• Welcome to ZNAK SAGITE — više od fantastike — edicija, časopis, knjižara....

Mehmete, reaguj!

Started by crippled_avenger, 13-03-2007, 03:16:25

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 7 Guests are viewing this topic.

RedSonja

fuj! prenosilac zaraza. izbelio dlaku udesio se i očistio nokte, ali iako malo liči na mog bivšeg hrčka skolda, te oči mene ne zavaravaju, you dont fool me!

Dybuk

Aww bas je slaaaadak!

[super reakcija @dejane]

Mrzim pacove, ali i to moze, samo bih komarce istrebila zasvagda.  8-)

Meho Krljic

Čujte, makar je ugodnije zamišljati Australiju kao kontinent podivljalih mačaka nego znati da je ona u realnosti kontinent gigantskih arahnida.  :cry: :cry:

RedSonja

australija je diiiiiivan kontinent, možda i najdivniji
ima super floru i faunu, osim onih lizarda i sličnih reptila fuj fuj, a znači ima i puno mačaka znači nema glodare jaow <3
ima i čajno drvo lajklajklajk, volim čajno drvo

Meho Krljic


Dybuk


Meho Krljic

Lepe, lepe. Ovaj se, recimo zove The Mouse Spider:



I odgovoran je za pokolj miševa, žaba, guštera...

Dybuk

Najs! Potrazi funnel web, to je jedan od otrovnijih, ima ogromne kljove.



RedSonja

na tog mišjeg spajdera bi se i djavo zgrozio

Meho Krljic

Sama pomisao da delim planetu sa njim me ispunjava nelagodom.

дејан

...barcode never lies
FLA

Meho Krljic

Brus Dikinson, naravno, pobedio rak:


BRUCE DICKINSON UPDATE


QuoteWe are very happy to announce that following his recent MRI Scan, Bruce was today officially given the all-clear by his specialists.
Bruce says,
"I would like to thank the fantastic medical team who have been treating me for the last few months, resulting in this amazing outcome. It's been tough on my family and in many ways it was harder for them than me. I'd also like to send a heartfelt thanks to all our fans for their kind words and thoughts. I'm a firm believer in trying to maintain a positive attitude, and the encouragement from the global Maiden family meant a great deal to me. Right now, I'm feeling extremely motivated and can't wait to get back to business as usual, as soon as I can!"
Rod Smallwood continues,
"We are of course all absolutely delighted that Bruce's doctors have pronounced him free of cancer. Although Bruce is naturally eager to resume Maiden activities, it will take a while before he is completely back to full strength, as we explained previously. Because of this, the band will not be touring or playing any shows until next year. We know our fans will understand the situation and, like us, would prefer to wait until Bruce is back to his usual indefatigable levels of fitness before going out on the road.
For now, the focus will be on putting the finishing touches to the new Iron Maiden studio album and that is what we will be concentrating on over the coming weeks. The release however will definitely be this year. Meanwhile, I'd like to echo Bruce's words and thank all Maiden fans. You have been incredibly patient, putting Bruce's health and well-being first during this difficult time and the band and I appreciate all your positive support."


http://youtu.be/iCSd0slqzcQ

Meho Krljic

Prigodno je. Neću da kažem da je ovo ko da sam ja piso, jer ja ipak ovo ne bih mogo da napišem, ali mnoge teze koje sam iznosio godinama putem DJMŠ se ovde potvrđuju od strane ozbiljnijeg autora od mene:

The Secret History of Ultimate Marvel, the Experiment That Changed Superheroes Forever

Quote

A reboot is a delicate thing. When a once-profitable franchise of characters becomes stale, outdated, or overly complex, there will always be voices calling for the slate to be wiped clean: to take the characters back to their basics, retell their origin stories, make them contemporary. But all too often, those rebooting efforts are laughable, pandering failures. Ultimate Marvel was the rare exception. It was a compendium of stories that saved the company that launched it, revolutionized the comics medium, and became the foundation of the multi-billion-dollar Marvel cinematic empire.
It began as a Hail Mary maneuver. Ultimate Marvel was a publishing experiment launched by Marvel Comics — the superhero-comics company that had invented the Avengers, Spider-Man, the X-Men, and countless other icons — during its darkest hour. The idea was simple: Launch various comics series where all the famous Marvel characters are young again and just starting their superhero careers in the modern day. Give the series flashy titles like Ultimate Spider-Man and Ultimate X-Men and make sure no reader will have to go back and read decades' worth of comics to understand what's going on. Return to core principles. Make these icons fresh again.

There were many reasons the initiative could have failed, but it instead succeeded beyond its creators' wildest dreams. Indeed, the world of Marvel movie adaptations — including this summer's megahit Avengers sequel and upcoming Fantastic Four — owe more to the Ultimate imprint than any other single Marvel Comics initiative. And yet, 15 years after the Ultimate line's birth, Marvel just killed it. Last week, a five-issue miniseries called Ultimate End debuted, and when it's done, there will be no more Ultimate Marvel. There is little mourning, even within die-hard comics fans who once loved the imprint.

What happened? Why dispose of something so successful? To find the answers, we must look at the secret history of Ultimate Marvel. It's a story of desperate ambition, shocking triumph, and fevered imagination. But it's also a cautionary tale: one about pushing limits too far, holding on too long, and learning to accept the forces of entropy. Here, then, is the tale of Ultimate Marvel, one of entertainment's greatest reboots — but also living proof that all reboots can become victims of their own success.

*****

"When I got hired, I literally thought I was going to be writing one of the last — if not the last — Marvel comics," says now-legendary comics writer Brian Michael Bendis, who wrote the first comic of the Ultimate line and will be writing the final one, too. When he wrote that first issue in 2000, the once-venerable Marvel was in chaos. "It's so the opposite now, that people don't even know."

Here's some context to understand the red-alert disaster the comics industry had become by the eve of the Ultimate experiment. In 1993, annual combined comics sales across all publishers had been close to a billion dollars; in 1999, that same number was a microscopic $270 million. In 1989, Batman was the most-talked-about movie in America; by 1999, the disastrous Batman & Robin had squirted a stink on the very idea of a cinematic comic-book adaptation. Marvel especially was feeling the burn: It went through a humiliating Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the late '90s, saw wave after wave of layoffs, and executive leadership was shuffled every few weeks. In 1999, after years of comics-publishing dominance, the company lost its top spot in industry market share and watched its rival, DC Comics, take the throne.

There was a wide array of causes for Marvel's woes — the collapse of a comics-as-collectible-items bubble and multiple defections by top artists, for example. But one ailment was obvious to any brand-new reader who bought a Marvel comic for the first time: There was so much backstory that the stories were almost incomprehensible.

Ever since Marvel's first comic in 1939, nearly every superhero story it published had to fit into a shared, ongoing universe of characters and events. There was some fudging of time frames (Spider-Man was introduced as a teenager in 1962, and by 1999, he was only in his 30s or so), but every story was built on the back of every previous story, and all stories were interconnected: Iron Man might talk about some battle that had occurred in X-Men, Mr. Fantastic would remember things that happened in comics published 20 years prior, and there were regular companywide "crossover events," where all the heroes would fight the same evil at the same time.

