I’ve wanted to get TV legend Kenny Johnson on the show for a while now! The producer, writer and director of class TV shows like ‘The Six Million Dollar Man’, ‘The Bionic Woman’, ‘The Incredible Hulk’, ‘V’ and ‘Alien Nation’, Kenny’s got a story or two to share. His latest is the novel ‘The Man of Legends’ about a 2,000 year old man who cannot die! We talk writing, 70s and 80s TV and the classic inspirations behind the new novel. Also… what could the future be for some of Kenny’s best known franchises? Enjoy read Kenny’s interview with our own Allie Hanley right here!

 

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Kenneth Johnson’s writing, producing and TV directing resume reads like a best of 70’s and 80’s TV. He’s known for creating the ground-breaking and influential science fiction television miniseries “V, ” as well as producing “The Six Million Dollar Man” and created other iconic Emmy-winning shows such as “The Bionic Woman,” “The Incredible Hulk,” and “Alien Nation.”

Johnson’s “Man Of Legends” is about a man who cannot die. He’s lived for more than 2,000 years and been witness to many of mankind’s achievements and atrocities. His life and those he’s touched is told through the eyes of those who have witnessed his struggle to be a better man in the eyes of the one who cursed him.

After reading an early copy I reached out to the author to discuss his story that hits shelves July 1.

Allie Hanley: I am such a big fan of “V,” “Alien Nation,” “The Bionic Woman” and “Hulk.” It wouldn’t be remiss to say you shaped a good portion of my childhood and teen years with those shows. I even had a bionic woman Barbie doll that went on “dates” with Steve (Six Million Dollar Man) and GI Joe. I named my dog “Max” and wanted him to be on every episode of “The Bionic Woman.”

I was sad when there were no longer any more episodes of “Alien Nation,” -loved the sour milk in lieu of alcohol, and was excited when “V” came back but it just wasn’t on par with yours!

Can you tell me about your new book “Man of Legends?”

Kenneth Johnson: While reading Mark Twain’s “Innocents Abroad” several years ago I came across a reference to my protagonist, which stirred my imagination. When I learned that Percy Shelley had also written poems about him I began some serious research and realized what an amazing tale could be woven together from all the legends about him. I also saw what a tremendous impact he could have had on the last 2000 years of world history (history is another of my passions). How he could have had life-changing encounters not only with Twain and Shelley (plus his wife Mary), but also sparked a young Tuscan boy to create a Renaissance painting, helped Scotsman James Watt to design the steam engine that kick started the Industrial Revolution, helped get Al Capone arrested, introduced the British Earl of Condom to the item that bears his name, inspired Gandhi, Einstein & so many others. …And made some unwitting mistakes that had ripple effects proving how no good deed goes unpunished.

AH: What made you want to tell the story from many perspectives rather than a narrative from Will’s viewpoint?

KJ: Also…having the different voices and speech patterns of the multiple characters telling the story adds a wonderful spice and sparkle to the reading experience — or listening experience to those who get the audio-book. Wait till you hear how they sound — it plays like an intriguing radio drama. Well, a great deal of the book is from Will’s POV. But he wouldn’t have the necessary knowledge to describe the experiences of the other characters whose voices I employed. Also I wanted the readers, like the characters in the novel, to experience my flawed hero Will as a flesh and blood man. Then through what we hear from Will plus Jillian and Father Paul and the love of Will’s life Hanna, we get to peel back the many layers of his story. To learn how he’d been born 20 centuries earlier and made a mistake back then that brought down a curse upon him: though he can suffer the pain of mortal injury he cannot die. And he must continually move forward every three days, unable to go backwards. Thus he’s on a constant quest to understand why this has befallen him, and if redemption is possible.

That’s the theme which drives the novel and threads through each of the characters in the story: trying to discover one’s reason for being.

And in Will’s case to also understand the mysterious sleek young man whom Will has glimpsed many times over the two millennia…who seems so eager to help him… yet is also consummately dangerous.

AH: With so many perspectives and characters was there one that you really loved and why?

KJ: Unfair! That’s like asking, “Who’s your favorite child, Kenny?” Each character is unique and so is his/her perspective on the story. Together with Will they create a rich tapestry ranging from the sharp reporter Jillian (troubled by her own demons),  to a country singer on the skids whom Will jumpstarts, to gritty, streetsy graffiti artist Tito, to five-year-old Maria, orphaned daughter of a prostitute, to Father St. Jacques the ambitious, self-serving French priest who represents Vatican authorities that have been relentlessly pursuing Will for 1600 years. …But I think that Katharine Hepburn-esque Hanna, now 85, who Will saved from drowning in the River Seine in 1937 and who became the love of his life as she traveled with him for a year, and is lovingly reunited with him in the course of the novel, is one who touches me the deepest. She is a sparkplug, a spitfire, a warm, brilliant woman any man would cherish and the romance she has with Will really is one for the ages.

