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2007 NEWS ARCHIVE
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October 2, 2007 |
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Source:
Superherohype.com |
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Composer Ilan Eshkeri
revealed to
Score Notes
back in August that he is reteaming with his Layer Cake
and Stardust helmer Matthew Vaughn for the big screen Thor
adaptation:
I'm looking forward to starting work with Matthew on 'Thor.' The
script is really fantastic - I just got a stack of comic books and I'm
currently reading all the early stuff! Anyway, and with a bit of luck,
there will be some other projects to look out for before the release of
'Thor.' |
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September 30, 2007 |
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Source: Wizard Magazine
#193 |
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Thunderstruck
Marvel�s �Thor� hits the fast track, but who can play a god?
The forecast for 2009
calls for a massive thunderstorm! Marvel Films recently announced that
it has found a director for the long-rumored movie about Marvel mainstay
Thor in the form of �Stardust� director Matthew Vaughan. While the
British helmer was once attached to �X-Men: The Last Stand,� this time,
he�ll be crafting a superhero story from square one based on a script by
Mark Protosevich (�I Am Legend�). Here�s a rundown on the perfect cast
to call down the thunder in theatres!
Kevin
McKidd as Thor
With a hefty dose of Scottish swagger, the gravelly voiced star of NBC�s
�Journeyman� exudes the perfect attitude to bring the Thunder God to
theatres. Ad that to McKidd�s sword-swinging acting resume in HBO�s
�Rome� and the recent �The Last Legion,� and you�ve got Mjolnir�s new
master
Jesse
Spencer as Donald Blake
Thor�s physician alter ego needs to have the same look as his godly
counterpart, but with a much frailer physique. �House� co-star Spencer
has the perfect mix of charm and nerdiness.
Linda
Cardellini as Jane Foster
Blake�s assistant needs a specific kind of gal Friday sexy, and �E.R.�
actress Cardellini exudes more than enough �girl next door� hotness to
coerce fans into scheduling multiple doctor�s appointments.
Cillian
Murphy as Loki
Previous roles in �Batman Begins� and �Red Eye� were scary enough, but
with a touch of CGI, Murphy�s take on the persuasive and perverse
trickster god Loki could be the most frightening comic villain in screen
history.
Kate
Beckinsale as Lady Sif
Female furies
who kick ass and carry big swords are hard to find. Luckily, Beckinsale
can pull off the action heroine part (a la �Underworld�) without
snuffing out her smoldering hotness.
The Great
Debate
Which Thor costume is better?
CLASSIC: Before I
harp on the majestic brilliance of Thor�s classic costume, let me simply
say this about the new one: The guy needs chainmail?! He�s the son of
Odin, a freakin� god on Earth who commands storm clouds! Not only does
it seem redundant for the Hulk�s most well-matched brawlin� buddy to
wear armor, but the conductivity of the metal alone seems
counterproductive while weidling the mythical hammer that is the worlds�
best lightning rod. And what is the purpose of hiding the Asgardian
arms that have beat back the likes of Loki and Hercules? If you�ve got
god-given guns, you better flaunt �em, because there is no better way to
intimidate the monsters of Midgard than showing off a pair of perfectly
sculpted hammer-hefters! That said, I don�t even need to mention the
pure awesomeness of a tunic that turns into a pair of undies below the
belt, but oh wait, I just did!
CURRENT: It�s an
ugly, dirty world out there full of fire demons, ice giants, and
government troops looking to draft you into the Superhuman Registration
movement � so you can bet your sweet Asgardian ass you need an equipment
upgrade now and again! First off, Marvel didn�t muck with the Thunder
God�s must-haves: Thor still sports the regal red cape, the basic black
chest tunic complete with armor-disc bling and the imposing knee-high
shit-kickers. However, the Son of Odin has successfully ditched his
tighty-whities on the outside, making way for an under-armor look that
an NFL all-pro would kill to have; hey, you think Hulk or Loki don�t hit
below the belt? And Thor�s tickets to the gun show are still valid,
baby; now they�re just laminated for his protection. Throw in that
streamlined helmet � the wings have been reduced and the headpiece
lowered to guard Thor�s supermodel looks � and you�ve got a Thunder God
generating 1.21 gigawatts of awesomeness! |
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August 24, 2007 |
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In an
interview with Warren Simmons, the current editor of Thor, several
questions are answered, along with some of Coipel's design sketches
- Q: Thor13
08-21-2007 11:07 AM
Is Thor going to see some Marvel Heroes after the first arc or will he
stay in Oklahoma the whole series?
The Thunder God is back, friends, and he is in a very serious mood.
And while Asgard is currently floating a few feet above terra firma in
the great state of Oklahoma, I can promise that you�ll be seeing
plenty of the Thunder God in the Marvel Universe over the next 12 to
18 months. In fact, you could say he�ll be playing a vital role in the
Universe in the months to come�
- Will Loki
return in the new series? (or any of the classic Thor villains?)
Where there is Thor, there is� Sorry, but, you�ll have to wait and
see what Mr. Straczynski and Mr. Coipel have in store
- On a
different note, can you tease any character comebacks we might be
seeing in Thor soon?
They�ll be coming fast and furious in issues # 3 and # 4. And I
promise that the last page of issue # 3 will just knock your socks
off. Olivier is doing amazing work here
- In the last
couple of years, Hercules has now returned and become a major
character in the Marvel universe. I was just wondering if there any
plans to feature him as a reoccurring character in a future Marvel
title or appear in Thor or The Order seeing as how he's
one of Thor's closest friends and the Order has been ripping of his
families' names?
That made me laugh, Spidey. Remember, he gets royalties. Well,
theoretically, at least. Anyway, there are some big plans afoot for
Hercules in the Marvel Universe. Although I can�t promise they�ll be
as cool as when he picked up a magma-covered Ares and tossed him into
a horde of undead zombie warriors who were trying to destroy Olympus,
they might come close. For all things Hercules, let�s bring Mr.
Paniccia into the conversation. Mark?
Mark Paniccia: Plans for thy favorite bearded and sandaled
hero cannot be revealed, but fans shall be pleased, me thinks. To say
more t�would risk spoilage!
WS: Ah, then let�s not risk any spoilage. Stay tuned, folks,
more Hercules news�soon
- Was there
any thought about making Thor for the revamp to make him more in line
with the traditional Thor from mythology, the red hair and beard?
Olivier did a number of sketches when he was coming up with a
design for the character, but they primarily were influenced by the
classic Marvel Kirby design. Here are a few of the initial sketches
Olivier put together, with the finalized versions at the bottom:
- Does Thor
have any recollection of his life on Earth BEFORE Ragnarok? In other
words, when Thor beats up Iron Man, is it because he knows all that
Iron Man has done in the context of experience, or just because Iron
Man is there and talking smack and he doesn't know or care who Iron
Man is?
As we�ll see in issue # 3, he is aware of his relationship to Iron
Man before Ragnarok. But he still whups his ass. Pick up the issue for
the excellent details
- Does
Oklahoma have a superhero team thanks to the 50 States Initiative, and
if so when are they going to meet up with Thor?
Well, check out issue # 3 for where Iron Man and Thor part ways...
- First, I'm
loving JMS' and Oliver Coipel's take on Thor! Secondly as the
editor I was wondering if you could tell us how the changes to the
Asgardian came about? I've always remembered Thor as a jovial figure
who for some reason spoke Middle English and was always read to share
a pint with friends. It seems like Ragnarok really did a number on his
personality.
As the series goes along, will we see Thor (as well as Donald
Blake) interact more with his former Avengers friends and the rest of
the Marvel U? And how many designs of Thor did Coipel go through
before settling on the final version? I hope he keeps his chainmail
armor, because it just makes sense for battle.
Hey, Spidey, very happy to hear that you are digging JMS and
Olivier�s take. While Ragnarok almost certainly had a profound impact
on his character, I think that Thor has returned to a Marvel Universe
that is remarkably different from the one that he left. And in the
same way that our environment has a profound effect on each of us, I
think that the Thunder God is looking around at some of the
extraordinary changes to America, and I do not know if he likes what
he sees�
There's also
another article with
preview pages for Thor #3 |
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August 18, 2007 |
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Hel's yeah, beeyatch!
Thor's #1!!!! |
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August 10, 2007 |
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Mark Protosevich's brilliant THOR script to be directed by
STARDUST's Matthew Vaughn!!!
Hey folks, Harry here... The week before I got married, I got a
whole host of scripts. About 20 to be exact and in and amongst those
was the latest script by Mark Protosevich (I AM LEGEND, JOHN CARTER
OF MARS)... THOR.
I'm a huge THOR geek. Even got that Mjolnir replica they issued a
few years back - and I constantly hope a burglar breaks into my
house so I can smash his face with my uru hammer. (joke... kinda).
So when this script hit... I'm a huge fan of Protosevich...
worked with him for quite some time on John Carter and he's a great
guy to work with... intensely passionate about the material he's
working on... and I kinda hate that I didn't get the script from
Mark, cuz when he turned in his draft on JOHN CARTER - it came
accompanied with a soundtrack cd he had made (that looked like Mars)
that was made up of the music he was listening to, as he wrote the
script. Richard Kelly does this too.
Anyway - I sat down and dove into the script. This isn't a Donald
Blake, doctor on vacation story. Instead, this is a genuine TALES OF
ASGARD story. In the first few pages the creation of everything
takes place... the origin of the gods, their universe and how
midgard (that's are place in the universe) came to be.
It has Thor and Loki as brothers - the best of friends... and it
shows how that goes bad. The origin of the uru hammer, Thor being
thrown from Asgard to being a mere mortal... it's a HUGE story -
easily the most awesome script that a MARVEL project has ever had.
About 3 weeks ago, I heard they were talking to Matthew Vaughn...
I'm a huge fan of Matthew's STARDUST. However, I'm sure Matthew
knows this... but the tone of STARDUST and this THOR script are very
very different. There can be no tongue in cheek, no broad comedy...
this is an intense story or deception, quests and battles amongst
gods. Protosevich channeled all the best from Kirby's universe and I
hope to Odin that they take their visual cue from his work.
This has the chance to literally kick everything we have coming
up's ass.
It's an epic step forward in ambition for Matthew Vaughn - I know
MARVEL loves this script - I just hope they allow this project to
live up to its potential. Now they have the hardest task of all...
finding Thor. Me - there's a half crazed part of me that wants
Ernest Borgnine to play ODIN - ala his Ragnar from THE VIKINGS. But
that's probably just me. |
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His Stardust opens this weekend, but for director
Matthew Vaughn, it looks like there�ll be little rest until he starts on
another comic-related projet.
According to
Variety, the former Layer Cake director has been
tapped by Marvel Studios to direct a film adaptaiotn of Thor,
with a pre-strike production to begin in winter (many studios are
sockpiling, or putting films on an accelerated schedule as a hedge
against a feared Writer�s Guild strike which could slow or shut down
film production at major studios for the term of the strike).
The adaptation Vaughn will be working from is written by Mark (I Am
Legend) Protosevich.
As the trade points out, this is the second Marvel film franchise Vaughn
has been associated with, as he was originally slated to direct X-Men
3 following the departure of Bryan Singer.
Variety speculates that Thor will follow in line with
Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk, that is, it will be
financed by Marvel Studios using the $500 million credit facility
through Merrill Lynch.
No projected release date was given, but assuming the film starts
pre-production this fall/winter and stays on track, 2009 would seem
likely, perhaps with a Marvel booth unveiling of a certain hammer at San
Diego Comic-Con somewhere in between.
Thor of course, is the second film in Marvel Studios trifecta
(the first being Iron Man, and the final being Captain America
(being written by David Self)) which will, according to the Marvel
Studios panel at last year's Comic-Con, will then pave the way for a
live-action Avengers film, which is already being written by Zak
Penn. |
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June 13, 2007 |
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Source:
Superherohype.com |
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A Thor movie is moving along in development with a Mark
Protosevich screenplay and "Layer Cake's" Matthew Vaughn reportedly
negotiating to direct |
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May 24, 2007 |
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An interview with JMS
Three years ago, the mighty Thor was believed to have
perished during Ragnarok as chronicled in
"Thor Disassembled." But comics fans
know the afterlife has a revolving door in comics and
they've been clamoring for the Thunder God's return ever
since. Teased during "Civil War" by a homicidal clone of
Odinson (affectionately known as "Clor"), fans can now
rest assured that the long wait is over: The one and only
Thor returns later this year in a new ongoing
Marvel Comics series by
J. Michael Straczynski and the writer took a few minutes
to chat with CBR News about the Thunder God's return to
Earth and the rebuilding of Asgard.
Straczynski is no stranger to mythology and the
author plans to draw heavily upon the original Norse myths
for his run on the character. At the beginning of the
series, Thor finds himself in something of a limbo between
life and death, drawing upon "the classic mythological
structure of the hero entering the underworld in order to
learn something vital and emerge stronger," Straczynski
told CBR News. "Thor does have some thinking to do about
the relationship between gods and men, and about whether
or not he's prepared to let the lives of the Asgardians go
forever, or allow them a chance at a new kind of life now
that he's broken the cycle of Ragnarok."
And upon retaking his mortal coil, the son of Odin
chooses to rebuild Asgard in a rather unorthodox place:
eight feet above Oklahoma. "I want to show the contrast of
a god living among humans, as has traditionally been the
case in myth, to get both the contrast and see how one
complements the other," Straczynski said. "There's a
Norse-related reason he's in Oklahoma, which is all I'll
say right now, but history buffs might catch it.
"In traditional mythology, you could be crossing
a field and run into Diana, or Thor, or Hercules,"
Straczynski continued. "They were not always removed to
Olympus or Asgard, they were right there, and instead of
detracting from their godhood, that added to it by
emphasizing the contrast. So, I'm definitely going to be
using the new digs in Oklahoma to give us this contrast."
Straczynski has been a fan of the character ever
since he first appeared in "Journey Into Mystery" and when
the new series found itself in need of a writer, the
author jumped at the chance. "When Neil Gaiman and Mark
Millar weren't able to do it, I made it really clear that
I wanted to do this
book," Straczynski said. "I've always been a big fan
of the character and wanted to see what I could do with
him."
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| "Thor" #1, pages 4 and 18 |
And the first issue of the new series not only marks
the return of Thor, but also that of his human alter ego,
Donald Blake. "As something of an old-time Thor fan, I
always liked Dr. Blake," Straczynski said. "I just thought
he wasn't used as well as he might have been in later
iterations, necessitating bringing in other shells. I want
to make him a more interesting character. If Aunt May can
become a dynamic character, sure as hell Donald Blake can
become a lot more interesting."
As expected, the Thunder God will be none too
happy to learn of the pro-registration side's genetic
experiments with his DNA. "Tony and Thor are going to have
a little chat about the former's extracurricular
activities by issue three of the book and I'm very much
looking forward to writing that particular throw-down,"
Straczynski said. "Thor is not going to want to get into
the politics of our world, only in serving where needed."
Straczynski didn't want to give away whether or not Thor
would be forced to register, but he did go so far as to
say that the Thunder God finds a solution to the problem
that hasn't been used elsewhere.
Straczynski said that his Thor will be "a bit
more aloof than usual, definitely back to his full power
level." And with Asgard in Oklahoma, fans can expect to
see Thor interacting with mere mortals on a regular basis.
Straczynski had nothing but praise for his
artistic collaborator Olivier Coipel. "His art is just
terrific," Straczynski said. "He's brought a very soulful
look to Thor, and a power that we haven't seen in a
while."
In addition to his various comics projects,
Straczynski penned the script for the upcoming feature
film "Changeling," with producer Ron Howard, director
Clint Eastwood and starring
Angelina Jolie. And look for "Thor" #1 to hit stands
this July.
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May 5, 2007 |
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Source:
Marvelousnews.com |
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Atlanta
Cutlery Corp. (ACC) & Museum Replicas Ltd. (MRL) announced today that
they have entered into a multi-year license agreement with Marvel
Entertainment Inc. for prop
collectibles throughout North America. The agreement covers multiple
characters from the Marvel Universe, including specific props from the
previously released X-Men movies and the upcoming Iron Man film
currently in production.
New product is set to roll out in conjunction with Marvel releases
beginning late summer 2007. Waves of props will be released -- many for
the first time -- and timed to the release of Marvel character based
movies, DVDs and comics.
The company will develop a range of prop collectibles and specialty
products including full-scale helmets, weapons, and other props all
inspired by the characters, creatures and themes from the Marvel
Universe.
As the Marvel Universe has matured with each new comic, DVD or movie
release, so has its audience. The assortment of products being created
by ACC/MRL will therefore be geared to appeal to the loyal fans from all
generations of the classic comics to the movies of today. Each prop will
be meticulously researched with Marvel archival personnel (as well as
20th
Century
Fox for the X-Men movie
props) for absolute realism and authenticity. Characters include Iron
Man, Captain America, Blade, Dr. Doom, Submariner, Moon Knight,
Mandarin, X-Men, Thanos and Thor. As comic book and movie audiences have
become more sophisticated in their reading and viewing tastes, so have
the collectors of these higher end collectibles. People are beginning to
realize that these pieces are not only purchased for their
ever-increasing intrinsic value, but for their aesthetic beauty. |
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April 28, 2007 |
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In an interview with several creators about the recent
Marvel Retreat, new Thor writer JMS was asked a couple of questions and
gave a Thor-ish response
NRAMA: Moving
things over to the guests, then�we�re going to have you to put modesty
aside for a moment, as you are one of a small handful of creators
asked to be part of this�What do you hope as an individual to bring to
the table at a session like this one? A particular unique skill or
insight?
J. Michael
Straczynski: My job is to listen to everyone else argue because
very often the answer walks into the room mid-argument but nobody
notices because everybody is busy protecting their turf. So my place
is that of Grand Vizir, thankyewverymuch.
NRAMA: Joe,
we know you intended to change your approach to focusing ore more
finite projects - why? What the reason this change in focus/direction?
Straczynski:
I want to focus on Thor, creating and reviving the mythology of the
character, and do a bit here and there on smaller stories is fun.
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April 26, 2007 |
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Source: Youtube.com,
forwarded to me by Jonathan (thanks!!) |
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In an
article on the upcoming World War Hulk event, it's mentioned about Thor
possible standing in the Hulk's way
What Worked Before: If stark's
lucky, Thor will still answer his calls after that clone cyborg
debacle during Civil War. Should the Thunder God enter the fray,
he can prove the difference maker, as he boasts physical strength on
par with the Hulk as well as abilities that tall, green and gruesome
lacks, such as flight and a nifty all-purpose Uru hammer.
Why It Won't Anymore: Again, Hulk's got an army - one that
includes former Thor sparring partner Korg, one of the stone men from
Saturn - and there's nary an Asgardian in sight these days.
Sakaar's finest fighting forces swarm Goldilocks, then Hulk swoops in
with a smirk and a nasty right hook.
Pak Talk: "Part of the thing about this war-bound crew from
'Planet Hulk' is that they're not scared of anybody. They have
fought in legendary mythic battles against foes nobody should be able
to defeat and they've triumphed. If Earth wants to throw a god
at them, they're perfectly ready to go for it.
In a blurb
about Ultimates 2 #13
The long-awaited conclusion to writer
Mark Millar and artist Bryan Hitch's final arc on the Ultimate
Universe's Mightiest Heroes finally arrives this May when issue #13
hits stores. It's the Asgardian smackdown to end all as Thor has
escaped his prison and prepares to confront the man responsible for
all the Ultimates' woes: Loki, the god of evil!
In an
article on the relaunch of Thor
Even if he didn't know Thor was a god,
a man still has to have balls of steel or the brain of a potato to
stand up to a six-foot-six giant clutching an enormous hammer - Sam
Miller probably falls into the latter category. The Oklahoma
farmer has a serious beef with the Norse God of Thunder when the Thor
title relaunches in July. No, Sam isn't Loki (we don't think);
he's just a simple farmer pissed off that the returned deity decides
to take up residence in his hometown and aims to resurrect Asgard on
the farmer's property. Sound out of this world? Writer J.
Michael Straczynski and artist Olivier Coipel reinvent the Thor
mythos, and to get the scoop, we went straight to Marvel HQ and asked
enough questions to satisfy Odin himself. Here's your cheat
sheet to the upcoming rebirth!
Thor
Who Is He? Created by bored Nordic people a billion years ago
and reinvented by Stan Lee in 1962, the Norse God of Thunder has
thrown down with Frost Giants and battled Ultron alongside the
Avengers. He's go a big ego and the brawn to back it up.
Last Seen: Dead. His brother Loki brought an army against
him, but Thor cut off Loki's head while the world was literally ending
around him. As Asgard fell apart, Thor destroyed the "gods to
the gods," known as "Those Who Sit Above In Shadow," and essentially
brought about an end to his world.
Future Plans: Buying real estate in the Midwest and getting a
new costume. "We've kept the classic Kirby feel of the costume
because that's such a wonderfully iconic design," says Thor Editor
Warren Simons, "but we've made some changes so it's closer to an
actual warrior's garb."
Asgard
What Is It? Before it was destroyed, it was the home of Thor and
the Norse gods and their answer to the Green Mount Olympus, but with a
rainbow bridge.
Last Seen: In the cataclysmic events of Ragnarok, the gods'
final Judgment Day, Asgard sat at ground zero.
Future Plans: Floating above some Oklahoma farmland. "The
first arc is really about Thor putting his house in order," explains
Simons, "and Asgard is where he starts."
Donald Blake
Who Is He? Thor's human alter ego. The good doctor and
Thor were joined together by Thor's father Odin to give Thor some much
needed humility.
Last Seen: Fantastic Four #538, picking up a hammer.
Future Plans: Looks like a reunion in Oklahoma.
