Cropped Will Cardini artwork

August 18, 2009

End of Eros

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 7:35 am

While I was away in New Mexico, I got a copy of my good buddy Jose-Luis Olivares’ comic End of Eros in the mail. I love Jose’s extravagant mark making. It looks like he attacks each page vigorously with his brush.

Here’s a sample:

Check out how Jose uses different types of Zip-A-Tone and a spot gray:

The story involves a whole lot of melting, fusing, and transforming, which I’m obviously a fan of. To top it all off, Jose threw in an awesome piece of original art:

And a Power Rangers card from the distant future (notice the authentic browning caused, as we all know, by time travel):

Thanks Jose!

August 7, 2009

Folk #4

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 8:23 pm

I just got Folk #4 in the mail today, courtesy of the source of sci-fi mini-comic greatness, Tyler Stafford. This is the third issue of Folk that I’ve read, and they just keep getting better and better! Stafford’s storylines harken back to old-school sci-fi pulp stories but the art and layouts are informed by a twenty-first century cartoon aesthetic. According to the intro, Stafford’s computer is “on the fritz” so this issue is 11 x 17 sheets folded in half (I guess he draws the pages 8.5 x 11?). The larger art looks good, maybe Stafford should continue to make his comics this big.

Here’s a page that encapsulates the concept of the issue:

That page also showcases one of the aspects of Stafford’s comics that I dig the most, the way he blends his borderless scenes together while keeping the flow between them highly readable.

This next page, though, shows the most interesting thing about this comic, the way that Stafford portrays the experience of feeling someone else’s dream on tape:

I highly recommend this comic and I’m going to keep buying everything that Stafford puts out. You can buy Folk #4 here.

July 21, 2009

Zardoz

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 2:55 am


via locosceles.

My friend Will Sellari showed me the movie Zardoz on Sunday night.


cover of the novelization, via jimthing.

It was a violent movie (starring Sean Connery!) with a barely sensical climax, a weird dislike of penises and an even stranger inability to understand erections, but besides all that, these masks were really amazing:


via the rope store.

Also there were some great inflatables. Trailer:

July 15, 2009

Moon starring Sam Rockwell

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: , , , , , — Will Cardini @ 11:50 am

I saw Moon Monday night.

It was really refreshing. The last hard sci fi movie that I remember seeing was Sunshine, and that kind of fell apart at the end. Moon, directed by Duncan Jones, definitely follows the tradition established by 2001 and Tarkovsky’s Solaris, while also managing to throw in some humanizing bits of humor.

Ditko’s Abstraction at Blog Flume

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: , , — Will Cardini @ 9:25 am

There’s a great post by Ken Parille over at Blog Flume on “Ditko and the Beauty of Abstraction.” Here’s a snippet:

[In this panel, there’s] a giant ‘paint splat’ surrounded by a fuzzy ‘lightning bolt’:

Even though a cartoon ‘paint splat’ has a representational connection to an actual one, here that connection is severed, for the nature of the object is unknown – it’s just a gesture, a play of form and color. In the standard cartoon idiom, a splat would represent an action; here it may be an action or just a thing: in other words, in the grammar of this scene it could be either a subject or a verb.

It’s fascinating to me that images in comics can have specific grammatical functions, can be a subject or a verb. It’s definitely something very unique to the medium of comics, and something that I see exploited way more in older newspaper strips than in contemporary comics, which is a shame. When cartoonists play around with visual symbols in this way, reality beings to melt and lose its concrete nature. It becomes “a set of symbols to be manipulated abstractly” as the co-mix blog puts so succinctly.

Update December 21st, 2017: The post from which I pulled the quote in the previous paragraph, and the whole co-mix blog, has been deleted.

June 3, 2009

Folk #2

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 7:48 pm

I just received Folk #2 by Tyler Stafford in the mail on Monday. I ordered it after I read the review on Optical Sloth, who, by the way, is well on their way to doing one minicomic review a day in 2009!

I was waiting to do a scan on one of the pages before I posted about Folk #2, but the venerable Shawn Hoke already took care of it for me:

Folk 2 interior by Tyler Stafford

Just check out the backgrounds in this page, especially the lower-right panel! I love how much detail Stafford puts into his environments, I usually just put in some generic mountains or fill it in with black … something for me to think about … Anyway all of y’all should order Stafford’s comics, available through his etsy.

