Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
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Religious Simpson’s show. Munchkin and Dante are Spirited Away. Free tabletop Role playing games. Qwirkle goes mainstream

August 27, 2009 in FAMILY, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Finished up my work with the last crew and started up on a new one. Religion is the theme of this show. Surprisingly not very  insulting.  I’ve seen a show this season that does have a very anti Christian joke in it (actually making fun of Jesus. I hope they cut that joke out). Yet this one, which is all about religion, gets away with the topic by only making fun of the people rather than the religions (or it’s founders). Wonder if anyone will care for it?

FAMILY/MOVIES

So I decided to see what Munchkin’s reaction would be to the movie Spirited Away by Hayao Miyazaki.  Keep in mind that she’s only three years old and the movie is REALLY intense.  Why would I even attempt to show her this movie? Well, I’ve tried showing her other dubbed version of Miyazaki movies that I own. I showed her My neighbor Totoro.

http://bjanepr.files.wordpress.com/2009/08/anime-my-neighbor-totoro.jpg

It didn’t keep her attention at all. I then tried showing her my personal favorite Miyazaki movie (if it’s in the original Japanese) Kiki’s Delivery Service and, again, she didn’t really care for it (I don’t own Castle in the Sky Laputa dubbed, so I couldn’t show her that).

http://www.northarc.com/images/kiki/kikic1024x768.jpg

So I pretty much gave up showing her Miyazaki movies.  Then, one day while going over my DVDs, she saw Howl’s Moving Castle and asked me if she could watch it. So I thought, why not?  It’s intense but I doubt it will keep her attention for long.  I mean, it’s about a young woman who turns into a old lady, for goodness sake. What could she possibly like about it?

http://freenet-homepage.de/kettensaegenpiraten/HowlsMovingCastle_by_cls.jpg

Well, apparently, just about everything but the end.  She sat through most of the movie. In fact, she loves seeing the part where the main character turns old.  Why in the world does that movie keep her attention while Totoro doesn’t, is beyond me. So since she liked Howl’s Moving Castle, I thought perhaps I’d show her Spirited Away.

Both Munchkin and DANTE where glued to their seats! Dante too. He’s only a year and a half years old. They couldn’t get enough of the movie.  They watched the whole thing. From the moment they saw it, they barely blinked.

spirited-away.jpg

When it ended, Munchkin asked me to play it again. WHY?!

Here’s my theory: From the moment the movie begins, there is a sense of conflict to the situation the protagonist (a young girl) is in. Within the first five minutes of the movie, she is faced with having to choose between one fear and another (follow her parents into the scary tunnel or stay behind in the car alone with the creepy statue).

http://images.fanpop.com/images/image_uploads/Spirited-Away-wallpaper-spirited-away-400845_1024_768.jpg

Her choices go from bad to worse as the story develops and she is confronted with one frighten thing after another.

http://hirvine.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2006/08/spirited_away_05.png

This movie puts the young girl in the most perilous and dangerous situations a little kid could possibly be in, and yet, she faces all the situations, fear and all, and not only begins to conquer her fears, but also begins to thrive.  The scary things, the dangerous things,  she faces them all in a believable way and becomes strong.  All those things, become less scary, less weird and she comes out ahead in the end.

http://stevenhartsite.files.wordpress.com/2009/07/yubaba.jpg

I think both Munchkin and Dante related to a character that was confronting very scary things.  To them, everything must seem as scary as the monsters in the movie. Maybe to them, the world is full of giants and weird new magical scary things.  They must have empathized with the protagonist’s predicament from the start.  But then seeing her “handle it”, get used to it all and thrive must have really been the thing that kept them riveted.

Miyazaki captured the true essence of the old fairy tales in this movie. The type of story that isn’t watered down by making the perils a person faces so weak that it’s hardly a threat and therefore, not really worth telling. This movie is like a classic fairy tales that puts a character in a true life and death struggle where you either succeed and become a stronger, better person in the end, or die trying.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kqXHPHhvU9w&feature=related

OR…maybe I just have weird kids. After all, Munchkin LOVES Batman, which I don’t understand because Superman is WAY cooler. I blame it on her mother.


ROLE PLAYING GAMES

For those of us who are broke, getting free games is awesome, so I thought I’d put up some Free Rpgs or board games that I’ve found on the net.  This week I’ll put this one up:

Risus: The Anything Rpg

Risus (Latin for laughter) is an extremely rules lite rpg.  You can download the pdf of the game off the site and the rules are six pages long. It was designed as a comedy rpg but as far a I can tell, most people use the game for more “serious” games.  It’s very versatile and has a very clever conflict resolution mechanic.  It’s also very easily modified to you own needs. It has a  fairly involved community that has made quite a few mods to the game already. Check it out.

BOARD GAMES

(Photos taken from www.boardgamegeek.com)

I’ve mentioned the game Qwirkle before in two posts a loooong time ago. I’ve been meaning to write a review of the game and I will the next chance I get.

The reason I’m bringing it up though is because, up until now,  the game has been difficult to find in stores. You could get it online but, often, that is just a pain (especially with the shipping cost) and some people don’t feel comfortable buying online (like my mom).  Nothing beats going over to a store, seeing a game, picking it up, examining it, buying it and playing it a few minutes later.

Well, now you can do just that.  Qwirkle is now being sold at Target stores in the U.S..  I discovered this on Tuesday when I stopped off at one to buy some diapers.  I always go the toy section to check out the toys and board games. You can imagine my surprise when I came across the game. It’s always exciting when a good “hobby board game” makes it’s way to the mainstream retailers.

Congrats!


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Hurray for overtime. Reading through Alesha’s story. Raul, superstar. Green Lantern: First Flight

August 20, 2009 in BLOGS, FAMILY, MOVIES, PODCASTS, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

This is the second time I’m writing this since I lost my original version somehow.  I have to make sure to make a back up. This post is the MUCH ABRIDGED version of the original.

I’ve gotten permission to do overtime at work.  This is good since I need the money.  It’s bad because I don’t get much time to do anything else (like re-write my lost blog post).

FAMILY

Alesha finished the first draft of her story. I’ve been reading it and giving her my two cents.  It starts off really well and then it begins to get a bit rushed.  She needs to double her word count so it’s not a big deal.  She just needs to slow the story down a bit by adding more.  It’s fun to read.  We’ve been bouncing ideas back and forth on it. Once it’s done, maybe I’ll put up a chapter or two on the blog.

reading.gif

BLOG/PODCAST

Raul is at it again. Making himself a multimedia superstar. Check this out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a72BKO2JwMo

MOVIES

Alesha and I saw, Green Lantern: First Flight on Monday.  I rented it late last week.  I really enjoyed it. Not for the kiddies.  This is rate PG-13.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4h1yAArJe8c

I’m also looking forward to the next animated movie DC is coming out with. It’s based on a great comic I own called Public Enemies. Take a look:


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The new Star Trek movie. First Communions and fevers. Obama and Notre Dame. Board games into video games, video games into board games.

May 21, 2009 in BOARD GAMES, CATHOLICISM, FAMILY, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEO GAMES

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Working late for two days straight again this week.  Need to make up the hours because I’m going to be missing a day of work to take care of the kids for a day.  My work load isn’t too crazy but the scenes I need to do are pretty complicated.  I’m working on a new crew right now. I’m helping out for the week. I’m not sure what happens afterward.  Hopefully I get put on a new crew.  Right now, the show I’m helping out on, is a show from last season.  This is their last week to ship everything.  I’m feeling the pressure.

FAMILY

Big day for Carolina’s family last Saturday.  Angelita, Carolina’s youngest daughter, did her First Communion.  We were all very happy for her.  Afterward we gathered at their house and had a First Communion party.  Munchkin had a fantastic time.  She had so much fun that when it was time to go, she left crying.

Meanwhile Dante and Alesha had to stay home.  Dante had a fever late last week.  He wasn’t doing very well at all.  Still, in spite of the fact that he was burning up, he insisted on sitting down to eat.  He also wanted to walk around and play.  He wanted so much to do what he always does, but the poor boy found himself not being able to do much.  By the end of the week, he was back to normal.  He just needed to spend at least one weekend at home without going out anywhere.

dante-fever.jpg

CATHOLICISM

I went to get my lunch on Monday from the kitchen at work.  As I was walking back to my desk I overheard a conversation at a  table in the kitchen from my fellow co-workers talking about the whole Obama/Notre Dame thing. Of course, most of the people I work with are on Obama’s side of the debate; and of course, they saw it as a purely political thing.  “Conservative Catholics” vs. “Liberal Catholics”. Their conversation was also the typical anti-Catholic prejudice, you hear everywhere.  “Those Catholics don’t know what they’re doing, they have it all wrong, they’re holding on to ancient things that don’t mean anything”…etc.   It ruined my lunch.  All I heard was a couple of sentences but it got me sooo steamed up it just ruined my lunch.  I couldn’t stop thinking about all the things I would say to them and how I would say it.  How “I would SHOW THEM”.  How my arguments would make them look foolish.  How I would show how much smarter and more intellectual my view was.  How arrogant, heartless and mean an angry Catholic could be…which is, of course, the reason I couldn’t do it and didn’t do it.  I was too angry to say anything that wouldn’t have done more harm than good. It wouldn’t have been a conversion about the topic at hand so much as an exercise in arrogance and pride on my part.