If you're confused by that description, don't worry — so was everyone else. Sixty years of continuity had set an insanely high bar for understanding what was happening in a Marvel comic, even if you were a die-hard fan. (To be fair: DC also had this problem.) What's more, everything in Marvel looked and sounded behind-the-times. In a world where geek audiences were flocking to watch the sleek, leather-clad, hip (by 1999 standards) action of The Matrix, Marvel's stories were alienatingly ridiculous. In the pages of Marvel's flailing comics series, you might see the Avengers — wearing uniforms of clownish purple or baby-blue — fighting wooden-dialogued villains with names like Kang the Conqueror and Lord Templar. Spider-Man was a married stiff who spent years trying to solve the mystery of whether or not he was a clone. And the characters were all so old: The phenomenon of ongoing continuity meant the original X-Men hadn't been teenagers for decades. A pop-culture empire lives and dies on young-adult interest, and Marvel's was fast receding.
Enter Bill Jemas. He was a relative outsider to the comics world (he'd gotten his law degree from Harvard before spending most of his career in the collectible-trading-card industry) who was put in charge of Marvel's editorial direction in 2000. He hated what Marvel had become: a place that was "publishing stories that were all but impossible for teens to read — and unaffordable, to boot," as he put it to me. But Jemas had an idea, born of a suggestion he says the CEO of Wizard, a comics-industry magazine, gave to him: "turn our middle-aging heroes back into teens." In other words, he wanted to launch a reboot.

Of course, that could have been a suicidally horrible idea if executed poorly. (Imagine some 55-year-old veteran comics writer penning a Spider-Man title where Peter Parker wears a backwards baseball cap and yells "Bodacious!" after hitting Green Goblin with a skateboard.) The company needed fresh and relatively young talent writing such stories. Luckily, Marvel had a charming, freshly minted editor-in-chief with great respect in the indie-comics world: Joe Quesada, who quickly sought out writers from outside the Marvel family. Quesada (who could not be reached for an interview) also had the virtue of being a devoted company man: Jemas recalled that Quesada would've preferred to "tell stories about new heroes, e.g., Peter Parker's nephew," rather than do a reboot, but went along with the Jemas plan nonetheless.

While Quesada was headhunting, Jemas struggled to find the right way to conceptualize his new initiative (at that time tentatively titled "Ground Zero," a name that fortuitously was abandoned). Comics companies had tried to jettison decades of storytelling before, and it usually ended in failure. Do you create a story where some cosmic event resets the clock on 60 years of continuity? DC had done that with its "Zero Hour" event in 1994, and it only ended up making everything more confusing for readers. Would you send your best heroes into another dimension, where they were somehow rejuvenated? Marvel did that with its "Heroes Reborn" event in 1995, and sales were abysmal (as were relations between executives and creators).

He opted for an extremely simple premise: There would be a new Spider-Man series and a new X-Men series, in which all the characters were still young. That's it: No explanations about why, no complicated in-continuity sci-fi justifications about interdimensional travel, nothing. Just stories where the most basic archetypes were in place — Peter Parker getting spiderlike powers after a spider bites him, the X-Men being superpowered mutants in a world that fears and hates them, Wolverine being grumpy, and so on — but where the characters were all starting out in the world of 2000, beginning a new continuity.

And Jemas had a firewall against failure, too: Marvel would continue to publish the existing Spider-Man and X-Men series, the ones with hundreds of issues of complicated, old continuity. They — the so-called "mainstream" Marvel series — would be unaffected. The rebooted tales would simply exist in another fictional universe — and if those stories didn't sell, Marvel could just cancel them without affecting existing mainstream continuity. There was no reason not to give it a try. Jemas and Quesada don't recall how they hit upon the name "Ultimate" for the branding, but it came up at some point and stuck in their minds. They aimed to launch Ultimate Spider-Man and Ultimate X-Men by year's end. But as the months wore on, the talent hunt was getting dire. "Honestly, I kissed a lot of frogs," Jemas recalled.

That's when Quesada made a fateful phone call to Brian Michael Bendis. At the time, Bendis was a struggling freelance indie-comics writer/artist whose biggest claim to fame was a mediocre-selling historical drama about a serial killer from the 1930s. "My normal was, I'll sell 2,000 copies of a comic, get a check for $400, and then hustle to do caricatures all weekend to make some real money," Bendis recalled with a laugh. So he was shocked when Quesada got in touch and told Bendis to pitch a back-to-basics Spidey story where Peter Parker was a teen and everything was a blank slate. Apparently, one of the previous auditionees had written a word-for-word adaptation of Spider-Man's 1962 first appearance, but with modern décor. Bendis knew he had to avoid that approach: "When you do that, it just dries it up. You're basically a cover band, at best."

Instead, he won the gig by writing an elegant script that read more like a TV pilot than a '90s superhero comic: There were no thought bubbles of internal monologue, no rushed exposition, not even a costume in the first issue. And it didn't feel self-consciously "modernized": There was no shock-value violence, and the 30-something Bendis wisely went easy on teen slang (though there are some snippets that haven't aged well, e.g., "See you on the flipmode"). The first issue was 45 pages long — more than twice the length of an average comic — which allowed for realistic pacing and Mamet-esque conversational dialogue. Peter is 15 and speaks in the awkward tones of a bullied child. His Aunt May and Uncle Ben are kind, aging hippies who charm the reader by calmly joking with each other. Peter's bitten by a genetically modified spider (in the mainstream version, the spider had been radioactive, but Bendis knew genetic tinkering would resonate more in 2000), and is genuinely confused and remorseful when he hits a bully and knocks the boy out with his strange new powers. None of it felt cartoonish and overwrought like mainstream Spidey. The now-famous final page is a single panel of Peter realizing he can stick to his own ceiling. He dangles upside-down, face forward, and mumbles, "Whoa — cool." In the context of the whole issue, it's a moment of earned, simple wonder.
Jemas was overjoyed with the issue, but retailers were skeptical. "I publicly said, 'If Ultimate Spider-Man made it to 100 issues, I would eat a bug,'" San Francisco–based comics-shop owner Brian Hibbs told me. The first issue debuted at No. 15 on the monthly sales charts for September of 2000, selling a modest 54,407 copies. But Jemas had a wild, risky scheme: He distributed millions of copies at chain stores like Payless Shoes and Walmart. Major media outlets picked up on Jemas's publicity push, leading to glowing reviews ("One of the most emotionally resonant depictions of teendom in comics," Entertainment Weekly wrote of the series). That all added up to overwhelmingly positive — and widespread — word-of-mouth praise. Sales steadily rose.

Finally, in December, the buzz paid off and Ultimate Marvel hit the top of the comics sales charts. But it wasn't with Ultimate Spider-Man. The first megahit Ultimate comic was the first issue of Ultimate X-Men, which sold a staggering 117,085 copies that month. It was set in the same universe as Ultimate Spider-Man, and had been long delayed because Jemas and Quesada couldn't decide on a writer. They tore their hair out during the search, even rejecting their beloved Bendis's spec script for the series. The person they finally picked was a newcomer to Marvel with an extremely controversial reputation for his work at other publishers. He was a Scotsman named Mark Millar, and the work he created at Ultimate Marvel changed superhero fiction forever — for better or worse.