AH: Were you raised religious and how did that play into your story?

KJ: As for me,  my mother went to a Methodist Church and so did I as a kid…mostly because I had a crush on a Judy Witherspoon who went there. As a teen and beyond I found it more interesting to learn about various other religions, beliefs, mythologies and superstitions and realized that almost all of them had caused far more harm than good. — But that the worthwhile kernel at the core of each of them seemed a far simpler concept…which is also touched on in my novel: an Ethic. A way of living right.

AH: There’s a few touching pages in your story that you dedicate to the death of a dog and do they go to heaven. Can you elaborate on that?

KJ: The young college student Nicole is mourning her recently deceased, beloved dog and Will explains why it hurts so much:

Because watching a puppy grow through maturity to old age and death is experiencing the whole life cycle. — Which is a metaphor for what Will has been going through for 2000 years…including seeing his wife and children,

and all the others whom he’s cared for, age and die…while he goes on and on. — That’s why he’s avoided Hanna, as much as he loved her…to save her the pain of seeing him still young.

As for the Great Mysteries, the novel certainly touches on them too. And I personally come down on the side of Will and Hamlet, “There are more things in heaven and Earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of…”

AH: Your style of writing is easily visualized. It wasn’t hard seeing this as a serialized TV show. Any movement in that direction and or where would you like to see this go?

KJ: Thanks for the compliment. Being first and foremost a director I’m always thinking cinematically. I very much hope to turn the novel into a TV project… ideally a four-hour or so miniseries which would allow more adequate time than a movie to really delve into all the mysterious, entertaining, fun, frightening, hopefully thought-provoking material I’ve been able to weave into the book.

AH: What are you working on now and how can readers follow you?

KJ: There is a KJ Facebook page for the novel, and there’s far more info at www.kennethjohnson.us — particularly about our current efforts to mount a big theatrical movie remake of my original miniseries V, as the first of a movie trilogy.

This is a story all about how Thor’s life got twist-turned upside down. All joking aside, the teaser trailer for the upcoming Thor: Ragnarok looks fabulous. Take a gander below and we will discuss after. Don’t worry; I can wait.

Wow, right? For starters, despite the darker tone (not counting the bright color scheme in some of the costumes) the humor we expect from Marvel superhero movies seems to remain intact. So surprise numero uno would be Thor’s loss of his mighty hammer, Mjölnir. The inclusion of The Incredible Hulk was also a bit of a shocker given that this was not an Avengers film. Who else can we expect to see, I wonder?

I am curious about how they are going to explain the presence of the film’s baddie, Hela (also known as Hel in some Norse works). According to Norse myhtology, she is a daughter of Loki. Will they alter that piece of her background in the film?

This trailer has raised plenty of questions and certainly has piqued my interest in the film. What was your impression?

[header image source: GQ]

Many fans have been wondering when the next time we would see the Green Goliath on the big screen after his standout appearance in The Avengers.  The head of Marvel Studios Kevin Feige recently spoke about the plans for a Hulk movie after the sequel to The Avengers sequel and that ‘World War Hulk’ as well as ‘Planet Hulk’ are definitely possibilities.

Feige spoke on the topic of the two stories being adapted:

“‘Planet Hulk’ is a cool story. ‘World War Hulk’ is a cool story. I think there’s pitfalls of continuity-overload, and mythology getting so dense that it almost collapses in on itself. It happens every few decades or so in the comics. Apart from that, I’d say everything is on the table.”

But Feige did state it’d be quite some time before we saw the Hulk in a solo film again:

“Do I think Hulk can carry a movie and be as entertaining as he was in ‘Avengers’? I do believe that. I do believe he absolutely could. We certainly are not even going to attempt that until ‘Avengers 2.’ So there’s a lot of time to think about it.”

Out of the two stories I think that ‘Planet Hulk’ would be easier to adapt into a solo film than ‘World War Hulk’. Are either of these stories that you would want to see on the big screen or do you have a personal Hulk storyline that you’d like to see brought to life? They did establish The Leader in The Incredible Hulk and I personally would enjoy seeing them pursue that option but can understand them going another route.

Source: MTV

 

Have you been wondering just what comes in the ten-disc Marvel Cinematic Universe – Phase One: Avengers Assembled Box Set? Well we now have a trailer for you detailing just what you will be getting. Minus the access denied folder with contents that not even I know. Trust me…I am dying to know what’s in it. Our own Scott Alminiana has pre-ordered this set after we saw it on the floor of this years San Diego Comic-Con. Will you assemble and purchase this ultimate collection?

