Briefly: Anyone who has read 1988’s Batman: The Killing Joke has been eagerly anticipating this sure-to-be-a-gem’s release, and it’s damned clear after this first trailer that this could be one of the very best animated features that DC has ever developed.

A lot of fans were also worried that the company wouldn’t take the source material seriously enough, leading to an adaptation that fell flat or felt inauthentic.

It’s pretty clear from this first trailer (well, and the R rating) that DC is doing its very, very best with The Killing Joke, and every single frame seen and word spoken in the below video is incredibly authentic to the original comic book.

Of course, we’ve got Kevin Conroy returning as Batman, and Mark Hamill as The Joker. It couldn’t get better than this.

Watch the trailer below, and let us know if you’re looking forward to the adaptation. Batman: The Killing Joke is set for release this Summer, and will premiere during July’s San Diego Comic Con!

https://youtu.be/SnTSqgJPVl8

The Killing Joke–by Brian Bolland, Alan Moore, and John Higgins–stands as not only one of the greatest Batman comics ever made, but as one of the best graphic novels ever written. It gave fans a look at the origins of the Joker, set up the events leading to the death of Jason Todd, and witnessed (perhaps the most vivid memory for those who read it back in 1988) the Joker’s brutal attack on Barbara Gordon. Now, 28 years after its release, The Killing Joke is getting its own animated feature scheduled for release this summer–and we have a look at the first official trailer!

Fans will be elated to know that Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill are reprising their roles as Batman and The Joker for this film, and for those attending the San Diego Comic-Con, Batman: The Killing Joke will make its world-wide debut at the convention!

Check out the trailer and let us know what you think in the comments below!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDj4zGFf4F8&feature=iv&src_vid=U3JevEGn9mE&annotation_id=annotation_1037806289

IDW Publishing announced that it has acquired Top Shelf Productions, the award-winning independent publisher of graphic novels, such as March, Blankets, and Essex Country. As well as several of Alan Moore’s books such as The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, From Hell and Voice of the Fire.

Top Shelf will remain a distinct imprint within the IDW family of books. IDW’s main role will be the support and management of Top Shelf’s infrastructure.

It sounds like this acquisition will be beneficial for both companies (as well as consumers!). Do you have a favourite Top Shelf title? Let us know in the comments below.

Click here for the full story.

IDW

Briefly: Now this is an adaptation I’d love to see (well, not as much as a Y: The Last Man series, but I’ll take what I can get).

According to Deadline, FX has started working on an event series based on Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell’s From Hell, which is “the story of Jack the Ripper, perhaps the most infamous man in the annals of murder. Detailing the events leading up to the Whitechapel killings and the cover-up that followed, From Hell is a meditation on the mind of a madman whose savagery and violence gave birth to the 20th century.”

Don Murphy, who also produced the film adaptation (and Transformers…) is set to produce the series, which will be written by Children of Men screenwriter David Arata. Now, this is a property that was probably always best suited to a series, because it’s so freaking long. Having the opportunity to go far more in depth than the film adaptation ever did can only mean good things for this version, and I cannot wait to see what comes from it.

Details on the series are essentially non-existent at this point, but we’ll be sure to fill you in as soon as we learn more. Are you down for a From Hell series? Sound out below!

Briefly: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is a fantastic property that could make a phenomenal movie or TV series if put in the right hands. Could those hands belong to Michael Greene and Fox?

TVLine has revealed that Fox has just purchased the rights to produce a ‘Put Pilot’ based on The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. This means that we’re extremely likely to see this come to light, as if a ‘Put Pilot’ is not aired, the network suffers a major penalty.

Michael Greene (Heroes, Smallville) will write and produce the pilot, which is still without a cast or director.

According to TVLine, the official logline for the series reads: “A drama series based on Alan Moore’s critically and commercially successful graphic novel series about a group of Victorian-age literary characters, including Captain Nemo, the Invisible Man, and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, who team up to fight a common enemy.”

Over ten years has passed since the terrible film adaptation of Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s first released to theatres. Do you think that enough time has gone by for people to forget about the film, or will people avoid this based on the name alone? The books are obviously held in very high regard, how do you think a series could turn out?

