Tuesday, August 24, 2010
"CRIME WAVE"
The trailer's on YouTube, but take my advice and skip it. It makes the film appear amateurish and boring, which it isn't. Instead take a look at this short video (above) about the film's director, Andre De Toth. He's the same guy who directed the underrated horror film, "House of Wax."
Sunday, August 22, 2010
A DINNER I WON'T FORGET
Before I start, let me apologize for taking the Pizza Boy story down. It's only temporary. I'll put up an improved version soon, and I think you'll like it a lot better. I had trouble with Beta Blogger, which isn't set up for the kind of photo stories I like to do, but it gets better every day and, well...you can't argue with the price. Thanks to Roberto, Jorge, Rooni, Fritz and Ben for the kind comments on that post.
Fortunately, I have another pizza story ready to go, this one taken from real life...
Fortunately, I have another pizza story ready to go, this one taken from real life...
When the family got up to go, I felt like shaking the kids hand and giving him my wallet. What a gift he gave to his father! What a son! What a night!
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Labels:
dad,
dad and son,
good son,
night to remember
Thursday, August 19, 2010
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF JAMES ELLROY?
It occurred to me that in my post on writers James Ellroy and Elmore Leonard I forgot to include a sample of Ellroy's writing. Ill make up for that here with a couple of brief Ellroy interviews. He writes the way he talks, so this should give you an idea of what the writing's like.
Ellroy talks in short sentenses with short words. It's a very lean style. In the interviews he comes off as obsessive, which doesn't surprise me. I think all good literary stylists have compulsive disorders. They write whether they get paid for it or not. You have to write an awful. awful lot to get the kind of feel for words that they have.
The trick is to avoid getting seduced by your own beautiful words, and to never neglect the content. Good writing is always about something that's worth knowing.
YouTube has several videos where Ellroy talks about Elizabeth Short, the famous "Black Dahlia" whose corpse was found surgically cut in half in Hollywood in the forties. His own mother was murdered when Ellroy was a kid, some (not Ellroy) believe by the same killer. The two murders are always on Ellroy's mind. I'm surprised that Ellroy is able to keep focused on a subject he's spoken and written about so frequently through the years. Maybe this is another example of how you have to be an an obsessive compulsive in order to write well.
Maybe the tragic crimes gave him a nucleus around which he could grow a compulsion. Maybe the best writers need compulsions for fuel and deliberately set about to acquire and nurture them. Or maybe I'm trying to over explain something that's simple and doesn't need an explanation. I don't know. Anyway, I love the way Ellroy talks.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
FILLER
I hate filler. I hate it in books, cartoons, films, food...you name it. Filler sucks.
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Sunday, August 15, 2010
PHILOSOPHY GIRLS AUDITIONS (PART 1)
INT. THEORY BUILDING: ON THE APPLICANTS:
BUTTERCUP: "Only two slots left, and there's dozens of girls ahead of us. It doesn't look good!"
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PHILOSOPHY GIRLS AUDITIONS (PART 2)
VIOLET: "Well, maybe she's right, Gladys. Rand says we're born with fundamental rights, which no Nietzchean Superman or Leviathan state can morally withdraw." |
IRIS: " 'Sounds good Violet, but the Utilitarians had another way of looking at it. They said the purpose of the state is to bring about the most happiness for the most people. It would be hard for the state to do that unless it had a lot of power. " |
PETUNIA: "But who decides what makes you happy? Hitler? Stalin? Rand says it's not the job of the state to make you happy. It's the job of the state to protect your right to make yourself happy, whatever way you choose, provided you respect the rights of others to do the same. It's right here in the Declaration of Independence...our 'inalienable right to life, liberty and the PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS!' " |
OUTSIDE, ON THE LINE OF APPLICANTS:
GLADYS (VO): "GOOD GRIEF! ANOTHER KID!!!! What's this, the PHILOSOPHY BABIES!!??
MAGNOLIA (VO): "I don't know, I think she's kinda cute."
GLADYS (VO): "See if you think so when you end up having to clean her turtle bowl!"
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Thursday, August 12, 2010
THEORYBOY INTERVIEWS MILT GRAY
Well, slightly exaggerating. Above, the heroine of Milt Gray's new web comic, "Ms. Viagri Ampleten." |
Sepia sketches by John Kricfalusi |
Greetings Theory Cornerites! Uncle Eddie here. That's me above, second from the left. You know, we've interviewed many celebrities on this site: Sammy, Dean, Frank, and even Bob Clampett, but none has been as tall as our present subject, Simpsons timing director, animator, Clampett fan and web cartoonist, the 6' 6" "Tower of Power," MILT GRAY. "Hi MILT!" |
MILT : "Hi, Uncle Eddie! Wanna see my latest drawing of Viagri Ampleten?"
UNCLE EDDIE: "Sure! Wow! She certainly is...(gulp!)...ample. So this is your new web comic character! She's a spy, right?"
MILT: "Well, not exactly. She's a free agent. Sometimes she works for the government, and sometimes for private people. She takes on the really dangerous assignments that no one else wants to touch."
UNCLE EDDIE: "How does she decide what jobs to take?"
MILT: "Good question. Well, she's more likely to take a job that gives her scope to follow her hobby, which is sex. She's on a crusade to liberate people from their sex hangups."
UNCLE EDDIE: "Uh oh! There goes your 'G' rating."
MILT: "'Not worried. I'm after whatever rating makes sense for the stories I'm telling. I figure the readers will tell me how graphic I should go."
UNCLE EDDIE: "How did you figure out the format? There can't be many web comics that scan the way yours does."
MILT: "Yeah, it works great, doesn't it? It came about because the project started as an animated cartoon, and the panels were meant to be layouts. That's why they're all the same size. When I decided to do a web comic instead, it seemed like a natural outgrowth of that to put them in a column and let the reader scroll down. I guess I was lucky, because everybody seems to like it that way."
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UNCLE EDDIE: "How did you color it?"
MILT: "Well, I xeroxed the original drawings down to a size my scanner could take, then I just fed them in. The color was done on Photoshop by my color stylist, Cynthia Macintosh.
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UNCLE EDDIE: "I'll put a few of the panels up (that's them above, cropped badly by me, and in a different format than the one Milt uses. I was just too sleepy to do it right). Boy, you can tell that an animator drew them."
MILT: "Thanks. There's a lot that's different about this comic. I hope it influences things. The web is a great vehicle for comics, and it'll get even better if we continue to experiment."
Milts web comic: http://www.viagriampleten.com
Labels:
caricatiures,
john k,
Milt,
milt gray,
viagri
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