Mjolnir
What Is It? Thor's favored sidearm. It scatters foes like
ninepins at a bowling alley and can only be lifted by beings as worthy
as the mighty Thor.
Last Seen: Picked up by a guy with the initials "D.B." in the
aforementioned FF #538
Future Plans: According to Simons, it's back with its "rightful
owner" so expect more head bashing.
Odin & Loki
Who Are They? Thor's father Odin is the rightful ruler of
Asgard. Thor's stepbrother, Loki, is as twisted an arch nemesis
as you can find. The Avengers were originally formed to stop the
trickster god.
Last Seen: Both dead.
Future Plans: "Where there is Thor, there is Odin and Loki,"
hints Simons.
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April 18, 2007 |
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Source:
Superherohype.com |
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Thor videogame on the
horizon?
Marvel Entertainment, Inc., SEGA�
Europe Ltd and SEGA� of America, Inc. have expanded their relationship
to include the rights to develop and distribute games inspired by
Marvel's Hall-of-Fame franchises -- Captain America, The
Incredible Hulk and Thor, Iron Man, with both game and film
slated to be released in May 2008.
"Video games are an ideal medium to showcase the appeal and excitement
of our Super Hero franchises," said David Maisel, Chairman, Marvel
Studios. "SEGA is one of the industry's most innovative game
developers and we are thrilled to partner with them to bring 'Captain
America,' 'The Incredible Hulk' and 'Thor' to the video gaming arena.
These franchises represent three of Marvel's most popular characters
and lend themselves to captivating game play. We have already seen
SEGA's passion for the Marvel Universe through the early development
of the 'Iron Man' video game, and we look forward to working closely
with them over the next few years to maximize the potential of these
franchises in the interactive entertainment space."
Under the expanded agreement, SEGA will develop a title to be based on
Marvel Studios' highly-anticipated The Incredible Hulk feature
film. Hitting theaters June 13, 2008, the film will return the
larger-than-life Super Hero to the roots of the long-running comic
series and television show with an all-new action-packed storyline
directed by Louis Leterrier (Transporter 2, Unleashed).
The Incredible Hulk video game will be released in the same
timeframe as the film. Games based on Captain America and
Thor will follow, though the timing of those feature film
projects, currently in development, has not yet been determined.
"We are excited to broaden our partnership with Marvel, a recognized
leader and innovator in the entertainment industry," said Simon
Jeffery, President and COO, SEGA of America. "As SEGA continues to
create games that are built from the ground up to appeal to Western
audiences it makes perfect sense to work with a powerhouse like
Marvel. 'Captain America,' 'The Incredible Hulk' and 'Thor' are icons
that people are already familiar with and love, so our goal is to give
gamers the ability to play out their fantasies by actually becoming
these Super Heroes. Fans can now not only watch them in movies and
read about them in comic books, but also literally control their
actions through the video games we are creating. We look forward to
bringing these icons to life like never before and putting the power
in the hands of the fans."
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April 12, 2007 |
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8 Page Spread preview from
Ultimates 2 #13 (click for larger shot)
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March 30, 2007 |
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An interview with JMS
concerning the upcoming Thor title
His return has been
hinted at for months, a bastardized version of him played a supporting
role in Civil War, and his fans have been patiently
drumming their fingers through it all, waiting and waiting for the real
Thor to return to the Marvel Universe.
This summer, the
waiting stops, when Marvel launches a new Thor series by J.
Michael Straczynski and Olivier Coipel. (By the way, if you missed the
news
earlier this month, JMS' screenplay, The Changeling will be
produced by Ron Howard's Imagine Entertainment and Clint Eastwood's
Malpaso company, with Eastwood directing, and Angelina Jolie set to
star.)
We've spoken with
the writer previously, but as the launch gets closer, we're able to get
some new information out of him - as well as score some preview pages
form the first issue.
Newsarama:
The character of Thor has been off the Marvel playing field for several
years now, only hinted at with an appearance of his hammer in your
Fantastic Four run and with the android Clor in Civil War.
But now that your new series is announced, we can say he's back - but
how does he come back to Earth?
J. Michael
Straczynski: The first issue finds Thor in what is essentially a
kind of limbo, between life and death and something greater and more
profound. He is offered both an opportunity, and a challenge, a chance
to fight his way back to finish the work he began. We also use the same
process to re-introduce Donald Blake, who raises the question: "Is it
for the gods to say when men die, or for men to say when the gods die?"
Answering that question is a large part of what propels Thor back into
the world of the living.
NRAMA: Much has been made of the announced story element that
Thor is rebuilding Asgard in the Middle of America - Oklahoma to be
specific. Can you tell us why Thor would set up stakes in middle America
as opposed to the lands where Norse mythology was worshipped, or say in
another dimension as Asgard was done in the past?
JMS: A
large part of the story involves both rediscovering and reinterpreting
his godhood, but also reacquiring his ties to humanity, since it was
that love of our species that has kept him here for so long. He needs,
wants to bring back Asgard, but wants it closer than before to his loved
home Earth, feels that they have lost something by being so removed. So
he begins that process, and selects Oklahoma for a number of reasons
including the fact that it has vast open spaces large enough to
accommodate the primary city of Asgard. Any place else would get
flattened. And putting it somewhere in Antarctica would defeat the
larger point.
NRAMA: The
last we saw of Thor, he went off into deep space following the foretold
end of the Asgardian people with Ragnarok. How are you fitting that in
with the new series?
JMS: We
cover that in the first issue, but I don't want to say too much about it
yet, that needs to be seen in the telling.
NRAMA: Fair
enough. In a previous
interview
with us, you said that "Way back several retreats ago, Joe Quesada
mentioned the goal of eventually bringing Thor back, and I made a
suggestion for whoever ended up doing it." This project has been one
that's gone through several writers - both Mark Millar and Neil Gaiman
were on tap at different points to write the series before it came back
to you. Can you tell us what that original suggestion was from you, and
how the book ended up back on your table?
JMS: I may
be wrong, but I think the progression started with Neil, who had
some great ideas (as he always does), then when that didn't work out for
logistical reasons, it bounced back to the group. I mentioned the image
of the hammer falling in Oklahoma, and Mark leapt right for it, but also
had to bow out for similar reasons. It then came back to the group, and
it came my way again. I'll be honest, I was kinda hoping that would
happen because I've always been a big fan of Thor and his mythology,
which I really wanted to explore.
NRAMA: Thor's alter-ego has been under several names and
personalities over time, but most notably that of Dr. Donald Blake. In
your Fantastic Four run, someone with the initials "D.B."
eventually picked up Thor's hammer discreetly and went off. What can you
say about the story of Mjolnir as it crashed into the FF comic?
JMS: The
crash is dealt with in our first issue, and was established in FF
because we were trying to tie the whole thing together, and give the
event the proper weight. If he just showed up, it wouldn't have as much
impact as setting it up gradually, so people get a sense of what's
coming, and then pull the trigger.
NRAMA:
Virtually throughout his entire history in the Marvel Universe, Thor's
been a character out of time and place - what would you say his
perspective is on Earth in the new series?
JMS:
Initially, he's distant, trying to figure out where he fits in again.
We're going to really power Thor up, give him all the strength of his
heritage, and that can kind of put you apart the very human race you
want to rediscover. He doesn't want to get pulled into the other groups,
he wants to do his own thing...the question he has to answer is, what is
that? And why? To a large extent, what he finds in the people of
Oklahoma will help to answer some of those questions.
NRAMA: Much
has been made of Thor's unique speech pattern in Marvel Comics - he has
had, on and off, a Shakespearean way of talking --- but it's something
you've said in the past you've had problems with. Can you tell us where
you're coming from in writing Thor's dialogue, and perhaps give us an
example of how he would say something?
JMS: I've
just never understood why a Norse god would speak in Medieval English.
Never parsed for me, even as a kid. So I'm going for more of a sense of
antiquity in the grammar and style rather than tarting it up with
"these" and "thous." The closest tonal parallel would be Aragon in
Lord of the Rings. The sense of dialog there has the feeling of
formality and otherness, but without resorting to tricks.
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2006 NEWS ARCHIVE
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September 11, 2006 |
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The artist
is going to be Olivier Coipel. You can see his artwork on House of
M, and Avengers #77-81,
amongst others.
Joe Quesada
reveals that the writer of the upcoming Thor launch will be - J.
Michael Straczynski! You can check out his site here
http://worldsofjms.com/marvel/index.htm to see what all he's done.
Question: This three initialed writer will be taking over Thor.
Answer: Who is JMS, Joe Michael Straczynski?
NRAMA: Aha, finally� well, okay. So Thor�s been acting a little
off in Civil War. How much does what�s happening there play
into this new series?
JQ: Oh, a lot, trust me.
NRAMA: You told us a few months back that one of the things you
wanted to see in a Thor revival was a new take on Asgard and
Asgardians. Does JMS�s new series fit that criteria?
JQ: [Laughs!] Oh yeah, and while he�s reinterpreting the
character and his universe, he�s also taking him back to basics as
evidenced by the man who gets the hammer.
NRAMA: And how about that infamous Wizard article of a
couple of years back where it was suggested a new group of teens find
the Asgardian artifacts and become the new Norse Gods. Wizard
got the research facility in the Mid-West right? Did they get the
rest..?
JQ: That article was right at the time. Joe was intrigued by
Neil Gaiman�s initial thoughts on Thor and it got him thinking about
writing it. Then we he started scripting he used some elements but not
all. How much he used you�re going to have to read to find out.
And then,
Newsarama talks to JMS about Thor.
While it probably won�t come as any great surprise to Marvel fans
writer J. Michael Straczynski will serve as the creative force behind
Marvel�s upcoming Thor revival, spinning partly out of the
writer�s own work in Fantastic Four and partly out of Civil
War, official confirmation comes after literally years of waiting
for fans of the character.
So with the news newly minted, we figured it was time for a sit-down
with JMS for the writer�s first open conversation about the upcoming
Thor ongoing series�
Newsarama: Joe, first of all, this seems like a project that
has long been in gestation. We�ve asked you about Thor in the past in
reference to your Fantastic Four storyline, but you�ve never
been able to respond fully acknowledging the ongoing series. So now
that the barrier is removed, can you ask you again to give us the
brief but now definitive back-story of this Thor concept...? Its
origins? How and if Neil Gaiman and Mark Millar were involved?
J. Michael Straczynski: I've always been a big fan of Thor, and
I've always actually preferred to write characters with a big mythos
behind them than more straight-ahead characters. The best Babylon 5
characters were always the ones that came at you from more unusual
stomping grounds (Londo, G'Kar, others) than Earth-normal. Way back
several retreats ago, Joe Quesada mentioned the goal of eventually
bringing Thor back, and I made a suggestion for whoever ended up doing
it, and [Mark] Millar jumped right in and said it was his. (He also
made this claim about the Sudetenland, and we all know how that worked
out.) But Mark, being Mark, was soon distracted by other bright-shinys.
Neil [Gaiman] was on tap at one point, with more of a teen Thor
approach, then eventually it came back to me
.
NRAMA: Is there a specific reason for the period of time it
took for this title to launch? Was it a creative decision? A marketing
one? Personal?
JMS: I think it was a combination of the first two. Marvel
wanted to rest the character for a while, which I think was a good
decision, so that his return would be noteworthy. They also wanted to
find some way to interface this with the Civil War storyline,
and some considerations in that story - which will surface in Civil
War #4 - meant pushing the debut back beyond that point.
NRAMA: Any hints just to hold readers over for another week or
so?
JMS: Let us just say of Civil War #4 that there will be
a reckoning....
NRAMA: Before asking you for specifics, if we may, let�s start
with some broader questions. What�s the appeal of the Thor concept to
you?
JMS: I've just always liked the character, from his debut in
Journey into Mystery, which I read as a kid when it first
appeared, to now. To be honest, I've always preferred that iteration
of Thor, with the Dr. Donald Blake persona, than some of the later
variations on that theme. Maybe that's just nostalgia speaking, but I
think there was something valid there in the counterpoint of the
characters, a warrior and a physician.
As some measure of how much a fan I am, when I heard that Marvel West
might be getting back the rights to Thor, I spec'd out a complete
movie screenplay even though I had heard that they already had another
writer on tap, just because I wanted to do it. I'm still very happy
with that screenplay, incidentally, though it has absolutely no
bearing on what we're going to do with Thor in the comics.
NRAMA: Are you a fan of the �a god walking among humans?�
thing?
JMS: That's one aspect of it, certainly, and Marvel has always
slanted a bit toward those kinds of characters...Captain America out
of his element in the 21st century, Peter Parker who never seems to
fit in, Daredevil who cannot see the world as we do, the Hulk who is
always at odds with the world...a god among humans certainly has that
aspect and that appeal. But what also makes the character attractive
is the flip-side, to see humans interacting with a god. Who are they
to him, but also, who is he to them? I think that's a very cool
dynamic to play with.
NRAMA: Are you a fan of Norse mythology?
JMS: To a certain extent, yeah...for as far back as I can
remember, even as a kid, I had an attraction to Greek, Roman, and
Norse mythologies.
NRAMA: Though one of Marvel�s more iconic figures, perhaps with
the exception of Walt Simonson�s 80�s run, Thor has never been a huge
seller for Marvel, at least not in the last 20 years or so. Why do you
think that is, and do you think your concept address this issue at
all?
JMS: I'm not entirely sure. If I were to speculate, and that is
all this is, it may be that over the years it got farther afield of
its original architecture as a story and a character. I love Beta Ray
Bill as a character, but does his appearance, so near to Thor's, make
the latter less unique? I loved having him turned into a toad, but
does that make it harder to take him seriously later on? I do think
it's possible to treat a character with too much reverence, but at the
same time, you can go too far in the other direction as well. I think
the stories may have gotten a bit repetitive over the course of
decades, so that when you picked up an issue of Thor, you kind of
always knew what to expect...and there's good to that, and not-good to
that.
NRAMA: Will your new series/ be steeped in the character�s
previous history, particularly then last few years and end of the
previous series, or are you using this opportunity to clean the slate?
JMS: I'm picking up where the story left off, but I kind of do
want to use this as a way to clean the slate and bring it back more to
the Kirby/Lee roots of the character. We've already hinted that Donald
Blake is back (raising the question: how?), and there are other
elements I'd like to see brought back as well.
NRAMA: We�ll assume you�re going to save that �how� for the
series, so we won�t put you on the spot and ask�
Quick question � faux Shakespearean dialogue� pro or con?
JMS: I'm inclined to try one bit of a change there. Even as a
kid, I could never figure out why a Norse god would speak in medieval
style English. I think it's possible to have that distance and
formality in one's language without resorting to that kind of
dialogue. The closest thing I'd point to as a comparison would be
Aragorn in Lord of the Rings. His speech patterns have a very
stylized feel, there's a sense of antiquity about them, but you don't
have to parse a lot of "thou's" and "thy's". So that's more the
feeling I want to strive for.
NRAMA: Getting a little more specific� Thor in the past has
always had to distinct words to move in � the Avengers/Marvel Universe
world and the fantasy-based/Asgardian world. Which world (if either)
will this new Thor inhabit?
JMS: A bit of both. One thing that I tried in the first few
issues, which have gone over very well in-house, involved the choice
of where to rebuild Asgard. Imagine for a moment shining Asgard, in
all its ancient glory, high minarets and spires, miles wide in every
direction...hovering eight feet above the ground...in the American
Mid-West. Oklahoma, to be specific. How would Thor (and, in time,
other restored Asgardians) relate to the folks thereabouts? How would
they relate to gods living in their midst? Rather than go with the
stereotype, I think they'd be (for the most part) welcomed as
neighbors. Eccentric neighbors, to be sure, but neighbors nonetheless.
It's a marvelous opportunity to provide real contrasts between those
two worlds as the locals more or less adopt the Asgardians...'cause
they're just looking for a home, same as anybody else. And imagine
standing beneath that structure, miles in every direction, hovering
just a few feet above your head.
The American Mid-West has been largely ignored or given short shrift
by the comics� universe, and this is a good chance to bring that world
into play, with its values and its heart. We will see ourselves more
clearly for the contrast, I think. The flip-side is that Thor et al
will also be more contrasted against this background. If everything is
godlike, then nothing is godlike...but put that contrast back in
again, as Lee and Kirby put Loki and Thor and others into modern life,
and I think it actually helps to strengthen Thor as a
character...makes him more unique, more distant and godlike...while
tugging at his humanity at the same time. And there's always room for
a doctor in a small Oklahoma town....
None of which is to say that down the road Asgard can't or won't be
moved to a more lofty locale, but for now, for re-starting the
character and making him more interesting by the contrast, that
location serves a very solid story purpose.
NRAMA
JMS: Yes, but not necessarily as you last saw them.
NRAMA: You briefly mentioned Neil Gaiman�s �teen� take on Thor,
which Wizard detailed in their Thor news story of a couple of
years back. That involved a new group of teens finding Asgardian
artifacts at that Mid-West research facility and taking up the mantle
of the gods. The Mid-West research facility part proved accurate, but
just to set the record straight, from all your comments your concept
breaks from that at that point and will present a more familiar take
on the concepts and characters, correct?
JMS: I don't know if familiar is the word I'd use, but they
ain't teens, that's for sure.
NRAMA: How about graphically� Will there be any new take or
changes to the look of Thor and Asgard?
JMS: I like and want to keep the sensibility of his classic
wardrobe, but I'd like to see if we can't make it a bit more realistic
to the eye...to again hearken to the Lord of the Rings, if you
look at the Riders of Rohan, their shields, helmets, or the soldiers
of Gondor...I like that look, and would like to see if there's a
chance to blend those together with the traditional Thor silhouette.
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July 28, 2006 |
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In an
interview with Joe Quesada about Thor, lots of things were discussed
Thor struck
the Marvel Universe like lightning with his dramatic return in July's
Civil War #3, but that rumbling you hear around comics isn't
just an oncoming storm.
Instead, it's the electric buzz surrounding the Thunder
God's return, and the fact that his arrival poses more questions than
it answers.
Thor hasn't been seen in the current mainstream Marvel
Universe since 2004's Thor vol 2 #85, the end of Michael Avon
Oeming and Andrea DeVito's "Ragnarok" storyline (#80-#85) that
effectively killed off the Thunder God and all his Asgardian brethren
in an adaptation of the epic Norse end-of-the-world myth.
Since then, Thor's been vacationing in comics limbo,
though there have been a couple of Asgardian-tinged projects that came
out following his demise - notably Loki by writer/novelist
Robert Rodi (Codename: Knockout) and artist Esad Ribic (Wolverine
covers) about Thor's diabolical brother who's also the God of
Mischief, and Thor: Blood Oath, by Oeming and Scott Kolins (Beyond)
which found the Thunder God teaming up with the Warriors Three
when Frost Giants put them on trial for murder.
However, those two books didn't take place in current
continuity, and after a scuttled plan to have Mark Millar (Ultimates)
and Greg Land (Ultimate Fantastic Four) do a Thor
ongoing - the creators opted to do Ultimate FF instead - the
Marvel U. has been Thor-less while the House of Ideas patiently bided
its time.
"We've been looking for a way to bring Thor back for
quite some time," explained Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada.
"We just wanted to make sure it was the right way at the right time.
We started to feel like the time was right, but we didn't have the
right way. Then all of these ideas were popping up for Civil
War. Amongst all of us, we had this great way to bring Thor
back that we knew was going to not only thrill the fans, but freak the
fans out.
Civil War turned out to be the golden
opportunity for Thor's return, and over the past few months leading up
to the event, Marvel began dropping clues that something big was
brewing, most notably in Fantastic Four #536-#538, which
centered around Thor's powerful mystical hammer Mjolnir falling to
Earth and becoming an object of desire for Dr. Doom. Also in
that same arc, readers were teased by recurring panels that featured a
shadowy figure sporting the initials D.B. - a nod to Donald Blake, the
one-time human alter ego of Thor - traveling to Oklahoma where the
hammer touched down. That set the stage for Thor's dramatic
return in Civil War #3, but his revival raises some questions
for the fans.
HOW WILL THOR'S RETURN IMPACT "CIVIL WAR"?
"I think the real question that people will be asking is, 'How
will Civil War affect Thor?" countered Quesada. "I'm not
going to tell you. You're just going to have to read and find
out. But Civil War will have a great effect on Thor and
show a side of Thor we've never seen before."
When Thor makes his dramatic entrance, it appears he's
being used as a secret weapon for Tony Stark's Pro-Registration
faction (he's referred to as "Codename: Lightning"). But we
expect to see Thor's loyalties torn between his current benefactor
Iron Man and his closes Avengers ally, Captain America, before
Civil War fires its final salvo.
WHAT PLANS ARE THERE FOR THOR
FOLLOWING "CIVIL WAR"?
When asked about Marvel's big ongoing plans for the Thunder God,
Quesada would only cryptically confirm that plans actually
exist: "Oh yeah, there's plans."
However, it's safe to assume that Thor will most
definitely be getting his own regular monthly series once more,
probably some time in 2007.
"I think it's a decent assumption that Thor may come
back in his own book." teased Quesada.
That, of course, leads into the next question...
WHO WILL BE THE CREATIVE TEAM ON
'THOR'?
"We've already go them, so...I'm sure [Wizard] will break the
news," said the tight-lipped Quesada. "The thing that we are
looking for with respect to a new Thor series is definitely something
that modernizes the character a bit, but at the same time goes back to
the basic roots of the character. It's the same kind of idea [as
our Eternals relaunch], where it makes new sense of the
mythology."
So we know Marvel has creators tapped, and though the
publisher won't confirm, Wizard's got picks of it's own (see
below).