We’ll share more details as soon as they come in, but be sure to share your thoughts below!

League_of_Extraordinary_Gentlemen_Vol_2_5

Source: TVLine

Yesterday Bleeding Cool ran a very interesting theory, and one my gut tells me will come true. In this week’s Justice League #12, we got the beginning of the much talked about romance between Superman and Wonder Woman. But also this week we got Justice League International Annual #1, which featured the disbanding of the team and and an appearance by a future version of Booster Gold, who sees sureveilance footage of the Super-Wonder hook up and says something to the effect of “now it is too late!!” and vanishes. Not to mention, John Constantine is now a part of the DC Universe for the first time in decades in this New 52 universe. So what does this all add up to?

As Bleeding Cool pointed out, all this circumstantial evidence leads to an intriguing possibilty: DC is planning on digging  out Alan Moore’s proposed DC Universe crossover The Twilight of the Superheroes out of mothballs. What is Twilight of the Superheroes you might ask? Back in 1987, before Alan Moore cut all ties with DC over Watchmen, he pitched and sold a proposal to DC as their next epic crossover. He made a detailed plot synopsis, and included a rather long letter explaining just how DC should approach, market and even merchandise this puppy (so very capitalist of you Mr.Moore. tsk tsk) But soon after, his relationship with DC ended badly, and Twilight of the Superheroes went on the shelf. Elements of the story popped up in books like Kingdom Come and Armageddon 2001, but no straight up adaptation was ever made.

If Twilight of the Superheroes happens, expect a lot of snarky comments from Alan Moore.

That may soon change though, if Bleeding Cool is correct. Here is the full synopsis for the story according to Wikipediea:

The framing device of the story involves future versions of John Constantine and Rip Hunter traveling to the present day, ostensibly to prevent a serious disaster involving the superheroes of their time. The hook through which the series would connect with other titles is the attempts of the two time travelers to recruit others into their quest to alter the future through warning them of upcoming events. Individual books in the DC Universe could tie into the crossover or not, as their creators wished, by having Hunter or Constantine show up and warn the stars of the book of some event. The main narrative of the series involves Constantine relating the story of what has happened in the future to his present-day self over drinks in a bar.

The series was set in the future of the DC Universe, where the world is ruled by superheroic dynasties, including the House of Steel (presided over by Superman and his wife Wonder Woman, now called Superwoman) and the House of Thunder (consisting of the Shazam family) as well as houses built around the Teen Titans (House of Titans, naturally), the JLA (the House of Justice) The House of Mystery (DC’s mystical characters) and an alliance of super villains, known as the House of Secrets. The houses of Steel and Thunder are about to unite through the dynastic marriage of Superboy and Mary Marvel Jr., with their combined power potentially threatening the status quo, and several characters, including Constantine, attempt to stop it. One group of opponents is a shadowy cabal of non-powered heroes from DC and pulp fiction, like Tarzan and the Shadow, led by Batman. Another involves an alien alliance of the Green Lantern Corps, Martians, and Thanagarians. Constantine’s narrative of the future ends with a massive battle between the various factions, resulting in the death of most of the super-powered characters. A side story would show a decaying superhero ghetto where decrepit versions of old heroes live. In the final part of the present time framing device it would be revealed that Hunter and Constantine had traveled back in time not to prevent the future they came from but to ensure its coming true. The final battle depicted in the book resulted in humanity being freed from the control of superheroes, a status that Hunter and Constantine supported.

There are more details on Alan Moore’s proposal here. Now, we know that DC CCO Geoff Johns mined Alan Moore’s old Tales of the Green Lantern Corps stories for much of his Green Lantern run, including Blackest Night. So why not use Alan Moore’s old proposal? This isn’t a Watchmen situation; DC owns Alan Moore’s proposal outright and have since 1987, and all the characters are characters DC owns. If DC goes ahead and does this, they might get some grief from Moore in the form of snarky comments in the press, but that would be just about all he could do. While I felt (and still feel) that Before Watchmen was a slap in Moore’s face, this is a totally different animal. Twilight of the Superheroes also sounds a lot like a super powered version of Game of Thrones, which would be another selling point these days. One way or the others, I suppose we will all find out soon enough.