Amazon.com has listed a new item. It was five years of build up that led to one of the greatest (well… if not the best) comic book movies of all time… ‘The Avengers’. And now you can get them all in one collectors set.

(10-Disc Limited Edition Six-Movie Collector’s Set) [Blu-ray]
• Marvel’s The Avengers (Blu-ray 3D and Blu-ray)
• Captain America: The First Avenger (Blu-ray 3D and Blu-ray)
• Thor (Blu-ray 3D and Blu-ray)
• Iron Man 2 (Blu-ray)
• The Incredible Hulk (Blu-ray)
• Iron Man (Blu-ray)
• Bonus Disc – “The Phase One Archives” (Blu-ray)
• Collectible packaging with exclusive memorabilia from the Marvel Cinematic Universe

Release date is still TBA. Check back on Amazon for more details.

Even after his cinematic rejuvenation in The Avengers, the Hulk might still “smash” on TV!

In a press call this morning, ABC’s Paul Lee revealed that ABC and Marvel are still moving forward on a Hulk TV show, while they have passed on “AKA Jessica Jones”, based on the Brian Michael Bendis’ Alias book.

In an article posted on Deadline about ABC’s slate announcement, the following blurb reveals ABC’s plans for the series:

The only property from Disney-owned Marvel still in active development at ABC is Hulk, which was set up one and half years ago with Guillermo Del Toro and David Eick attached. Lee said the project will be in consideration for the next pilot cycle. I hear Del Toro is still on board. ABC has passed on the Aka Jessica Jones adaptation whose writer, Twilight‘s Melissa Rosenberg, has a new series on ABC, Red Widow.

So sorry, Jessica Jones. We’ll have to wait a little longer to see you on a TV or film screen. And it’ll be at least another year for Hulk. Now how much longer will we have to wait to see “some Luke Cage up in this bitch!?!” (which is how Tyrese would play him if he got the chance).

As a little kid growing up in the 80’s, I remember imagining the super heroes I so dearly loved from comics books and Saturday morning television coming to life on the big screen in full live action glory. I’d play with my Marvel Super-Heroes Secret Wars action figures on the playground at recess and dream up how maybe one day, there might be a Captain America movie, then maybe a kick ass Thor movie, and then everyone would meet up together in one big giant omigod awesome Avengers movie…wouldn’t that be like, totally radical?!?  Then I got older, and middle school and high school hit, and I realized that those fantasies were just playground pipe dreams. There was simply no way this would ever happen. Hollywood was just to lame to ever allow it happen. Hollywood’s idea of a comic book movie was Dick Tracy and Howard the Duck. Well, It took some twenty five years from those playground outings, but The Avengers movie has finally happened. And oh boy, did they ever happen. They happened hard.

Let’s just get the important stuff out the way here; The Avengers is freakin’ awesome. It is everything you could want out of both a Summer blockbuster and a super hero movie.  Marvel Studios’ grand experiment of building an interconnected Marvel “movie-verse” in much the same way as the Marvel comic book universe was built, which began four years ago in Iron Man and culminating with this movie, has payed off in spades. And they really saved the best for last. (well, not “last”– just the end of phase one I guess) Incredible kudos have to go to Marvel Studios for having the vision to pull this one off. They gambled big and the pay off was just as big. If any one of the solo movies for the main cast of Avengers has failed spectacularly, this movie wouldn’t have really worked. Remember, production on The Avengers started before either Thor or Captain America was even released; either of those movies could have tanked. This kind of gutsy, confident move from a studio hasn’t been seen since New Line Cinema greenlit The Lord of the Rings trilogy. And Marvel cast these films perfectly. From Robert Downey to Chris Hemsworth and Chris Evans, I know I can’t imagine anyone else playing these parts now.

But good studio choices aside, so much of what makes Avengers work like gangbusters falls squarely on writer/director Joss Whedon’s shoulders. Everything about character, team dynamics, and blending together action and drama and comedy that he learned while working on television series like Buffy, Angel and Firefly is applied to Avengers with the polish of a seasoned film veteran. You’d never know the man had only directed one feature film before when watching this one. In fact, I kind of shudder to think what this movie might have been like under almost anyone but Joss Whedon’s hand; while there are plenty of fanboys out there with an intimate knowledge of super hero comics, there aren’t that many talented writer/directors out there who also happen to be big fanboys. But lucky for us, Joss Whedon is the whole package, which is why he was the ideal man for the job. Aside from just being able to create the structure of this thing and keep it from being unweildy, and getting amazing performances from his ensemble, Whedon knew just what aspects to draw on from the comics, and just what to ignore.