WHAT'S UP WITH THE REST OF THOR'S
ASGARDIAN PANTHEON?
"That won't be touched upon 'til later," was all Quesada would say
when asked about Thor's Norse brethren. However, last we saw,
Odin was already dead (although it was, like, the 37th time), even
before Sif, Balder, Heimdall, Loki, the Warriors Three and the rest of
the gods and goddesses perished during Ragnarok. Regardless of
what happened in the past or what the current status of the gods is,
any Thor relaunch will either re-introduce the entire cast, or
explain away their fate to start with a clean slate (our money's on
the former).
WHY DID IT TAKE SO LONG TO BRING
THOR BACK?
Marvel could have cranked out a random year-long Thor
ongoing with some A-list creators and it probably would have sold like
hot-cakes. But rather than rush the property back onto shelves,
Marvel took a more patient approach - one that was probably driving
some hardcore Thor fans absolutely crazy.
"It was something we had to feel," stressed
Quesada when explaining the delay. "I think Moon Knight is the
perfect example of a character that we waited and waited and waited
until we got the right idea, and now we've got a character on our
hands that nobody ever suspected would be a hit."
"What would serve fans better: just putting out a
regular old Thor book that's not going to do gangbusters, or
putting out a great Thor book that not only attracts old fans,
but has people coming and saying 'Wow, I never really checked out
Thor, maybe I'll like it this time'?"
WIZARD
PICKS 10 POSSIBLE CREATIVE TEAMS FOR THOR
Marvel's already got a creative team tapped for an ongoing
Thor book, but it's keeping the announcement under wraps for now.
Since the publisher's not spilling just yet, Wizard pitches 10
Thor creative teams we wanna see!
- Mike Oeming/Andrea DeVito
Oeming's proved his chops on superhero/mythology stories with
his "Ragnarok" arc in Thor and Thor: Blood Oath.
Teamed with DeVito, their closing arc before the Thunder God
disappeared was one of the best Thor stories ever!
- Neil Gaiman/John Romita Jr.
Want a complete reimagining of the Asgardians? Gaiman
could write the Norse gods in his sleep, and JRJR already dazzled on
Thor once before. Plus, look at what they're doing
together on Eternals!
- Walt Simonson/Olivier Coipel
The writer behind the most beloved, memorable Thor run of
all time comes back to the book, joined by the crazy dynamic pencils
of Coipel (House of M)!
- Keith Giffen/Leonard Kirk
Giffen does plots like no one's business, and his humor will
keep it from getting too overblown. Kirk's a rising star, as
seen in his smooth, clean lines on Agents of Atlas.
- Charlie Huston/Mike McKone
Huston's made it crazy-impossible to put down Moon Knight
because of its hard-hitting action, and McKone's worth banking on
any day.
- Ed Brubaker/Greg Land
Bru's got us buzzed on Daredevil and Captain America,
so why not the big godly Thor reboot? And Land proved
he can rock the big guy in Ultimate FF, so he's a natural.
- J. Michael Straczynski/Roy Allan
Martinez
JMS isn't shy about doing radical overhauls (see Spidey's
unmasking), and he's already set the stage for Thor's return in
FF. Newcomer Martinez (Son of M) would bring a new
feel and look and completely flip Asgard on its side.
- Dwayne McDuffie/Scott Kolins
McDuffie's already thrilled us while writing a pantheon of
"gods" on "Justice League Unlimited," and his Beyond
collaborator Kolins showed the goods for large-scale action on
Thor: Blood Oath and Flash.
- Jeph Loeb/Ed McGuinness
This blockbuster duo blew fans away with the high-octane
Superman/Batman, so it's not a longshot to thing they could
tackle on of Marvel's heavyweights.
- Brian K. Vaughan/Gary Frank
With BKV's respectful treatment of classic characters, we'll get a
book that'll feel new and classic at the same time. Toss in
Frank, who knocks it out of the park on Squadron Supreme, and
it would be one hell of a title.
In an
interview with Frank Cho and Brian Bendis, they discuss the upcoming
title Mighty Avengers, and discuss some gods
Wizard: Frank, was there a
character you were really excited about approaching for the book?
One of the characters I had fun drawing is Ares. I read Mike
Oeming's mini-series, but for whatever reason I didn't like the
mohawk. I recently saw Russell Crowe's "Gladiator" and I thought
we could go more toward that look. He'd still have that mohawk
on his helmet, so people would know right away who he is, though.
Wizard: If Ares were on the team, would you have him sporting
the huge sword pictured here or his normal battle-axe and machine
guns?
Cho: Everything.
Bendis: He'd use every weapon available. And someone
pointed out to me he'd be the first Avenger with a gun, so that's kind
of cool.
Wizard: Where did you go for his design, Frank?
Cho: Final Fantasy. You see all thee guys
carrying huge friggin' swords - big phallic symbols.
Bendis: Ares is a great character, but is wide open as far as
subplots in his life. I have to give Oeming credit for this,
because he said, "We never tell you who Ares' kid's mother is."
It's someone in the Marvel Universe. Could be someone on the
team.
Cho: Aunt May?
Wizard: Who would win in a fight between Ares and Thor?
Bendis: Ares. I believe you will be seeing that.
Wizard: Who'd win in a fight between Ares and Wolverine?
Cho: Ares would kill him. He's a god, dude!
Wizard did a
countdown of the 50 Greatest Fights Of All Time
#42 - THOR, LOKI AND ODIN VS.
SURTUR
The Mighty Thor #353
Ragnarok - the end of days for Asgard - is moments away. Thor
lies beaten and bloodied and his father, wise Odin, trapped in a
frozen prison; Asgard's fate falls to its greatest villain...Loki.
As Surtur dips his enchanted sword into the Eternal Flames, making him
nearly unstoppable, the trickster god (and Thor's half-brother)
finally takes action to save his home - but his motives are not all
altruistic. "Why aspire to become lord of all I survey," he
asks, "if all I survey is burned to a cinder?" Freed to act,
Thor and Odin join Loki to stop the rampaging god, and a father and
his two sons put aside their differences to stop an ultimate evil.
Blow after blow and bolt after bolt of magic build to a sad, shocking
ending as one of the three falls before the battle is done.
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All the news coming out of
the San Diego Comic-Con |
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Lots of neat
toys and props coming out soon,
here's a link to a Marvel page, but coming up are...
In an
interview with Tom Brevoort, Newsarama got this out of him
NRAMA:
That last page - buh-hu-wha-huh? Is it safe to make the leap then,
that things progressed rather rapidly from where we last saw them at
the end of the latest issue of Fantastic Four, when some "DB"
guy was hustling to grab the hammer?
TB: A few
things have moved along, definitely.
NRAMA: So
don't leave us hanging here Tom - you can't just walk away here after
that ending - got a few teases for issue #4?
TB: Okay,
we've already said that issue #4 includes a death, a funeral, a
betrayal and a team reborn. So somebody's not making it out of the
book in one piece, and you're about to see a major status quo shift
for both a team and a book in the Marvel U.
And Thor is the
fifth tease.
On
Thursday's Civil War panel
Asked about the
Thor project he was supposed to do with Greg Land, Millar said,
"Oh sh*t, I knew there was something I forgot to do."
"There's a very
good reason as to why Thor took a side," Quesada said when asked why
Thor apparently is fighting on the Pro-Registration side in Civil
War #3.
On Friday's
New Joe Friday's from Newsarama
Joe, something in context for this week - Thor appeared this week
in Civil War. While we've spoken with Tom Brevoort about his
appearance in Civil War not particularly matching up with what
we've been seeing in Fantastic Four, you were the one who said
that Thor fans would love you and hate you and love you this year at
last year's SDCC. Okay - he's back, so there's the love...but the
hate, and the love again?
JQ : Better that than be bored or dispassionate, no? [laughs]
Thor fans are in for a heck of a ride, we plan on doing some
incredible things with the Thunder God including creating a new
villain for him that fans have already been introduced to and don�t
even know it. Man, I love laying down the tease!
On
Saturday's Future of Marvel Films panel
Feige said that
the first three films that Marvel is looking at are Captain America,
Nick Fury, and Thor, and all are currently being worked
on, actively
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July 5, 2006 |
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In an interview with Ed
McGuinness and Jeph Loeb, the upcoming creative team on The Ultimates
Loeb: And
that is one of the things we're going to be playing with in Ed's arc:
It's very much about gods and men. Where does the line go?
What, really, is the difference between a man with super powers and a
god? Or a god and a mortal man? How do all those Things
fit together? Particularly when we're talking about a god, we're
talking about Thor and his reality and all of the things that come
with it: Asgard and Odin and war; history and Loki and Sif.
All that good stuff.
Wizard: Everyone has been wondering what's
up with Thor. When are we going to get to know more about him?
McGuinness: That's my thing. I want
Thor to be a Viking so bad. Because that's what he is!
It's like, the other Thor is cool and everything, but if I get my
chance to draw Thor, I want him to be "The Thirteenth Warrior"-type
material. He doesn't take garbage from anybody and he's a Viking
god!
Wizard: So you're looking at the more
take-charge Thor from the "President Thor" arc of Ultimate Fantastic
Four as opposed to the laid-back, hippie-ish Thor seen throughout most
of Ultimates?
Loeb: First of all, I think that part of
what Mark was faced with is that the "President Thor" storyline
probably should have happened after Ultimates 2 #13, so that you would
have had a better sense of why Thor is a different kind of Thor
because of what goes on at the end of the story. So when you get
into that, all those changes start to add up. What always
fascinated me about the marvel Universe Thor is that he was constantly
trying to fit into a mortal's world. What Ed and I have talked
about is that he's much more of a guy who can do whatever the hell he
wants. If he wants to make love to 20 women and drink a keg of
beer, it's what he's going to do. And if anybody's got a problem
with it - well, then they've got the problem with it. But he's
certainly not going to bow to anybody with these powers. And
that's an interesting sort of person to have when you've got a team an
leadership, and you're trying to figure out who's going to do what.
And the challenge now is to find a threat that Thor can't just go in
and throw his hammer at and go, "OK. That's taken care of.
I'm going to go back upstairs. The rest of you lick your
wounds."
Wizard: Fine, fine. What about
Absorbing Man? How do you turn him into a Thor-level baddie
instead of an also-ran?
McGuinness: I think he's a Thor-level
threat if played the right way. I totally think so. And if
he has friends with him, things can happen. Who knows?
Wizard: If there was one thing that
Absorbing Man could absorb in the book, what would you want it to be?
McGuinness: Gamma radiation
Loeb: Erica Durance.
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There was a rumor going
around the Heroes World Convention that J. Michael Straczynski (I think
that's how you spell it) let slip that he would be writing the new Thor
book. He also noted that David Goyer is apparently writing the
treatment of the Thor movie. |
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June 1, 2006 |
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At the WizardWorld
convention this weekend, when asked about Thor, there were a couple of
statements made by Tom Brevoort
Will Thor be seen in the Marvel
Universe sometime in the coming year? "Maybe not even a year,"
Brevoort teased, plying that a return is more imminent than a year.
As in the previous panel, Brevoort
reiterated that fans should expect to see Thor "sooner rather than
later" and mentioned readers should keep an eye on Fantastic Four
#538.
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From the Wizard 2006 Mega
Movie Issue |
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They
follow up with a "Where are they now?" segment for Eric Allan Kramer,
who played Thor in The Return of the Incredible Hulk movie
1988 was a
good year for Thor, Hollywood-wise. The hero was still reeling
from getting mad props in 1987's "Adventures in Babysitting" and was
featured in the first made-for-TV "Incredible Hulk" movie after the
series went off the air. Although Thor's guest spot was intended
as a would-be pilot for a live-action series starring the Asgardian,
things didn't pan out. But the blame for that can't fall on Eric
Allan Kramer, a bruiser of a thespian who seemed to be having way too
much fun with the silly script he'd been given. (Sample dialogue
during a battle with the Hulk: "This will send you back to hell,
you ugly troll!") Even though Kramer, a fight choreographer and
swordplay expert, was forced to wear what looked like goat skins
instead of the classic Thor costume, we still get a kick out of him
telling Bill Bixby as David Banner, "When the troll's upon you, you're
a mighty fighter."
After befriending the Hulk but missing out on his own
series, Kramer found steady work in sitcoms such as "Seinfeld" and
"Cheers," often playing the bruiser somebody mistakenly pisses off.
He maintained his geek street cred with roles in "True Romance" (as
ill-fated bodyguard Boris), "MANTIS" and "Lois & Clark." A
series regular on "The Hughleys," Kramer also made for a convincing
skipper as Alan Hale Jr. in the "Surviving Gilligan's Island" TV
movie. Recently, he's appeared in "American Wedding" and on
"CSI," "Will & Grace" and "Monk."
In an
interview with WWE Star Kane, they ask him if he could play any comic
book character in a film, who would it be?
Years ago, when they were doing the
"Ragnarok" story in Thor, dude. I would have to be the demon
Surtur. He was the baddest SOB in the universe.
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Ed
McGuinness was recently signed to an exclusive deal to Marvel Comics.
He states that he'd love to get his hands on Thor.
You can't go wrong with a big Viking.
Some guys like monkey's; I like Vikings. He's the god of
thunder. He's just a brute. I love Norse mythology and all
that stuff. I like the classic look the best, but I like the
beard too. I don't like the beard with the visor, but I like the
beard by itself.
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May 1, 2006 |
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Mark Protosevich has been
announced as the writer for the Thor movie. According to Mark, his
approach will go like this
"In
the comics, the stories that appealed to me most were the features
called 'Tales of Asgard,' " CAA-repped Protosevich said. "They were
very much based on the traditional Norse myths and how the
relationship between being like Thor and Loki and Thor and Odin, and
how these beings manifested themselves. I don't want to give too much
away, but I will say the movie will take place in the world of myth
and legend but will not betray some of the thematic elements of the
comics that made them so appealing, like the idea of a god growing to
truly understand man."
I'm
happy to hear they're not throwing out the fantastical, which is
usually the hardest to convey, so it's usually the first thing thrown
out with this type of material. I've heard Protosevich's unmade
scripts to both I AM LEGEND and JOHN CARTER OF MARS are fantastic.
Hope he continues that roll with this one.
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In the
letters page (p. 14), Ulises Curiel writes in that
Peter Jackson on "Thor": A
three-hour slugfest of special effects...this is a no brainer.
Jackson has it all. Mighty Mjolnir graces the screen, Frost
Giants, Trolls, Surtur...you name it! This would be great.
Yep, gotta agree with ya there Ulises
In regards
to the Ultimates, in an interview with Mark Millar
Wizard: Will Thor get to cut loose as
the Son of Odin, instead of wallowing in self-pity?
Millar: I think Thor fans are going to enjoy the rest of this
book
Following
"Civil War", there's going to be a roster shakeup of the Avengers, and
Wizard picks it's dream team. On it are Captain America, Hawkeye,
Spider-Woman, Yellowjacket, Wonder Man, Iron Man, Photon, Beast,
She-Hulk, Vision, Nova, and Thor. On Thor it states: "Hands
down, THE most powerful hero in the Marvel U; with the Thunder God on
your side, victory is assured - when he shows up. Because
when push comes to shove, he's Prince of Asgard first, Avenger second.
There's a
2-page spread on Mjolnir on pgs, 64 and 65
There's a
small news blurb about the Ultimate Avengers 2 movie stating that we
will see expanded back stories for Thor and others. |
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February 27, 2006 |
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In the latest issue of
Marvel Spotlight, I got my letter printed.
But they edited the listing
of suggested future creators. The one's in yellow were taken out.
Hmmmmm.
Any plans we could see the following in the
future?
Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Gerry Conway, Tom DeFalco,
Warren Ellis, Dan Jurgens, Ron Marz, William
Messner-Loebs, Doug Moench, Mike Oeming,
Walt
Simonson, Roy Thomas, Len Wein, John and Sal Buscema,
Mike Deodato, Andrea DiVito, Scot Eaton, Ron
Frenz,
Stuart Immonen, the Kuberts, Keith Pollard,
Tom Raney,
the Romitas, and M.C. Wyman. I
realize that some of
them are no longer with Marvel, but come on! They
still worked for Marvel before and produced some great stuff.
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February 17, 2006 |
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During this weeks Joe
Friday's column, Ares joining a team is mentioned and Thor is discussed
NRAMA: Moving away from terrorists in comics, we�re told that
you might be ready to discuss that �major superteam� Ares is joining.
Spill�
JQ - Well, I think people are starting to get a sense of
where he�s going, Ares #1 has just sold out! Let me just ask
this, how much fun would it be to see Wolverine and Ares on the same
team? Not saying they will, just asking how much fun would that be?
NRAMA: A god is a mutant? Sweet. He and Professor Xavier can
share tips on keeping their domes shiny�
JQ- Yeah, or�
NRAMA: Or�?
JQ- Yeah. Or.
NRAMA: And still speaking of the FF, at least tangentially, we
received this cover to Fantastic Four #536 by email today, which was
not released with the March solicits.
So, can we finally talk about this openly..?
JQ - Well, sure, let�s see, that sure does look like Thor�s
hammer to me! That also looks like Doctor Doom�s gauntlet about to
pick it up. But, let�s think about this, can Doom pick it up? If he
can pick it up, is it the real hammer? If it�s the real hammer and he
can pick it up, what does that say about Doom? If he can�t pick it up,
then who can? And what the heck is the hammer doing on the cover of FF
anyway?
NRAMA: We�ll bite - What is it doing there?
JQ - I�ll tell ya what it�s doin� there!
NRAMA: Please
JQ - A mysterious artifact comes crashing down to earth and
Reed is asked to investigate. Outside of what the artifact is, there�s
the bigger question as to what does it mean? Again, I�m not going to
go into too much detail but I have told Thor fans that this year was
going to make them happy, so I�ll be expecting a ticker tape parade
later this year.
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February 11, 2006 |
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From Toynewsi.com and from
all around the 'net |
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The 2006 Toyfare Convention
coverage has revealed some pics of some cool upcoming stuff. You
can check it out here. |
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They've got an exclusive
Thor clip from the upcoming Ultimate Avengers DVD that features Thor
facing off against some whalers. It looks pretty freakin'
awesome!! You can view it
here |
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In an
interview with Peter David at Wondercon, he mentioned that he would be
interested in doing Thor.
So as opposed to projects he is
working on, how about Marvel franchises or characters he'd like
to work on..?
"Wouldn't mind working on Thor at some point," Davis said. "Had
fun with him in a couple issues of Captain Marvel. Also
Hercules...maybe team them up for something?"
In an interview with JMS,
he's asked about the heavenly artifact that crashes in an upcoming issue
of Fantastic Four (which he writes)
NRAMA: In regards to the Fantastic Four, the
description of March and April's issues regarding a "heavenly
artifact" fallen to Earth in the Mid-West sounds nearly identical to a
concept for a new Thor reported by Wizard Magazine last
year. According to that report, the concept started with Neil Gaiman,
and then you put a spin on it, and at the time of the report it was
supposed to have gone to Mark Millar.
Can you mention if there is indeed a connection between that
Wizard report and this upcoming Fantastic Four storyline?
JMS: Let me try to put this first into historical context,
then spin it out from there.
Neil had come to Marvel with some thoughts on Thor, which I
won't elaborate upon in case that's something he wants to use
somewhere else or in another context, because it was a very cool idea.
At roughly the same time, around three retreats ago, I came up with a
thread in relation to the Thor story that everyone liked, and thought,
why not combine them? At one point Mark "Squeaky" Millar jumped in and
wanted it, 'cause it was shiny, and Joe Quesada said, 'Sure, go with
it'. But that in time went away, and we pulled those two core concepts
apart into their component pieces...with the one remaining that I'd
put forth originally.
What that premise is, and was, and where it goes, and what it may
or may not do in relation to Thor, I don't want to say because I don't
think I should. What I can say, in relation to the FF story, is this -
at some point in our storyline, something hurtled down out of the sky
and cratered in Oklahoma. Scientists and corporate guys arriving on
the scene found something unusual, and built a massive research dome
around it, trying to figure out what it was and how it worked and what
to do with it.
That item...is Thor's hammer. That doesn't mean he's coming back,
and doesn't mean he's not coming back. Where it goes from there,
well...we'll see, won't we?
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January 16, 2006 |
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Here's an interview with
Mike Oeming
BY
JENNIFER M. CONTINO
To write about Ares the god of War, Marvel turned to
a man familiar with these types of characters, Michael
Avon Oeming. We picked his brain for the facts about
Ares.
THE PULSE: Why Ares? Out of all the characters in the
Marvel Universe you could have worked with, why did you want
to write this five-part story?
MIKE AVON OEMING: I don't know! I got the call and
answered with glee. I think Marvel just realised they wanted
to work with more of their mythology guys and wanted to try
something new, but not completely new, so they decided to
build on the character. I want to see it move into a series
though!
THE PULSE: Who is Ares? Most people might know the God of
War from some other comic appearances, but he seems to just
have been in a handful or so of Marvel issues ... what makes
him tick?
OEMING: Well, he starts out as the villain we've seen a
few times before. A real heel. A villain. I look into why
that is, and turn it around a bit so that Ares is looking -
not to redeem himself, but to change. Not for the better,
he's not going into a self help mode - he's just looking to
change. He sees what he is, and that he really has no place
amongst the gods who hate him.
He has a human son now, and that's what his life has become
about. But once that's been pulled away from him, the old
Ares comes back out to do whatever he can to get him back.
Sort of like Ransom without the saggy-faced [Mel]
Gibson.
THE PULSE: How is working on this "god" different than
what you did with Thor or your own Hammer of the Gods
series?
OEMING: Hammer is about a hero searching for his
roots - this is about a villain destroying his.
