There were no big stars (at least that Americans would recognize), or doctors or heroes.  Threads portrays just regular folks going about their seemingly mundane lives as political forces outside their control bring the world to destruction, all of which gave an incredible foundation of normalcy which the every-man can connect with.  The viewer can place themselves into any one of these characters plus with it's almost documentary feel gives the whole thing a great sense of non-hyped realism.  As in the American The Day After, the first hour counts down to d-day.

Starving survivors acting like it's a Zombie Walk
The attack itself is brutal and horrific but that would just be the start and the city of Sheffield, where the story takes place, takes a direct hit.  No punch is held back in the depiction of the immediate aftermath; the firestorm and death and suffering.  It is not a glossed over depiction of the after-affects of a nuclear war.  The suffering is depicted as quite real, both physical and especially psychological. And as the days and weeks go by things only get worse and more barbaric as the threads of society and humanity break down.  In fact, almost the entire second hour of the movie is depicted without dialogue - a stark contrast to the American spoon-fed version of the aftermath.

But what does this all have to do with a prelude to a Mutant Future (Gamma World) game?

Well, keep reading.....


***********SPOILERS***********


I urge you to watch the movie Threads before reading further.

Only one character that we meet in the beginning of Threads survives to carry us through to the many years after the war.

The woman Ruth, who becomes pregnant at the beginning of the story carries her baby to term in the months after the war.  Though the brief narration mentions the dismal future of having a successful birth, Ruth manages to birth her baby on her own in a shed while a barking dog watches.

Here is where the Mutant Future begins...

The contents of the basket of this street vendor contains
literal rats-on-a-stick.
In the film, after the birth, ten years pass and the immediate affects of the war lessen.  The population of Britain is down to per-medieval levels.  Agriculture, though attempting to make a comeback is still a pretty dismal prospect, but some folks are tilling the soil. It is here that Ruth succumbs  to 10 years of radiation poisoning leaving her daughter of 10 to fend on her own.  There is a scene where this girl and other children born after the war are being educated by a television with a children's program on video tape while an old crone watches on.

Eventually leaving this small society, this girl is on her own.  Scrounging and scavenging she eventually hooks up with two other boys possibly also born after the war.  A new generation born into this Mutant Future / Gamma World.  Together they loot the ruins for food but one of them is shot as a looter.  The girl and one boy escape.  The girl, now thirteen, becomes pregnant from the surviving boy and eventually is on her own again.  In labor, she finds shelter in some broken down 'medical center' where some old woman is helping a sick dying man.  It is here that the girl gives birth.  The 'nurse' gives the wrapped baby to the young girl and as this girl removes the swaths to view the face of her baby she begins to scream (the film ends in a freeze frame before the scream is actually heard).

This last moment is where we can be thrust into the beginnings of our post-apocalyptic game.  You initially think that the baby may be still-born but with the look on the mother's face at the very end tends to push the thought that the baby is indeed alive but in some horrible mutant state.  Realistically, I am sure this Mutant baby would either eventually die or live a pretty horrible brutal life, but in games terms, using Threads and a prelude to a post-apocalyptic game, you get the beginnings of a mutant race.

Now I don't mean to make lite of an incredibly serious subject.  I was shocked and moved by this movie as a whole, even thirty years after it was made but this is what our games represent.  Though Gamma World is just a fantasy RPG it's foundation is based on some pretty grim and brutal realities as this movie shows.  Why not explore that, feel that and make it part of your game.  It will definitely set a realistic foundation to a fantastical game setting.

Anyways, just thought I'd share...

A hopeless mutant character or a role playing opportunity?

Friday, March 1, 2013

What Can Be Better Than A Man In A Cowl?

Behind the scenes photo dump of Bat-man 1966.  Who would not have loved to work on this production?

















Adam West's and Burt Ward's stunt doubles.



I couldn't resist!

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Pulp Triple Feature!