When Alan Moore proposed his epic story, the DC Characters all pretty much looked like this.

 

Despite my love of female super heroes, the main super heroine character of Alan Moore’s classic Watchmen, the Silk Spectre, was always the least interesting character to me in that whole series. She is mostly defined by her relationships to lead male characters Dr. Manhattan and Nite Owl, as well as to her own mother, the original Silk Spectre. Aside from how she views herself in relation to these other people, we don’t know much more about Laurie Jupiter other than that in the context of the original story. Sadly, she also often comes across as a bit of a whiney harpy at times, and although she was realistic, she wasn’t usually endearing. So I will say this for Darwyn Cooke’s first issue of Before Watchmen: Silk  Spectre; he actually made me actually like Laurie Jupiter for the first time, and he and artist Amanda Conner gave us an overall fun and breezy first issue.

But there also lies the problem with this comic so far; this is part of Watchmen…should it even be breezy and light and fun? More or less enjoyable as it was, Silk Spectre took me all of maybe six minutes to read. With Watchmen, it took six minutes just to digest just a few pages.

The story here is set in 1966, and teenage Laurie Jupiter is being trained by her mother, the original heroine called the Silk Spectre from the forties, to take her place as  her successor. While this is something of a classic comic book trope (and highly reminiscent of Black Canary from the actual DC Universe, on whom Silk Spectre was more or less based on) it never really made sense in the word of Watchmen. To me, the central conceit of Watchmen was always “what if super heroes existed in the real world?” In the real world, people putting on costumes and fighting hoodlums in the streets would either be insane (Rorschach) total sociopaths (the Comedian, and I guess Ozymandias) or be struggling with some serious sexual issues (Nite Owl) Of all these various costumed vigilantes in the original story, the original Silk Spectre seemed among the most sane, more or less, although an attention seeker of the highest order.

So the idea that any sane mother would dress her non super powered teenage daughter up in fishnets and heels, then send her out in the streets to fight crime and probably get killed brutally was maybe the most “comic booky” and unbelievable thing in the original story. In the more whimsical worlds of Marvel and DC you give things like this a pass, but Watchmen was meant to reflect our brutal ugly world, one wear a pair of glasses could never hide anyone’s secret identity. But the whole concept of the mother making her daughter follow in her footsteps was so tangential to the main story of the original series, you just didn’t notice it or give it much thought at how crazy it was. But the first issue of Silk Spectre is ALL about this notion, so it ends up feeling more like a traditional super hero story found in any comic, and not one set in the grittier more realistic world of Watchmen.

In this first issue, Laurie spends her days and nights busting her ass to be a teenage hero and please her mother, to the point where she has no life of her own to speak of. While training one day after school, she meets a handsome, popular boy named Greg, who isn’t threatened by Laurie’s kick ass-ness at all, and in fact seems to be kinda turned on by it. This pisses off the local “Mean Girl” at school, a snotty, prissy bitch named Betty Kensington, who looks like Betty Draper from Mad Men and acts just like Cordelia Chase from Buffy. This new boy also annoys Laurie’s mom, who doesn’t want her daughter distracted by boys, and just wants her to train to be a super hero. And I guess this is my biggest problem with this story…we don’t really know why Sally Jupiter wants her daughter to be crime fighter so badly, as she retired from the costumed hero life early and saw it as a stepping stone to greater fame as an “actress/model.” The motivations for putting her daughter’s life at risk are never really explored. All we get out of her is that the she says the world is filled with killers and rapists, a rather clumsy way of referencing Sally Jupiter’s brutal rape attempt in the original Watchmen book.

After throwing a teenage “I don’t want your life!” tantrum, Laurie runs away from home with her new guy who professes his love for her. He’s dodging the draft (remember, this is the Vietnam era) and Laurie is looking to piss off her mom. So as the issue ends, they are off to San Francisco, in a hippy bus of all things. Of course, readers of the original series know that by at least the end of the sixties, Laurie is committed to the Silk Spectre persona and hooking up with Dr.Manhattan, so I guess the point of this series is just what happens between her and new boyfriend Greg in San Francisco that leads to Laurie making such a huge about face on living the costumed hero life. And while this first issue was by no means bad, I still don’t know if this is a story that was begging to be told.