THE PULSE: Why do you like characters like this - the
Gods among mortal types?
OEMING: Because I'm a huge fan and student of Mythology,
especially the teachings of Joseph Campbell. Like
him, I think mythology is largely (though not entirely) an
allegory for our life experiences. The story of the Gods are
really about us in many ways. The trails of Hercules- have
we not gone through the same things in some way- childhood,
school, adulthood, marriage, divorce/breakups, jobs, loosing
jobs, having kids, friends and family dying and eventually
our own deaths - these are our own trials and all these
paths we take every day are illustrated in mythology.
Mythology can, like religion (and isn't mythology just
someone else's religion?) prepare us for these trials in
life.
THE PULSE: What is this story about? What was the pitch?
OEMING: The one line pitch - when the God of War has his
child stolen - what will he do to get him back? Anything is
the answer. But it's also about the cycle of son on father
violence that prevails Greek Myth. Alexander will be turned
against his father, ARES, who turned on his father ZUES, who
KILLED his father, Kronos, who killed HIS father. Imagine
being part of THAT family!
THE PULSE: What were some of the biggest challenges to
working on a story like this? How do you make this god
different from others you've written and human to the
reader, even though he's got higher attributes?
OEMING: Only the five issues limits what we could do on
this series. That's the main problem is a massive epic has
to be boiled down to Cliff Notes in a mini series.
THE PULSE: What influences and inspires you while working
on Ares?
OEMING: Mythology in general, the atmosphere of it, and
the real human connections we can make to fantasy that makes
it REAL. That's what inspires me. Despite all the fantastic
stuff, this is a father and son story.
THE PULSE: Who, besides Ares, is featured in these
issues? Any other gods? Any other notables from the Marvel
Universe in this? Who?
OEMING: Sure, Hercules plays a big part, and I introduce
and bring back some rarely seen heroes - Ajax, Petrocles,
Achilles, Hera and a few more including Mikaboshi, a
Japanese god of Evil.
THE PULSE: How does being an accomplished artist help you
when writing and collaborating with other artists? What kind
of advantage do you think that gives you?
OEMING: Just keeping in the mind the details to get
ideas across more clearly to the artist. I stay out of the
way as far as direction goes - especially with Travel, I
just don't want to get in his way!
THE PULSE: What other projects are you working on?
OEMING: Lots, but not too much! I draw Powers monthly
(working on 17 as we speak) writing RED SONJA monthly and I
just finished THOR BLOOD OATH. I'm co writing MAGICIAN:
APPRENTICE, an adaptation of a Lord of the Rings style
novels called the RIFTWAR SAGA with Bryan J.L. Glass- we are
also working on MICE TEMPLAR a large creator owned maxi
series. I'm currently finishing up drawing CROSS BROX which
is co-created and co written by IVAN BRANDON of NYC MECH.
Other than that, not much!
Also anyone interested in my newsletter which has
information about me and upcoming projects can sign up by
emailing me at [email protected]
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Mike Oeming has a new
column where he will be interviewing other comic creators. For his
debut, he's talking with Warren Ellis.
You can read it
here! |
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During their weekly "Joe
Friday's" column, these few tidbits were mentioned
NRAMA: Spider-Man, huh..? No, let�s stay with this for the moment.
What time period are you concentrating on? Are you working six months
ahead? Twelve? More?
JQ: We�re working 18 to 24 months ahead. Whoa, hold on, Mark
Millar just whispered two words into my ear and I have no idea what he
means by it. He said, �Ultimate Asgard.�
All yesterday we also came up with some interesting ideas for some of
our newer characters as well as places to send them. How about this -
Ares, whose series is currently on stands now, will be joining a
major Marvel team book.
We also came up with some amazing stuff for Captain America as
well as Iron Man and T� whoops, almost let that leak. |
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2005 NEWS ARCHIVE
top |
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December 16, 2005 |
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In their weekly column
where they interview Joe Quesada, Thor is brought up
NRAMA: Okay, getting back to that other "summer" event
referenced in the Illuminati special solicitation copy, which you
named as Planet Hulk, let us read to you the solicitation copy
for another March title, Fantastic Four #536:
"A mysterious object has fallen from the heavens to crash in the
Midwest, and Reed Richards has been called in to try to piece together
the mystery surrounding it. What is it--and how will it lead into
CIVIL WAR and the return of a Marvel mainstay?"
JQ: Wow, that sounds cool as hell, I can't wait to read it!!!
NRAMA: Now Reed Richards happens to be a member of the
"Illuminati"...
JQ: Last I looked at their roll, yes.
NRAMA: So putting our Nancy Drew hats on...
JQ: Do you have any idea how funny you look with a Nancy Drew
hat on?
NRAMA: Nevertheless...
In last year's Wizard #160, the publication reported a Thor
relaunch was in the works, based on a pitch by Neil Gaiman, and "respun"
some by with Gaiman's blessing by one J. Michael Straczynski, who just
so happens to write Fantastic Four, including March's #536.
The concept, as Wizard described it, involved pieces of Asgard
falling to Earth in the aftermath of "Ragnarok" in the form of powerful
artifacts, including Thor's legendary Mjolnir. An evil corporation sets
out to collect these artifacts, building a base around an immovable
hammer in the middle of a field in ...wait for it... Iowa, which last we
looked at a map was in the Midwest. A group of teens then gather the
remaining artifacts at this site, which becomes ground zero for their
transformation into Thor, Loki, and the new gods of Asgard.
Then at MegaCon very early in the year, you told fans, "We
know that Ragnarok has happened, the Gods are dead and the cycle has to
begin again". And in Boston just a few months back, you noted at your
Cup 'O Joe panel that, "We absolutely know what we're doing with
Thor"...
JQ: Yup, that's me...
NRAMA: And Thor is one of the few characters not currently
active that could be considered a "Marvel mainstay."
Sorry to put you on the spot Joe, but it sounds an awful lot like
beginning in March, JMS is kicking off your Thor revival plans in
the pages of Fantastic Four, making it the summer companion to
Civil War mentioned in the Illuminati special solicitation?
Comments?
JQ: Here's what's really funny. Last week I told fans that I
was going to kill Speedball but that if they had other suggestions I
would put someone else's head in the noose. I want to thank the fans
because I received many emails with character suggestions and the
character that's in the lead at this moment is Thor.
What's hysterical about that is that Thor, as we all know, is already
dead and gone, but there you have it, he leads the "kill poll." I'm
still accepting votes and I know that some folks were looking for my
personal email, so if you want to send me your suggestions and save
Speedball just email me at [email protected]. Right now it's not looking
good for a Thor revival.
NRAMA: So for the record then, are you saying there are no
longer any solid Thor plans? And the rather striking similarities
between what was reported about a Thor revival in Wizard
and the solicitation for JMS' FF #536 are not related?
JQ: Look, I was looking forward to a Thor revival as
much as the next person but if folks want him dead as opposed to
Speedball what am I to think?
NRAMA: Okay, to close as usual, anything new you want
readers to know or can tell them this week?
JQ: I sure do hope people are picking up Fantastic Four...
NRAMA: Okay, we'll bite. How come?
JQ: Because it's a cool book. Can't that just be enough? Does
something have to happen in FF that may affect some other character that
hasn't been seen in ages in order to be worth buying?
Come on, who would stoop to that kind of thing? |
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November 6, 2005 |
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Various online news sources |
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The
upcoming Avengers DVD (featuring the Ultimate version of the team), has
released another promotional poster, this time featuring Thor.
Former Thor
artist, Scot Eaton, has signed an exclusive deal with Marvel.
Congratulations! Man I loved his Thor work. Check
here for the details |
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September 2, 2005 |
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Another
possible hint that it's going to be Neil Gaiman writing Thor in the
relaunch. During an interview with him, the question is asked,
"What can you tell us about your next Marvel project?"
The new project - what I will say is
that having gone over several different projects, this is one where
Joe Quesad actually came to me and said, "Look, what about character
or characters X? We'd never really known quite what to do with
them, but we would like to make them or him, much more important and
much more part of the mainstream Marvel Universe". So I'm
starting to work on it.
In a Q&A
session with the new Ultimates writer, Jeph Loeb, he's asked about the
various Ultimates, and on Thor he stated
I love what Mar did here, Loki messing
iwth everyone's head, the idea that the world thinks he's nuts, but we
know he isn't. I don't think we've seen the extent of his power
- and that is a truly frightening thing.
In an
interview with former Thor writer, Dan Jurgens, he's asked the question,
"You're commonly known as a Superman guy. How does it feel working
on Hyperion, Marvel's version of the Big S?
In a way, I've always thought of
Thor as more of Marvel's Superman. But it's fun, because while
there's obviously that inspiration that came from Superman, Hyperion
has evolved into a very different character.
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August 2, 2005 |
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An interview with Scott
Kollins
SWEARING THOR'S OATH WITH SCOTT KOLINS
By
Remy Minnick, Comixfan Staff Writer
Artist Scott Kolins sped into a considerable run with Geoff Johns on
DC Comics' The Flash, and then joined the writer once
more for Marvel Comics' The Avengers. It's there where
fans began to appreciate his neat style and knack for detail in
crowded pages of multiple characters. So much so, that he moved on to
pencil the team's foundations in the Earth's Mightiest Heroes
miniseries. After a recent run on another diverse mix of characters in
Marvel Team-Up, Kolins now moves on to help fans
reminisce on the recently departed Thor in the Blood Oath
miniseries. Comixfan talks to Kolins about his approach to capturing
the Thunder God's early years, from the fantasy world of Asgard to his
human exploration as the good doctor Donald Blake.
Comixfan: Between Marvel Team-Up and
Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes, you've pretty much drawn
every character in the Marvel Universe. Is there anybody that you have
wanted to draw but haven't had the opportunity to yet?
Scott
Kolins: Machine Man comes to mind. Inhumans and Silver Surfer too.
I love all sorts of characters. I've been wanting to do a Lockjaw
story since before Marvel Team Up. Variety is a big thing with me, but
I still have a major interest in doing full length stories or more
with many of the Marvel characters I may have been able to draw for a
panel or issue. I still want to work on Hulk projects, Thor,
Spider-Man, Avengers, FF, X-Men and even Doctor Strange too.
Comixfan: Thor: Blood Oath, like Earth's
Mightiest Heroes, is set in the classic Marvel Universe. Do
you approach the way you draw the titles differently then you would a
more modern tale of the Marvel Universe like Marvel Team-Up?
Kolins:
Not really. I would if there was a conscious decision to make the book
look or feel like it was another era (of time or comics). The goal
with these "classic stories" I've been working on, is to enjoy the
past scenarios today. Meaning: take some characters and make them
presentable to today's audience as well as anyone who might have read
those older stories. Use the tricks and skills of today with the
classic characters. There might be more referencing costumes, props
and anything especially associated with the characters and/or story.
Though even that needs to be looked at with a modern eye to some
extent. If something is fairly antiquated - it may need some revising
to make it work to today's readers. Hopefully, if I need to do that, I
can come up with something that again can work for those who read the
older stories as well as a new reader.
Comixfan: Having to reference the classic character's costumes
and props, do you find it difficult to leave your own mark on the
character? Especially when it needs to seamlessly slide into
continuity?
Kolins: No, it's usually pretty easy. Adding some clothing
wrinkles automatically alters those old costumes, and my style of not
using blacks seems to give it some sort of Scott Kolins mark. Putting
those old costumes together is actually a lot of fun as there are
different versions and I get to pick and choose which pieces of which
version I like. Giant Man was like that. Sometimes he had solid black
suspenders, sometimes he had lined suspenders and his belt usually
changed. So I picked through those costume pieces and got what I felt
worked best for me. There are occasional costumes or props that are
difficult - the Melter was tough as his costume was sooo whacky. With
him I just did the best I could and moved on. He wasn't intrigal to
the issue so I didn't obsess over making his costume really cool.
Comixfan:
With the huge cast of characters in Marvel Team-Up and
the difficulty of interweaving Avengers: Earth's Mightiest
Heroes into past continuity, how much reference work do you do
when drawing a title?
Kolins: Depending on the character - quite a bit, if I have the
time and reference. When I can I'll scout through lots of issues to
find what I think are quinticential shots or good establishing shots.
Something to give me some a basic (but hopefully "correct")
understanding of the character while I feel for my own groove.
Sometimes I'll take a good Kirby shot of a character, make big
photocopy and tape it up on my wall - so I can see it all the time as
I'm working on the pages.
Comixfan: How did you get involved with working on Thor:
Blood Oath?
Kolins: Tom Brevoort offered, and after a brief discussion of
what it was about, I signed on happily. Tom knows I'm a big Thor fan.
Comixfan: How long have you been following the adventures of
the mighty Thor? Do you still remember the first story of his that you
read?
Kolins:
Off an on since I was about 7. It was Thor #267, I
think. Nothing super special about it by today's standards. I think it
was Wein/Simonson/De Zuniga and it was just fun stuff. A swinging
hammer, a helmet with wings, gods on another world and monsters! Sign
me up!
Comixfan: What is Thor: Blood Oath about?
Kolins: It's a fun tale filled with magic treasure, cursed
weapons, murder, monsters, and wild places, but basically it boils
down to Thor helping out his closest friends, the Warriors Three, who
got into deep trouble. All four are blood brothers; they would die for
each other. A real soldier/warrior bond - male comradery - "All for
one and one for all". That kinda stuff. I love the Warriors three too,
and I'm really psyched to be drawing them.
Comixfan: Were there any characters or scenes that you were
itching to draw once you started reading the script for the series?
Kolins: Every scene is like that. We start off with Thor Vs.
Absorbing man. Big ol' CRASH BAM fight. Cars flying - all that! Then
we get Don Blake and Jane Foster doing the ER thing from the aftermath
of that huge fight. Cool again. Then Thor, in his human identity Don
Blake, has a really cool and shocking dream/nightmare about the main
plot - and we are off and running! The only thing I asked for that
wasn't in the original outline for the series was Ulik, and Mike has
graciously agreed to fit him in.
Comixfan:
Is there anything in particular about Ulik that made you ask if he
could be included in the series?
Kolins: After Loki, The Detroyer, and Mangog, he was always one
of my favorite reoccuring Thor villains. He was this really mean troll
- and the first time I saw him he led a raid on NY. Trolls with
torches and axes running through the city at night was just too cool.
In his first Kirby appearence he was really scary looking. Just
deadly. Similar to how I love Grodd, I want Ulik to come off really
cool in this book. Like he'll eat your head off. I thought of him here
because I don't think he'd been used a lot recently and he's a bit
more adaptable to some other plot. Loki, The Destroyer or Mangog are
too big and really only belong in their own plot/story.
Comixfan: How has it been working with Mike Oeming?
Kolins:
Great! Mike's very accommodating and very open to what I want to do,
plus he's writing really fun stuff to draw. I just drew some pages
with a giant drunken eagle! How often do you get to draw something
like that?! Pretty soon I'll get to the knock down drag out battle
with Thor and Hercules. I can't wait!
Comixfan: You have worked with a high profile group of writers,
from Joe Casey to Geoff Johns to Mike Oeming. Do you have a list of
writers that you would work on anything with?
Kolins: Don't forget Kirkman, he's pretty high profile too. But
work with on anything? No. I'd need a lot of convincing to work on
Darkhawk (sorry Robert) or some odd characters (And I love all sorts
of "B" characters btw). Geoff comes closest to "work with on
anything". We really grew together on Flash, and I trust
Geoff's instincts on almost anything, but part of that trust is
because of his own very discriminating tastes. I guess I'd work on
anything to work with Alan Moore or Frank Miller.
Comixfan: Do you have any other titles coming up?
Kolins: Thor: Blood Oath is getting all my
attention right now. We're still talking about what's next. Marvel has
mentioned their interest in me leaning towards various finite series.
So I'll be hopping around the Marvel Universe for the foreseeable
future. I do have some proposals in, we'll just have to wait and see
what works. Bring on Lockjaw or Spider-Man or some Mutants or the
whole freakin' Marvel Universe, I'm there!
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Win lunch with Mike Oeming
at Wizard World Chicago and proceeds go to ACTOR
Ebay Auction |
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I have no clue how I missed
adding this interview with Mike Oeming from WAY back in
March?!? Geez!
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OEMING ON THOR & WINGS
by
Benjamin Ong Pang Kean
Last weekend at Wizard World LA, Marvel Comics announced
that Mike Oeming has another Thor project slated for
release later this year called Thor: Tales of Asgard.
In his latest e-newsletter, the following information
was provided:
THOR: TALES OF ASGARD
A nice follow up to the ending of Thor and Beta Ray
Bill, I am writing a 6 issue "classic Thor" story for
Marvel drawn by Scott Kollins called Tales of Asgard.
Thor and the Warriors Three journey to recover mystical
objects returning Thor to his classic roots, we'll see a
fight with the Absorbing man, good old Donald Blake and
Jane foster, and most of our Asgardian cast. This will
be a great hold over for Thor fans between the ending of
Beta Ray Bill and the relaunch of Thor. More info to
come in the near future.
We managed to get hold of Oeming for a quickie�er,
conversation.
Newsarama: For the uninitiated and for those who
missed your earlier runs, what's happened in your
�Assembled� story arc (Thor (Vol. 2) #80-85)?
Mike Oeming: Thor: Dissasembled was the last
story arc to the long running Thor series. We did
Ragnarok, the ending of the Norse gods.
As best I know, Marvel will be doing a Thor relaunch
either later this year or early next with writer Mark
Millar and artist Greg Land - can't get a bigger
relaunch than that, I�d say.
NRAMA: What about
Stormbreaker: The Saga of Beta Ray Bill?
MO: Stormbreaker is a 6-issue mini that
takes place directly after �Dissasembled� - Beta Ray
Bill is the last survivor of Ragnarok, and he actually
will go back to Asgard post-destruction. The hopes for
the series is to integrate Bill into the Marvel universe
more.
NRAMA: What's in store for fans of Thor in the
upcoming Thor: Tales of Asgard?
MO: Lots of classic Thor action! Think old school
[John] Buscema and [Jack] Kirby, wall to wall action,
fights in the streets of NYC and Asgard. Just lots of
fun, and an easy read for those who have never read
Thor.
NRAMA: Does Tales lead directly to the new
Thor relaunch? Or will there be more Thor
stories from you? Will you be involved in the new
relaunch in any way?
MO: This won�t tie in with the relaunch, and at
this point I won�t have anything to do with the
relaunch, but from what I understand, it does pick up
where �Dissasembled� left off.
NRAMA: Will you be drawing the covers to Tales?
MO: No, we have Scott Kollins. Who needs me?
NRAMA: From Andrea DiVito to Scott Kollins. How's
it like working with these artists, and how well do you
think they've envisioned your version of Thor?
MO: Scott loves classic Marvel and Thor, so it�s
going to kill. Andrea is making Bill a star character. I
talk to them both about what they want to draw and work
with that. Scott loves Ulik, so we'll be seeing him for
sure.
NRAMA: Other than this, you've also announced a
new creator-owned project in your latest e-newsletter.
What is Wings of Anansi about? How'd you hook up
with artist Greg Titus?
MO: Wings is an urban crime drama, with a
fairy tale twist, inspired by the African folk tales of
Anansi, a spider who told and was part of African
stories and mythology. Because it�s a one-shot, I don�t
like to give away details other than saying its really
hard edged - violence and sex abound, but there is a
strong spiritual message beneath all that. In a strange
way, it�s a story about my mother�s life, but I can�t
really get into that until after it comes out.
I met Greg at the Pittsburgh con, and knew right away I
wanted to work with him. He's a seriously hard worker,
totally dedicated to the craft.
To get to know the creator and to keep up-to-date on
the latest news from Oeming, visit his website at
http://www.mike-oeming.com/ and join the Oeming
Newsletter by emailing him at
[email protected] |
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From Wizard #167 and the
internet |
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There is an Avengers
expansion coming to the Marvel Vs. card game, and Thor features
prominently in two ads and on an exclusive tin that was exclusive to
SDCC
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June
18, 2005 |
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A hint of things to come?
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May
30, 2005 |
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BRINGING BACK THE
CLASSIC: OEMING ON THOR: BLOOD OATH
by
Benjamin Ong Pang Kean
While fans are still waiting for news on the relaunch of
Marvel�s Thor series, Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe
Quesada
revealed during his weekly Joe Fridays Q&A column
that Mike Oeming and Scott Kolins� Thor: Blood Oath
limited series is debuting in September.
Blood Oath marks Oeming�s third Thor
project after the regular (and now cancelled) Thor
series in which he and artist Andrea DiVito chronicled
the last days of the Mighty Thor and later on, the
Stormbreaker: The Saga of Beta Ray Bill mini-series,
also with DiVito.
Originally titled
Thor: Tales of Asgard, the six-issue Blood
Oath mini takes place in the early years of Thor
before Ragnarok and therefore, has nothing to do with
the much-hyped House of M summer blockbuster
event, Oeming said.
�What's House of M? I think I've heard of it. Anyway,
this has nothing to do with that, this next Thor
project is a big old classic Thor story of Thunderhead
[and] the Warriors Three in an Asgardian adventure that
spans most of the Marvels Pantheon.
�The
Warriors Three are three of Thor�s longtime friends and
among the greatest warriors of Asgard,� he explained.
�Hogun the Grimm carries a studded mace and rarely
speaks. Think of him as the first Goth-punk. Fandral is
a swordsman, a looker and a woman chaser. Volstagg, I
think, is based slightly on Shakespeare�s favorite
character, Falstaff, a huge lighthearted warrior.