I wondered though, if I HAD said something in a calm, collected, and charitable way, if they would have seen it as a political argument rather than a logical one anyway.  I wonder how much I would be able to say to them that wouldn’t have sounded as if I was politically “Conservative” instead of just Catholic.  Why is it that if you live your faith as it is taught by the Church  you are automatically “a close minded, ultra conservative, right winger”? Why is it that being unfaithful to your Church and faith is celebrated as being “progressive” and open minded? Yes, I understand that there are political Conservatives that are Catholics. I also understand that there are political Liberals that are Catholics. Yet, that really shouldn’t be the issue.  The issue should really be about whether you are a FAITHFUL Catholic or not. You shouldn’t put you parties or political views ahead of the dogmas of your faith.  If you do, it only goes to show which one of the two is your REAL Religion.  In the end, it just  made me sad.

MOVIES

I  used to like Star Wars more than Star Trek.  I thought that Star Wars, in general, was a bit more fun and Star Trek was a bit to “hard sci-fi” to be as fun.  Then George Lucas released his  Star Wars prequels and pretty much ruined the fun of Star Wars by making three movies that never actually captured the fun of the original three.

Along comes the new Star Trek movie and does to Star Trek what Lucas couldn’t pull off with Star Wars. It updates the Star Trek franchise, makes it fun, captures the essence of what made the original Star Trek work (the characters), takes away the dryness of Star Trek, adds some action and makes it cool to like Star Trek.  Yes, the intellectual parts and the hard science, that made Star Trek truly geeky, are missing, but what we get in it’s place is a good fun time.  Hopefully, some of the intellectual stuff will make an appearance in the next movies, for now, I’m happy with what they gave us.

BOARD GAMES/VIDEO GAMES

Haven’t written about games in a while so I just thought I’d write about a board game that will become a video game and some video games that have become board games.

  • Dungeon Twister

Andy and I played a game of Dungeon Twister last Friday.  He beat me, but I think the game would have kept going. On hindsight I think we messed up a rule that would have changed the way we saw the last move of the game.

Andy really likes the game. He’s liked it ever since we played it for the first time months ago.  It’s a dungeon crawl-ish chess game with a modular board whose parts twist around. There is no luck in the game.  It’s all tactics and strategy. Here’s the Description of the game:

Dungeon Twister is a 2-player high level strategy game where 2 teams of adventurers with various powers are trapped in a dungeon. The board is composed of 8 rooms that can be moved and rotated by the players. Each turn, a player is able to spend actions to move around the dungeon, pick up and use items, battle with the opponents team, or turn and move the rooms of the dungeon.

The goal is to reach 5 victory points. Points are collected by moving adventurers out of the dungeon or by killing an opponent’s adventurer. Treasures are disseminated across the whole dungeon and will bring the adventurers well-needed powers.

Each player has the same characters, each with different powers. Some run fast, some fight or disarm traps. The cleric heals, magician burns everything in sight and the goblin is so weak that the simple fact of getting him out will bring you two victory points.

Combat and actions are managed via cards. To move, fight, heal or turn a room, you must manage action points obtained by playing cards. Those cards are not drawn but selected from a set of cards by both players. Both players have access to the same panel of cards at the beginning of the game so the game is really about managing the resources and adapting to the changing environment.

It has recently  been announced that a new version of the game is coming out called: Dungeon Twister 2: Prison. This version of the game will actually be different and yet will still play the same as the original and it will be “backwards compatible” with the original. It will be coming out in December. The interesting part is that the game will also be released for Xbox live through Hydravision at the same time.

  • Skirmish Wars: Advance Tactics

A few years back, when the first Advance Wars game came out for the GBA, I bought it and totally fell in love with it.  I played that game once for an entire night.  I started playing it at around 7 or 8 pm, looked up after some hours had gone by and discovered the sun was rising.  It was just such a fun game.   I didn’t buy the new ones that came out after that, Mostly because (like the Street fighter games) the new games where pretty much, more of the same and I hadn’t (and still haven’t) unlocked all the maps in the game I have, and the original allowed you to make your own maps as well.  Theoretically I can keep playing the game without needing to buy a new one.  Besides, I haven’t played the game in a few years.

Just found out from the Purple Pawn website that someone has made a free print and play version of the game called Skirmish Wars: Advance Tactics.  They put it up on BGG  and I downloaded the pdf.  It looks great. They made the maps modular so you can create your own scenarios and everything. I’m so going to print it out.  I just need the figure out how “fancy” I want to make my version. I’m sure Andy will be up for a game. I just hope the game doesn’t take too long to play.

 Image 43

Above is a screenshot of what the original video game looks like.  Below is the board game version.


Just looking at the picture make me want to play it.  It looks so fun.

  • FITS

From the mind of Reiner Knizia comes FITS.  It’s Tetris the board game. It sounds great.  He really came up with a great way to translate the game into a tabletop game.

FITS (Fill In The Spaces) is essentially a multi-player Tetris . Each player has an inclined board on which they place different polyominoes – like Blokus pieces, with three, four, or five squares. Cards are drawn from a pile to tell the players which piece to take. The pieces may be rotated and reversed before they slide down the inclined area to dock to other gaming pieces, but unlike Tetris cannot be slid horizontally once dropped. Scoring is based on quantity and configuration of squares left uncovered.

Unlike original Tetris there is no time pressure but like Tetris there is no player interaction as every player is engaged with his own board.


This game is now on my Wishlist under “Must have”.  Definitely looks like a game most people will want to play if I was to bring it out.

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We watched the Watchmen. Dante walks. Munchkin watches Superman

March 12, 2009 in COMIC BOOKS, FAMILY, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Well, not much to report for this week.  Just working on finishing up the show on paper.  It’s good to be back drawing on paper but I miss the ability to  time my own scene and look at how it will work with the dialogue.  Still, it’s fine.  I’m having fun.  Hope this job lasts a bit longer ’cause I don’t want to be laid off anytime soon.

FAMILY

Dante has started walking now. He’s very proud of himself.  On Monday, he mostly did it between spaces that he could see a definite end point.  Such as, from the couch to the living room table, or from the living room table to  one of us.  If he would take a few steps and see everything  he might be able to walk to was more than ten steps away, he immediately would go back on his hands and knees and begins to crawl.

By mid week, he was confidently walking toward nothing, then he would look around, stop and walk in another direction. He would then crawl if he lost his balance. It’s great to  see him get more and more confident. It’s also darn funny to watch him walk too.  I’m sure  by Friday of next week, he won’t be crawling at all.

FAMILY

Munchkin has gotten into wanting to watch Superman and Justice League Cartoons.  I don’t know why.  She suddenly decided she wanted to watch them.  She went over to the DVD shelf, pointed to the Superman and Justice League cartoons, looked up at me an said, “Supaman, Supaman?”

I think her favorite heroes so far are Superman and Batman. She likes Superman because he can fly and Batman because…well…I have no idea why she likes Batman.  Maybe because she’s played with a Batman action figure before. I’m not exactly sure what she finds so entertaining about the cartoons either. This weekend she watched two seasons worth of Superman Cartoons and one DVD worth of Justice League cartoons. By “watched”, I mean, she had them playing in the background while she played with her toys. She would occasionally look up and watch for about five minutes before going back and playing.  Although, when she grew tired of playing with me or her toys, she would sit down and watch an entire episode. Even though she wasn’t watching them all the time, the moment one of the DVDs ended, she insisted on putting on another.

The cartoons are not anywhere near the kind of thing she’s used to watching.  They are very action oriented cartoons.  Lots of superhero fights in them.  Lots of life or death situations with many things at stake and very serious themes. Very complicated stories that would just go ever her head.  I think she has gotten used to watching action oriented cartoons from watching Disney cartoons like, Tarzan, Treasure Planet and Lilo & Stitch. Little by little, she’s learning the names of all the Superheroes in the show.  She now knows that Hawkgirl’s name is Hawkgirl. Although, every hero that talks with a gruff voice, she insists on calling Batman.  I find it funny and strange, yet I can’t help but feel a bit proud of her for being such a geek.  That’s my daughter.

walking-and-superheroes.jpg

COMIC BOOKS

Speaking of Superheroes, I was thinking of maybe buying Munchkin some Superhero comics because she likes the cartoons so much.  Lucky for me, both DC and Marvel have started coming out with kids comics.