*****

The history of Ultimate Marvel is, in a way, a story about warring approaches to a reboot: Bendis's and Millar's. Bendis wanted to polish the old archetypes; Millar wanted to aggressively critique them. Bendis sought timeless stories; Millar craved biting contemporary political critique. Bendis was looking to inspire; Millar aimed to disquiet. As Bendis put it: "I'm writing about hope and he's writing about nihilism, and I know he doesn't always think he is, but he is. Constantly."

Millar is one of the most divisive — and successful — names in the history of comics, and he had already begun his meteoric ascent when Quesada and Jemas snatched him up. At DC, he'd written jaw-droppingly violent and provocative stories on a series called The Authority. One Authority story was even about the titular superteam fighting an army of horrific pastiches of Marvel superheroes, including a rapist Captain America, a baby-murdering Iron Man, and white-supremacist X-Men. But he'd gone too far and left DC after they told him he couldn't enact some of his more wild ideas (including George W. Bush authorizing the deployment of a government-created pedophile supervillain). As envelope-pushing as he was, Millar was also a brilliant crafter of action-story structure and — perhaps to a fault — knew how to grab attention unlike anyone else in the business. Jemas never shirked from controversy, and relished making this high-profile hire.

Millar's initial stories for Ultimate X-Men may have sold like gangbusters in 2001, but they weren't especially groundbreaking (other than the awful goatees that artist Adam Kubert gave to Wolverine and Cyclops). His greatest achievement was brewing in the background. Jemas and Quesada had asked him to team up with superstar artist Bryan Hitch for the launch of Ultimate Marvel's take on Marvel Comics' premier superteam, the Avengers. Hitch had drawn for The Authority (though his run didn't overlap with Millar's), where he earned a reputation for drawing comics that looked like movies: full of photorealistic figures and enormous action sequences. The Ultimate-universe Avengers series would be called The Ultimates, and Marvel wanted it to be the imprint's biggest series yet.

"The tout of actually being able to make an Avengers film wasn't on anybody's radar," Hitch told me. "So that's what we said, that this was 'Avengers: The Movie.'" They couldn't have known how true that cheeky philosophy would turn out to be. In a scant few months, the pair unwittingly concocted ideas that formed the foundation of the worldwide-hit Marvel Cinematic Universe. As Joss Whedon, writer/director of The Avengers and its sequel, put it: "It's my feeling that Ultimates brought Marvel into the modern age in a way no other book did."

The Avengers that hundreds of millions of people see on the silver screen are, for the most part, the Ultimates. The classic Avengers were a private club that hung out in a mansion with a wacky butler; the Ultimates were a military operation assembled by superspy Nick Fury to combat extinction-level threats. Classic Hawkeye was a wisecracking reformed criminal who wore a ridiculous purple mask; Ultimate Hawkeye was a hardened black-ops soldier in dark leather who was best buddies with Black Widow. Classic Iron Man was a wealthy-but-sweet ladies' man with a firm code of ethics; Ultimate Iron Man was a cynical, charismatic, womanizing alcoholic. Classic Nick Fury was white; Ultimate Nick Fury was African-American and explicitly drawn to look like Samuel L. Jackson (Millar had the idea to change Fury's ethnicity, but Hitch was the one who modeled him off of Jackson, just because he thought the actor's look fit their reimagined character's attitude). Which of those setups sounds more familiar?

The reliably high quality and ever-increasing sales of the existing Ultimate Marvel series had built a fever pitch of buzz, so when The Ultimates No. 1 hit stands in January 2002, it flew off shelves and became the single best-selling comic of the year. "It wasn't until The Ultimates came out that we recognized there was something legitimately big-time here with Ultimate," retailer Hibbs recalled. And what made that success all the more remarkable was how outspokenly political and deconstructionist Millar's story was. He knew there were unhealthy ideas at the core of the Avengers' archetypes, and he was unafraid to prove it.

All of these Ultimate versions of the Avengers were, to put it bluntly, complete assholes. They were also all very specifically post-9/11 characters. Hawkeye and Black Widow were unfeeling government murderers, Iron Man was a gleeful war profiteer, and Captain America ... well, Ultimate Captain America was just about the most blunt satire of War on Terror neoconservatism that popular culture had seen up until that point. He was a cold, stern prick in World War II, and when he was reawakened in 2002, he immediately felt an affinity for President Bush's crusaderlike worldview. Indeed, the third issue literally concluded with Cap saluting President Bush. Later, in one of modern superhero comics' most infamous moments, an alien invader tells Cap to surrender and he responds, "Surrender?SURRENDER??!!" and, pointing to his helmet's giant A, "You think this letter on my head stands for France?"
If you were a comics fan in 2002 and 2003, The Ultimates was all you and your friends could talk about. It was a panoramic action story that was thrilling in a way nothing else in comics was. And in retrospect, it's astounding how leftist The Ultimates was, during a period when American action movies were either pro-war or purely escapist. Millar declined to be interviewed for this article, but I spoke with him at length two years ago for a profile I wrote at The New Republic, and he outlined his philosophy there. "Europeans tend to be pretty left-wing, and Scotland's always been a left-wing country, so I'm always suspicious of uniforms," the Scotsman said. But you didn't have to be a liberal to love The Ultimates: It was a rip-roaring action story with luscious artwork, and even though Ultimate Cap wasn't intended as a role model, many took him as such. "People would say, 'I joined the army after reading The Ultimates because I wanted to make a difference in the Middle East,' and I was like, 'Well, I kinda meant the opposite of that,'" Millar recalled with a laugh.

By the middle of the decade, the Ultimate Marvel line was a wild success, regularly dominating best-seller charts. Ultimate Spider-Man, Ultimate X-Men, The Ultimates, and the newly launched Ultimate Fantastic Four all existed in the same universe, meaning the sleek, Ultimate versions of Marvel's characters were all hanging out with one another in their own little pocket of fiction. Every week, readers would pick up issues of the Ultimate titles to see how the "Ultimized" versions of long-standing characters would fit into the Ultimate universe — a universe you could plausibly catch up on with just a few days of backissue reading. Marvel continued to publish dozens of series set in the old, mainstream universe — but the Ultimate universe was what fans and critics buzzed about.

"It really saved the industry at that time," longtime comics journalist Heidi MacDonald said. "Ultimate [Marvel] reignited interest among Marvel fans and got new readers." To bring some shine and excitement to its non-Ultimate universe, Marvel put Bendis and Millar in charge of mainstream Marvel titles like The Avengers and Wolverine as well. Marvel regained the top spot in market share, and Ultimate Marvel was the engine that drove it there. As Ultimate Fantastic Four writer Mike Carey put it, if you were an Ultimate writer, artist, or editor, you were in the "cool kids' club."

