Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2015

RIP Patrick Macnee (1922-2015)

Remember the kool British spy tv series The Avengers and the team of Steed & Keel?
"Wait, you mean 'Steed & Peel', right?"
Nope, I meant "Steed & Keel"!
That's how the series was meant to be!
Read about how the show would never have "crossed the pond" if it had stayed with it's original, somewhat dull, concept HERE.
If it hadn't, we wouldn't be mourning the passing of actor Patrick Macnee, who made the somewhat stereotypical character of John Steed the distinctive cult icon he is today...

Monday, February 23, 2015

Visit Our Other RetroBlogs: Secret Sanctum of Captain Video

Specializing in comic adaptations of tv shows, movies, and dramatic radio shows, Secret Sanctum of Captain Video™ runs material unseen since first publication years and sometimes decades earlier.
Recent posts include...
The Avengers
Conan the Destroyer
Man from U.N.C.L.E.
and both the radio and movie versions of The Shadow!

Sunday, February 15, 2015

RIP Gary Owens (1934-2015)

He was Space Ghost, Roger Ramjet, and the announcer on Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In...

You may not know his face, but you cetatinly knew his booming voice!
Now he's gone...but his voice will live on...

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Brian Clemens (1931-2015)

The name might not be immediately identifiable, but his most famous creation is...
...although they couldn't use the show's name on an American comic book because some upstarts in tights had usurped it!
Wonder what ever became of those guys...
Besides a sequel series, The New Avengers, Brian Clemens also created and wrote The Professionals, CI 5: The New Professionals, Thriller (not the 1-hour b/w Boris Karloff show, but a color 90 min anthology series), wrote episodes of Danger Man (aka Secret Agent) and Adam Adamant Lives, and scripted a number of popular genre movies including See No Evil, Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter, Golden Voyage of Sinbad, and the cult flick Dr Jekyll & Sister Hyde.

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Give Someone a Batman Christmas!

Want to give your Batman-obsessed loved one a "Batty" Christmas?
Combine the new blu ray (or dvd) set...

...with a not-available-in-stores digitally-restored reproduction of a 1966 Carmine Infantino/Murphy Anderson promo piece...
...created in 1966 to hype the then-new tv show!
Ironically, the visual looks more like a huge flat-screen tv than the small cathode-ray tv tubes of the 1960s!
Available in a variety of formats to fit both decor and budget!

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Roosevelt Reading Room LIFE STORIES OF AMERICAN PRESIDENTS "Theodore Roosevelt"

With Ken Burns' The Roosevelts running on PBS...
...we thought we'd show how educational comics portrayed them, beginning with the Rough Rider!
This never-reprinted tale from Dell's Life Stories of American Presidents (1957) features the superb artwork of John Buscema.
Edited (and possibly written) by Helen Meyer.
If you think Buscema did a great job with the dynamic Teddy, wait until tomorrow, when he tackles the wheelchair-bound FDR in a masterful bit of effective storytelling!

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Houdini's WEIRD TALES!

In 1924, the one-year-old Weird Tales magazine had not yet achieved the fame (or notoriety) that would make it a best-seller synonymous with fantasy and horror stories...
...so, for a couple of issues, the publisher brought in the famed Harry Houdini to write the cover-feature.
Sales didn't pick up, and the magazine was forced to go from monthly to quarterly.
For the third and final Houdini cover story...
...the publisher had an up-and-coming young author ghost-write the final Houdini entry, doing a first-person mystery-adventure instead of the non-fiction charlatan spiritualist exposes of the previous issues.
The writer was H P Lovecraft.
You can read both the tale and the story behind it (explained in a letter by Lovecraft to fellow author Frank Belknap Long HERE.
It's been reprinted numerous times, ususally under the title "Under the Pyramids", and credited to Lovecraft.
Weird Tales and Lovecraft remained together, each inspiring the other to amazing creative heights.
Lovecraft began work with Houdini and C M Eddy, Jr. on a non-fiction book entitled "Cancer of Superstition", but Houdini's death ended the project which was fully-outlined with several chapters written.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Houdini Reading Room TRUE COMICS "Great Houdini"

..here's another, grittier, version, with more emphasis on the person rather than the performer.
This tale from Parents Magazine Press' True Comics #54 (1947) goes a bit further about both what inspired Houdini and caused his death.
But it wasn't the last word about Houdini in the four color pages of comics.
You'll see a more detailed retelling of his life story tomorrow!

Monday, September 1, 2014

Houdini Reading Room REAL FACT COMICS "Master of Mystery"

...we thought we'd take a look at how he's been portrayed in comics.
Here's his second solo appearance (after cameos in strips like Kid Eternity) in a never-reprinted feature from DC's Real Fact Comics #1 (1946).
Note: Houdini's first appearance is in the ultra-rare Rural House's Mask Comics #1.
But the only known surviving copies are "slabbed" in plastic cases to increase their resale value, so we may never see that story ever again.
While the writer is unknown, the artist is Dick Sprang, best-known for his decades of work on comics' most famous escape artist, The Batman!