Whedon knew that while some superficial aspects of Mark Millar’s The Ultimates made more sense for the big screen, he couldn’t make the characters as unlikable as they were presented in that book, and chose their original classic Marvel Universe personalities instead.

And not to knock the various Marvel solo films, but under Whedon’s hand almost all the main members come off better here than in their own previous solo movies. Captain America is the ultimate military leader here, something we only glimpsed towards the second half of his own movie. Thor is the fully powered God of Thunder from the moment he steps into frame in this one, a bigger bad ass than he was in the entirety of his own film, where he spent so much of the running time de-powered. And Black Widow is far, far more interesting and developed under Whedon. Her introduction scene alone in this movie is better than her whole role in Iron Man 2. I should have known uber feminist Joss Whedon would not have let her merely be just “the chick” on the team. Even Robert Downey Jr. is better here as Tony Stark than he was in much of the second Iron Man movie. And Mark Ruffalo’s take on the Hulk might be the best thing in the whole movie, period. And I’ve never been a particularly big Hulk fan, so that’s saying something coming from me.

Every single character in the Avengers has their moment to shine (or several.) This isn’t like X-Men The Last Stand, where characters like Angel and Colossus are introduced just to stand around and do nothing. Every single member of the Avengers has something to do here, has something to contribute to the team, not just in action scenes but in dialogue scenes as well.  And unlike so many so called “popcorn” movies, some of the best parts of Avengers is just dialogue and performances. I can’t stress enough how different that makes this movie from the current crop of summer action blockbusters, most notoriously the Transformers franchise.

As for that the movie is actually about, well…the plot of this movie isn’t complicated; if you’ve seen the trailers (and since you’re reading Geekscape, chances are you’ve seen it like a dozen times already) then you pretty much know the plot: Loki is evil, wants to use the Tessaract (also known as the Cosmic Cube ) and subjugate the Earth with his Alien army. Super Heroes are gathered to stop him. There’s your plot. There are no Dark Knight style “plans within plans” like with the Joker. This movie isn’t trying to say anything about society at large. Avengers is a classic straightforward Summer popcorn movie. But this movie reminds us that straightforward can be great too; it’s not like the plots to Raiders of the Lost Ark or Jaws were particularly complex, they were just incredibly well executed and had great acting, characters and action set pieces, all things this movie has in great abundance. To tell you anymore, about specific story and character beats would just ruin the movie for you, and I don’t wanna do that. Just trust me when I say they’re great. Especially the last act. And unlike so many movies where the trailer gave everything away…let’s just say that’s not this movie.

Much of the basic plot comes straight out of Avengers #1 back in 1963

If there are any minor quibbles I have with The Avengers, they’re just that—quibbles. I wish that Alan Silvestri’s score was a lot better. I so wish it contained a memorable theme like Indiana Jones or Superman or even Tim Burton’s Batman. Like most of the Marvel Studios film scores, it merely gets the job done. I also wish Hawkeye was more developed as a character, something the plot mechanations kept him from really being for most of the movie. And finally, I guess I sort of wish that Avengers could have stood on its own more as a film, without needing to have seen the solo films for Iron Man, Thor and Captain America first. I’d be outright lying if I said that this movie wouldn’t be confusing for newbies without having done their homework first. But that’s not really a knock on the film; even The Empire Stikes Back doesn’t make sense without having seen Star Wars first, and that doesn’t keep Empire from being brilliant. Oh, and not once does anyone shout out “Avengers, Assemble!” I mean, how could they forget to do that? But when that’s almost your worst complaint, I think the movie is doing pretty ok.

For comic book fans, The Avengers is literally a dream come true. For non comic book fans, who remember when summer action blockbusters were good and not just big and loud and stupid, it is just as much a dream come true in its own way. The Avengers has raised the bar for comic book super hero movies for all time—I’m not sure that introducing a movie with this just one super hero fighting just one super villain is going to be enough anymore after this movie comes out, I can’t help but feel something like that will seem like slim pickings from now on.

I recently found an old issue of the now defunct Wizard magazine from 2005 in one of my comic book longboxes; in it there was an article called “55 Comic Book Movie Things We Can’t Wait To See.”  Interestingly, #5 on that list was a Joss Whedon directed super hero movie, and entry #34 was seeing an Avengers movie come to life. On the notion of a potential Avengers movie, the article stated  “Marvel zombies will know that moment has arrived, when Captain America , Thor and Iron Man stand tall on the silver screen, rallied to battle—we’re getting superpowered chills just thinking about it.”  Well, seven years later, I know I got superpowered chills seeing it, and unless you just plain hate fun, chances are so will you.