Now you maybe saying to yourself, “Hey Luis, aren’t ALL comic books for kids? DC and Marvel ONLY do kids comics”.  To which I would reply, “You haven’t read any modern comic, have you?”  By no means are modern comic for kids.  In fact, if most comic would be given a movie rating, they would mostly be PG13 and up. Comics are full of sex and violence, and in many of them, the superheroes are about as immoral as the villains they fight. There are very few comics that I would say are “kid appropriate” and even those would be dealing with themes that would go over a little kid’s head.

DC and Marvel have come to realize that they no longer have comics that would appeal to young readers (and therefore are not getting new readers), which is the reason why they have developed a line of comics especially for them. This is great news for me, since now I have some comics I could get my kids.  So I was thinking maybe I’d get her a Superfriends comic and see how it goes.  Maybe I’ll take her to the comic shop next week and pick one up.

http://images1.wikia.nocookie.net/comics/images/7/71/Super_Friends_1.jpg

Guess I’m raising a geek.

MOVIES

(The following, is a spoiler free review of the Watchmen movie)

Alesha really wanted to go watch Watchmen last weekend, so we did.  I didn’t own the Watchmen comic until a few weeks ago.  I had read Watchmen in high school when a friend of mine had lent me his copy. I remembered the book, so I knew what it was all about.  At the time I read it though, I didn’t really truly “get it”. The book is very deep and brings up a lot of philosophical questions about human nature and the problem of evil.  It’s also one of those comics I was talking about above that are in no way meant to be read by kids.  It’s a very “Adult” book.

Alesha wanted to see it because she had heard so much about the comic.  Which in turn, made her bug me to go buy the comic so she could read it, which she did, after I bought it.  She enjoyed the book and then got even more excited about going to see the movie.  I began re-reading the comic myself but only got half way through the 200 or so pages before we went to see the movie.  As of the time of this writing, I’m still making my way through the rest of it.  Taking my time, in order to “soak it in”.

So what do I think about the movie? Well, I thought it was an incredibly faithful rendition of this epic comic book. I’ve read many reviews of the movie that say, they didn’t like the protagonists.  They where all unlikeable.  Well, that’s because the protagonist in the book where not very likable either.  In fact, the protagonist in the movie where far more likable than their book counterparts.  Watchmen is not a movie about good, superheroes. It’s a movie about messed up superheroes that are really screwed up in the head.  Many people hate what they call the “juvenile view on humanity” the movie has. I saw one person say it was a “hippie movie”. I think it’s great that it pushes people’s buttons.  That’s why the book is so interesting to begin with. I also read a review of a guy who took his son to go see it. He left the theater very upset and even told the theater owner that he should be ashamed at playing the movie.  Which I think is ridiculous.  The movie is rated R for a reason.  Why blame the theater owner? It was the father’s responsibility to find out what the movie was about before taking his son to go see it. Especially if it’s rated R. He shouldn’t blame anyone else.  I think he thought it would be okay to watch because it was a “superhero movie”.  Well, wake up.  Comics aren’t for kids anymore dude.  Watchmen (which was written in 1985) was one of the comics that where responsible for making the comic medium grow up.

Do I agree with the world view the book and movie puts forth?  Not completely, but I will say that part of the view point put forth, is no different than what Blaise Pascal puts forth in his book Pensées.  Of course, Pascal‘s solution to the problems is much different and much wiser than it is in Watchmen. The solution to the problem put forth in the movie is quite evil and would be, at best, temporary.    I think that perhaps most people just don’t want to be told that there is a problem at all, or at least, be reminded there is.

So what’s the movie about? It’s a murder mystery. In an alternate 1985, where Nixon is president and America won the Vietnam war (thanks to one of the superheroes in the movie), someone has killed a superhero (the Comedian) and another hero (named Rorschach) is trying to figure out why.

There is a lot to this movie and I recommend it.  BUT it’s by no means perfect.  If I have one real complaint about the movie it’s that the violence and sex in the movie is gratuitous.  The comic was pretty violent, so I expected to see the atrocities in the book, but I didn’t expect them to be enhanced. Nor did I expect them to add more violence when there was no need to. The stuff in the book was bad enough without adding more.  Also, the book had sex in it but the movie seemed to relish in making the sex scenes go on forever. Both these things where unnecessary and just plain took you out of the movie.

Oh, and one more thing…having read the book, I expected this, but if you haven’t, this might take you aback.  There is a character in the book named Dr. Manhattan, who is a super being. He stopped being human a long time ago and therefore no longer feels shame, or embarrassment,  nor does he feel heat or cold. This means that, whenever he’s not out in public, he’s naked and, just like in the comic, he is shown in “all his glory”.  Most people I talked to at work said that the audience they saw the movie with, didn’t react at all to this, but the audience I saw the movie with, had some giggling girls/women in it and I heard a friend of mine say he heard some guys giggle in his theater.

You’ve been warned.  Remember, this movie is rated R.  You want to know what you’re getting into before watch the movie? Read the comic.

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Welcoming, Baby Paolo. Valentines Day. Non-spoiler review of the movie Coraline

February 19, 2009 in FAMILY, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Finished up the board-a-matic this Wednesday. Today I start helping out other crews.  In a couple of days, we’ll be back on the show for the final pass.  There’s going to be a lot of work to do.

I’m so glad I have a job still.  The season is slowly coming to a close.  Not looking forward to it.

FAMILY

I have a new nephew! My brother Juan and my sister-in-law Deborah had a baby boy this Tuesday!  Hurray! I’m soooo happy.  I think Deborah was in labor for like two days. It was really difficult.  She went through a lot.  My brother said it was the most trying time he’s ever been through.  My mom was is prayer mode the whole time.  I pray a bit as well. It definitely is exciting though.  As of the time of this writing, I haven’t actually met the little boy yet.  Can’t wait.

Babies are so great.

Talking about hairy Baby Paolo

FAMILY

This weekend was Valentines Day.  Alesha and I celebrated it on Sunday instead of Saturday.  We did this for two reasons, one, because that way we might have a chance to get my mom to take care of the kids without stepping on any Valentines Day plans my parents might have; and two, so that we could avoid the crowded restaurants and traffic all over.

It was nice. Alesha and I hadn’t gone out like that in a while and it was a good change.  The kids love having my parents over also.  Alesha and I went to a restaurant next to our housing community and then we went to the movies. We had fun.

Monday I stayed home with the kids and Alesha went to the Dentist and had lunch with her sister.  I believe she also went shopping. Meanwhile, at home, I was really tired and it was all I could do to keep up with the kids’ constant demands for my attention.  I LOVE my kids, but sometimes I just need a small break to get my strength back, and they didn’t want to give it to me.  I didn’t do much resting at all that day.  By the time Alesha got home, I had just put the kids to bed and I was completely fried.   Alesha took pity on me and played a game of Magic: The Gathering with me (which she won). It helped a lot.

MOVIES

(Edit: got the name of the movie wrong. It was pointed out to me on the comments, so I fixed it)

http://weblogs.variety.com/photos/uncategorized/2008/08/13/coralineposter1.jpg

The movie Alesha and I went to watch on our Valentines date was the movie Coraline.  This was the second time watching it for Alesha.  The movie was in 3D and I must say, I was impressed by the technology.  The movie was based on a novella by one of my favorite authors Neil Gaiman.   He was the reason I wanted to watch it. It was directed by the director of Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach, Henry Selick.  Both those movies where interesting but not really something I would say where all that great.  The motion capture in those two movies is the best part of those movies, unfortunately the stories where not quite as gripping as they could have been.  Not so with Coraline.

I loved the movie.  First, because the story was great.  It was really fun and interesting. The Character designs were great.  I loved the motion capture animation in the movie.  It’s NOT computer generated.  Motion Capture is the animation technique of sculpting figures over wireframes putting them on a miniature set and moving them a little, then taking a picture, moving a them a little again, then taking a picture, then moving them a little again and taking a picture…etc. Old school.  The movie benefits from it. Best of all, this movie HAS NO SINGING, which, as much as little kids like it, more often than not, gets in the way of the story in most modern American animated movies.

Again, I will say that the story was the thing that made the movie worth seeing.  It’s the reason I like Neil Gaiman‘s work.  The movie shares some similarities with other movies that I’ve really enjoyed: Pan’s Labyrinth and Spirited Away.  If you’ve enjoyed these movies, you may very likely enjoy Coraline.  Coraline shares some of the intensity of both these movies as well as a girl hero and her ability to use her wits to figure out ways out of magical perils. I won’t go into more detail than that in order  to not spoil the movie. If you watch the movie, you will see what I mean when I compare Coraline with those other movies.