�They are on a mission to recover several magical items
to make up for the accidental killing of a giant - hence
the title, Blood Oath. Back in the day, if you
killed someone, you didn�t always get in real trouble
for it, you had a pay a "weird" to pay something to the
elder of the family as cost of their dead kin. They have
to get a Magic Pig that makes wine, but it�s guarded by
a partying and drunk Hercules, the spear of Cuchulan, an
Irish hero, a Japanese sword guarded by the thousands of
men it's killed, and some other crazy stuff that�s
impossible to get.
�I�m having so much fun writing these guys. They have so
much history together, so there�s lots of room for
banter, teasing and love. We'll get to see some other
classic Marvel guys, like Hercules and Absorbing Man, as
well as a few new guys. I guess they are all
retroactively dead though, so it�s kind of like dancing
with their corpses.�
Oeming is collaborating with Scott Kolins, fresh from
his run on Earth�s Mightiest Heroes, and he is
extremely excited to be working with the artist. �Hell,
yes! Scott is amazing. He just sent in his first pages
and they blew me away. He read my mind, saw what I was
thinking, and yet made it his own, totally. Between
Andrea on Thor, Stormbreaker and Scott on
Blood Oath, I must be the luckiest writer in the
world.�
That said, the writer/artist has more stories to tell
about the Mighty Thor �but I have to see what Marvel
does with Thor next,� he said. �He's headed for a
reboot. I left Thor�s destiny sort of open ended at the
end of Thor, so they can either bring him back or
restart in a completely new direction. Either way, I'd
like to think they will start Thor fresh again,
leave Asgard a memory that will be brought back in 10
years. Nothing or anyone ever stays dead forever, after
all. In the meantime, we have this really fun story of
classic Thor to hold us over.
�Hopefully, [I�ll be remembered] as someone who brought
honor to the ending of this pivotal Marvel series.
Hopefully, I honored both classic Thor and the
mythology, as well as those who laid the foundation for
it, Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, Simonson, Thomas, Buscema and
others.�
To get to know the creator and to keep up-to-date on
the latest news from Oeming, visit his website at
http://www.mike-oeming.com/ and join the Oeming
Newsletter by emailing him at
[email protected]
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Brian Michael Bendis promises
Magneto's reality-altering assault on the world will have long-lasting
effects. Check out the list of six possible scenarios below;
Marvel has guaranteed that one of them will be a reality when House
of M wraps in September!
- The number of mutants living on Earth will be
reduced from over 60,000 to 300 maximum, returning the X-Men to their
familiar perch on the edge of extinction
- The Ultimate and regular Marvel Universes will
merge and become one, tying in to the events of Ultimate Fantastic
Four
- Thor, the deceased Asgardian God of Thunder,
will make his triumphant return to the land of the living after
kicking Magneto's tyrannical ass
- Dr Strange, the only man powerful enough to
stop the Scarlet Witch in "Avengers Disassembled," saves the day but
pays the ultimate price. He'll be replaced by Wanda, Sorceress
Supreme
- Peter Parker is no longer married to Mary Jane
- Daredevil's secret identity becomes secret
again
So which will it be? Get your first clues
when House of M #1 goes on sale June 1 |
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May
20, 2005 |
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In their new weekly feature, they
have started interviewing Joe Quesada every Friday. This week, he
doesn't give us any hope for the Thor relaunch, but does brighten up by
giving a little info about Mike Oeming's new Thor mini
NRMA: Let�s move to a few questions from Newsarama readers�
"On behalf of Thor fans everywhere, we would like to hear something
definitive about when the Thor monthly is going to return and who's
going to be doing it. Also, while you're at it, when are we going to
see the [Mike Oeming�s] Tales of Asgard mini?" � danfinnegan
JQ: Dan, I get asked this question quite a lot and I always
ask fans to be patient. I know that may not be what some want to hear
and of course there are those that will accuse me of dodging the
question, but look, I just can�t tell you everything that we have
planned because it will spoil some great surprises. Thor will be back,
I promise, but that�s all I can say. He is part of a larger plan.
However, in the meantime, while you wait, you can enjoy Michael
Oeming and Scott Kolins Thor: Blood Oath, which comes out in
September!
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March
19, 2005 |
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Something else from the Wizardworld
panel *
Quesada said Marvel is taking its time with its Thor relaunch, with
events leading into it |
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From Silverbulletcomicbooks.com |
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Apparently, Mark Millar is still on
tap to write Thor For
several months now, the future of Thor at Marvel has been less
than clear. With Neil Gaiman, J. Michael Straczynski and Mark Millar
each rumored to be writing Thor at different times. Of the three,
Millar was most recently linked to the relaunch until he opted for
Ultimate Fantastic Four with Greg Land. However, in a new interview
at
ComiX-fan,
Marvel editor Tom Brevoort revealed that the Millar Thor run
might be back
CXF: Can you give fans the
update on the Thor relaunch and where that stands now that Millar
has backed away to do other things?
TB: As I understand it, Millar hasn't backed away from it, merely put it
aside for the moment in order to focus on his Ultimate FF run.
But he's still going to be writing the new Thor series |
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At the Wizardworld LA panel Joe
Quesada was asked about Thor -
Still no team to announce yet for Thor. Quesada said Marvel is
waiting to get through some other �cool� stuff before concentrating on
Thor to make sure they get it right.
AND IN REALLY AWESOME NEWS DEPARTMENT
- Picking up on another item
from last night, Brevoort said a 6-issue �Classic Thor� project is the
works by Mike Oeming and Scott Kolins, similar to Kolins and Joe Casey�s
Earth's Mightiest Heroes |
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And according to Millar's own board |
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"Hey guys,
Greg and I decided to do UFF instead of Thor. We aren't doing Thor after
this. UFF is my last Marvel project I do under my contract and then I'm
taking a huge break, focusing only on the Millarworld stuff for 06. No
plans for anything at Marvel beyond this, but this may change in the
future. Absolutely no hassles with Marvel or anything (I love them to
death), but I'm just disappearing for a while and will be focusing on
MW2 when I get back.
Personally, I'd love to see Oeming on the Thor book. Maybe we should
start a petition. His Ragnarok arc was fantastic.
MM" |
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February 28, 2005 |
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From Comicbookresources.com |
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Also at the panel at Megacon, Joe
Quesada said some other things about Thor * On The Sentry being in
New Avengers: "The time is right now for The Sentry. He sort of takes
the position of Thor in the group as the powerhouse. It will be
interesting to see what kind of powerhouse he becomes."
* There will be Thor-related material because the character returns in a
new book. |
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IGN FilmForce was advised by a longtime reliable source that the
feature film version of Thor is now set-up at Sony Pictures.
Our scooper also advised us that
David Goyer (Blade, Batman Begins) isn't currently
attached to the project.
Goyer has stated in press reports and at the L.A.
Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention in December that he
was considering writing and directing Thor. Marvel Studios
prexy
Avi Arad went a step further, saying in a video interview at the
Blade: Trinity premiere that Goyer was writing the script.
That was an overstatement on Arad's part.
Goyer's reps advised IGN FilmForce that he is NOT writing Thor
at this time and that there is no deal for him to do so but he is
talking to Marvel Studios about the project. That's all there is
right now: some chatter but no contract.
Goyer is also mulling a big-screen version of
DC Comics'
The Flash.
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January 27, 2005 |
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These are some images of upcoming
stuff |
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Thanks
to Mike Oeming posting this on the Thor board. It's the cover to
Beta Ray Bill #5!
And
this is the movie poster for the movie "Son of the Mask" starring Alan
Cumming (X2's Nightcrawler) as Loki, and Bob Hoskins as Odin.
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January 18, 2005 |
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There's an interview with Mike
Oeming about Stormbreaker
here |
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There's an interview with Mike
Oeming here |
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There's one more interview with Mike
Oeming about Stormbreaker
here |
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2004 NEWS ARCHIVE
Back to top |
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December 27, 2004 |
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They've got a preview of Stormbreaker
#1 up here |
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December 22, 2004 |
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According
to the Ultimate Power Chart listed, Ultimate Thor is stronger than
(ultimate versions of) Captain Marvel, Spider-Man, Captain America, and
Iron Man. But he is weaker than (ultimate versions of) Colossus,
Thing, and Hulk. According to the chart, he can lift 13 tons, far
less that the 100 tons the regular Thor can lift. But don't fret too
much, Ultimate Hulk can only lift 17 tons.
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The
Thor Relaunch Thunder strikes a second time
for the gods of Asgard, thanks to the combined efforts of three of comics'
top writers in May 2005.
That's when Ultimates writer Mark Millar and X-Men:
Phoenix - Endsong artist Greg Land launch a brand new take on the mighty
Thor, seven months after the Michael Avon Oeming-penned "Ragnarok," in
which Asgard was destroyed and Thor prevailed before meeting his glorious
end.
"The old Thor is dead and gone," confirms Millar.
"We get a chance to start all over again and create a whole new batch of
characters, and that's quite tantalizing."
It all started with a pitch by legendary scribe Neil
Gaiman. While Gaiman's novel-writing schedule prevented him from
actually writing the new series, he gave Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe
Quesada permission to take his idea to an editorial summit attended by
Marvel's top writers. Amazing Spider-Man scribe J. Michael
Straczynski came up with a new spin that Mark Millar - who previously had
zero interest in the character - fell in love with and jumped at the
chance to write.
"Gaiman's idea was so nice, and JMS' spin on it was
absolutely brilliant," raves Millar. "I went back to my hotel, and
while I was in the bath, I became obsessed with the idea, and I was so
excited that I actually phoned Joe naked from the bath and said, 'Don't
let anyone else do that Thor idea, because I must do it!'"
In the aftermath of "Ragnarok," pieces of Asgard begin
falling to Earth in the form of powerful artifacts. An evil
corporation sets out to collect these artifacts, building a base around an
immovable hammer - the legendary Mjolnir - in the middle of a field in
Iowa. A group of teens gather the remaining artifacts at this site,
which becomes ground zero for their transformation into Thor, Loki and the
gods of Asgard.
"Thor never quite seemed to fit in with the rest of the
Marvel Universe," explains the writer. "There was always something
weird about this Asgardian god hanging around super-soldiers and
billionaire industrialists. This idea is a bit more real, in the
sense that it's a group of kids who inherit what's left of that world."
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A
brief interview with Greg Land In 2005, Greg
Land goes from girls to gods.
Early next year, the rising star artist with a flair
for the female form will pair with mega-popular scribe Mark Millar to
relaunch one of Marvel's mightiest males, the Norse god Thor.
The move to Thor vaults Land to the big leagues and
lets him strut his stuff on some of Marvel's most popular characters, but
it won't be without its hurdles. "It's going to be a challenge,"
Land admits. "To take something a lot of people have liked and
change it. But with Mark doing it, it'll have that big, box office
feel."
Though the project is in the early stages, the creators
feel a concept overhaul is necessary. "All the main characters will
be there, but they'll be handles differently. Don Blake won't be
Thor, that kind of thing." says Land.
The new series' first arc will deal with people's
reaction to a startling development - all the gods' weapons have fallen to
Earth. "They've been found, and they're being treated like
treasures," explains Land. "Thor's hammer has been discovered, but
no one on Earth can lift it. So they've created a scientific
community around it to determine what the heck it is."
Land won't be ignoring his bread and butter, though.
The artist promises fans they'll have plenty of beautiful babes to ogle in
the pages of Thor. "That's the one thing I asked for," says Land.
"I know the fans enjoy my renditions of the ladies."
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Young
Avengers Youth goes wild in February, when
Hollywood scribe Allan Heinberg and hot artist Jim Cheung launch Young
Avengers.
"The series chronicles the adventures of four all-new,
teenage superheroes who first appear on the scene dressed as...well, young
Avengers." laughs Heinberg.
The appearance of Patriot, Iron Lad, Asgardian, and the
Hulkling in the aftermath of "Avengers Disassembled" touches off a storm
of controversy both in the press and within the superhero community, with
questions ranging from "Where did these kids come from?" to "Are they
heroes or villains?"
"I don't want to reveal too much," warns Heinberg, "but
I can confirm that each Young Avengers has a significant tie to the
Avengers themselves - or to Avengers history - which may not be readily
apparent."
Look for the rookie Avengers to get a superhero crash
course in the first arc, which features a classic Avengers villain and
guest appearances by Captain America, Iron Man and, teases Heinberg, "my
favorite character in the entire Marvel Universe, Jessica Jones."
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Spotlight
on Stormbreaker:Saga of Beta Ray Bill WHY
IT'S COOL: "Listen well then, Lords, and I will tell my tale,
the story of Beta Ray Bill." Everyone's favorite horse-faced God of
Thunder is back!
Beta Ray Bill, the crusading alien chosen as defender
of his people, met Thor during the acclaimed Walt Simonson run on the
Norse God's title and fought him to a standstill. Claiming to have
won Thor's hammer in battle, Bill was reluctant to actually take Mjolnir,
but needed it desperately to help protect his people from marauding space
demons. Given his proven valor, and because he nobly spared Thor's
life when he could have easily finished him off, the all-father Odin
volunteered to have the dwarfs craft a new uru hammer for Bill, a hammer
equal to Mjolnir. Imbuing him with all the power of Asgard and
making him the champion known as Beta Ray Thor!
Since that auspicious beginning, the unique and
unorthodox Bill has been a fan favorite and a sure way to put a smile on
the face of any reader. That's what Marvel's counting on when they
unveil the return of Beta Ray Bill in Stormbreaker, named after Bill's
hammer, with writers Michael Avon Oeming and Daniel Berman and artist
Andrea DiVito, the team that brought Bill back from limbo in their recent
Thor arc.
"Beta Ray Bill's the last survivor of Asgard," says
Oeming. "That's a lot of what the story's going to be dealing with,
his guilt over surviving Asgard and his attempts to get back there."
That's not to say this is going to be a tearjerker of a book.
"There's a lot of fighting," stresses Oeming. "You don't write a
character like Beta Ray Bill and be ponderous about him. It's pretty
nose-to-the-grindstone action."
IN ISSUE #1: Bill encounters...who? Oeming says we can
expect a cool cameo. "It's one of Marvel's classic characters, but I
think we do something with them that hasn't been done before." We
can also look forward to a new character or two, including one who's "a
real treat for Beta Ray Bill to fight."
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ON
THE RISE: ANDREA DIVITO Credits:
Italian artist DiVito's first published work was for the anthology
L'intrepido (The Intrepid), but he got his big break at the 2000 San Diego
Comic-Con where DiVito met with Mark Alessi, who hired him onto the new
CrossGen staff. After a series of fill-ins, DiVito got his first
ongoing gig with Brath. After joining writer Mike Oeming on the
Avengers Disassembled Thor tie-in, "Ragnarok," he returns in January with
the Thor spin-off, Stormbreaker.
What he does: DiVito provides smooth, rich pencils complete
with detailed backgrounds and epic visions. Being trained at the
CrossGen studios helped. "Being around so many talented artists is
something that anybody trying to do this job should have the chance to
do." DiVito remarked. "I will always remember all those
beautiful and stressful years as one of my fondest memories and a
life-changing experience."
Why he'll be hot: Joining the ranks of Marvel artists, DiVito
had the pleasure of killing Thor and now following up the hottest Thor run
in years with the intent to build a new mythos around fan-favorite Thor
corps member Beta Ray Bill.
Didja know?: If given free reign over comics, DiVito would
want to take control of Conan. He credits long-time Conan artist
John Buscema as his greatest influence. "His Conan is what brought
me to choose this career. John has been a big influence both
personally and professionally for me."
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THE
CREATIVE TEAMS THAT DEFINED OUR FAVORITE BOOKS
WALT SIMONSON ON THOR ISSUES #337-355, 357-382
Let's face it, Thor was hurting by 1983. There
are only so many exciting ways to battle frost giants and trickster gods
while sporting a shiny helmet and a pretty face. That's why Walt
Simonson's first act as writer/artists was to pass the power of Thor over
to a horse-faced alien named Beta Ray Bill (though he wise kept the neat
helmet). Through nearly four solid years steering the mightiest
immortal of them all, Simonson scraped the rust from Thor's chassis, oiled
the creakier parts and gave it a new paint job that showed there was still
some life in the Thunder God by importing massive amounts of action to
carry the amplified mythological explorations. This series not only
proved why Thor should be epic, it showed that Simonson's was one of the
few creators whose work could give the story the scope it deserved.
This month, Beta Ray Bill gets his own mini-series, Stormbreaker, from
Michael Avon Oeming, Daniel Berman and Andrea DiVito, whose all-too-brief
2004 run on Thor has already shown they're ready to step up next to
Simonson as epic Thor-ytellers. now let's see if they turn Bill into
a frog. |
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December 20, 2004 |
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From the ComiX-Fan forums |
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An interview with Andrea DiVito |
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Here's an excerpt from an interview
with David Goyer concerning Thor
full
interview
Can I get an update on Thor?
It�s something I�ve been talking about doing with Marvel and Avi [Arad].
That was always a personal favourite of mine in that world.And I�ve been
talking about doing it, but nothing�s been set in stone just yet.
I can�t think of who would make a good Thor. The Rock, perhaps?
Oh I wouldn�t do The Rock. Here�s my point: Ryan put on twenty to
twenty-two pounds for this movie, I�m not saying Thor will be Ryan
Reynolds, but he�s [Ryan] a big guy in it � he�s massive, I�d rather take
an actor [Like Reynolds] and pack on the muscle and have him be Thor,
rather than have someone that comes out of wrestling.
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December 12, 2004 |
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Here's an interview with Avi Arad at
the Blade Trinity premiere. In it he talks about the status of the
Thor movie. One thing I apologize for is you cannot hear what the
interviewer is saying.
Avi Arad Interview |
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December 1, 2004 |
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| BLADE`s boss tackling
THOR next? |
David Goyer may be making
the Thunder God's movie as his next!
While being interviewed by The Sound End student newspaper,
BLADE: TRINITY writer/director David S. Goyer revealed that he
could be working on another well-known Marvel Comics superhero for his
next project. Mentioned as a small sidenote in the start of the piece,
the paper states that Goyer is in talks to help create a THOR
movie. |
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November 19, 2004 |
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From www.tvshowsondvd.com |
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The Marvel Super-Heroes 1960's
cartoons on DVD Sometimes in the DVD business a title gets
announced, and then gets pulled for all sorts of reasons. Guys like Gord
and yours truly have to know when to hold back on talking about something,
because it's a truly iffy title and might never see the light of day.
Such was the case a few weeks back when I first got wind of a DVD called
The 60's Superhero Collection from Buena Vista Home Entertainment.
When I first heard about this, I understood it to be a mid-November
follow-up to
Spider-Man - The '67 Collection, featuring a number of Marvel
Superheroes in cartoons made during the same era, by the same people. And,
when I say "the same people", I am certainly including the immortal Ralph
Bakshi in that group!
However, as I spoke to Buena Vista about the release, it was made clear
that it would be unwise for me to post news about it right away, as the
title had recently been pulled from the schedule. I was told simply to
cross my fingers and hope it returned to the release list for sometime in
2005.
Well, it looks like my finger-crossing worked! Amazon.com now has The
60's Superheroes 5-DVD set
up for pre-order already, even though they show a long-range release
date nine months away: June 28, 2005. Yep, you read that right, and
even though the title isn't officially announced by the studio yet (and
won't be for a long time!), my friends at BV do tell me that the date
looks correct so far as they can tell. They are quick to caution, though -
and we'll definitely join them in this warning - that plans are always
subject to change. Especially this far out!
For those of you unfamiliar with the Marvel Superheroes series, it
was a 1966 item that came from Grantray-Lawrence Animation. It featured
Captain America, The Incredible Hulk, The Mighty Thor, Iron Man, and
The Sub-Mariner (better known these days as "Namor"). Each
character had their own sub-series within the main show, and there were 13
episodes per character. That's 65 half-hour episodes in all, most of which
have never been released to home video before (both Hulk and Iron Man had
a handful of episodes released to VHS tape).
The date for the release of this DVD, June 28th, is very close to the
planned 7/1/05 release of the new Fantastic Four movie (starring
The Shield's Michael Chiklis [as Ben Grimm/The Thing], Dark Angel's
Jessica Alba [as Sue Storm/The Invisible Girl], Horatio Hornblower's
Ioan Gruffudd [as Reed Richards/Mr. Fantastic], Opposite Sex's
Chris Evans [as Johnny Storm/The Human Torch], and Nip/Tuck's
Julian McMahon [as Dr. Doom]). It seems natural that this is the first of
many DVDs which will come out at that time, as a tie-in to the launch of
this major summer blockbuster film. TV-on-DVD fans might look for more
DVDs of the various shows featuring the above-named stars as well. |
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November 8, 2004 |
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At the Wizard World Texas convention,
there was a bit of Thor and Thor-related news reported * The
Young Avengers title will debut in February and is part of a push by
Marvel for new characters. "We want to go out on a limb a little more,"
Buckley said.
* Frank Tieri is writing a Weapon X follow-up and a Hercules project
* Casey on the eight-issue Earth's Mightiest Heroes series: "It's from The
Avengers' first meeting to the first lineup change. There are definitely
secrets you didn't know about how the new lineup came to be."
* Thor will return next summer, courtesy of a creative team that will
be named in the next month or so. |
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October 29, 2004 |
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There
is a eulogy given for Thor by Walt Simonson
I didn't believe it when I heard the news.
Thor was dead.
Of all the characters I've worked on as both a
comic book writer and artist, Thor and I had the longest ongoing
relationship!
Thor was the first Marvel comic I discovered in
college, and it was my favorite from the start.
When I first caught a glimpse of Jack Kirby's
dynamic pencil line, I was hooked. The pages were burstinjg with
energy. After that, i haunted every store that carried Marvel
Comics. I'd bike for miles to get my ahnds on the latest issue.