But there were cracks in the foundation, and they were widening. Jemas was ousted in 2004 after a string of high-publicity publishing flops — some related to Ultimate Marvel, some tied to mainstream Marvel. The second volume of The Ultimates began in 2005 and was perpetually delayed due to Hitch's agonizingly slow artistic process, infuriating fans and retailers. Aging sci-fi writer Orson Scott Card wrote a reviled Ultimate Iron Man miniseries. On top of all that, Marvel was simply running out of characters to Ultimize. To keep this massive reboot effort relevant, Quesada needed something big to get readers excited again, so he and longtime superhero writer Jeph Loeb concocted a major story to shake up the Ultimate line. What they created was one of the biggest creative disasters in comics history, one from which Ultimate Marvel never quite recovered.

****

Millar left the Ultimate line after Ultimates 2, but Quesada and Loeb opted to take Millar's sexed-up, ultraviolent, transgressive techniques and amplify them. Loeb launched Ultimates 3 in 2007, and in the very first panel, the Ultimates are watching a sex tape of Iron Man and Black Widow. A few pages later, brother-and-sister heroes Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch are caught in an incestuous tryst — and just a few pages after that, Scarlet Witch is brutally murdered in broad daylight. That kind of random sex and violence was rampant throughout the third Ultimates outing, without the political relevance or epic pacing of the first two volumes. Sales were good, but reviews were terrible.

As it turned out, it was all just a prologue for Ultimatum, a 2008 miniseries that would irreparably damage the Ultimate universe. When artist David Finch was recruited to draw for it, Marvel gave him a very simple description of the story's mission. "I was told it was a way to basically kill everyone in the Ultimate universe," Finch told me. "And that's pretty much what it turned out to be."

That's a bit of an exaggeration, but not by much. Loeb later told Newsarama.com that Ultimatum was always intended to be "a big, blockbuster-y kind of thing," "a big, noisy, disaster story about a massive change in the Ultimate Universe," and "very much a Michael Bay movie." Indeed, in the Michael Bay tradition, the story begins with Magneto using a tidal wave to kill nearly everyone in Manhattan. But even Bay might have blushed at Ultimatum's subsequent violence. Over the course of just five issues, 34 different heroes and villains were murdered, often by gruesome means: Doctor Strange was squeezed until his head exploded; Magneto was decapitated; the Blob ate the Wasp and, while holding her half-devoured corpse, belched out, "Tastes like chicken"; and so on. It was an abattoir masquerading as a comics series, filled with anatomically improbable breasts and laughable dialogue. (I reached out to Loeb for an interview but was told he would only speak with me if we didn't discuss Ultimates 3 or Ultimatum.)
   Fans and retailers were furious. "It was fucking terrible," retailer Hibbs recalled, adding that he was only able to sell about half of the copies he ordered for his store. "Ultimatum is a base and insulting comic book," read a review at comics site Let's Be Friends Again. "Ultimatum #5 could quite possibly be the single worst piece of writing in recorded history," wrote critic Jason Kerouac. But Jesse Schedeen of IGN most succinctly summed up the damage Loeb and Quesada had done to the Ultimate Marvel experiment: "I sincerely hope the Ultimate line is able to return to its roots and offer readers clean, accessible, and unique takes on these iconic heroes again," he wrote. "It had better, because I'm growing dangerously close to wiping my hands of the whole enterprise." He wasn't alone in his disdain: Overall sales for the Ultimate line never returned to their pre-Ultimatum levels.

But just as the Ultimate comics reboot was faltering, the ideas it had spawned in the pre-Ultimatum years were succeeding elsewhere — specifically, on the big screen. In 2005, Marvel announced plans to start producing its own movies (hits like Spider-Man and X-Men had been produced by Sony and Fox, respectively), and its first offering was going to be an Iron Man film. Millar and Bendis were brought on as consultants, but even without their help, the filmmakers had decided to have Robert Downey, Jr. play the Ultimate take on Tony Stark: a skeezy, boozed-up prick whom you still couldn't help rooting for. But the coup de grâce was the much-talked-about post-credits scene, co-written by Bendis, in which Tony meets Nick Fury ... as played by Samuel L. Jackson. It wasn't even Bendis or Millar's idea to bring Jackson-as-Fury to the big screen — producer Kevin Feige had loved Ultimate Nick Fury so much that he had reached out to Bendis. The movie was a smash, and a major vindication for the Ultimate Marvel experiment.

As Marvel's movie empire grew, the Ultimate vision became a deeper and deeper influence. When Hawkeye showed up in Thor, he was a dead ringer for Ultimate Hawkeye. When Captain America debuted, he wasn't a jerk like Ultimate Cap, but his costume was almost 100 percent lifted from Hitch's Ultimate redesign. And when Ultimates superfan Joss Whedon crafted The Avengers (released in 2012), the whole endeavor ended up feeling like an Ultimate production — epic action sequences, military-sponsored missions, naturalistic dialogue — and almost nothing like the Avengers of old.

And in the world of comics, even though Ultimate sales were dropping throughout the late '00s, Marvel's mainstream titles were doing quite well — largely because they had adopted many of the hallmarks of the Ultimate brand: a more realistic tone (well, as realistic as you can get in a world with telepaths and gods), sleek visual modernism, and a willingness to shake the status quo with operatic action. Mainstream Marvel heroes rarely pranced around in pastel leotards anymore, and they certainly didn't have clunky internal monologues in thought bubbles: They looked and sounded more and more like their Ultimate-universe counterparts from the pre-Ultimatum years.

As an imprint, however, Ultimate Marvel simply couldn't get back on track. Millar was brought back for a long run on Ultimates, but readers found the stories half-baked and dull. Up-and-coming writer Jonathan Hickman penned a major story about Ultimate Mr. Fantastic turning evil and destroying half of Europe — but simultaneously, DC Comics did a linewide relaunch that was, in essence, its own attempt to "Ultimize" its characters. (The DC push was an initiative called "The New 52," in which the publisher canceled all its existing comics titles and rebooted its characters in stories where they were younger and freed from old continuity.) DC's reboot (which is still ongoing) was a smash hit and drew attention away from Marvel's Ultimate tales. Sales simply couldn't perk up. What's more, Millar became a reviled figure among progressive comics fans, known for his creator-owned Millarworld comics, in which grisly murder and obscene rape were regularly on tap. Superhero fans would joke about classic Ultimates scenes like Cap's anti-France rant, dismissing them as cynical relics of a bygone era.
There was only one saving grace for the Ultimate universe and the promise it had once held: Bendis's Ultimate Spider-Man stories. Bendis was Marvel's golden boy, and although his stories acknowledged that Ultimatum happened, Quesada never forced him to change the optimistic tone of his beloved series. Sales were never spectacular, but they were solid and dependable. Indeed, Bendis and series artist Mark Bagley broke the record for longest-running unchanged creative team on a comic — and when Bagley left after issue No. 111, Bendis kept plugging along. But the series' greatest achievement came in 2011, when Bendis introduced a new character, one who represented the triumph of the Bendis approach to a reboot: finding hope and light in Marvel's core principles. The character's name was Miles Morales, he was Afro-Latino, and he will almost certainly be Ultimate Marvel's most lasting legacy in the world of superhero comics.