May 26, 2009

Wizards by Ralph Bakshi

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 12:04 am

I watched Ralph Bakshi’s movie Wizards this past weekend.


Images from the movie poster.

Until I saw this, I had never realized that Ralph Bakshi directed the half-finished live-action/rotoscope/animation Lord of the Rings movie! As I watched it, I wondered why more movies like it – animated fantasy epics – didn’t exist. I don’t know for sure, but I would think that this kind of movie is cheaper than both an entirely live movie and a 3D CGI verison. Then, during the special features, I discovered the reason – A New Hope came out two weeks after Wizards was released. Oh well.


Movie still.

My buddy Ryan Lauderdale pointed out that the strange mix of animation and color keyed stock footage is probably more interesting in 2009 than it was in 1977, now that that kind of mixed medium film is more prevalent out on the net and lots of people have access to video editing software. I wonder what someone in 2409 will think if they sit down (or download or mentally upload or whatever) and view Wizards – will any of it be relevant anymore? Or will they all be living out their own epic fantasy quests in a solar system that has been transformed into a Matrioshka Brain?


Movie still.

Unanswerable questions, really. I’ll just have to sit down and watch Fire and Ice.

April 28, 2009

Enki Bilal’s Immortal

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: — Will Cardini @ 7:15 pm

I watched Enki Bilal’s Immortal this past Sunday. After I read Jog’s review [2022-06-26 update: this link to Jog’s review on the Comixology website is now broken], I just had to check it out, so I made my girlfriend and friends sit through it on our sci fi movie nite.

Overall, the movie has too much going on and too many styles mixed up together – as Jog mentions, the mashup of CGI and RL actors is particularly awful. However, at its best, the movie has a frantic melee of crazy sci fi ideas and imagery that transcends to another level where Egyptian gods coexist with hammerhead aliens and a blue-scalped woman is in love with an alien named John who hangs out on a throne floating in outer space.

A snapshot of the main characters, Nikopol, Jill, and Horus, as depicted in the Nikopol Trilogy comic book that is also by Enki Bilal and was adapted for the movie, image via hakanuygun.

The one thing that is portrayed most effectively in the movie is the cityscape of future New York, image via letsfallasleep. The backgrounds are often the most visually consistent and compelling aspects of the scenes.

March 31, 2009

The International Space Station

Filed under: Fiction,Inspiration — Will Cardini @ 12:58 am

via wikipedia.

According to universe today, now that the solar panel modules have been added to the as-yet uncompleted International Space Station, it is the second brightest object in the night sky, next to the moon.

via universe today.

Venus has been dethroned, and this is just a sign of things to come. Our children’s children will look up into a sky filled with artificial satellites, floating space cities twinkling in the twilight.

A lone guitarist, camping on a mild post-global-weirding Saskatchewan winter night, will sing a song about a woman who left him for a life in space. The sky is so bright with habitats, he can hardly pick out her new home. Her muscles, weakened by the lower gravity of the Lagrange-point colonies, will never be able to support earth’s gravity again.

March 6, 2009

Postcapitalism and Kim Stanley Robinson

Filed under: SF Reviews — Tags: , — Will Cardini @ 10:35 am

A couple of days ago I linked to an article by Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Mars trilogy and The Years of Rice and Salt.

In the article, Robinson cogently outlines the connection between striving for global social justice and tackling climate change, going so far as to say that “justice becomes a kind of climate change technology.” What really interests me, however, is the call that Robinson puts out at the end for all of us to close a gap in our collective imagination, to fill in “a blank spot in our vision of the future”: namely, what economic system will succeed capitalism.

Of course postcapitalist theories abound, a few personal favorites being the steady-state economy and post-scarcity anarchism. But the problem here is that they are just theories and models, none of which have been tested in the real world. And, if you believe Robinson, we need to discover which of these theories are viable if we are going to survive the next century. Science fiction offers a great testing environment for extended thought experiments in this vein – Singularity Sky by Charles Stross offers an accelerated vision (pun intended) of the arrival of post-scarcity anarchism in its opening chapters,

Cover of Singularity Sky by Charles Stress

and Robinson’s own Mars trilogy offers a compelling narrative of competing postcapitalisms that takes place over the course of decades, applied to the mesocosm of a terraforming Mars.


via the terraforming art gallery.

P.S. Robinson’s favorite band is YES.


Fragile cover art by Roger Dean.