I highly recommend this movie.  I will put this one disclaimer on it though, if you have a kid who is easily scared, don’t take them to watch this movie.  It’s a bit creepy.  After all, fairyland is a very alien world that follows it’s own rules. There aren’t many people who enter it, that manage to come back out.

Below is the teaser trailer to the movie. I chose it over the actual official trailer because the official trailer is one giant spoiler.  Why watch the movie is they give away all the surprises? The teaser is sooo much better.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPft7Sp33fs

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Prayer request. Simpson show review. Dante’s teeth. Sleeping Beauty

October 2, 2008 in Copyright Protections, FAMILY, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

FAMILY
Before I write anything else, I would first like to ask for your prayers. My daughter’s Godfather’s mother is very sick and maybe dying, It’s a very difficult time for them right now and I would please ask you to keep him, his mother, and their family in your prayers. Thank you.

THE SIMPSONS NEWS
Last Sunday, the second show I worked on this season was broadcast. I didn’t watch it because, to be honest, I always forget the show is on. The show was mainly about Homer and Flanders teaming up to become bounty hunters, while the “B” plot has Marge getting a job in an erotic bakery. In any case, my co-workers who saw and worked on the show were really disappointed in the show. It turns out that the show was overwritten which means that it was two minutes longer than it should have been. In order to be able to air it, the show had to be edited down. This meant cutting quite a bit of content. The result was that a lot of the best gags were lost. For example, the show has a sequence that spoofs The French Connection. In the cut we saw, it goes on for a while as Homer almost runs over all kinds of people, but in the version that was aired, they cut the sequence down so that he only runs over one person and then it ends. There was also a great running gag with Chef Luigi that was cut completely. There where a lot of things like that, that were cut. Not only that, but during the retakes processes (which is the processes where they fix all the mistakes the colored version of the show has. And sometimes, where they re-write gags they think they can improve) they re-wrote some fun silly gag with an angry Leprechaun and replaced it with the Hulk instead. That really stunk because that was one of the crew’s favorite gags. Sometimes the writers, re-write stuff because they don’t think it’s funny but that’s only because they’ve seen the gag too many times. To everyone else, it’s still fresh. This happens just about every show. Sometimes I think the writers should watch a show with an audience so they could see what gags are working and which ones are not. There are gags that, we at the studio laugh our heads off, that they cut just because they don’t think it’s funny anymore.

I think the thing that has me most bummed out about hearing how much of the show was cut, is that fact that no one is going to get to see these gags but us in the studio. It MIGHT come out in the season 20 box set but I’m not sure it will. So far, not everything that gets cut gets put in the box sets. In any case, it’s just disappointing.

FAMILY

Dante’s Teeth
For picture of Munchkin with teeth bigger than her head, click here.

FAMILY
Well, Munchkin is no longer obsessed with Snow White, she’s obsessed with Sleeping Beauty instead. I decided to show her the movie to see how she would react to it. I wanted to see if the movie would caught her attention like Snow White did. It was actually kinda funny because when I put the movie in, and the movie began to play, Munchkin had a frown on her face. She was looking at me and at the movie as if she didn’t trust it to be any good. This suddenly made me feel responsible if the movie failed to entertain her. So I sat there watching her watch the movie wringing my hands anxiously, hoping she would like it. It was very silly. She pretty much kept the expression through out the entire movie. When it was all over, Munchkin stood up, looked at me and asked me to play in again. Now she asks to see the movie every chance she gets.

The things, she likes about it, really surprise me. For one thing, she loves the music. That’s not as surprising so much as the fact that she loves to listen to the orchestral part during the opening credits. Since the movie is old, it has the credits at the beginning of the movie with a sampling of the music that will be played through out. Munchkin loves to sit there and listen to it. She smiles, listens and turns to me with anticipation during that opening. Unsurprisingly, she gets up and tries to move and dance like Princes Aurora in the forest but what surprises me is during the times that Maleficent in on screen, she doesn’t seem to get very scared. She’s completely fascinated with all the fairy tale elements in the story, including the exciting finally against the dragon.

For my part, I’m glad she wants to watch this movie. Why? Well I’ll explain myself below…

MOVIES
Sleeping Beauty is by far my favorite “girl marries prince” Disney movie. It’s an amazing movie to look at. I can’t help but admire all the artwork in every scene of that movie. The art direction is simply amazing. The background paintings are drop dead gorgeous.

The animation, by “The Nine Old Men” is masterful. The music by Tchaikovsky is beautiful. The character designs are great, the consistency of the drawings of the characters is remarkable (a major flaw in modern 2D Disney movies). The fact that every line on all the characters was hand inked, with different colored inks, on different parts of their bodies, onto a cell is just mind blowing. The bad guy in the move is one of the coolest bad guys in the Disney pantheon.

The dragon she turns into is sooo awesome and the design is simply amazing. As little as we get to know about Prince Philip, he comes across as really cool. Even though he had A LOT of help fighting Maleficent from the good fairies, he still comes across are very heroic. Not only that, but the iconic symbolism of that fight is really great.

I mean, he’s protected by The Shield of Virtue and he fights with The Sword of Truth and with it he slays a dragon. It really calls to mind Biblical passages:

7 And there was a great battle in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon, and the dragon fought, and his angels. 8 And they prevailed not: neither was their place found any more in heaven. 9 And that great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, who is called the devil and Satan, who seduceth the whole world. (Revelation 12: 7-9 Douay-Rheims)

11 And I saw heaven opened: and behold a white horse. And he that sat upon him was called faithful and true: and with justice doth he judge and fight. 12 And his eyes were as a flame of fire: and on his head were many diadems. And he had a name written, which no man knoweth but himself. 13 And he was clothed with a garment sprinkled with blood. And his name is called: THE WORD OF GOD. 14 And the armies that are in heaven followed him on white horses, clothed in fine linen, white and clean. 15 And out of his mouth proceedeth a sharp two-edged sword, that with it he may strike the nations. (Revelations 19: 11-15 Douay Rheims)

Just having his shield be Virtue (like the Four Cardinal Virtues and the three Theological ones: Fortitude, Prudence, Temperance, Justice, Faith, Hope, and Charity), made me think about what it must mean to be protected from the dragon by it. And you HAVE to like a movie that has goblins in it (I guess that last part is just the Tolkien/Fantasy/D&D geek in me, talking).

COPYRIGHT PROTECTION

FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS’ PARTNERSHIP


According to our sources
THE HOUSE WILL TRY TO PASS THE ORPHAN WORKS BILL TODAY

10.3.08 

If this Bill is only meant to help libraries and museums, why did they draft it behind closed doors?

Why have the doors been opened wide for commercial infringement of the work of living authors actively licensing their work?

Why do they want to pass it when nobody’s looking?

Why do they want to re-write copyright law without an open debate?

Stop this effort to give content to Big Internet firms by undermining copyright law.

Get the word out.

    · Light up Washington and home offices of your Congressman.
    · Contact the media.
    · Deny them cover. Do not let them hide.


Tell them we will hold each of them accountable.

THE MESSAGE for your Congressman, Key Leaders, Aides, Media

· The “Dark Archive”  – where infringers can register their paperwork in  secret  – will not protect our copyrights.

· An “Open Archive” – with orphaned work exposed to to the public – would be a come-and-get-it bank for plagiarists and infringers.

· Artists cannot monitor tens or hundreds of thousands of images every day to see if somebody somewhere has infringed their work.

· There are more than a trillion images subject to orphaning each day.
 
· If someone can’t find me, that doesn’t mean I’ve orphaned my work.
    
· An unsuccessful search for a property owner should not be a license to steal.

· Artists should not have to digitize their life’s work at their own expense to comply with a law they don’t want or need.

· The high cost compliance would make compliance prohibitive.
 
· The loss of exclusive rights would undermine contractual agreements with clients.
 
· We cannot sell exclusive rights to clients if others can publish our work without our knowledge or consent.

· The loss of exclusive rights would devalue our entire inventories of work.
    
· Small business owners should not be forced to subsidize the business models of Big Internet firms.
  
· No rational business owner should have to give access to their inventory, metadata, client contact information, etc. to outside business interests.


Tell lawmakers to prevent passage of this bill until it can be subjected to an open, informed and transparent public examination.

Tell them this is no way to re-write copyright law.


Tell them it will affect millions of rights holders worldwide.


Tell them you would support a true orphan works bill, but this is not it.