****

Bendis wasn't blind. He knew that by 2011, the decade-long Ultimate experiment had lost much of its luster. He was constantly talking to colleagues about how to fix the world he'd launched. "I would say, 'Hey, what did we do right? What did we do wrong? What would I have done differently?'" he recalled. "In those conversations of what we did right or wrong, we'd come about the idea of Peter Parker being of a different race. That if you really look at the origin, there's no reason that character wouldn't be of color. In fact, maybe it makes more sense."

He soon became fixated on the racial questions posed by the Spider-Man archetype. If a middle-class teenager was growing up deep in Queens in 1962, sure, he'd be white. But in the New York of 2011's profoundly multiethnic outer boroughs? Statistically, he'd almost certainly be a person of color. But if Bendis was going to introduce a nonwhite Spider-Man, what would he do with the existing Spider-Man? That's where the magic of the anything-is-possible Ultimate Marvel approach paid off.

"We started thinking about who ended up being Miles, and it became obvious that the only way Miles works is if Peter isn't there," Bendis said. "Then you realize that the trigger has to be pulled." Bendis wrote a story in which Ultimate Peter dies a hero's death. Around the same time, shy teenager Miles Morales gains similar abilities to Peter's and tentatively starts fighting crime in his stead. The ensuing story lines were classic Bendis: tender, streamlined, and optimistic. Miles wasn't just an Afro-Latino Peter Parker. He was his own person, kind and quiet, reluctant to stand out and perpetually struggling with self-doubt — in many ways, an even more believable teenager than Ultimate Peter had been.
   Miles was also an enormous hit immediately after his August 2011 debut. Sales for the series spiked, but more important, Miles was a publicity sensation, drawing attention in mainstream media outlets and among fans who had long ago grown bored with Spider-Man. Just a few months into his existence, long before Marvel had made any Miles merchandise, fans were constructing their own Miles costumes (his uniform has a slightly different color scheme than Peter's) and wearing them to conventions. Marvel knew it had a hit on its hands, and has recently started cranking out Miles costumes, Miles toys, and a version of Miles in the hit Saturday-morning Spider-Man cartoon. "Miles was something that was vital and important, and he sold," Hibbs said. When Sony announced it was rebooting its Spider-Man movie franchise yet again, there were cries across the internet for the new Spidey to be Miles. "It brought a lot of attention back to that book. But it didn't help the entire line."

Nothing could save the rest of the Ultimate line, which had larger problems than just the fallout from Ultimatum. More than a decade into the Ultimate project, Marvel had learned a harsh lesson about the concept of a franchise reboot: It tends toward chaos. If a new reader tried to digest an issue of an Ultimate comic in 2011, she'd run into the exact problem Ultimate Marvel was designed to combat: confusing continuity. Wait, why was Mr. Fantastic evil? What had happened four years ago in Ultimatum? Remind me how Dr. Doom died? As Hickman put it: "I think maybe the lesson might be that continuity eventually swallows everything." (Incidentally, now that the Marvel Cinematic Universe is 11 movies deep, this is becoming a concern for Marvel Studios. It remains to be seen how Marvel's movie producers might learn from the pitfalls of the Ultimate world.)

Creators and editors I spoke to said the decision to kill the Ultimate brand came sometime in 2013. There was a last-ditch Ultimate story that year, entitled Cataclysm, where a cosmic entity came to devour the Earth. Then-writer of Ultimates Joshua Hale Fialkov told me the writing was on the wall: "The way it was put to me was, we need to do something gigantic," he said, "but if it didn't raise the profile of the universe, then they'd end it." It was a sales failure. The trigger had to be pulled.

****

To Marvel's credit, the Ultimate universe is getting a Viking funeral. There has been a years-long story line in the mainstream Marvel universe, written by Hickman, which has climaxed in a massive crossover event called Secret Wars. The catalyst, seen in this month's Secret Wars No. 1, is an interdimensional apocalypse in which the Ultimate universe and the mainstream Marvel universe literally collide, destroying each other. At the end of the issue, a sparse page features text reading "THE MARVEL UNIVERSE • 1961 - 2015" and "THE ULTIMATE UNIVERSE • 2000 - 2015." This is, however, a bit of a misdirect: Marvel has already announced plans for its post–Secret Wars status quo, which appears mostly to be a reconstruction of mainstream Marvel (it remains to be seen how much of this new status quo will be a reboot of its own). The only real death here is an Ultimate death.

All is not lost. Marvel has also made it clear that the new status quo will feature some as-yet-unspecified synthesis of the two universes. We do have confirmation that Miles Morales will join the Avengers, which is a huge victory both for diversity and for the legacy of the Ultimate experiment. And in the world of the movies, African-American Nick Fury isn't going anywhere, nor is asshole Tony Stark or leather-loving Hawkeye. Plus, this summer's Fantastic Four movie is explicitly an homage to Ultimate Fantastic Four: Its titular heroes will all be teenagers, an innovation concocted in the Ultimate universe.
And that gets at the other big lesson of the Ultimate experiment: If a reboot succeeds, it bleeds into the world around it — often to its own detriment. "The biggest frustration with me was that the things that made the Ultimate universe so special were applied to the regular Marvel universe, making the Ultimate universe less special," Bendis said. In other words: Ultimate Marvel was so successful that it made itself unnecessary. As long as Miles is saved (and, perhaps, Ultimate Nick Fury), nothing very beloved will be lost in the death of the once-sensational Ultimate universe. All the themes and motifs have, thankfully, sprouted across the superhero genre and brought it to unheard-of heights of success.

There's one final lesson. According to Bendis — the alpha and omega of Ultimate Marvel storytelling — the key to the reboot was understanding what made the old Marvel archetypes worth rebooting in the first place. "The transition that we made was based on the fact that the concept of Spider-Man wasn't broken," he told me. "The Spider-Man origin and its themes are pretty much perfect. So adaptations are much like a Shakespeare play: The trick isn't to fix it and say you know better than Shakespeare. It's to find the truth of it and keep the truth going for a new audience."


tomat

Arguing on the internet is like running in the Special Olympics: even if you win, you're still retarded.