I will say that the art by Amanda Conner is top notch here, but her overly bubbly and cartoony style feels out of place in the Watchmen universe. There are several cut aways to goofy, cutesy thought bubbles that Laurie has at various stages to describe her feelings, and the whole thing feels kind of off in the greater context of Watchmen. (although some are very funny) Also, the story is very PG-13 rated so far….heck, maybe just PG rated even. Aside from one lewd gesture made by Mean Girl Betty in one panel, this could be any DCU book about the exploits of a teen super hero and her overbearing mom. Hell, it could almost be a super hero book set in the Archie universe. Again, that doesn’t make it a bad comic, it just makes it feel like not a part of Watchmen. And while one might say this book shouldn’t be just like Alan Moore’s and Dave Gibbons’ original classic, it has to still feel like it is a part of that world….and so far, this doesn’t.

This whole Before Watchmen business is giving me bad memories of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. By the time Lucas and Spielberg got around to making the fourth Indy movie, twenty years had passed since The Last Crusade, and whole Indiana Jones trilogy had become this revered part of American cinema. Unless they had a really, really good to reason to go back to the well, they should have left well enough alone.  Crystal Skull turned out to not be a good enough reason to taint our memories of Indy, and so far it turns out that Before Watchmen isn’t much different. (and even then you could argue it was the original creators who chose to return to their creation in Indy’s case, not an argument one can make about Before Watchmen)  The original Watchmen has become THE seminal work of comic book super hero fiction. Any follow up with Watchmen in the title needed to be great, not just “good enough”, and so far Silk Spectre just seems good enough.

This week sees  DC’s controversial return to the world of Watchmen with Before Watchmen: Minutemen. This six-issue series is written and drawn by Darwyn Cooke, the man behind the fantastic mini-series DC: The New Frontier as well as the man responsible for bringing The Spirit into the mainstream DC universe. I love both of those aforementioned books and thus was looking forward to see Cooke’s take on the Minutemen. To say that I was let down is an understatement. So, what went wrong? Lemme break it down for you…

Let me just start by saying that Darwyn Cooke’s artwork is not the problem in this issue, in fact it is actually the issue’s saving grace. His artwork is uniquely his own and whenever you see a Darwyn Cooke page you know it’s one of his. His style fits the book perfectly. With the issue mainly set in 1939, the art fits the time setting nicely and still gives it a timely feeling. No, the art is not the problem at all. Well, then what is already?

The story is the big problem with the premiere issue. Why is it such a problem? Well, it’s because it’s boring. Issue one follows original Nite Owl, Hollis Mason, as he recalls the history of the first masks and what brought them together to form the Minutemen. The premise sounds interesting but the execution is not at all. Each member is given a few pages that shows their start in the world of the masks but the problem is that we aren’t really introduced to the characters, they are shown to us. We never truly get a chance to know who these characters are before we move on to the next character and soon forget ever meeting the previous character. I felt no connection to any of them and by issue’s end could care less about not only why they want to be heroes but also why they’d want to form a team. This is only a six-issue series so a slow burn story is not the way to go. Especially with this being the flag-ship book of the Before Watchmen prequels.

No, I didn’t hate this book, but I did expect a lot more. This was the Before Watchmen book that I was looking forward to the most and now I feel slightly cheated and very let down. Will I read issue two? Yeah, but I’m not looking forward to it. Should you read issue one? I say, save your money and go pick up DC: The New Frontier trade instead.

Sit back and watch the minutes slowly tick away

Worried that with E3 going on you won’t get any comic news? Worry not! Courtesy of USA TODAY we have the cover and first five pages of Darwyn Cooke’s ‘Before Watchmen: Minutemen’ for you. This six-issue series will focuse on ‘The Minutemen’ who were were the premier group of superheroes throughout the 1940s. They were founded in 1939, largely through the actions of Nelson Gardner (Captain Metropolis), Sally Jupiter (the first Silk Spectre) and Sally Jupiter’s agent Laurence Schexnayder. Schexnayder also provided the group’s publicity. After several public controversies, the group finally disbanded in 1949.