Tell them to to consider the amendments presented by the Illustrators’ Partnership, Artists Rights Society and Advertising Photographers of America

Phone, fax, email these Congresspeople immediately

DELAHUNT  Phone: (202) 225-3111     Fax (202) 225-5658
Phone: (617) 770-3700   Fax: (617) 770-2984

CONYERS    Phone: (202) 225-5126    Fax: (202) 225-0072
Phone: (313) 961-5670    Fax: (313) 226-2085

NADLER       Phone: (202) 225-5635     Fax: (202) 225-6923
Phone: (212) 367-7350     Fax: (212) 367-7356

BERMAN      Phone: (202) 225-4695     Fax: (202) 225-3196
Phone: (818) 994-7200     Fax: (818) 994-1050

PELOSI        AmericanVoices@mail.house.gov
Phone: (202) 225-4965      Fax: (202) 225-8259
Phone: (415) 556-4862      Fax: (415) 861-1670

HOYER       steny.hoyer@mail.house.gov
Phone: (202) 225-4131      Fax: (202) 225-4300
Phone: (301) 474-0119      Fax: (301) 474-4697

YOUR REPRESENTATIVE
To find Washington and District Office phone, fax and web forms for your Representative
http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/dbq/officials/
and enter your zip code

YOUR LOCAL MEDIA
To find the contacts for your Local Media go to
http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/dbq/media/
and enter your zip code

– Brad Holland and Cynthia Turner, for the Board of the Illustrators’ Partnership

Please post or forward this message immediately to any interested party.

_______________________________________________________________


For news and information:
Illustrators’ Partnership Orphan Works Blog: http://ipaorphanworks.blogspot.com/

Over 75 organizations oppose this bill, representing over half a million creators.

U.S. Creators and the image-making public can email Congress through the Capwiz site: http://capwiz.com/illustratorspartnership/home/ 2 minutes is all it takes to tell the U.S. Congress to uphold copyright protection for the world’s artists.

INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS please fax these 4 U.S. State Agencies and appeal to your home representatives for intervention. http://www.illustratorspartnership.org/01_topics/article.php?searchterm=00267

CALL CONGRESS: 1-800-828-0498.  Tell the U.S. Capitol Switchboard Operator “I would like to leave a message for Congressperson  __________ that I oppose the Orphan Works Act.”  The switchboard operator will patch you through to the lawmaker’s office and often take a message which also gets passed on to the lawmaker. Once you’re put through tell your Representative the message again.

If you received our mail as a forwarded message, and wish to be added to our mailing list, email us at: illustratorspartnership@cnymail.com Place “Add Name” in the subject line, and provide your name and the email address you want used in the message area. Illustrators, photographers, fine artists, songwriters, musicians, and countless licensing firms all believe this bill will harm their small businesses.

 

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Adventures at Comic Con Part 1. Spoilerific Batman: Dark Knight review with a Batman drawing. Close call with the Orphan Bill.

July 31, 2008 in COMIC BOOKS, COMIC CON 2008, Copyright Protections, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

EDIT: (Okay, I’m keep the original post up but we are no longer accepting suggestions.  Thank you all who participated. Hopefully some of your suggestions will be used when the show airs.)

Okay, so I guess this will be my last post reminding you about helping out the show. See the post: Calling all Simpsons fans, the show needs your help. Nethack and other Rogue type games for more details. This week, production began looking for the clips to put in the animatic. Luckily we had some suggestions from people inside the studio that we can work with (I made sure Josh Lama’s suggestion was in the pile they took with them). Once we are done with the first pencil test pass of the show, we’ll get to see how well the gag works . We won’t be done with that until sometime late next month.

homer-with-a-football-again.gif

Been working hard, getting my scenes done this week. I’m doing pretty well actually.
Usually, the week after Comic Con, (more on that below) everyone is talking about the Con and we all show each other our loot. Not so much this year. My friend Tommy did give me a copy of an artist’s sketchbook that he bought there and ended up not liking the drawings in it as much as he thought he would. I was happy because it so happens I almost bought that very book, but ended up changing my mind at the last minute. Cool.

COMIC CON 2008
Went to Comic Con last Thursday. Been looking forward to it for a while. I was hoping to have a very inspired day, like I did last year. I packed up a lunch, a bottle of water, took my back pack and I left my house at around 7:00am so I could be there around 8 or 9. I live about two hours away from San Diego. For the first time since I’ve been going, I took the 15 fwy south instead of the 5 fwy south. The biggest reason for this decision was because I live closer to the 15 fwy so it was more convenient. It was interesting. A little more scenic than I anticipated. Although I missed the hour and a half long view of the beach you get when you drive down on the 5 fwy (it’s purdy).

The Con doors opened at 9:30am. Got to San Diego around 9:00am. Parking, as usual, was a pain in the butt. Luckily, I was able to find the place I parked in last time easily enough. The fifteen dollars I payed to park there was like a punch in the gut though. Still, I was paying for the convenience of not going around for an hour looking for parking. I got out of the car and headed for the convention center. Didn’t take long before I was passing by stormtroopers and pirates, while trying to avoid the ninja turtles that where passing out fliers on the side walk. That’s when I realized that, once again, I had forgotten my camera. I’ve yet to remember to bring it. Lucky for me, my phone has a dissent camera so I took it out and prepared to take pictures. Unfortunately by the time I did so, I was stuck in the middle of an enormous mob of wall to wall people. It would have been great to have taken a picture of it but, since I was smack in the center, I couldn’t get a good shot of it without it looking like only a small handful of heads. The mob was there because it was attempting to cross the street to get to the Convention Center. After traffic cops herded us all across the street like a bunch of cattle, I finally made it to the Convention center.

Arriving at Comic Con 2008

As you can see. There were quite a few people already there and the Convention hadn’t officially opened yet. I managed to find the professional’s pre-registration area so I could get my badge to get in. Unlike last year, I actually remembered to pre-register. Last year it took me two hours in line to get my badge and I had to pay. This time, it took about five minutes and it was free. YAY!

After waiting ten minutes, it became 9:30, the Con was officially opened and we were let in.

entering-comic-con.jpg

Once again, as it always does, I got overwhelmed by the Con. I found myself just about right in the middle and I had to decide which direction I should go to start my trek down every aisle.

where-do-i-begin.jpg

Unfortunately I wasn’t able to take a good panoramic shot of the Con for the above picture because I wasn’t thinking of making a panoramic shot. I’ll just say that, if you want to know what the other side you don’t see looks like, it’s just as endless as the side you do see.

I picked a side and I was on my way. The side I started in made me feel as if I’d suddenly gone to the wrong Con. I thought I was at E3 instead. It was all video games there. Lots of video games that will be coming out soon. I didn’t stay long. Most of the video games I saw, didn’t interest me much. A few of the cinematic videos of the games where really nice thought. They really caught my eye. The Warhammer Fantasy MMO video, for example, looked awesome. Why don’t they make CG movies like that?

In any case, I walked up and down the aisles for an hour or so when I finally came up to the Stuart Ng booth (the one with all the European comics) where I got inspired last year. I looked around and was horribly disappointed that I found nothing at all that caught my eye. That’s never happened before, and I left the booth pretty sad.

Except for a Dalek that was set loose on the Con floor to exterminate all life…

Dalek at the Con Exterminating

…nothing caught my eye in any of the rest of the aisles either, until I got to the center of the Con. That’s where all the big flashy shinny booths are. Lots of fun stuff to see there.

First, I happened to discover that someone just happened to have dropped an Iron Monger suit. It was just sitting there and no one was claiming it so I thought I’d take it. Problem is that the thing was too big to carry and when I tried to get into it, I found it to be trickier then I thought. .

Iron Monger at Comic Con 2008

Disappointed I walked on. Then I saw that, once again, someone had accidentally dropped a James Bond car in the middle of the Con. So again, I thought, since no one was claiming it, I’d take it home, but there was no keys in the ignition, so my plans were crushed.

007-car.jpg

That’s when I heard the Hulk yell at me. He was angry because he said I was trying to “steal thing”. I told him it was “finders keeper” if someone dropped things and didn’t claim them. He got angry at me. You don’t want to see him when he’s angry.

Hulk at Comic Con 2008

So I had a few more adventures at the Con with some other superheroes and a few Star Wars characters, but I think I’ll save that for next week.

TO BE CONTINUED…

MOVIES

WARNING: The following review of the new Batman movie contains spoilers. I really couldn’t talk about this movie without doing so. It has too many interesting moral things in it that I wanted to talk about. So if you haven’t seen the movie and you don’t want it spoiled, please do not continue reading. You have been warned.

I saw the movie Batman the Dark Knight on Wednesday of last week. Overall I liked the movie. It felt like a modern Batman comic book instead of what people think Batman comic books are like. It was very smart and I liked the moral dilemmas presented to the characters through out the movie. One thing that all superhero movies should do is exactly that (have big moral dilemmas). Superhero stories are best when they are morality plays (like Westerns and Samurai movies). I don’t know why people making superhero movies don’t get that. The first Superman movie would have been much much better if they had left Lois Lane dead. Turning the world backwards in time was a total cop out. Same with the first Spiderman movie. Mary Jane or a bus full of kids? I’LL SAVE THEM BOTH, TA DA! Stupid, very very stupid and shallow too. When this Batman movie presented a similar dilemma, it did it right. I was happy with that. There has been a consistent depth to the latest two Batman movies that I’ve really enjoyed.