Meho Krljic

'Hot Girls Wanted': A Good Film About Porn That's No Turn-On
Quote

A documentary about making it in the porn industry that works as an excellent warning to viewers who might be tempted to try it as a path to success, Hot Girls Wanted carries its ambitions lightly. This swift-moving film from directors Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus, produced by Rashida Jones, doesn't lecture or hector. It spends time with a few young women involved in the "amateur porn" subset of the genre, finding out why they've chosen this work, and how their initial expectations compare to their subsequent realities.
The subjects of Hot Girls Wanted are mostly in their late teens, yearning to escape from parental control and make more money than they would at low-paying jobs in a lousy economy. After an initial montage of sex-positive pop culture — Miley Cyrus and Kim Kardashian are among the dignitaries acknowledged — the filmmakers' implication is that female role models can influence suggestible people into thinking sex work is a path to wealth and fame.
Hot Girls Wanted focuses particularly on Tressa (her last name is withheld), a teen from Texas who journeys to Florida, where the porn industry flourishes with such self-starters as her new employer, a poker-faced hustler named Riley, who lures new employees on Craigslist. You'd think Tressa and other girls who share an apartment-cum-office with Riley would become suspicious of their new boss' worldview when he flips through potential stars on his laptop and remarks approvingly of one, "She's 18, she looks like she's 12 — with double-Ds!" Ick.
But "ick" soon becomes something far ickier. At first elated to be enjoying a sorority-house atmosphere and making hundreds of dollars per shoot, Tressa soon finds herself in a loop of arduous labor and pain. The frequent sex leaves her with an infected vaginal cyst; a visit to the ER is required. The cameras follow her on return visits to home, where her mother is sad and her father is clueless (Tressa doesn't tell him what she's doing until long after her mother knows).
On-screen graphics dole out statistics about how the porn industry goes through thousands of such girls every year, noting that few of them last more than three months before giving it up. One woman says, "You're just processed meat." The filmmakers make sure we know just how many viewers see the work Tressa and others are doing. They also show us how depressed and degraded it ends up making most of the so-called "stars" feel. By mostly refraining from editorializing but simply by showing (discreetly — there's not a titillating shot to be seen in the whole film) and allowing these young women to say what they're thinking, Hot Girls Wanted makes its point, vividly and dismayingly. Hot Girls Wanted streams on Netflix starting Friday, 5/29.

Nema torenta za ovo još uvek, ipak je strimovano pre par sati. Tako da, ako se neko seti mene kad se to pojavi, neka baci dojavu.

ridiculus

Meho, ne znam koliko si fan Karpentera ili Dvejna Džonsona, ali ne znam gde drugde da stavim ovu vest:

http://www.theverge.com/2015/6/1/8701813/rock-dwayne-johnson-big-trouble-in-little-china

A, bogami, ne znam ni šta da mislim o njoj.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

Pa, fan sam. Mislim, pre neki dan sam gledao Herkula koga sigurno ne bih gledao da Dvejn ne igra, a uz Karpentera sam bio i u najtežim trenucima i smatram da je Ghosts of Mars remek-delo. Tako da.. ovo je sasvim prihvatljiva vest. Opet, pošto ovo neće režirati Karpenter, a i originalni film se jedva držao noktima za ivicu gledljivosti, stalno preteći da sa litice kempa padne pravo u ambis jednostavnog kiča, nije da se od ovog očekuje bogznašta.

ridiculus

 :cry: :cry: :cry:

BTiLC je jedan od mojih omiljenih avanturističih filmova iz 80-tih. Mislim, znam ja da je to kemp, ali spoj ironije, Kurta Rasela i nekih dijaloga mi je dovoljan da mi bude jedan od najdražih filmova tog perioda i žanra.

A Dvejn Džonson... da, bez njega Herkul bi bio Patuljak. Nije ni ovako sjajan, ali je bar gledljiv. Ima Tom Čik jednu internu šalu u svojim emisijama, kada pričaju kako je Džonson bolji glumac od Harisona Forda. Nisam ni razmišljao o tome dok nisam čuo njih tamo da pominju, ali živa istina.  :lol:
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

Tu... tezu bi valjalo obrazložiti malko.


U drugim vestima, Krekd, srećom i dalje objavljuje povremeno interesantne napise. Na primer ovaj:


6 Things I Learned Having My Penis Surgically Removed

ridiculus

Quote from: Meho Krljic on 02-06-2015, 14:12:18
Tu... tezu bi valjalo obrazložiti malko.

Ha-ha... pa da me linčuju fanovi Zvezdanih ratova i Indijane Džonsa!? Da, mnogima ideja zvuči suludo na prvi pogled. Naravno, kada kažem "istina", mislim na sopstveni stav. Ni Džonson ni Ford nisu karakterni glumci, a Ford ima neke ikonične uloge. Ali moguće je posmatrati stvari iz te perspektive. Jesi gledao Forda u poslednjih 15 godina? Igra samo sebe, mada bi neki rekli da je to bio slučaj oduvek. Njegova "duhovitost" iz gorepomenutih filmova više sledi iz samog scenarija i dobre režije, nego iz njegovih performansi. Blejd Raner mi je jedan od 5 najboljih filmova ikada, ali nisam siguran da i tu Ford doprinosi mnogo sam po sebi - ali u tom filmu je sve ostalo toliko dobro da Ford može da igra sebe koliko hoće. Možda jedino Apokalipsa danas - to nisam dugo vremena gledao. Sa druge strane, Džonson doprinese filmu čak i kad je ovaj u konačnom efektu loš (Southland Tales). I duhovitiji je, tj. ima bolji osećaj za tajming. Međutim, kako je komedija subjektivna stvar - možda i najsubjektivnija od svih - razumem da mnogi ne misle tako. Pogotovo što je teško zanemariti koliko nas je Ford sve opčinjavao u mladosti.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

Hmmm, ja sam pretpostavljao da će argument biti to  da Ford igra sebe u svakom filmu i svakako se to može argumentovati (ako ignorišemo Američke Grafite i još par naslova, naravno) ali sam onda pretpostavio da se i za The Rocka može reći isto, pogotovo što on dobija tipske uloge koje imaju manji ekspresivni opseg od uloga koje igra Ford. Čak i uloga u Pain & Gain u kojoj ima dublje napisan lik se pre svega bazira na ideji parodiranja mnogih stvari po kojima je The Rock prepoznatljiv.

ridiculus

Pa, da, to i jeste moja teza - rekoh, ni jedan ni drugi nisu karakterni glumci, što znači da se ne investiraju u različite ličnosti - ali Džonson ume da bude šarmantniji, duhovitiji, prirodniji, spontaniji, što, upravo s obzirom na ograničeniji opseg likova koje igra, čini da mislim to što mislim. Zameni Roka u mnogim filmovima nekim drugim - Džejsonom Statamom, na primer - i izgubićeš nešto. Zameni Forda istim Statamom (tamo gde je moguće, gde kasting ima smisla; recimo u Blejd Raneru, Svedoku) i nekako mi se čini da se ništa ne bi mnogo promenilo.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

O, ali Han Solo i Indiana Jones su za čitavu našu generaciju definisali prototip (anti)heroja. A to bez Forda ne bi išlo tek tako. Probali su mnogi drugi - Majkl Daglas, Ričard Čemberlen...

ridiculus

Dobro, zato nisam ni pomenuo SW i Indianu. Suviše su ikonični njegovi likovi u tim serijalima. Naravno da to znači da imaju neki šarm, samo što ja mislim da je to više zasluga drugih nego Forda.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

Kapiram da je po tviteru vriska i naricanje, pogotovo aktivista za muška prava što feminstički kolonizatori nastavljaju da uništavaju sveti medijum superherojskih stripova... Marvel je tizovao kako će novi univerzum izgledati po završetku Secret Wars, dajući nam par grupnih slika aktuelnih superheroja i, na ovoj drugoj, pored Daredevila u crnom kostimu, oživljenog Karnaka i Thinga u uniformi Guardians of the Galaxy, vidimo i - ženskog Wolverinea. Dakle, prvo Tor, sad Volverin, ko je sledeći? Naravno, Wolverine je u ovom slučaju Laura, X-23, ženski klon originalnog Džejmsa Hauleta i to sasvim ima smisla, uostalom pre nekoliko godina Wolverine je bio Daken, Loganov sin i mada ja nisam voleo taj serijal (Daniel Way ne bi trebalo da piše Wolverinea, nikad), voleo sam X-23 i uopšte, volim Laurin lik i sasvim mi je u redu da ona malo igra "tatinu" ulogu. Uostalom, vidi se i Wolverine iz Old Man Logan kontinuiteta, odmah pored nje, dakle, biće i on tu na neki način...