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Doctor Who Deja Vu!

We're into the 2nd week of the newest Doctor Who's run, and whom do we already see?
Yep, the Daleks!
Used to be we'd have to wait at least a couple of months before they turned up, but now it's "Here's The Doctor and, of course, the Daleks!"
Here's a comic book adaptation of their first movie appearance...from almost 50 years ago!
The more thing change...

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Robin WIlliams (1951-2014)

He could've played it safe.
He could've just done schitck, and made an easy fortune.
Instead, he took creative chances no one else dared to do, like this...
"I yam what I yam" said it all for this one-of-a-kind talent.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

The ORIGINAL Planet of the Apes Tale...MONKEY PLANET by Pierre Boule

You've seen the seven films and both tv series...
...but did you ever read the book that started it all?
Here's the only graphic novel adaptation of the original story...
Read it before you see the movie this weekend!

Monday, June 16, 2014

Shaggy and Captain Scarlet Have Passed Away...

Well, not quite.
The characters are alive and well.
But the actors who defined them have passed away.
Francis Matthews, who sounded exactly like Cary Grant, was the voice of Captain Scarlet (whose "look" was based on Grant) on the cult-hit 1960s puppet tv series.

Casey Kasem was Shaggy on the various Scooby Doo tv series...
...Robin on the first Batman animated series (1969) as well as several Super Friends series...
...Mark on Battle of the Planets, the first "Americanization" of Gatchaman...
plus Alex on the several Josie and the Pussycat shows and numerous other one-shot voice-overs.

Though they are gone, their performances will live on...

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Best of Reading Room: RACE FOR THE MOON "Invasion"

Some people called early television "just radio with pictures"...
...a premise taken to an obvious extreme in this tale...
Unfortunately, the technological level of tv fx in 1958, when this story was published in Race for the Moon #1, make the events of the story highly unlikely.
The primary reason the inspiration for this story, the 1938 War of the Worlds radio hoax by Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre of the Air, worked was because peoples' imaginations ran wild, fueled by sound effects and well-written dialogue!
The "visuals" were in their heads!
Nonetheless, the unknown writer and artist Bob Powell did their best in only five pages.
And, the comic's intended audience, kids aged 9-15, could accept the premise, especially if they had no knowledge of the Welles radio show, which wasn't often rebroadcast until old radio show reruns made a comeback in the mid-1960s on college radio stations and lp albums.

NOTE: This story is a radically toned-down version of a tale that appeared a decade earlier!
Tomorrow we'll show you how it ORIGINALLY looked...pre-Comics Code, which has NEVER been reprinted!

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Marvel Characters Inspire Clothing Designers...

Ever wondered if a cape and tights could pass for haute couture?
On Thursday, Project Runway: Under the Gunn viewers will find out.
The four remaining competitors on the reality show will use Marvel characters such as Black Widow, Captain Marvel (shown above), Falcon, Hawkeye and the Guardians of the Galaxy as inspiration for a ready-to-wear challenge.
Jaimie Alexander (Lady Sif on Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the Thor films) will serve as a guest judge ready to school the hopefuls on all things fierce.
Cort Lane (that name just sounds like a superhero), Marvel’s vice president in charge of animation development and production, will also be on hand as a guest mentor.
Catch it Thursday evening on Lifetime, 9 p.m. ET/PT.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Happy Birthday to the REAL Captain Kirk!

Chris Pine is a decent replacement, but...
...as Sean Connery IS the one, true James Bond, William Shatner IS Captain James T Kirk!
If any proof be needed...
BTW, Trivia Point: The photo above features Captain Kirk vs...Captain Midnight!
Richard Webb (Finney in "Court Martial" was tv's Captain Midnight in the 1950s)

Friday, March 21, 2014

Comix Class: MOVIEMAKING ILLUSTRATED

Our "brother blog", Secret Sanctum of Captain Video presents a long out-of-print handbook which utilizes Silver and Bronze Age Marvel Comics artwork to demonstrate cinematography in storyboard fashion.
In fact, noted comic and animation artist Scott Shaw! used it in his storyboarding class...
I used to teach a class in storyboarding for the animation union here in Los Angeles. At the time, there was a tremendous influx of comic book talent from the Philippines come to work in animation. Many of these artists had no previous experience working in this field, plus there was a certain learning gap due to language and culture. Although this book really isn't particularly well-done (comics and film AREN'T as similar as some folks think), I frequently used pages from it when trying to help my Filipino students. Once they figured things out, many of 'em went on to do LOTS of professional storyboard work in the animation biz.
Considering how many current artists have problems grasping the essentials of storytelling (not illustrating, storytelling), perhaps an updated version of this should be standard reading.
Until then, this will have to do.
Class is already in session.
Don't be late and bring an Apple (iTouch or iPad will do) for the teacher. ;-)