As many of you know, most of today's pop entertainment had it's birth in the original pulp fiction that began coming out in the early 20th century.  Comic heroes, space opera fantasy, sword and sorcery adventure all had it's beginnings with cheap and trashy dime magazines.  Star Wars, Jack Kirby's creations, Dungeons & Dragons and RPGs in general can all be traced to the early creators of fantasy adventures; Robert E. Howard, Edgar Rice Burroughs, H. P. Lovecraft. What better way to wrap up October with a triple feature based on classic fantasy, horror and pulp adventures!  Lock yourself indoors, make yourself a big bowl of buttered popcorn and enjoy!

First Feature:
H.P. Lovecraft's modern-day silent film!


Feature Two:
Edgar Rice Burroughs space fantasy hero brought to life!

Feature Three:
Robert E. Howard's classic swords and sorcery hero!

Available via Video on Demand or at your local video store!

Friday, June 22, 2012

Friday, May 4, 2012

Make Every Day An Avengers Day

Ya gotta love Marvel's Silver Age.  The heroes' light-hearted interaction with a populous that adored and worshiped them (and at other times hated them).  When else in the Marvel continuum would the mayor of New York declare an Avengers day to apologize for the way he treated Earth's Mightiest Heroes. 

But with the new Avengers movie finally being released here in the states, lets make today Avengers Day!



Thursday, March 8, 2012

Fire and Ice: Behind the scenes

I've always been a huge Ralph Bakshi fan. I've even loved his contentious use of rotoscope to animate his movies which he used in Hey Good Looking, Wizards, LOTR, Fire and Ice and American Pop.

One of my least favorite of his fantasy films of his surprisingly is Fire and Ice. One would think that gathering together Bakshi, Frank Frazetta and Roy Thomas would produce one hell of a fantastic fantasy drama, after-all, these three creators are seen by some to be the top in the genre at the time. Frazetta's artwork being transferred to the screen is a blast to watch but that doesn't save the plodding stereotypical fantasy story.

Teegra, anyone?

Regardless, seeing how Bakshi works his magic is quite thrilling. I've always loved the process of classic hand drawn animation but Bakshi took it one level further. Having to shoot the entire movie in live action and then illustrating it to later embed into a fantasy world has always seemed like a grand mystery. The video clip below shows Bakshi's rotoscoping process and it's quite amazing to watch:



It's interesting to note that his use of rotoscope was looked down upon by traditional animators. However, with today's use of motion capture to animate modern CGI creations like the creatures in Avatar and Gollum from Peter Jackson's LOTR, Bakshi can be thought of as a forerunner to modern-day special affects.


Still from the live action shooting of Bakshi's Lord of the Rings

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Avengers Assembled!

Those of you who watched the Superbowl this weekend caught a 17 second glimpse of the new Avengers preview clip. As much of a tease as those 17 seconds were, the bigger blast was the following full teaser Besides getting a bigger taste of what might be happening in this summer's blockbuster we get the pièce de résistanc; the first glimpse of Earth's Mightiest Heroes assembled!

Thor, Black Widow, Hawkeye, Captain America, Hulk and Iron Man, together for the first time! Of course, Widow looks a bit out-classed with only her pea-shooter but considering that she can take down enemies with her thighs we'll just have to see how it plays out.

As a young kid and Avengers fan in the early 70's I never even dreamed that one would ever see these heroes together on the big screen in a big budget blockbuster. Of course, it'd be even more complete seeing GiANT-man/Goliath and the Wasp.

So for your summer anticipation....

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

The Old Marvel Universe and the Marvel Movies

With our upcoming ICONS campaign and with the upcoming Avengers movie release later this summer I've been thinking a a lot about how the movies relate to the Marvel Universe that I grew up with.

Regardless of some of the movie elements tying in more with the Marvel Ultimates line, I think that the movies, especially in a particular order, pretty well mimic the thrill of the original Marvel Universe of the Silver Age.