Mene više od svega nervira NOVA renumeracija pošto se Marvel sad već sa tim sprda. Mislim, imali su pre tri godine Marvel Now, pa onda All New Marvel NOW, pa sad imaju All New All Different i tu više čovek ne može da se snađe sa brojevima jedan, jebote.. Da ne pominjem da gomila serijala nije imala nikakvog razloga da se renumeriše. Mislim, Spajdermen, u redu (menjan glavni junak), pa čak i X-Factor u redu (promenjen ceo tim), ali Iron Man? Uncanny X-men? Oba serijala su dvaput renumerisana iako je kontinuitet u njima tekao skoro bez ikakvih pauza i promena... Wolverine je renumerisan čak i zadržavši istog autora, samo jer je počeo novi story arc... Opet, shvatam da se ovo radi da se olakša pristup novim čitaocima, zaintrigiranim nakon gledanja filmova...

DC je naravno sa Convergence učinio još gluplju stvar  :lol:  Mislim, tri godine nakon što su uradili ono što Marvel radi - čišćenje kontinuiteta, kolabiranje divergentnih istorija u jednu, renumeracija - sad rade suprotno. Valjda misle da su loše kritike koje mnogi njihovi serijali dobijaju posledica urednijeg kontinuiteta  :cry:  Spojlr alrt: nisu.

Meho Krljic

Kada je Bendis najavio da uskoro odlazi sa X-men, slutio sam da je Iron Man njegov sledeći zadatak i pokazalo se da je tako. Moglo bi to da valja.

tomat

Crowdfunding a porno movie in space

ima i vimeo klip, ali ne znam kako da ga postavim na forum :(
Arguing on the internet is like running in the Special Olympics: even if you win, you're still retarded.


mac

Ima valjda i na Zemlji još devičanskih lokacija. Recimo Antarktik, paluba Titanika, ono ostrvo nastanjeno negostoljubivim domorocima... Sve ove lokacije imaju jednu prednost u odnosu na mesto sa mikrogravitacijom: seks je lakši. Možda to ima smisla kad bi se nekako privezali...

tomat

kako to dučine na palubi Titanika?
Arguing on the internet is like running in the Special Olympics: even if you win, you're still retarded.

Albedo 0

jbt, kad bi imali tolke pare dali bi im Francuzi dučine to i na Ajfelovom tornju, šta će im svemir

mac

Pod zvonom, ili u batiskafu koji je na palubi. Zajedno istražuju u batiskafu, jada-jada-jada, i batiskaf je morao u servis, na dubinsko pranje i čišćenje...

Filaret

Quote from: mac on 11-06-2015, 23:26:45
...jada-jada-jada...


Ko ratni poklič, bog te mazo...  :)


lilit

That's how it is with people. Nobody cares how it works as long as it works.

Meho Krljic

Dolazi naše vreme.  :lol:

Meho Krljic

Jebemti ovaj Marvel. Taman nas navuku na nedeljni tempo Sikrit Vorz, a onda četvrti broj kasni a sa njim i jedno 60% celokupne njihove strip produkcije, da se ne otkriju slučajno neki elementi zapleta... Dakle, četvrta epizoda koja je trebalo da izađe juče, izaći će tek prvog Jula, a ovde ima spisak svega što se onda takođe, kaskadno odlaže... grrrr...

džin tonik

jako bitno... lazarus #17 ne kasni, image rules! :lol:

Meho Krljic

Naravno, spakovan je Lazarus 17. Mada, koliko sporo tu ide priča, ja sad čekam da se nakupi bar desetak brojeva koje nisam čitao pre nego što nastavim.

džin tonik

ja iznimno pratim kad nisam stao sa #15; #16 me navukao, religijski motivi.

džin tonik

greska, prica iz #16 pauzira, te se uvode novi zapleti. smor.

ridiculus

Jadni Indijana Džons. :cry:

Prvo su ljudi dokazali da film Raiders of the Lost Ark ima jednu od najvećih rupa u radnji koja se može pronaći u nekom filmu (prelazak Indijane sa broda na... PODMORNICU!), a sada se sprdaju sa samom koncepcijom.

Elem, u podkastu Doug Loves Movies, u epizodi od 6. juna, komičar Dana Gould tvrdi da je Indijana Džons "complete failure" u prvom filmu. Ništa ne uspeva da uradi kako treba, jer:
1. ne uspeva da spreči naciste da dodju do kovčega
2. kovčeg ionako brani sam sebe
3. bez njegovog mešanja, kovčeg bi možda stigao do Berlina, i Hitler bi ga otvorio i... Drugi svetski rat bi možda bio završen!

Nije ovo prvi put da se ovakva teorija poteže u medijima - mislim da ima nešto slično u jednoj epizodi serije The Big Bang Theory.

Mišljenja? Brani li neko Indijanu?
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Father Jape

Moje je mišljenje da plot holes ne smetaju naročito dobrom delu, a da takve razgovore uglavnom vode dokoni filistri.

Mada ako se sroči kao u tvom postu, može biti umereno uveseljavajući izvor komike.
Blijedi čovjek na tragu pervertita.
To je ta nezadrživa napaljenost mladosti.
Dušman u odsustvu Dušmana.

Linkin

Quote from: ridiculus on 18-06-2015, 22:39:01
Prvo su ljudi dokazali da film Raiders of the Lost Ark ima jednu od najvećih rupa u radnji koja se može pronaći u nekom filmu (prelazak Indijane sa broda na... PODMORNICU!)

Obrisana "periscope ride" scena (Indi skroz desno):



Re-imaginacija u stripu:








Quote from: ridiculus on 18-06-2015, 22:39:01
Elem, u podkastu Doug Loves Movies, u epizodi od 6. juna, komičar Dana Gould tvrdi da je Indijana Džons "complete failure" u prvom filmu. Ništa ne uspeva da uradi kako treba, jer:
1. ne uspeva da spreči naciste da dodju do kovčega
2. kovčeg ionako brani sam sebe
3. bez njegovog mešanja, kovčeg bi možda stigao do Berlina, i Hitler bi ga otvorio i... Drugi svetski rat bi možda bio završen!

Sa tačkama 1. i 2. se slažem. Ali, takvo razrešenje se uklapa. Indijana je anti-heroj.