I was mesmerized as Loki and the Absorbing Man led a rebellion in
Asgard, in anguish as Thor pined for the lovely Jane Foster.
The epic story grabbed me in a way the other
early Marvel books didn't. Thor was noble, altruistic and just.
He was the stuff that all heroes were made of, and he was a god as well.
But even gods couldn't have everything they wanted. Thor had
trouble with women, he got into arguments with his father, he constantly
searched for his place in the world. In a way, he was as human as
your or I. Thor won, but his victories didn't always make him
happy. And, just like the rest of us, he didn't win all the time.
Working on Thor will always be one of the
highlights of my career. Although they were only stories put on
paper, the tales were almost self-generating, as Thor came to life
before me. And we became the best of friends.
I loved that character. I am sorry he is
going away. Maybe I'll slip out and throw a Viking funeral for
him, build a little pyre in the backyard and fire it up! Thanks
for everything, Thor. May you be carried to Valhalla in glory.
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In
the Buzz Bin section The Trickster God Loki
lost his head - literally - during a recent fight with his big brother
Thor in Asgard. However, Loki's detached head hasn't stopped
talking, making claims that he rules the kingdom. No word on whether
the severed head will get its own title. |
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In
an interview with Brian Bendis on New Avengers, this question was posed:
Where's Thor? And don't just tell us he's dead.
Did you pick the Sentry as the Avengers' Superman-level character only
because Thor wasn't around?
Lately, Thor's been very much of his own world -
staring from way before I came onto Avengers. Mike Oeming was doing
these very epic stories with Asgardian lore, and he wasn't going to be
anywhere near Earth for a while. He was unavailable, and I just kind
of put him out of my mind. It doesn't mean he won't show up - and
actually, if he ever does come back, he'll be coming back to a whole new
world, and I think that would be very interesting to explore. So
maybe one day. But right now, it just wasn't in the cards.
At this point, the editors of Wizard went to Marvel
EIC Joe Quesada to ge the full scoop on Thor's fate following his death in
October's Thor #85
Quesada: Thor will be back. There will
be some major changes in the world of the Asgardian, and I can assure fans
that it will be as radical and as shocking as what just happened in
Avengers. We're not ready to announce any new creative teams - but
Thor fans will be happy, I can promise you that. |
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October 19, 2004 |
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From www.disitalwebbing.com |
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Here's an
interview with Walt Simonson |
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Here's an
interview with Mike Oeming |
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October 10, 2004 |
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There's
a brief interview with Mike
Oeming
In
an article entitled "Retailer Buzz", which features feedback from comic
shop owners.
Loki.
It's not easy being king, but I'm sure it's no bed of roses being the
king's adopted brother. Between Thor and Loki, the trickster god's
finally been getting his due over the last few months. Retailes
are taking note as well. "Scarce is an understatement," mused
Andrew Lujan of Crazy Cat Comics in Manhattan Beach, CA regarding
Loki. "The art is incredible. By far, it's the biggest
surprise from Marvel this year in terms of quality of work"
In
the "Hot 10 Comics", Loki was #6 and Thor was #7, which were ahead
of DC's Identity Crisis #1 and Avengers #500!! |
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September 17, 2004 |
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From www.superherohype.com |
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Marvel Looking for The
Avengers Voices
September 17, 2004
Video Business reports that Marvel Comics will launch a
nationwide open casting call for its first upcoming animated
DVD premiere movie, The Avengers.
Fans can send in audition tapes for voices of Marvel
characters Captain America, the Hulk, Thor, Iron Man and
others that will be featured in the movie.
The Avengers represents the first of a planned series of
original DVD features to be produced by Marvel in
collaboration with Lions Gate Home Entertainment.
Marvel won't guarantee that a fan will be cast as voice
talent, but audition tapes are likely to be included as DVD
extras when the film is released in 2006.
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August 29, 2004 |
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In
the "Heat Index", Loki #1 is listed
Writer Robert Rodi weaves a superb tale about Marvel's trickster god,
explaining how Thor's adopted - and spurned - brother developed his blood
lust and evolved into the mischievous villain. Esad Ribic's painted
pages evoke memories of early Alex Ross.
There
is an article called "Shock Treatment", that discusses event-packed titles
that are currently going on, with Thor being one of them.
Michael Avon Oeming and Andrea DiVito proved one thing when they took over
the reigns of Thor with issue #80 in June: Even gods can weep.
The epic tale crafted by the new creative team has turned the world of
Marvel's resident Thunder God upside down. Loki has gathered an
unstoppable army to destroy everything his noble stepbrother loves - and
in the span of just two issues, he succeeds. Balder, Fandral,
Valkyrie and others are dead. Sif has lost an arm. The once
voluminous Volstagg has been starved into sickliness. Asgard lies in
smoking ruins. And most shocking of all, the mighty Mjolnir has been
shattered into three pieces. Was this Oeming's plan from the very
beginning? "Yes, because that was my assignment," reveals the
writer. "The plan was always to tie in the storyline in Thor with
Avengers Disassembled. Cal it Thor Disassembled!" The first
step in disassembling the son of Odin was to h ark back to the character's
mythological Norse roots - a genre Oeming happens to know very well, from
his work on the Image series Hammer of the Gods. "For years
I've researched this world and lived it in dreams, so seeing it on the
page is amazing," admits the scribe. "And Andrea brings it to life
in such a vibrant and incredible way." The second step? Oeming
and DiVito dug deep to depict Thor at his most desperate low, when al has
been lost and only vengeance and honor remain. It starts with the
heart-wrenching deaths (or supposed deaths) that have filled each issue,
from Sif to Balder to the Enchantress - all designed to bring emotion back
to one of the most powerful heroes in the Marvel Universe. "Those
moments were written just to make them matter, to show reactions,"
explains Oeming. "This is rarely done in comics. People die,
and maybe there's a reaction in that panel - but it doesn't stay with the
characters. Thor's known these people for 2,000 years, so their
deaths will have a profound impact on his life." The rest of
Oeming's run (which wraps up with October's issue #85) promises to live up
the word Ragnarok - the Norse term for the "Twilight of the Gods" and the
end of the world as we know it. "This is truly Ragnarok," insists
the writer. "No one has seen the things Thor will go through by the
end of the series. Long-time mysteries about the Norse Gods will
finally be answered - and major characters will die." How major?
Try Thor himself! That's right, the Son of Odin will beet his doom
in issue #85. Whether this tale will stand as the final chapter in
the storied history of Thor, or merely the bridge to a new era,
remains unclear - but if nothing else, Oeming and DiVito have succeeded in
crafting an epic that stands mightily on its own.
In
the "Creator's Picks" section, writer Ron Marz picked Thor #337 (amongst a
couple of other titles).
"The cover of Beta Ray Bill smashing the hell out of the Thor log jumped
right off the convenience store spinner rack I was walking past. The
beginning of Walter Simonson's landmark run grabbed my by the throat and
dragged me back into something I hadn't done in years - reading comics." |
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August 16, 2004 |
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From Wizard X |
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In
the "Heat Index", Thor #80-81 are listed.
How do you give the God of Thunder a jolt? Stick new writer (and
Powers artist) Mike Oeming on him, that's how. Oeming deftly
gave newbies a short and sweet introduction to Thor's world with his
prologue to issue #80 - and then he proceeds to tear it apart by
killing off Thor's loved ones, sacking Asgard and cracking his hammer
Mjolnir. That's right, cracking Mjolnir. Now that's an
epic we'd sit through English class for!
In
an article on the greatest stories, Walt Simonson's #349-354's "Surtur
Saga" is listed.
The dark god has escaped his prison. And the universe will burn
for it. Thor's "Surtur Saga" truly defines the word "epic."
In every sense, this superhero blockbuster thrusts the entire Marvel
Universe - led by Thor - into battle with the millennia-old fire demon
Surtur and his hellish hordes, whose goal is nothing less than the
destruction of the universe. Secret alliances are formed and
broken. Battles are fought simultaneously on several fronts.
Villains become heroes, and heroes fall before the dark god's might.
Stuck in the middle is Thor, torn apart emotionally and physically as
he finds himself caught between defending his beloved Midgard (Earth)
and his immortal brethren in Asgard against Surtur. "Surtur, in
the actual Norse myths, is an integral part of the destruction of the
universe," explains writer/artist Walter Simonson. "When the
gods and their enemies destroy each other, Surtur is left and, with
his burning sword, flings fire across the universe and everything goes
up in flames - presumably even him." Odin, king of the Norse
gods, thwarted Surtur when he was very young, but not without the
weighty cost of his two brothers murdered in battle. Odin
escaped with Surtur's power source, the Eternal Flame, and was able to
trap the behemoth in the realm of Muspelheim for many millennia - but
now he's escaped. With his army of savage demons, Surtur sets
out to claim the Flame in Asgard. In order o get there though,
Earth stands in his way. His army floods into Earth like a
plague of locusts, pushing back the Avengers and Fantastic Four and
thousands of Asgardian warriors. But it was all a ruse:
Surtur tricked Thor into allowing him to enter Asgard. Surtur
swats down the Asgardian gatekeeper Heimdall like a bug, shattering
the vaunted Rainbow Bridge to Asgard as though it were stained-glass.
Thor tries to stop Surtur alone, but is battered into unconsciousness.
All that stands between Surtur and total destruction is Lord Odin, not
nearly the young man that bested the fire lord long ago. As
Surtur looms over the lone Asgardian, he casts a shadow of death as he
nears the Eternal Flame. And with all the Asgardians down for
the count, the survival of all creation fall to...Loki.
In
a casting call for the Ultimate movie, they pick Viggo Mortensen as
Ultimate Thor
In
their "Picks" section, they have an article for "Loki"
WHY IT'S COOL: "I think artist Esad Ribic is our new king of
painting in comics," proclaims Thor writer/Powers artist Mike Oeming.
"He's hands down the best painter in the industry. He's
expressive in his art, and I don't think he even uses photo reference.
His work is dynamic and varied in its lighting and color choices."
IN ISSUE #3 OF 4: Loki's feelings about his fellow Asgardians -
Thor, Odin, Sif and Balder - take on a whole new light as revelations
about his past continue to unfold. |
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From www.comicbookresources.com |
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In an interview with Neil Gaiman, he
states his position on writing Thor in the future
Gaiman is currently hard at work on his latest novel, "Anansi Boys." Once
he finishes that; he'll begin work on his second comic project for
Marvel. Despite
speculation by many online journalists, Gaiman has not decided what the
project will be. "Marvel project #2, at the end of the day, will be
whatever they want it to be and I don't mind," said Gaiman. "I have to
finish 'Anansi Boys' first. It's a bit weird to hear that you're
definitely doing X or definitely doing Y or definitely Zed. I know some of
the things that are happening with Thor spin-offs from conversations that
I had six months ago with Joe. Where I said, 'If I did do Thor I would
want to do X, Y and Zed.' And Joe came back to me and said, 'Look if you
don't get to do Thor can we do X, Y, and Zed with another person?' I said,
'Oh God, yes' They were just ideas. I'm not territorial about them and
they're fun ideas and they were ways that I probably would have done
Thor."
If Gaiman does choose Thor as his second Marvel project he hopes to
work with artist P. Craig Russell. "I love working with Craig Russell," he
said. However, Gaiman is keeping his options open for what Marvel
character to tackle next. "I might just say sod it and do the Purple Man
mini-series." |
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Marvel's
upcoming title "Marvel Age Team-Up" begins September 15
�The premises of the team ups are actually
being culled from stories from the first series, that is until I can
convince the editors to let me go wild and write 'em all new from
scratch,� Dezago said. �The first issue is from Amazing
Spider-Man #1, featuring Spidey and the Fantastic Four going after the
Chameleon. Michael O'Hare totally stuck that landing and I give him a 9.9
for the art, just check it out yourselves. The second issue is Captain
America and Spidey against The Grey Gargoyle
with art by Lou Kang. Marvel Age Spidey meets his first X-Man with Kitty
Pryde in issue #3, with a sweet job turned in by Jonboy Meyers. Team up
number #4 is Spidey and Thor with gorgeous art by
Ron Lim.�
Marvel
has signed an agreement with Russ, a plush company to produce Marvel Plush
Toys
Pursuant to the agreement, Russ Berrie and
Company, Inc. (RUSS) will now produce and market under a global,
multi-year license agreement plush items and gift category products for
several premiere Marvel character franchises including Spider-Man, X-Men,
Fantastic Four, Thor, Iron Man, the Incredible Hulk, Captain America,
Daredevil, Silver-Surfer, Namor, and Marvel's pre-school line, Spider-Man
and Friends. Merchandise is expected to be available in retail
outlets in time for the Holiday 2004 season. |
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July 25, 2004 |
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From Newsarama report of San Diego
ComicCon |
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Quesada named Robert Rodi and
Essad Ribic�s Loki as one of his favorite books.
�We gave Loki what he�s always wanted,� Rodi said. �He�s got Asgard. But �
as the saying goes, be careful what you wish for, as things go bad �
really bad and really creepy really fast.�
Quesada added that Rodi�s story was the first time he�d read a Loki story
and understood the character more than just an annoyance for Thor, thanks
to the shift in point of view Rodi is employing
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Marvel then
talked about "Earth' Mightiest Heroes," the "Year One" series for
Avengers that CBR News
brought you word on months ago. When Quesada told Casey the series
sounded great, Casey agreed and Kolins expressed enthusiasm over the
package and urged fans not to miss the series.The next announcement
was of "Young Avengers," the second Avengers series and it drew a
collective "huh" from the audience. Written by Heinberg and
illustrated by newly exclusive Jimmy Cheung, Quesada urged "It's not
what you think. It's nothing like you're thinking, it's one of the
most inventive series we've come along in a long time and Al has such
an incredible take on the characters you'll be excited." Expect the
project in early 2005. "It can be whatever I want it to be," said
Heinberg. The characters will be all new and he joked about the
creative process, when he first said, "Why am I doing this book? I
hate this book!" The audience laughed and Heinberg said Geoff Johns'
"Teen Titans" inspired the book, with young versions of Hulk, Captain
America, Iron Man and Thor showing up in the wake of "Avengers
Disassembled." |
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Not much was said about
"Thor," but Quesada had a laugh about the titular character, saying, "No
one's on 'Thor' because Ragnarok killed him."
Coming up in February is
the "Avengers Finale" special written by Brian Bendis and "it'll be like
the last episode of 'Mash,' with special moments for every characters."
It'll feature some of the top artists in the series, including a cover by
Neal Adams and a final chapter by George Perez.
In regards to Thor,
Quesada said that plans have changed, and asked the audience to be patient |
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June 25, 2004 |
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From the Seattle Times |
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By
Mark Rahner
Seattle Times staff reporterIf the
'60s were the "Marvel Age" of comics, this is the Marvel Age of
movies. We exchanged some word balloons with the man behind it all
about "Spider-Man 2" and the spate of coming films based on some of
Marvel's most revered characters, Marvel Studios Chairman and CEO Avi
Arad.
Q: What's the coolest thing about "Spider-Man 2"?
A: He's holding up this incredible wall at the pier, looking
at the girl he loves and saying, "This is heavy." It's a pretty big
wall. It's like 20 times the size of Spidey, and it's about to kill
him and Mary Jane.
Q: How was Dr. Octopus picked as the new villain?
A: I think we needed the first "Spider-Man" and all its
success to move on to Doc Ock. The other thing was that our rule with
Spidey is that the villains are attached to Peter Parker in one way or
another, like in the books.
Q: Doesn't Doc Ock also marry Peter Parker's Aunt May in the
comics?
A: Oh, absolutely. We stayed away from this silly thing.
Call it the roommate. But there is a scene when he goes to
science camp, the kids pick on him, and Doc Ock says to him, 'Don't
let anybody pick on you. You do what you believe.' So he was always a
character that Peter revered, and that was a very good connection.
Q: Let's talk about coming Marvel movies. In the "Hulk"
sequel, will the green guy at least say "Hulk smash!" this time?
A: Of course. I think at the end of the first movie you see
this commitment: "You wouldn't like me when I'm angry."
And he's coming to terms with who he is. "I've got this curse and
I'm going to use it when I need to protect innocent people." And I
think in [the sequel] you'll see a man who understands his problem, is
trying to solve it, coming to terms with the Bruce side of it, still
trying to reject the Hulk, finding a way to reject it, and there are
consequences to that, of course. And who knows? Green turns to gray
and all hell breaks out.
Q: "The Fantastic Four." You saw the infamous, unreleased
1994 version, right?
A: We bought it to burn it. Some (bootlegs) appeared at
comic book conventions just to drive us nuts. The deal was we buy it,
we burn the master so we can do it right. It's going into production
in August. Tim Story ("Barbershop") is directing. I can't tell you the
cast yet. It's any day now.
Q: What about "Doctor Strange" � which should premiere in a
state where medical marijuana is legal, because it was such a '60s
head comic?
A: I know, isn't it? We are nowhere with that. That's a
tough one to write, but we are working on it. We are trying to find
the real Jerry Garcia of the writing community.
Q: "The Black Panther." Pretty gutsy of Stan Lee to
introduce him in the era of the real Black Panthers.
A: If you know Stan, he's just Mr. Good. And he was naive,
he didn't connect this. It wasn't about the social statement.
Q: I never saw him give the black power sign.
A: It's hard to do it with a paw. That's going to be a great
movie. We have a great take on it. It's like black Indiana Jones. It
can be very interesting.
Q: "Thor"?
A: We've literally just started these discussions. If you're a
"Thor" follower you'll really love the movie, because we've found a
really fine balance between Earth and Asgard. It's so big you have to
look at it as a "Lord of the Rings" kind of thing." |
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From the Millarworld message board |
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From Newsarama.com |
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It's official - Thor:Son of Asgard is
now an ongoing series! Marvel is
pleased to announce that THOR: SON OF ASGARD - previously solicited as a
six-issue miniseries - is now an ongoing, monthly series! Details on the
upcoming story arc are available in Marvel Previews #10, on sale now.
Thanks to popular demand, the adventures of young Thor, Balder & Sif will
continue with the same creators, writer Akira Yoshida and artist Greg
Tocchini, with covers by Runaways cover artist, Jo Chen!
Writer Akira Yoshida offered, "Thanks to Marvel for believing in the book
and standing behind it. I work with a great team and look forward to
giving the fans a great saga!"
Series artist Greg Tocchini said, "To continue this series is awesome. I'm
enjoying this so much, I can't put it in words -- but I promise to try to
show my joy with my drawings!"
Series Editor MacKenzie Cadenhead said, "The first six issues of Son of
Asgard were wonderful to work on both because of the compelling story we
were telling and thanks to the amazing collaboration of the creative team.
To continue working with Greg, Akira and Guru eFX is reason enough, but
knowing what they have in store for the next arc has got me really
excited. Also, having worked with Jo Chen on Runaways, I am thrilled to
have her on board-she'll be a terrific addition."
Marvel Editor in Chief, Joe Quesada, added, "This is a testament to
Marvel's commitment to taking chances on new talent. Here was a series
featuring a classic Marvel hero in a new light, done by a cast of
relatively unknown creators. We believed in the book, supported it, and
are now enjoying a nice bit of success." |
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June 13, 2004 |
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June 8, 2004 |
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Exclusive to The Immortal Thor of
Asgard |
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May 28, 2004 |
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Way back in October of 2002 in an
issue of Toyfare, it was announced that Dynamic Forces and Moore Creations
would be coming out with a Thor vs Silver Surfer diorama that recreated
the cover to Silver Surfer #4. Well it's been almost 2 years now,
and apparently it is still planned on being released
The company began its diorama line in 2002 with "The Death of
Elektra", based on Frank Miller's art. To date, we've produced
eleven pieces so far that we've classified as dioramas, or that fit that
criteria. And we've got sculptors like Clayburn Moore working
through on projects like Wolverine in the Sewers, or the upcoming Thor
vs Silver Surfer!
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May 26, 2004 |
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From
Hollywoodreporter.com |
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Lions Gate nabs Marvel DVDs
By Brett Sporich
Marvel Enterprises Inc. has chosen Lions Gate
Entertainment to develop, produce and distribute at least eight
direct-to-DVD animated features, focusing first on such comic book
characters as Captain America, the Hulk, Thor
and Iron Man, Marvel chairman and CEO Avi Arad said.
"We have a unique opportunity to develop these characters and others
through DVD in a way that will further solidify the Marvel name as one of
the pre-eminent brands in entertainment," Arad said.
Marvel controls a library of more than 4,700 comic book characters, some
of which have been developed by major Hollywood studios into live-action
films like "Spider-Man."
"Spider-Man" sold more than 6 million DVD units during its first week in
release and remains one of the top-selling titles in the history of DVD.
"I think what is unique about this endeavor is that animation and live
action don't live in the same space," said Glenn Ross, president of LGHE
Family Entertainment. "Therefore, we have a fantastic opportunity to
develop an animated brand beginning from Marvel's core comic book fan base
and expand that out to a much broader appeal."
Some Wall Street analysts have said that this new line of animated home
videos could possibly sell as many as 1 million DVD units each, an
ambitious goal when compared to similar genres released on DVD.
Marvel and Lions Gate, teaming with the studio's production partner
CineGroupe, are expected develop eight 66-minute animated features for
release on DVD beginning next year.
Under terms of the agreement, Lions Gate will provide Marvel with
licensing fees for character rights and fund all of the development,
production, distribution and marketing for each title.
Marvel will spearhead creative development and production. "It will depend
on the characters whether we will use CGI, classic Disney-like animation
or high-end anime," Arad said. "For example, Iron Man would work best with
CGI, while Blade works best with high-end anime, and the Hulk would work
best using classic animation, making the character larger than life."