The Joker was finally done right. He was just like the comic book Joker. About time! Heath Ledger was great in the role. I don’t know how they could possibly cast another person to play the part. That’s going to be tricky. He was really great.

Great action in the movie, great cast. I liked Aaron Eckhart as Harvey Dent, he came across as very heroic. I hope that Two Face isn’t dead. He was very cool (in a bad guy way). Having the Joker “create” him was a very interesting take.

There is so much to like about the movie. It’s great. You can sit down and analyze the movie and get a lot out of it.

The Movie also brings up a very interesting point about Batman. Is Batman an effective hero? According to the movie, he is not. His use of fear and violence to solve problems doesn’t actually help the city, it merely causes more fear and violence. I will say this though, at least they finally made a Batman movie where Batman doesn’t kill the villain. That’s something I hated about the Tim Burton Batman movie. In that movie Batman murders the Joker, which of course makes him just as bad as the Joker. Not in this new movie. They get Batman right…well…almost.

batman-sketch.jpg

Having liked so much of it, I did have issues. Some of these issues where clarified after I talked about the movie with some friends of mine at work. I thought the movie felt long. A friend of mine thought this was because it was not written and edited cleanly enough. It wasn’t a lean movie. I’m not sure if I agree with him though. I would need to watch it again to make sure. I personally think that part of the reason it felt long was that it had a very unconventional structure. I don’t know how many Acts the story had but sometime midway through the movie, every time one ended and another Act began, it felt like the movie should have ended there. As a viewer, you never had the ability to anticipate the movie’s end and it made the movie feel really long. Again, I think repeat viewings of the movie might fix this problem.

Okay, now for my biggest problem with the movie. I propose to you that the movie was pretty much about the hope there is in all people to do the right thing. In spite of the fact that through out the movie, many people fell into the Jokers “morality traps” and chose to do an evil in order to produce a good (which is a BIG no no). In the climactic “morality trap” of the movie, the people of Gotham on the boats ended up doing the right thing. This showed the Joker that the people of Gotham are not animals but humans capable of making good moral choices. If that’s the case, why throw it all out the window in the last five minutes of the movie? What I mean to say is, why didn’t Batman and Commissioner Gordon have any faith in the people of Gotham when they found out the “truth” about Harvey Dent? Especially since only a few minutes before, the people of Gotham proved they could face dire circumstances with flying colors. It seemed really forced and unnecessary. Not only that, but the movie did a lousy job of making you feel that Harvey Dent was seen as a great hero by the people of Gotham. The characters kept, telling us he was, but never actually showed it (like they did with Batman and Gordon’s son). So not only did it feel forced to me, but then they added insult to injury by scandalizing Batman and Gordon by having them lie to the public. To me, story wise, it came across as if Batman and the Joker had exactly the same view of humanity. Are the people of Gotham so weak? They live in Gotham for goodness sakes! Out all the places to live, that city should produce the strongest of people.

Did the Joker win in the end? I would propose to you that the answer is, “yes” but not for the reasons the movie itself gives. I propose that the Joker would not have won if the heroes would have had faith in the people of Gotham to deal with the truth. Since the Joker managed to break the heroes’ faith in people completely, they chose to compromise their virtue and decided to deceive everyone. This is suppose to make Batman seem heroic and tragic. I propose that when the situation is looked at objectively, without the dramatic musical montage and voice over, it just makes Batman, look like he wants to be a martyr, just to be a martyr. “Oh look at me, I’m such a tragic hero.” This guy has major psychological issues. I didn’t buy it. It didn’t work for me.

Obviously, the reason they ended the movie that way, was just so that they had an established conflict for the start of the next movie. They could have come up with something more consistent to the story of the movie than that.

Okay, that’s my rant. Still, I trully loved the movie. I just left the theater very angry because of those last five minutes. I think I left the movie theater far more energized and excited after seeing Ironman, in spite of the fact that Ironman was nowhere near as smart and wore it’s themes on it’s sleeve. But then, the Batman movie was not meant to fill you with happiness and joy. It was meant to be a great morality play.

COPYRIGHT PROTECTIONS

Yesterday the Orphan Bill was almost Hotlined. Luckily enough people called their Senator and put the Bill on Hold temporarily. I received the following e-mail explaining what happened:

FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS’ PARTNERSHIP
Senate Orphan Works Bill Put “on Hold”

We’ve just received word that the Senate bill has been put “on hold.” In fact, there appear to be multiple holds on it. Senators who “hold” hotlined bills do not have to identify themselves nor give their reasons for holding it. Holds are temporary. We don’t know how many of you contacted your Senators on such short notice this afternoon, but many, many thanks to all of you who responded so rapidly.

Most people are unaware of the process called hotlining. In the past it was used to pass non-controversial legislation, but increasingly, it’s being used to pass bills whose sponsors don’t want to see debate. An excellent article in Roll Call explains the process. Here’s an excerpt:

Senate conservatives are upset that the leaders of both parties in the chamber have in recent years increasingly used a practice known as “hotlining” bills – previously used to quickly move noncontroversial bills or simple procedural motions – to pass complex and often costly legislation, in some cases with little or no public debate. The increase was particularly noticeable just before the August recess, when leaders hotlined more than 150 bills, totaling millions of dollars in new spending, in a period of less than a week.

The practice has led to complaints from Members and watchdog groups alike that lawmakers are essentially signing off on legislation neither they nor their staff have ever read…

In order for a bill to be hotlined, the Senate Majority Leader and Minority Leader must agree to pass it by unanimous consent, without a roll-call vote. The two leaders then inform Members of this agreement using special hotlines installed in each office and give Members a specified amount of time to object – in some cases as little as 15 minutes. If no objection is registered, the bill is passed.

– From ‘Hotlined’ Bills Spark Concern
By John Stanton, Roll Call Staff
September 17, 2007
To read the full article, go to: http://tinyurl.com/3p8x2u
This is the second time the Senate Orphan Works bill has been hotlined this summer. The previous hotline came on June 5, the same week artists descended on Washington to urge lawmakers to oppose this controversial bill. The bill was put on hold that time too.

Since bills can be hotlined without prior notice, we’ll all have to stay vigilant throughout the rest of this legislative session. Thanks again to all of you who responded so quickly.

Over 60 organizations, representing more than 250,000 creators, are united in opposing these bills in their current form. Illustrators, photographers, fine artists, songwriters, musicians, and countless licensing firms all believe this bill will harm their small businesses.
Read the list: http://www.illustratorspartnership.org/01_topics/article.php?searchterm=00273


 


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Hi ho, hi ho, back to work I go. Catching up on movies.

July 10, 2008 in MOVIES, MY WEEK, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Went back to work earlier than expected. I got a call last week asking me if I could start this Wednesday. It seems that a show needed some help because an artist was going out of town or something and they need a replacement for the rest of the week. I agreed to come in so I started work. From the moment I got to my cubicle I had work. It was waiting for me on my chair. I didn’t really get a lot of time to settle in. I saw the work load and knew if I stalled, I wouldn’t be able to get it done, so I rolled up my sleeves and got started. An hour or two later, my director got into the office. He told me he left me the stuff and just wanted me to get started on it without any need to talk to him about it. I was way ahead of him. Not exactly the back to work experience I was hoping for.

The funny thing about being back to work this time around is that I got that weird nervous feeling that I’ve only gotten, when I was younger, on my first days back to school from summer vacation. That’s never happened to me before. Why do I feel like that now?

MOVIES

Do to the fact that both my wife and I were out of work and we had some crazy bills to pay last month, we haven’t really been buying things or going out at all. This meant the we hadn’t seen any of the new movies we really wanted to see that have come out lately. Well, since I was going back to work, I thought it would be a good idea to go watch as many movies as we could before I went back. So earlier this week I saw three movies, Hancock, Kung Fu Panda, and The Incredible Hulk (in that order). So I’ll do a really quick review of all the movies, beginning with:

Hancock

The movie was entertaining. I enjoyed it quite a bit. The biggest flaw I had with this movie was that you just about get the whole movie just watching the trailer. Fortunately the trailer leaves out one big twist that actually made the movie enjoyable. It’s a fun popcorn movie. I recommend it.

Kung Fu Panda

I loooooved this movie. First, because I love Kung Fu. Second, because I know Kung Fu. Third because it was funny and fun. This is the type of animated movie I wish was made years ago. Why hadn’t anyone thought of this before? It’s the type of movie I wished I’d worked on.