Sa tačkom 3. se ne slažem. Tvrdnja je smešna. Jasno je da bi nacisti ionako testirali moć kovčega, da se Indijana nije umešao, pre nego što ga predaju Hitleru.

Sve u svemu, tipično komičarsko karikiranje, preko isticanja dobro poznatog, pa preuvečavanja.

ridiculus

Preterivanje jeste, ali u službi dobre šale. ;)

Meni lično greške obično ne smetaju, pogotovo ako su u pitanju anahronizmi. Problemi doslednosti (npr. lik ima jednu frizuru u jednom kadru, a onda, pri promeni kamere, drugu) mogu da me nerviraju, ali nisu posebno bitni u filmu kao celini. Ali postoje i greške i propusti ozbiljnije vrste.

Prelazak na podmornicu je impresivno glupa odluka sa Indijeve strane: šta da je podmornica zaronila? Misao pomenuta u stripu, "nisam siguran da je ovo bila dobra ideja", ni izbliza ne objašnjava KOLIKO je glupa. Samo bi kačenje za svemirski brod to moglo da prevazidje. Indi bi se verovatno udavio i ovako prikačen za periskop posle mnogo sati puta. Ili bi umro od žedji. Ili bi bio primećen.

No, čak ni ta scena mi ne kvari primetno ukupan utisak o filmu, koji mi je još uvek veoma drag. No, ne bih nikako okarakterisao Indijanu kao antiheroja. Ima vrlo istančan osećaj za pravdu - i rukovodi se njim, što je bitnije - da bi bio tako nešto.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.

Meho Krljic

IRON MAIDEN Singer Bruce Dickinson Set To Launch His Own Airline

Quote

According to Dailymail.co.uk, IRON MAIDEN singer Bruce Dickinson is set to hit a high note of a different kind as he launches a new commercial airline.

Swapping hard rock for the open skies, the heavy metal legend is taking on pilots and crew after buying a Boeing 737 for his latest venture.

The 56-year-old British rocker's passion for planes is no secret – he set up Cardiff Aviation as a maintenance company for jets in 2012 and obtained a commercial pilot's licence after he learned to fly in Florida back in the 1990s.

Dickinson said: 'The reason I do all the things I do now is because I love them. Life is too short to do the things you don't love doing. I fly airliners and in my spare time I sing a bit.'

Dickinson said the sky is the limit for his airline, VVB, which is now applying for a licence to operate flights within Europe.

The airline will be headquartered at Cardiff Aviation's base in St Athan, Vale of Glamorgan, in South Wales, and it has plans to acquire additional planes.

Dickinson and his Iron Maiden bandmates were one of the most popular and influential acts during heavy metal's heyday, and they continue to sell out stadiums worldwide.

Despite the demands of a rock and roll lifestyle, Dickinson managed to find time to pursue his passion and become a pilot for the now-defunct UK airline Astraeus.

He has been behind the controls on flights carrying his band members, Liverpool FC and Britons who were airlifted out of Lebanon during the Israel/Hezbollah conflict in 2006.

Formed in east London in the 1970s, Iron Maiden are known for hits such as Number of the Beast and Run to the Hills, and they are putting the finishing touches on a new album following Dickinson's cancer scare.

Doctors recently pronounced the rocker free from cancer almost a year after his illness was discovered during a routine check-up.


Meho Krljic

Dakle, nije Afroamerikanac već - Britanac Tom Holland Is Your New Spider-Man

QuoteLadies, gentlemen, and entomologists — meet your new friendly neighborhood Spider-Man: Tom Holland
The three-headed monster of Marvel, Disney, and Sony today confirmed that the 19-year-old Brit, best known for his roles in The Impossible and the TV miniseries Wolf Hall, will be assuming web-slinging duties for a standalone Sony movie to be directed by Jon Watts (Cop Car) that will hit theaters on July 28, 2017. As expected Holland's Spidey will make his Marvel Cinematic Universe debut in next year's Captain America: Civil War.
Related: Behind the Scenes on 'Captain America: Civil War'
Holland beat out a quintet of actors for the coveted web-head role. The half-dozen finalists auditioned in Atlanta on the Civil War set on May 30 so Marvel could presumably screen test the candidates opposite the other superheroes currently working on the film, due out May 6, 2016.
"For Spidey himself, we saw many terrific young actors, but Tom's screen tests were special," Tom Rothman, chairman of Sony Pictures, said in a statement. Former Sony studio boss Amy Pascal, who will co-produce the upcoming Spider-Man films, called Holland "a vibrant, talented young actor capable of embodying one of the most well-known characters in the world."
Holland first made a splash playing Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts' older son in the 2012 tsunami drama The Impossible. His next major Hollywood film is the Ron Howard-helmed In the Heart of the Sea about the ill-fated whale ship that inspired Moby-Dick, which co-stars fellow Marvel hero Chris Hemsworth and arrives in theaters on Dec. 11.
Marvel and Sony announced in February that the vaunted wall-crawler — the comic publisher's most popular, most iconic character — would rejoin the fold for a series of MCU team-up movies. In exchange, the Marvel braintrust would provide creative juice for the stand-alone films after Sony's Amazing Spider-Man franchise with Andrew Garfield struggled both critically and commercially.
Holland's Peter Parker will go back to his high-school roots, but without redoing an origin story we've already seen play out with Garfield and Tobey Maguire.
The casting news comes just days after Wikileaks released more material from the Sony hack, including one document that states that Spider-Man/Peter Parker is "not a homosexual (unless Marvel has portrayed that alter ego as a homosexual)." It is "mandatory" that Parker is Caucasian, too. The memo dated back to 2011, before the launch of the first Garfield film. Coincidentally, on Monday, Marvel announced that its "Ultimate" version of Spidey, the alter ego of the half-black, half-Latino Miles Morales, was going to be part of the publisher's main continuity, coexisting with Peter Parker. Considering the wording of the contract left wiggle room to alter the character based on any comic reboot, some fans got their hopes up that Morales might be the basis for the new movie hero, but today's announcement — indeed the entire casting process — belied that notion.
"Spider-Man is one of Marvel's great characters, beloved around the world," Disney CEO Bob Iger said. "We're thrilled to work with Sony Pictures to bring the iconic web-slinger into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, which opens up fantastic new opportunities for storytelling and franchise building."We'll see if Holland's web-slinger, unlike Garfield's, manages to stick around to build that franchise, but Rothman is all in on his new hero. "All in all," he said Tuesday, "we are off to a roaring start."


ridiculus

Indiana Jones named greatest movie character of all time in new poll

Holivud mi uzvraća udarac! Prvo sam izneo mogućnost da je Dwayne Johnson bolji glumac od Harisona Forda, a onda i da je Indiana Jones u Pljačkašima izgubljenog kovčega potpuno nepotreban lik (u narativnom smislu). Imam utisak da, ako budem rekao još koju reč protiv dr. Jonesa, ima da ga proglase za počasnog američkog građanina. A možda i običan narod dobije šansu na ženidbu ili udaju s njim! Pa ko pre...

Hm... čudi me prisustvo Batice na listi. Ali mi je drago, nije da nije.
Dok ima smrti, ima i nade.