So how would one watch these movies best to recreate the initial excitement of the characters created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Steve Ditko and other silver age creators? We'll this is what I've put together:

Captain America: The First Avenger
The obvious beginning; Jack Kirby's and Joe Shuster's 1941 star-spangled creation put the Timely/Atlas/Marvel comics on the map. A well done film which stands as a strong foundation to the marvel movie universe and introduces the super-serum which appears again in The Incredible Hulk. I suggest skipping the post credit sequence, just end it with Cap 'disappearing'.


X-Men: First Class
Though the X-Men comics began in 1964, the same month that the Avengers debuted, I felt that because a portion of this begins during WWII and concludes in the early 60's, this is the obvious second film in the series. The X-Men were always a bit off on their own so this just reinforces that aspect of the movie universe. Another good flick and sets the foundations for the Mutant heroes.

Fantastic Four
Yes. The first FF movie. After Cap and the 'death' of the super-hero during the 1950's (thanks to Prof. Wertheim) superheroes didn't make a comeback until the early 1960's. DC had the Justice League and Marvel came out with the Fantastic Four. As a movie, it has it's problems but I still liked the first one enough. We'll get to the second one in a bit.

Hulk
The second super-hero book marvel put out was Hulk, so the Ang Lee movie places here. I still like this movie especially since it has the Hulk jumping around the desert in a purple spedo.


Spider-man
The Hulk comics only lasted 6 issues but it's canceling made way for the coming of Spider-man in Amazing Fantasy #15. Though the Spider-man series wouldn't actually begin until a few months later, Sam Raimi's first Spider-man movie shows up here.


Now, Thor actually made his debut the same month that Spider-man did but I'm going to hold off on Thor a bit until we enter the more cosmic era of the Marvel Universe timeline.

Iron Man
So now we come to the next hero created, Iron Man. With Robert Downey's portrait of Tony Stark and the Golden Avenger (complete with clunky original Iron Man armor) is a perfect fit for this movie series. SHIELD begins to make it's film universe appearance here.


Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer
We begin now with the cosmic era of the Marvel Universe with the introduction of Galactus and the Silver Surfer in this, yes, sub-par flick. Sure it's a bit of a let down, what with Mr. Fantastic doing his fantasti-dance and all, but they did get the Surfer's look right, though Galactus was a huge disappointment. I swear, if you look closely at that cloud at the end you can just barely make out the head of the Big G - barely. But it's included here for continuity sake.


Thor
Okay, in full cosmic mode. Though Thor was getting cosmic a bit before the FF introduced the Silver Surfer and Galactus with the late 1965 appearance of the Destroyer and the full grandeur of Asgard I think it actually fits better after FF2. Again, SHIELD is present with hints towards the Avengers.

Spider-man 2
With the 'death' of the Green Goblin in mid-1966, Doc Ock became Spidey's main protagonist. While the rest of the Marvel Universe went cosmic, Stan Lee kept Peter Parker and Spider-man grounded in the dramas of day to day real-life. Thus Raimi's second flick places here.

The Incredible Hulk
With Ed Norton's portrail of the troubled Bruce Banner, the introduction of the Abomination and the birth of the Leader I'll place The Incredible Hulk here. An appearance by Tony Stark (and SHIELD) unifies the Universe and begins the build up to the Avengers.

Iron Man 2
We start to break a way from the early 60's chronology a bit by this point as a drunken Tony Stark doesn't really appear until the late 70's (or 80's?). But you do have Whiplash, a classic late 60's Iron Man villain and Titanium man. SHIELD's presence along with the Black Widow tie up things nicely for the debut of the Avengers.

X-Men 1
Since the X-men and the Avengers comic series both began in September 1963, I'm placing the first X-Men movie here (for now) though I think after the release of the Avengers movie I would place X-Men after it. But until that happens I'm happy with it here.


The Avengers
The release date of May 2012 should give you plenty of time to view these Marvel movies in this order to 'relive' so to speak, the thrill of the birth of a comic universe that changed comics.

From here I would place
Daredevil
X-Men 2
Spider-man 3 (if you can tolerate another viewing of it)
Ghost Rider
X-men 3