As is typical, after each animated project's home video window expires,
the companies may exploit the movies in other entertainment media
domestically and internationally, including television and
video-on-demand, Roos and Arad confirmed. |
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Could this press
release herald the arrival of a Thor movie?
Marvel today announced
that it has signed an agreement with Lion's Gate Entertainment to jump
into the made for DVD marketplace with both feet, with eight 2D or 3D
animated projects to begin production immediately. Marvel will be paid a
licensing fee for each project, and will creatively develop each as well.
The press release regarding the agreement reads:
Marvel Enterprises, Inc. (NYSE:MVL), a global
entertainment licensing company, and Lions Gate Entertainment (AMEX:LGF)
(TSX:LGF), the premier independent filmed entertainment studio,
announced today that they have entered into an agreement to develop,
produce and distribute original animated DVD features based on certain
characters within the Marvel Universe. Under the terms of the
arrangement, Marvel and Lions Gate plan to commence production
immediately on eight original animated projects in either 2-D or 3-D
format with the first title expected to be released by Lions Gate in
late 2005. The announcement was made by Lions Gate Chief Executive
Officer Jon Feltheimer and Avi Arad, Chairman and CEO Marvel Studios.
"More than $2 billion in DVDs based on Marvel characters have been sold
and Marvel's animated television projects have been very successful, so
this is a natural evolution for the company," said Arad. "Lions Gate has
been a great partner for us and this new venture will further solidify
the Marvel name as one of the preeminent brands in entertainment."
Feltheimer added, "This deal reflects the next chapter in our ongoing
relationship with Marvel. The Marvel Universe maintains an outstanding
and loyal fan base that craves fresh material featuring Marvel's Super
Heroes. We're confident that we can take Marvel's extensive library of
popular characters with compelling storylines and create action-packed,
appealing animated made-for-DVD movies."
Under terms of the agreement, Lions Gate will provide Marvel with
licensing fees for character rights and fund all of the development,
production, distribution and marketing for each title. Marvel will
spearhead creative development and production. After each animated
project's home video window expires, the companies may exploit the
movies in other entertainment media domestically and internationally
including television and Video On Demand (VOD). Both companies will
share in the profits from the venture.
Marvel will choose from a roster of leading production partners,
including Lions Gate's own animation production partner, CineGroupe.
Each animated picture will have a minimum running time of 66 minutes and
specific titles and characters chosen for animation will be announced at
a later date.
The two companies noted that the agreement builds on the current
theatrical relationship between Lions Gate and Marvel. As announced in
February 2004, Lions Gate has been granted licenses to develop, produce
and distribute theatrical film releases based upon two popular Marvel(TM)
properties -- Iron Fist(TM) and Black Widow(TM) -- and Lions Gate and
Marvel already plan to make a sequel to their April 2004 release "The
Punisher."
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In the Marvel
solicits, there is a listing for Thor: Son of Asgard #7, and it's the
start of a 3 issue arc! This means that it's no longer a
mini-series, but an ongoing. Please show your support and pick up
this title - it's great! If you liked the old "Tales of Asgard"
backup feature in the older issues, you'll love this title! Because
of this, I've moved it from the mini-series
section and put it in it's own area in the
Comics page |
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May 13, 2004 |
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Marvel has released
it's schedule for movies
2004: Blade: Trinity, Man-Thing
2005: Fantastic Four, Elektra, Iron Man, Ghost Rider,
Luke Cage
2006: Black Widow, DeathLok, Dr. Strange, Iron Fist, The
Hulk 2, Namor: The Sub-Mariner, Nick Fury, Punisher 2, X-Men 3
2007+: Spider Man 3, Black Panther, Captain America,
Thor
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Newsarama has posted
the entire issue of #80, Mike Oeming and Andrea DiVito's first issue, and
it's looking awesome. Click
here to view it. |
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May 2, 2004 |
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From Comicon |
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From Wizard #152 |
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It's been
reported in the Buzz Bin that the current rumor has it that Neil Gaiman
could make an appearance writing Thor
In an article
entitled "Assembly Call", Brian Michael Bendis reports on who he wanted on
the Avenger-based titles and why. On Thor: Bendis'
collaborator on Powers, Oeming's a deft artist but his writing on
the Norse epic Hammer of the Gods makes him a force in scripts that
delve into mythology, ancient cults, and folklore. On what he has
planned: "I planned this out to be a sort of touchstone for the
series overall," revealed Oeming. "I'm calling back on some old
characters and events and bringing in new ones. I'm a huge fan of
Norse Mythology and Walt Simonson's run on Thor, so there will be
plenty of homages to both. It's like a love letter to the series
from a fanboy." On why he's Bendis' man: "Oeming is a
mythology savant. He knows all of it. He was born to write
Thor. Don't believe me? Read his Hammer of the Gods." |
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April 15, 2004 |
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An
interview
with Mike Oeming |
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An
interview with Scot Eaton |
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From
Silverbulletcomicbooks.com |
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April 1, 2004 |
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This
June, Thor fans will get an up-close look at the dark side of Asgard.
Loki, a four-issue mini-series from writer Robert Rodi (Elektra) and
painter Essad Ribic (X-Men:Children of the Atom) will reveal the true
origins of Loki's evil nature. Ribic hopes his ultra-detailed
painting style will shed new light on Thor's mischievous stepsibling.
"Rodi's operatic dialogue dictated my visual approach," Ribic said.
"I tried to make Loki look like a very expensive Wagner opera, or
something out of the '80's Flash Gordon movie, which I loved." Here
is a sample of his artwork from the Marvel Encyclopedia. |
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March 21, 2004 |
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At the Wizardworld
L.A. convention, Marvel included two covers to what looked to be new
projects starring Loki and Rogue, although there was no listing for such
projects in the June solicitations.
At the "Cup 'o
Joe" conference, Marvel EIC Joe Quesada.
On Thor: 'You are going to love me come the end of this year.
Anyone who's a Thor fan, you're going to love my ass by the end of the
year."
When asked about outgoing Thor writer Dan Jurgens, Quesada said, "We'd
love to keep him at Marvel."
RUMOR
ALERT, RUMOR ALERT!
Upcoming Thor writer is apparently only signed on to do 4 or 6 issues
(I've heard both). After that, it's a secret. Given available
data, the current guess is former Sandman writer Neil Gaiman will be
taking over given - a) Joe Q's state above, b) Neil has stated that he is
a major Thor fan, and c) Oeming is not scheduled to even finish out the
year. |
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March 18, 2004 |
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Here is an
interview with Akira Yoshida about Son of Asgard
As yesterday�s breaking news apparently indicates,
its time for the Marvel Heroes � i.e. The Avengers �
family of titles to get their jumpstart and their own time under the
lights.
In addition to the July-launching Brian Bendis � David Finch helmed
�Avengers Disassemble� story arc (which starts with July's #500) that will
ultimately give The Avengers a new start in a new series,
all indications are pointing towards that event being the lynchpin of a
creative and editorial overhaul of the core Avengers-satellite titles.
In addition to what Newsarama.com reported
yesterday - that
both Iron Man writer John Jackson Miller and
Captain America writer Robert Morales will be leaving their
respective series with the June issues,
Newsarama has
also learned that long-time Thor writer Dan
Jurgens will be leaving that title around the same time;
and that May�s issue #8
of Hawkeye will be that series final issue. This would
leave the current slate of Avengers-related books free and clear of
writers, the newly launched She-Hulk and Captain
America and the Falcon possibly excepted from the changes
According to a post on the Joe Quesada forum, Bendis' Powers
collaborator Mike Oeming is named, or strongly speculated as being the
writer on Thor, according to the advance Diamond
solicitations for June. Whether this is for one issue, or ongoing is
unclear. Rumors have speculated that he would be taking the title.
Also, according to sources, Captain America - a title
that never seemed to find its creative footing under the Marvel Knights
banner after the departure of artist John Cassaday - will take the
creative team change as the opportunity to move back to the Marvel
Universe proper to again be a core part of the Avengers family.
So while it�s not yet known the exact fate of Cap, Thor,
or Iron Man around or after Bendis� �Disassemble� event,
with Iron Man apparently on the Hollywood fast track and
Captain America and Thor being two of the few major Marvel
properties not yet lined up in film deals, it's unlikely the
licensing-conscious Marvel would allow those titles to go on any extended
hiatus. And as April and May�s MK0404 and Reload events indicate, Marvel
likes to make big splashes in big groups, with the nature of said splash
being the topic of the hour around the industry water cooler.
In terms of creators for the three series, Marvel has many high-profile
artists who haven't been heard from recently, while writer Warren Ellis is
reportedly going to launch a new series starring an Avenger in late 2004.
With their MVP writer lined up for the event itself, speculation
(unconfirmed at this point) has centered on Bendis �assembling� a Grant
Morrison-esque/�JLA Big Guns� type line-up for the Earth Mightiest Heroes,
featuring Marvel�s biggest, most enduring solo stars like long-time
founding Avengers Cap, Thor and Iron Man, possibly standing alongside
Marvel�s other solo and licensing superstars like Spider-Man, Wolverine,
the Hulk and Daredevil, or in others words, a regular monthly line-up not
completely unlike the characters Bendis has assembled for the hit
quarterly Secret War limited series.
While Bendis didn�t give any hints at Avengers line-up � promising more
info at this weekend�s Wizardworld LA con in Long Beach - he did address
some of the topics raised in light of yesterday�s news on his Image
Comics.com message board. Bendis
posted:
�for long time avengers fans, rest assured you are reading the words of
one. i am a huge avengers fan. you don't take a gig like this unless you
are a fan. don't let the online crazies convince you otherwise. it is so
hard to break in to comics, you HAVE to be fan to get here. everyone who
works on these books is a true true life long fan.
�but
i am also a fan of the future. and taking the concept of the avengers into
it. with the help of avengers editor tom breevort and andy schmidt you can
look forward to a real step forward without forgetting where we came from.
�reading your posts i can see that there is no way we will make everyone
happy with the new team roster. yay she hulk, boo she-hulk, but hopefully
the stories and art will be there for you.
�and
you are looking at a huge geoff johns fan as well. just wanted to put that
out there.
�also, i know that these characters belong to all of us, that is why my
scripts for avengers have made the rounds to peers and collaberators like
none before. i have listened to response from people on every plane of
comics. this stuff is tested, discussed, and ready to go.� |
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The Marvel Masterworks Message Board |
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ICV2 has just released sales #s for
February and we now have a complete 12 month picture, once again Thor
sales have dropped by over 600 copies.
Mar 2003 Thor #61 - 36,299
Jan 2004 Thor #73 - 31,141
Feb 2004 THOR #74-30,538
with these constants drops I was wondering how long before Marvel either
kills or re-booth Thor, it seem it might be sooner then I thought.
A kid on the Quesada board got his hands on Advanced solicits from his
retailer.. and (if what he says is true) Michael Avon Oeming is taking
over art and/or writing THOR.
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March 4, 2004 |
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The writing team of
Damian Shannon and Mark Swift have sold their idea for a Viking-themed
action-adventure film to Walt Disney Pictures. The scribes, whose last
project was the FREDDY VS. JASON horror hit, sold Disney on their
take on incorporating fantasy elements from Viking lore such as Valkyries
(legendary female warriors), berserkers, giants and sea monsters for their
heroes to face in a quest to save the world. Perhaps Swift and Shannon
used the phrase "Think PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN meets Ragnarok,"
when pitching their idea to studio chief Nina Jacobson. |
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From Comicon.com - The
Pulse |
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An interview with Drew
Geraci
BY JENNIFER M. CONTINO
These past few years have been a whirlwind for inker Drew
Geraci. He went from working full time at CrossGen
to becoming a freelancer again; from working in the
sci-fi/fantasy genres to working on Marvel's resident
Thunder god, Thor. He
Blogs
about his experiences, but is also eager to talk about his
comics past, present, and future.
Geraci, who's currently inking
Thor, reflects upon his comic memories weekly in his blog.
When asked about his past career in comics he told us, "I
don't think back much, because as a freelance artist, you have
to stay in the present to stay competitive. The whole
CrossGen experience has been a whirlwind, for better or
worse. It was a difficult adjustment, as my wife and I were
pretty content in Georgia until CG made an offer too
good to refuse at the time."
Geraci, like many other CrossGen
staples, was released from CrossGen towards the end of
summer. Although, shortly after he was laid off, he was asked
to return. He explained why he didn't. "I was laid off during
'Black Wednesday'. Thankfully, I had five pages of Batgirl
waiting for me at home. Since the CG paychecks were
delayed later and later, I heard in the wind that Mark
[Alessi] was going to let us freelance elsewhere to pay
our bills. The funny thing is, someone in management realized
later that they let too many people go, because they still had
lots of series to wrap up, so several weeks later I was
offered a chance to return at a reduced salary. It would've
paid the same if I freelanced for DC or Marvel,
so I politely declined. There were personal reasons I couldn't
return as well."
"I equated it with having your
grandmother die suddenly: you're upset, you get angry, go
through the grieving process, then you finally come to
acceptance," Geraci continued. "Then, weeks later, your
decaying grandmother pops out of the grave saying:
'Give your Nana a big hug!'
'No! No! You're not my Nana! Get
away!'
Also, I had been a good soldier,
having just turned down yet ANOTHER monthly series from DC
Editor Michael Wright two weeks before being let go from
CG. I even met Mark Alessi in his office to tell
him I turned it down to show my commitment. I spent the
pre-layoff weekend cranking on Route 666 #17, so it
would be done for Monday. It was all for nothing. So if I came
back a month after the layoff, what would it be, a stay of
execution from the Governor?"
"I turned down DC one time too many, because by the
time of the CrossGen layoffs, DC had locked in
all their talent for the next six months. Mike Carlin,
who I consider a good friend, offered me a shot at doing an
upcoming series by doing a sample page. I was in the running
with a couple other inkers, but I didn't make the cut. But
Mike called and told me personally that it was no
reflection on my work and it was the kindest rejection I ever
experienced."
Although Geraci had been out of the
DC loop for a few years, one of his first assignments
was some fill in issues on the newest Batgirl series.
He was pretty well versed in Cassandra Cain. "I knew quite a
bit about her, since she came on the scene while I was on
Nightwing," Geraci said. "I was pleasantly surprised the
fans embraced her as they did, since the Barbara Gordon
version has achieved legendary status. But I'm glad DC
stuck by its guns and didn't miraculously cure Barbara. As
Oracle, she's become invaluable in the DCU."
This series gave Geraci some unique challenges he hadn't faced
in a while. "Since Batgirl has a full facemask, making sure
the expressions JJ's [Jean-Jacques Dzialowski] pencils
implied came through accurately. As a newbie, he's still a
little rough around the edges when it comes to straight
superhero action, but his strength is the way he draws a moody
Batman and Batgirl in a mysterious, out-of-focus Tommy Lee
Edwards style. If he leans more in that direction, it'll
benefit his growth as an artist."
Geraci admitted some of his favorite
past work has been in the DC universe, particularly in
the Batman family of characters. "Birds of Prey
and Nightwing are favorites because working with
Greg Land was a great learning curve for me. For a while,
DC had all these one-shots, like Secret Files and
Galleries, which gave me a chance to work with a variety
of pencillers. Negation #11 over Yanick Paquette
was my single favorite CG issue to work on. I also had
the pleasure of doing the first three Way of the Rat
fill-ins (# 5, 9, 14). The first few issues of Sojourn
...."
Many were surprised to hear Geraci
landed at The House of Ideas instead of DC. He
explained how the Marvel deal came about. "Almost every
six months since I joined CrossGen, I'd get offers from
Michael Wright to come back, but I knew I had to stick
with CG for two years or pay back the cost of moving to
Florida. Michael and I had gotten quite friendly (as
much as you can over the phone) when we worked together years
ago. I even called him shortly after 9/11 to see if he was
everything was okay with him and any extended family he had in
the area."
"As I said earlier, I just turned down another monthly series
from the Bat-office, and had I a crystal ball, I'd have taken
it knowing I wouldn't start that assignment for a couple
weeks, and would've eased right into it after being let go by
CG," continued the inker. "Michael did the next best
thing: offered me a Batman-related miniseries, but
unfortunately, there was a delay that dragged on a couple
months, so in the interim, Scot Eaton was lobbying to
have me ink him on Thor. Only catch was that I'd have
to wait a month, so a fill in art team could complete the
previous story arc, and I could start with # 75. I called
Michael and thanked him for the miniseries offer, but I wanted
to re-establish myself on a monthly, and Marvel seemed
an ideal opportunity to do exactly that."
Geraci had a simple reason for
wanting to work on Thor. "He's a Lee/Kirby
character. What's not to love? He's classic Marvel. The
most rewarding thing is that all this affection I've had for
the character is causing me to surprise myself in the inks-I'm
feel I'm evolving into what I consider a Marvel inker.
My Marvel influences are almost overwhelming my
subconscious. I'm finding little bits of Austin, Ordway,
Simonson, Hitch, Neary, Nowlan, plus a little WildStorm
snap in my Thor work. All translated through my own
skewed mind, of course, so it doesn't look quite like the
patchwork that it sounds. I was a Marvel Zombie the
first five years of my comics reading, so you can imagine how
excited I am to be working for them. Previously, I only did a
handful of covers for various X-titles over Dusty Abell
in the late '90s."
He's working with another former
CrossGener, Scot Eaton. "Thor was made for Scot and
vice versa," enthused Geraci. "Scot can do Thor's
massive frame justice, plus grand scale panoramic shots. Yet
Scot keeps it all grounded with the humanity he lays down on
each page. I haven't been this excited since Birds of Prey.
I want to show the public the truest Scot Eaton art
yet. The closest inker to achieve that was Andrew Hennessey.
I take great pains to nail the faces spot-on, because he draws
such subtle nuances, that they could easily get
misinterpreted."
Geraci's biggest challenges in inking Thor revolve
around the clothing. "All the costume details," he began.
"Those Asgardians always overdress for a party. But that's
what also makes them cool."
If Thor isn't enough Geraci for you, he's also working
on several other projects. "I write a monthly inking tutorial
in Sketch Magazine, plus
website
has a blog every Tuesday where I discuss strictly
comic-related topics and my torturous road to funnybook fame.
Also, upcoming commission work, inking pencil drawings of
Spider-Girl and Starfire which I'll display on the
site with the others. Finally, I'm trying to wrap up a short
story penciled by Jason Armstrong, written & inked by
me featuring my own character, Hotwire. Then, maybe, sleep."
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January 27, 2004 |
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Current Spawn
artist Angel Medina has always prized comic art. Especially when it
comes to John Buscema. "I was a huge Marvel fan," Medina explains,
"and after a while I started to realize it was all the John Buscema
stuff." His desire for Buscema art was cemented by a bittersweet
experience. "I got to meet him before he passed away. That
made me realize that his work was finite," Medina said. "There's no
more coming our way." And like any fan, he even has preferences from
the legendary artist's vast catalogue. "I mostly go after his Thor
stuff," Medina says of his wish list, "but the epitome to me would have to
be something from Silver Surfer #4." |
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From
silverbulletcomicbooks.com |
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An interview
with Dan Jurgens
During his
five year run on THOR Dan Jurgens has written some of the most
memorable stories in the character�s history. In 1998 Wizard
magazine proclaimed Thor the best hero in comics, describing his battles
as �titanically exciting�. Over the next two years Jurgens pitted Thor
against insanely powerful opponents like the Dark Gods, the Juggernaut,
Thanos and the savage Mangog, who nearly beat the Thunder God to death and
left him hanging on a slab of ice in issue #24. In THOR #25 the
Odinson exacted his revenge by shoving his hammer down Mangog's throat and
roasting his internal organs. Mangog�s carcass was last seen hurled off a
cliff.
Furious, unrelenting battles like the fight with Mangog earned THOR
a reputation as one of the most kinetic comic books on the stands. But
Jurgens wasn�t just interested in writing bare-knuckled combat. He soon
set out to tell an epic story that would challenge readers with questions
about religion, politics and the pursuit of power.
In 2002-2003 THOR readers have watched the All-Father Odin die and
Thor wrestle with the responsibility of inherited power in Asgard, and
eventually on Earth. Gone are the monstrous throw-downs of the past; in
their place stand intelligent discussions on how one being can make the
world a better place and the repercussions that come with such a
monumental task.
I talked to writer Dan Jurgens about the ambitious scope of Thor,
how his stories parallel events in our world and why Thor's
trickster-brother Loki suddenly has a collection of Dr. Strange trinkets.
Markisan Naso: In your own words, can you give people who
haven�t read the book a brief recap of what has been going on in THOR?
Dan Jurgens: Briefly, Thor used to lead two lives, one as the God
of Thunder and the other as human Jake Olson. Each life complicated the
other�s so Odin separated them into two distinct people, with the
unintended consequence of removing Thor�s more human self... or soul... in
the process. Odin died and Thor assumed Asgard's throne. He then became
more involved with earth's affairs until he actually moved Asgard to a
point where it hovered above NYC.
Several nations objected to this and formed a secret cabal that tried to
destroy Asgard, bringing it down upon the city, essentially destroying
both.
We have since jumped to a point years from now in which Thor has taken
control of Earth and is now lord and monarch of the entire planet.
National borders and religions have been erased and the story has become
one of a small band of revolutionaries who wish to kill Thor even while he
tries to build a better future for mankind.
MN: Over the last two years you�ve really taken THOR in an
entirely new and ambitious direction. What inspired you to write such an
epic story? Is this a tale you�ve wanted to tell since you started writing
THOR or did it simply evolve during your run?
DJ: This is a story that evolved.
When I started writing THOR, the character hadn't had a monthly
series for a while, so we set out to do classic THOR stories that
reintroduced the character.