It had some really cool things going on. The style of the opening dream sequence was just awesome. one of the highlights of the movie. Watching the movie really made me want to go back to study kung fu again sooooo bad. I miss it. Haven’t done it in years. Go see this movie cause, I want a sequel. Which would probably happen even if it bombs. It’s a Dreamworks movie after all.

The Incredible Hulk

Exactly what I expected. Waaay better than the first Hulk movie. Compelling story even when the Hulk wasn’t on screen. It was fun and exciting. I still liked Iron Man a lot better. Still I liked this movie and I love The Avengers teasers that Marvel Comics is putting in all the movies. I tend to get more out of these movies than most people do because I read the comics and they often put a lot of “inside information” for all the comic geeks through out the movies. It’s like what was done with the Lord of the Rings movies. If you read the books you got more out of the movies than if you didn’t.

I highly recommend you read the Marvel Comics so you can join the fun, otherwise you just get annoyed by it. It’s easy to do too, it’s not like you have to read a novel or anything and they are fun reads.

Now we just have to wait for the Thor movie, The Ant-Man movie and the Captain America movie and we’ll have just about all the Avengers.

MY WEEK

Do to the crazy week I’m having, I really didn’t get time to draw. I did this quick doodle at lunch. I felt like drawing something different for a change. The lesson I got from drawing it? I need to go back to figure drawing class. It’s been a long time and apparently I’m really rusty.

hulk.jpg

 

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The Hobbit Movie news. Are you Geek enough for D&D 4th edition? Artists go to Washington to fight Orphan Bill.

June 12, 2008 in Copyright Protections, MOVIES, MY WEEK, The Hobbit, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

I called the studio earlier this week. I wanted to know if they had worked out the schedule for the season yet, and if they had, where I fit in it. Well, I was told the schedule is still not quite done yet but it’s possible I might start on the first or second week of July. Unfortunately, this is not set in stone. So until the schedule is official, I might go back to work next month…or maybe not.

MOVIES (The Hobbit)

A while back I wrote about how it was good that The Hobbit movie would be split up into two movies. Turns out that my assumption that both movies would be telling the same story of The Hobbit, was incorrect. It seems that the first movie is going to be a movie version of The Hobbit book while the second movie is going to be completely made up.

Wait…

What?

That’s right, you read right, the second movie being made is going to be completely made up, as in,

“I feel like writing a completely new Middle Earth story that takes place between The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings that Tolkien never wrote.”

There are two places on the internet where you can find out all about this stuff:

Weta holics: Which has an enormous interview with the Producer of the movies, Peter Jackson and the Director of the movies Guillermo del Toro.

The One Ring.net: Which has an interview with Director Guillermo del Toro.

I personally wanted desperately to know the answer to one question. It was actually asked in the Weta holics interview. Here it is below:

WetaHost 2 – Hello Mr. Jackson and Mr. Del Toro! Thank you very much for this time. My question is one that I think you will hear alot of from many of us…from what material will you pulling the second movie from? I know it’ll be great with you two on board, but I am mighty curious. I am a huge fan of both of you and I look foward to more Tolkien films!
Guillermo del Toro The idea is to find a compelling way to join THE HOBBIT and FELLOWSHIP and enhance the 5 films both visually an in their Cosmology. There’s omissions and material enough in the available, licensed material to attempt this. The agreement is, however, that the second film must be relevant and emotionally strong enough to be brought to life but that we must try and contain the HOBBIT in a single film.
Peter Jackson I’m really looking forward to developing Film Two. It gives us a freedom that we haven’t really had on our Tolkien journey. Some of you may well say that’s a good thing of course! The Hobbit is interesting in how Tolkien created a feeling of dangerous events unfolding, which preoccupy Gandalf. There’s an awful lot of incident that happens during that 60 year gap. At this stage, we’re not imagining a film that literally covers 60 years, like a bio-pic or documentary. We would figure out what happens during that 60 years, and choose one short section of time to drop in and dramatise for the screen. I’m really interested in how it effects The Hobbit – do we show what happens to Gandalg during his trips away? We’ll see. We may well have seeds for Film Two that we’ll subtly sow during The Hobbit.

Uh…is it just me or did Peter Jackson just totally ignore the question. What sources are you going to use Mr. Jackson? Meanwhile it would be nice to know what “Omissions and material” in the “licensed material” del Toro is talking about. To be honest I don’t like this idea at all. Nearly every time Peter Jackson deviated from what Tolkien had written in some source material, he actually made the story worse, not better. Some things he changed, I could understand, but then there are other things that make me go, “HUH!”? For example:

  • Helm’s Deep. There really wasn’t any reason why the elves should have showed up. They all got killed to a man. There was not one Elf left alive at the end of that battle (except Legolas). They weren’t in Helm’s Deep in the book. Why have them there in the movie?
  • Then there’s the question, what the heck happened to the Dunedain? In the book, Aragorn had an army of “Aragorns” (A.K.A Dunedain) that were as cool as he was, kicked major butt and turned the tide of the battle in Minas Tirith. In the movie, it was an army of ghosts. In the book, the ghosts simply helped Aragorn and the Dunedain get the ships the they needed to get to Minas Tirith to kick major butt. The the ghosts didn’t go all the way to Minas Tirith. In the movie, the fact that the ghosts did what they did, begs the question, “Why didn’t they just take those ghosts all the way to Mordor then?”
  • Then of course, there’s Faramir whose character and personality they changed for the worse because, according to the Commentary on the DVD, “he needed a character arch”. In the book, Faramir was suppose to be the complete opposite of his brother Boromir and through him we were suppose got get a glimpse of what true wisdom and virtue really was. In any case, they at least fixed him some what in the extended editions, so he’s not too horrible, although having Sam and Frodo at Osgiliath just to get attacked by a Ring Wraith was a really a dumb idea too.
  • Okay, so everything I mentioned above doesn’t really ruin the movies for me. I could live with those changes. They are still, “in the spirit” of what the story intended. There is one thing thought that just doesn’t fit any “spirit” at all. The worst sin in the movies…the portrayal of Denethor. This bugs me every time I watch the movies he’s in. For two reasons:
  1. It is inconsistent with what the writers had established as their style. What I mean is, if they were willing to change Faramir because he needed story arch, WHY TAKE AWAY DENETHOR’S ARCH SO THAT HE’S A ONE NOTE CHARACTER?! (He’s Angry, angry, angry, angry, despairing and angry, he’s dead.) Then to have a scene were Gandalf hits him! What a disgrace. Yes, I understand he’s just a fictional character but it’s what he represents that bugs me. This leads me to reason…
  2. In the books, there are many characters that represent wisdom, it’s a motif that is through out the books. Each character represents different kinds of wisdom. Elrond, Galadriel, Gandalf, Aragorn, Faramir, Sam, all, in part, represent a form of wisdom in the story. Denethor also represents wisdom but a wisdom that was slowly lost due to overconfidence and pride. Denethor was a wise and prudent (but very grumpy) leader. He knew what was at stake and what needed to be done about it. The problem with Denethor was that he was a very proud man and this proved to be his undoing. He also had a Palantir (just like Saruman the Wizard) something erroneously cut out of the movies. Denethor knew that Sauron controlled the Palantir but Denethor, through his pride, thought he was strong enough to deal with that fact and used it often. Denethor also knew that the Palantir could not show him false things. So Sauron out smarted Denethor by showing him that, the ships that Aragorn had taken from the “bad guys” using the ghosts, were on the way to Minas Tirith. Sauron hid the fact that Aragorn and the Dunedain were on board. He only showed him that evil ships with black sails were on the way. Denethor thought that more bad guys were coming and that is the reason he went into despair. Denethor thought he knew something no one else did. See, Sauron tricked a good man with false information by using his pride against him. Denethor‘s pride proved greater than his wisdom and he foolishly played mind games with “evil” and lost. That is the lesson you should take away from Denethor‘s story, “Don’t play with fire or you’ll get burned.” Why was this cut from the movies? If they had enough time to film big chunks of story afterwards for the special edition DVDs, why not a scene with a Palantir and Denethor, to explain why he went nuts? As it is, Denethor, in the movies, has no redeeming qualities and no character arch.

Don’t get me wrong. I love the The Lord of the Rings movies. There was far more right than wrong in them. I think, if they would have been written and directed by anyone else other than Peter Jackson and gang, they probably would have been awful. I really want them to make The Hobbit movie because I think, for the most part, they “get it”. The thing I don’t like is the fact that they are making something up from scratch, and I’m too much of a purist to feel comfortable about it.

One thing I am excited about, is that Guillermo del Toro is directing the movies and this means the art direction is going to be a little different. I personally didn’t like that way the Orcs, Goblins, and Wargs were designed in the original movies. Del Toro in the interviews, has already said, he’s going to be changing some of those designs. Especially the Wargs, which are going to look more like Wolves instead of Hyenas, and the Goblins are going to look different also. I’ve seen the trailer for Hellboy 2 and the monsters in that movie look great. I like that monsters in Del Toro’s movie Pan’s Labyrinth also. If The Hobbit movie looks anything like that, I’ll be happy.

ROLE PLAYING GAMES

Dungeons and Dragons 4th Edition (D&D4E) came out last week on June 6th and at it’s peak the Core 4th edition gift set became the 4th highest seller at amazon.com. Dungeons and Dragons was the first role playing game ever invented. It inspired tons of other games since. Including some popular video games such as, but not limited to, the Final Fantasy series, the Zelda series, the Knights of the Old Republic series and Bethesda Softwork’s Morrowind, and Oblivion games. The role playing style of gaming has really come to popularity with the invention of games like Lord of the Rings Online and World of Warcraft. Now everyone who plays these games knows what geeks like me have known for years, playing role playing games with friends is fun. Not bad for a game that, in the 80s, was erroneously thought to lead kids into Satanism (much like a certain series of popular books about a young wizard named Harry).

Now that there are so many other role playing games out there, both tabletop and digital, why would you care to buy and play this one? Much like the Wii, D&D4E was designed to attract the new gamers. It has taken a lot of elements from some of the best of both the tabletop and digital role playing games out there, and simplified them so that anyone can pick up and play it; and if you’re into World of Warcraft or Lord of the Rings Online, it will be even easier because it has borrowed a lot of ideas from those games as well. There is no better time to get into the geeky goodness of playing games like these.

MY WEEK

Man! I hate being sick. My throat is killing me. I’ve been sick since last week. This weekend I got really sick. I started getting better on Tuesday but that’s when I made the mistake of yelling along with The Munchkin when I was playing with her. On Wednesday I could barely swallow. I’m grumpy and feeling just awful. To make matters worse, the drawing below had to be drawn twice because my laptop over heated and turned itself off as I was just finishing it. I hadn’t save the drawing. It’s all I had the strength to draw. What a lousy week.

im-sick.jpg

COPYRIGHT PROTECTION

Woo Hoo! Some illustrators have actually gone to Washington to fight the Orphan Bill. Hope they can make a difference. Let’s pray for them:

FROM THE ILLUSTRATORS’ PARTNERSHIP

 

Visual Artists Go to Washington, Independent Record Labels Oppose Orphan Works Act

 

Last week over two dozen visual artists, representing illustrators, photographers, fine artists and the arts licensing trades went to Capital Hill to explain to legislators how the Orphan Works Act will harm creators and the hundreds of thousands of art-related small businesses that serve and are dependent on them. At the same time, independent music labels have joined the opposition to orphan works legislation as it currently exists.

 

The Illustrators’ Partnership has stressed that Orphan Works legislation should be limited to true orphaned work and not act as an unwarranted compulsory license imposed on commercial markets. IPA, the Advertising Photographers of America and the Artists Rights Society have joined to offer amendments to that effect.

Excerpted from the Washington Internet Daily/Monday June 09, 2008:

 

The visual-arts community hit the Hill last week to protest what it portrays as a hijacking of the orphan-works issue as it was presented in a 2005 Copyright Office report…

 

The Copyright Office ran a bait-and-switch from its 2005 notice of intent, which focused on facilitating libraries’, museums’ and other nonprofits’ efforts to digitize collections to improve access to them, [Illustrators’ Partnership co-founder Brad] Holland said. Artists want the issue narrowed back to that focus, scrapping commercial use, he said…Copyright Office roundtables on orphan works never addressed alternates to registries, an “untested, untried, unaccountable market system” favoring Google, Getty, Corbis and other commercial aggregators, Holland said. [Cynthia] Turner [also of the Partnership] said artists would incur high costs registering works, and they hesitate to hand over high-res, commercial versions to Google or others.

 

In the same article, Washington Internet Daily also reports that the leading group of independent music labels has broken with the corporate music trade associations. The American Association of Independent Music has published a position paper opposing the current orphan works bills. The article quotes a music industry executive: “I can tell you that nobody in the music business” sought the bill.

 

… the executive said the bill is “de facto… establishing a new compulsory license” by putting unregistered artists at a legal disadvantage in court. The law can’t explicitly require registration or it will violate the Berne Convention, TRIPS and other treaties the U.S. has signed, the executive said. Book publishers and music executives in the U.K. think the U.S. will be in trouble, the executive said, citing a recent visit: “I can tell you there are European commissioners that are looking at this right now.”

 

–Excerpts from “Orphan-Works Bills Scorned by Visual Arts, Indie Labels” by Greg Piper, Washington Internet Daily June 09, 2008

 

Also see http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/27803/visual-artists-and-indie-record-labels-voice-concern-over-orphan-works-bills/

 

Please forward this message to every artist you know.

 

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Why didn’t Plato play Dungeons and Dragons? Indiana Jones movie thoughts.

May 29, 2008 in MOVIES, ROLE PLAYING GAMES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

As of the time of this writing, the actors haven’t signed. The table read has been postponed until Monday. If they sign this week, Fox won’t wait until next Thursday for the cast read. This means the show might begin storyboarding and designing next week and layout might start near the middle of July.

Please pray that things get settled soon. Thanks.

ROLE PLAYING GAMES

So I was reading an article in a gaming news site that really caught my attention. It asked a very interesting question which went like this:

Pong, released in 1972, relied on cutting-edge electronics. Dungeons & Dragons, which appeared two years later, employed technologies that had existed for thousands of years. The odd-shaped dice used to play original D&D – the pyramids, the icosahedrons, the strange gear of so many roleplaying games – are the five Platonic solids. The Greeks had advanced math, writing, drama, myth and lots of leisure time – not to mention an academy at Athens loaded with nerds. So why didn’t Plato ever think to deck out a dungeon for his fellows to loot?

The article itself is a little all over the place but in the end, it does answer the question. It’s interesting but it made me wonder how different games would be, had someone invented Role Playing Games (RPGs) earlier in history. Just look at what D&D has done in the short while it’s been around. If it wasn’t for D&D, games like World of Warcraft or Lord of the Rings Online wouldn’t exist. These games are basically taking similar D&D mechanics and instead of rolling dice, uses computer generated randomness to calculate successes or failure. But of course the biggest difference between games like this and a tabletop RPG is the lack of versatility the computer game has. Where in a tabletop RPG you can do anything and go anywhere you want, computer RPGs are limited to what the computer game program allows you to do.

Well anyway, I just thought it was a very interesting article and it just made me think.

MOVIES

Last Monday, Alesha and I went to go see the new Indiana Jones movie. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. For quite some time now I’ve had the feeling that the movie wasn’t going to be all that good. I thought it might be about as good as Temple of Doom, and I’m not a big fan of Temple of Doom. Well, we sat down in the theater at 11:45 am (less expensive around that time) and watched the movie. We were treated to pretty much what I expected, an entertaining, forgettable, shallow movie. In fact, even though it was entertaining, the movie just seemed to go through the motions of an Indiana Jones movie, but lacked the heart of an Indiana Jones movie. I actually think Temple of Doom is better. At least in that movie, the action had a purpose. There was always something greater at stake than just showing a fight. Not in this movie. In fact, the fights were so meaningless that they felt like I was watching a video game.

In a video game, you might enter an area to get some treasure or a key or something and then you get attacked by random ninjas that “spawn” before you or just come out of the wood work. You fight them, defeat them, get the treasure or whatever and then you go to the next area, where you get attacked by random ninjas again, you defeat them, get in a car were you get attacked by more random ninjas…and so on. Well, this new Indiana Jones movie not only felt just like this, it actually had “random ninjas”, in the form of natives, that came out of nowhere just to fight them. It was ridiculous and the main bad guys, who were communist Russians, were no better than that as well. They weren’t even an actual threat. I never, for one second, thought Indiana Jones was in some sort of danger while they were around, which was not the case in any of the other movies.

Not only that but the creators of the movie assumed every one in the audience was as big a moron as the characters in the movie and had to spell everything out for us. (The following is not a spoiler) There actually was a moment at the end of the movie where the characters of the movie discover the big ‘mysterious secret’ of the movie but the audience had pretty much figured it out from having watched the first ten minutes of the film. It was embarrassing. Am I suppose to respect these heroes if they don’t even have the same common sense as the audience? None of the other films talked down to the audience like this (although Temple of Doom came close).

Overall, the movie was a little worse then I thought it was going to be. It did have it’s moments though. It might be a great movie to watch and make fun of with a group of friends and family (like Temple of Doom).

Indiana Jones and the Legend of Zelda Short Round alien ninjas, transformers

 

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Hi, Welcome!

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