One of the challenges of doing comics today though, is to take the
character through evolutionary stages that keep readers intrigued. This
general concept started as a stand alone project that Tom and I discussed
and eventually decided to fold into the monthly series.
Once we decided to kill Odin, everything else fell into place. It's always
cheesy to say a story writes itself, but when we decided on this general
direction, that's sort of what happened.
MN: Did the editorial staff at Marvel have any reservations about
what you wanted to do with THOR?
DJ: If anyone said anything negative, it was never passed on to me.
As I said, Tom Brevoort and I sculpted this direction together. We never
made a declarative statement that we'd be doing this for three years.
Instead, it became a layered story that had to unfold with proper pacing
and we've worked hard to maintain that.
MN: The events in THOR really seem to exist outside the
normal Marvel Universe, especially now that the book is set far ahead in
the future. There was a crossover with Iron Man a while back, but outside
of that no other Marvel comic books seem to be affected by your
storylines. How does this apparent freedom from regular continuity affect
the way you approach your stories?
DJ: Well, the freedom makes it easier to accomplish.
However, I wish we could have had some of this reflected in other Marvel
books as it would lead credence to the entire storyline. One of the things
I loved about Marvel as a kid was the feeling of connectivity among all
the books and characters and that no longer exists, which is something of
a shame.
It's weird, because DC, which used to be totally unable to accomplish such
a thing, is now far better at it than is Marvel.
MN: You�ve spent a lot of time depicting a wide range of human
reactions to Thor�s presence on Earth, exploring whether or not it�s right
for an all-powerful entity to fix all the world�s problems. In the book
this is a very difficult question for many characters to answer. You can
really feel how people are torn. Why is a right solution so elusive in
this situation? How do you think people in �real life� would react if
Asgard suddenly appeared over NYC?
DJ: From the day I started writing THOR, I've always been
struck by the notion of how people would react if a flying being suddenly
appeared and proclaimed himself a god.
If that being then tried to impose his will, all the while saying... and
believing... that it was in mankind's best interests, how would people
react? So far, Thor has eradicated most disease and hunger, as well as
most weapons and armies. He's given Earth alternative energy sources that
no longer mandates the desecration of Mother Earth.
So is Earth better off or not? Because the downfall to all of this is that
while many problems have been solved, new ones have been created. Man has
become less an independent, creative being and more a pet.
So is the tradeoff fair? These are the issues we explore and we try to
cover the full spectrum of emotion and reactions in the process.
MN: At times it seems like Thor�s choices often mirror those of the
United States government, albeit on a much greater scale. How do you think
the events in THOR relate to the state of the world today? Have you
researched opinions on current U.S. policy when writing THOR?
DJ: Yes.
The United States government is in the midst of a military action in
another nation while making it clear it's for someone's own good. At the
end of the day, Thor's statements really aren't so different.
We initiated our stories before all that, however...and it's been weird to
see it all dovetail as it has.
But the excuses for national aggression tend to be the same over the
centuries anyway.
MN: I often find myself thinking about the issues in THOR
and how they parallel those of the real world after I�ve read an issue. Is
it important that your story stimulate this kind of response in your
readers? What would you like them to take away from each issue?
DJ: My basic goal as a writer is pretty damn simple. When the
reader finishes the book, I want him or her to want to buy the next issue.
I don't mean that in the commercial sense but the editorial sense.
If they saw an idea, thought or visual in the book that got their brain
cells dancing a bit... one that intrigued them enough to want to read more
of the story the following month and beyond, then I accomplished what I
set out to. The real trick is to add to that group every month, and that's
the toughest obstacle a writer faces.
But when all of this is said and done, I want them to think the trip was
worth their time and money. I've always thought that the goal of a writer
should be that, once their time on a book ends, it should be in better
shape than when they started.
MN: Along with ruminations on political power, you�ve really added
some interesting religious explorations in THOR. Characters all
over the Marvel U have erected churches in Thor�s name and many have
abandoned their old religions. A priest regularly talked to Thor about his
�attempt� to replace the Christian God. A lobsterman gave up Catholicism
after Thor saved his livelihood. In my opinion these are some of the most
powerful scenes in the book. But quite frankly, there isn�t a lot of
religious discussion happening in comic books today. Were you at all
concerned about possibly offending or alienating readers with the subject
matter? Why did you choose to address Thor�s effect on religion in such
detail?
DJ: I'm rather surprised we haven't gotten more reaction from this,
not in the negative sense, but more from the fact that, as you say, it's
an idea that isn't explored much.
Many religious leaders representing a number of religions seem to feel
that mankind is currently suffering a crisis of faith.
It seems likely that if someone arrived in a world filled with greed,
disappointment and deprivation of the basics needed to simply live, which
earth most certainly is, he might well be exalted if he proclaimed himself
a god and began to slowly make things more equitable.
Such a thing would throw the status quo of the world's religions into
turmoil, and this is what we've explored. Nowhere have we said that any
particular religion is good or bad. We've only said that given these
conditions, things would change in a hurry. So, yes, the First Church of
Asgard and its followers, Thorists, would begin to change the world in
dramatic ways.
And it's also true that Thursday is named after THOR... Thor's
day... so it would replace Sunday as the Sabbath for some.
MN: Many characters in the book believe THOR is a bad guy
who is forcing humanity to be dependent on him. People are willing to give
up their lives to stop him. And yet THOR believes his actions are
justified. For many onlookers in the Marvel U. THOR has become a
villain. How do you view the character and what he feels he�s trying to
accomplish?
DJ: THOR is not a bad guy.
THOR is a good guy trying to accomplish the right thing.
But doing so may well be impossible. Either that, or it will create
problematic side effects he could not have foreseen.
That's my take.
MN: Books like DC's THE AUTHORITY have explored similar
notions of super-powered heroes reshaping the world the way they think it
should be, i.e. making it better. But it�s rare that an established,
mainstream superhero title like THOR has gone down this road. How
is your THOR different from other comic stories that have
entertained the idea of creating Utopia through force.
DJ: I believe the religious aspect of all of this has made THOR
far different from what we've seen elsewhere.
When all of this began, Thor repeatedly stated that he was not an
authority on anything. Rather, he was offering help and alternatives.
He never asked for a religious following to spring up around him... it
simply happened on its own. He never asked to be worshipped.
THOR is less a study of a main character and more a study of
people's reactions to the concept of the character.
MN: How have THOR fans reacted to the changes in the book?
DJ: Some love it, a few may hate it.
If you want to read THOR in order to see him whack the Absorbing
Man over the head, this is not the book to read. We're doing something
different right now. Something a little more thought provoking and a lot
more challenging.
MN: In the new storyline, �The Reigning� (begun in issue #68), Thor
now rules the Earth. Over the last three issues you've mentioned the
difficulties Thor faced trying to take control of the planet -- in fact he
lost and eye and an arm somewhere along the way -- but we haven�t seen
what actually happened. Was there a specific reason you chose to begin the
story after Thor was victorious? Do you have any plans to write any
flashbacks to that time period?
DJ: Yes, there will be flashbacks. THOR #73 will tell the
story of the assassination attempt by a few main Marvel characters that
nearly took Thor out of the picture.
From a storytelling sense, I thought it was more powerful to jump to the
result of Thor's actions and then fill in the main highlights as the story
unfolds.
MN: Incredibly, Loki has become a trusted ally in Thor�s regime.
How do you view the Trickster�s role in the book and has Thor's acceptance
of him affected Loki in any way? And what's the deal with Loki wearing Dr.
Strange�s cloak and the Eye of Agamotto?
DJ: You'll see some background on Strange's trinkets later.
And, yes, Loki is a trusted ally of Thor's. Really, Thor has given Loki
almost everything he ever could have hoped. Even Odin never had the guts,
wisdom or lack thereof to do what Thor's done.
His interests and Thor's suddenly coincide.
MN: THOR has seen a lot of art changes in the past year. But
it looks like Scot Eaton is on his way to bringing some consistency to the
book. Do you think the heavy art rotation has hindered the storyline in
any way? Aside from consistency, what else does Scot bring to THOR
artistically?
DJ: I think the lack of a consistent artist has hurt us and we've
finally rectified that problem.
There are certain classic visual elements that THOR needs to
succeed. Scot delivers on all counts. His stuff is absolutely fantastic.
MN: Many people think this future THOR timeline will simply
be reset once you finish the story. How long will �The Reigning" run and
will it truly have any lasting impact on THOR and the Marvel
Universe?
DJ: Well, now you're asking me to give away the end of the story
and I just can't do that!
MN: THOR has taken over the Earth, allied himself with Loki
and he�s obviously killed or beaten the piss out of the Avengers, and
anyone else who opposed him. Can he ever be redeemed? And can he ever
regain the human portion of his soul that he lost after being separated
from Jake Olson?
DJ: Without giving away too much, the arc that will follow all of
this is called "Redemption".
And it would be incredibly simplistic to think it's going to be that
simple, or even the typically trite, "Oh, now I'll do something good and
everything will be okay again," type of story.
MN: It seems like THOR is a book that�s been under people�s
radar for a while now, despite the bold direction and Herculean scope. Why
hasn�t THOR generated more buzz in the comics community?
DJ: THOR has always been a book or character that floats a
bit under the radar. With rare exception, he's never enjoyed the sales
level or recognition of Spider-Man.
Right now, buzz is driven by changing creative teams on the three or four
biggest properties at Marvel or DC, sometimes with concepts that go back
to the basics, other times with bold new ideas.
Our ideas evolved in a slower, more deliberate fashion. If, just before
Odin died, I had changed my name to "H. Jeffrey Smith" and Marvel had
trumpeted the arrival of a new writer, we might have gotten a bigger look.
MN: Ultimately, what did you want to accomplish with this epic
THOR saga? And once it�s ended how the hell can you possibly top it?
DJ: I'll go back to what I said earlier...I want readers to feel
the ride was worth the price of admission and that they enjoyed enough to
get on the ride again.
As for how we'll top it...stay tuned.
Interview with
Drew Geraci the new inker of Thor
Inker
Drew
Geraci is
one of the many former CrossGen employees who had an established career
well before their work with the Florida-based company�in his case, having
had successful runs inking Greg Land on DC�s Nightwing and Birds
of Prey. As with other former CrossGen-ers, fans of Geraci�s work are
curious to see where his next assignment will be. SBC recently learned
from Geraci himself that starting with Thor 75, he will inking Scot
Eaton�s pencils. To find out more about his new assignment and life after
CrossGen, we decided to interview him. Be sure to enjoy the pages from
Thor that Geraci shared with SBC for this exclusive interview on his
new Thor assignment.
Tim O�Shea: How did the new assignment on Thor come about?
Drew Geraci: Scot and I had talked about working together forever.
I started buying Thor again when Scot started drawing it because I thought
he was an ideal artist for Thor, and sure enough, he is! The new story
arc, starting with # 75 seemed a logical time for me to jump on board as
well as new readers, so come on, everybody!!
TO: While you and Scot Eaton worked in the same offices at
CrossGen, did you actually end up collaborating with him much while there?
DG: Not at all. We wanted to, but we were hired specifically for
our respective titles, and we had a lot of peer pressure to do some very
detailed work. This left almost no time for side projects. We always
talked about doing a pinup together, but never seemed to make time. Before
you know it, two years passed and Scot left for greener pastures. It was a
regret we shared...until now!
TO: It's an interesting time to be working on Thor, as Jurgens is
taking the book into some uncharted territory. What about the story itself
made you want to come onboard?
DG: I picked up the trade paperback which had the Alan Davis
stories in it (Gods
on Earth),
and I was genuinely impressed with the way Dan Jurgens built up the
development of Thor's benevolent dictatorship in such a natural way. By
the time I got to the Davis issues at the end of the trade, it was icing
on the cake. Jurgen's dialogue really makes a compelling case for Thor's
rationale. He peppered the story with little touches I enjoyed. For
example, there's a scene in a Catholic hospital where a woman's son dies.
She's distraught and angry at God in her grief. Then an Asgardian healer
appears with magic elixirs that save other terminal patients, but too late
for her boy. All the mortals react differently. Some have their belief
system uprooted, some are angry at this effrontery at God by false gods.
Heavy stuff, but not heavy-handed.
TO: Upon reflection what would you say were the upsides and
downsides to the CrossGen experience for you, both personally and
professionally?
DG: Upside: Making relationships with some immensely talented
people whom I only knew previously as names in the credit boxes of comics.
Also, having a unique peer group was helpful in my understanding of my
abilities and value as an artist.
Downside: Lots of editorial interference, despite the claim we had no
editors. I actually wished we had real editors so the story quality was
tighter. We had the most beautiful-looking comics, but there was this
audacious seven-year sigil backstory that had to be adhered to. That's why
the individual issues moved at a glacial pace. Every month it was like
"let's hold hands and take one tiny step forward" in a contrived manner.
At $2.95 a pop, that's asking a lot. What's ridiculous is that being under
one roof was the perfect opportunity to let the creativity fly , but we
were hamstrung by bureaucracy.
Also, story suspense was a casualty of this bureaucracy. Let's face it:
was anybody ever worried that the first four sigil-bearers, Ethan, Sephie,
Sam and Giselle would be seriously hurt? They were always too invincible
and perfect. There were stories begun where a main character would be
trapped or "wounded" but it would be resolved the next issue or two
without testing the character's fortitude in a disadvantaged situation,
which is the true definition of a hero.
We had the greatest amount of talent under one roof at our peak, and it
was squandered by Management-related dictates. Having hung myself, I must
say I think CG is finally the publisher they should've been all along. The
current line, El Cazador, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, Way of the Rat, etc.
are examples of the finest comic books available. However, the sigil
concept that management was so enamored with was an albatross that's cost
the company greatly. The CG brand name can be rehabilitated given time for
fans to forget there ever was a sigil. I hope for the artists and writers'
sake they succeed.
TO: What prompted you to provide such educational material at your
site, such as the pencil-to-ink
studies?
DG: I've gotten lots of positive feedback from other countries
that've enjoyed the tutorials on my site.
Since Malibu and Image Comics pioneered the new coloring process a decade
ago, inking has become almost an afterthought. When I was growing up, I
really gravitated to the concept as inkers as contributing artists. Inking
is a lost art that a new generation of fans is unaware of. You look at
Wally Wood's inks over anybody, and you'll see brilliant craftsmanship
there. I have no intention to overpower any penciler like Wood did (nor
could I ever come close to matching his excellence), but that's the
example that sticks out in my mind. The art should stand on it's own in
black and white before the colorist completes the imagery.
TO: On a related note, how often will you be writing for
Sketch
magazine?
DG: I'd like to contribute every issue, as long as they'll have me.
There's no other publication like it in the market currently. The closest
thing that comes to mind was Bob Greenberger's Comics Scene in the
early 1980s. It would have lots of insightful articles and roundtable
discussions with creators discussing their craft. If you have ambitions to
break in the biz, Sketch is very informative.
TO: Prior to your time at CrossGen, the majority of your work was
at DC. Are you hoping to explore a lot of both universes (DC and Marvel)
and are there any other creators in particular that you hope to work with
in 2004?
DG: Only through occasional private commission work offered on my
website.
Right now, I'm 100 percent focused on Thor. Scot and I really want
to amp up the art and get the book noticed.
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2003 NEWS ARCHIVE
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December 24, 2003 |
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THOR:
SON OF ASGARD - THE ADVENTURES OF THOR AS A YOUNG MAN
While he�s currently
exerting his rule over earth in his ongoing Marvel series, Thor�s early
days get a spotlight in March with Thor: Son of Asgard, a six-issue
miniseries written by Akira (Record of the Lodoss War) Yoshida and
illustrated by Greg Tocchini.
The story, as the title suggests is set years�centuries�millennia earlier
than the present-day Marvel Universe, and centers on a quite young God of
Thunder and his compatriots � Balder, Sif, and Loki. Together, the young
gods are sent on a quest by Odin, and the levels of the relationships
between the characters is explored as they all undergo trials and
challenges.
It was all a perfect fit for Yoshida, a lifelong Marvel � and Thor fan.
�Akira was originally introduced to us through Kia Asamiya,� Assistant
Editor Mackenzie Cadenhead told Newsarama. �Kia and Akira had worked
together on a few projects such as Record of Lodoss War, Nadesico,
and Steam Detectives. Knowing that we were looking for someone who
could tell a sweeping epic that took into account the landscape and
mythology of Asgard while infusing it with a vibrancy and vitality that
would appeal to a teen audience, it made sense to give Akira a shot based
on his prior work.
�We had wanted to tell a story of the early days of Thor. We were
pleasantly surprised to learn that Thor was one of Akira's favorite
characters and that he was well versed in the mythology of Asgard. We gave
him a basic list of criteria and then he made the magic.�
Given Yoshida�s bona-fides, mixing a Japanese creator and Nordic god isn�t
like putting oil and water together, as some may think. �There is a huge
tradition of fantasy stories as a whole in Japan,� Cadenhead said. �One of
the most beloved fiction genres on that side of the globe is fantasy.
Japan itself is a country rich with its own mythology and tradition,
which, like the Norse mythology, has been mined in many contemporary
artistic mediums. But, ultimately, it comes down to the fact that a good
writer is a good writer no matter where he is from or in what language he
writes � and that�s what we have with Akira.�
Cadenhead also nailed down the timeline a little more - Son of Asgard
is even pre Tales of Asgard. We�re talking the adventures of Thor
as a boy here. �He has no hammer, he has no guarantee that he will ever
even be worthy of Mjolnir,� Cadenhead said. �This is the story of Thor
coming to terms with his place in Asgard, proving his worth and developing
his friendship with Sif and Balder. This series has more of a pure fantasy
feel than we've seen in a while. It�s myth and magic, brotherhood and
adventure.�
Joining Yoshida on the adventure is an artist who himself is no stranger
to fantasy, Greg Tocchini, the former penciller on CrossGen�s DemonWars
projects. �Both Akira and Greg understood from the get go that the
landscape of Asgard was as much a character as the teens were,� Cadenhead
said. �Greg is as ornate in his pencils as Akira is in his plotting. Not
only is Greg able to capture the majestic landscapes of Asgard, he has an
amazing ability to make acting choices for the characters and he brings to
life the complex personalities Akira has infused in them. The teens'
interaction is a vital part of the story and it comes across equally in
dialogue and gesture/expression/body language of the characters.� |
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December 13, 2003 |
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Here's a link to an
interesting interview with Tom Brevoort concerning who's stronger in the
Marvel Universe
http://www.comixfan.com/xfan/forums/printthread.php?threadid=24170
Here's a link to an article talking
about Thor
http://www.comixfan.com/xfan/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=23898 |
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From
www.comicon.com The Pulse |
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Here's a link to an
interview with current Thor artist Scot Eaton
http://www.comicon.com/cgi-bin/pulse.cgi?http%3A//www.comicon.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi%3Fubb%3Dget_topic%26f%3D36%26t%3D001628 |
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December 1, 2003 |
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In an
interview with Mark Millar, writer of the Ultimates, he is asked about the
upcoming second volume.
Wizard: And there's big stuff with the Hulk
too, right?
Mark Millar: Oh yeah, someone leaks that Bruce Banner is the Hulk
and the public is furious that he killed 800 people and the government
is protecting him. So, the first big arc covers the trial of the
Hulk and the Ultimates versus Thor.
Wizard: What?
Mark Millar: They find out some very interesting things about
Thor. Let's just say he's not what anyone thinks. Is he the
Odinson made flesh or is he a psychopath with a scary hammer? All
will be revealed.
MANGA
SCRIBE SPOTLIGHTS THOR'S EARLY DAYS IN NEW MINI-SERIES
Centuries prior to setting foot in Avengers Mansion and long
before he made a habit of smashing villains with his hammer Mjolnir, Thor
had another weapon of choice. But he had to find it first.
It's Thor's quest for a mythical sword that is at the heart of Marvel's
six-issue mini-series, Thor:Son of Asgard, shipping in March.
The series will spotlight Thor's early years and place the young godling
in a setting that's more about fighting frost giants than the Masters of
Evil. With the premise set, Marvel needed a writer who knew a thing
or two about fantastic epics and myths. Enter Akira Yoshida.
Yoshida's deft handling of the fantasy manga epic Record of Lodoss War
and the acclaimed Nadesico made him the ideal man to chronicle the
early years of Marvel's God of Thunder. Along with artist Greg
Tocchini (Demon Wars), Yoshida will spin a tale that is more
fantasy than superhero, while featuring a number of familiar Asgardian
faces. "Two things that we wanted to see in Thor:Son of Asgard
were complex relationships between the core team - Balder, Thor, and Sif -
and an elaborate landscape of Asgard that we would be itching to
traverse," described Assistant Editor Mackenzie Cadenhead. "Akira
has integrated these two elements so the environment itself has almost
become a character that plays into the interpersonal dynamics of the
team." Having been a fan of Marvel comics and Thor since childhood,
Yoshida was elated to be part of the project. "I like the fact that
he is a conflicted god who has always had these mythic powers but ususally
chooses to try and fix all his problems with a big hammer," laughed
Yoshida. "But seriously, Thor is probably one of the most complex
characters in the Marvel Universe. He is not only a superhero, he is
a god!" Artist Greg Tocchini's work on CrossGen's Demon Wars
made him no stranger to magic and mysticism, and it also helps that he's
been a Thor fanatic since his early days. "Just the fact that Thor
is a god justifies my fascination with the character," gushed the
Brazil-based Tocchini. "When I was a little kid, I would pretend to
be Captain America and Hawkeye among many others, but never Thor because,
to me, no mortal could ever be a god." A Brazilian artist and a
Japanese writer teaming up to work on a Nordic character? I may seem
odd, but it makes perfect sense to Cadenhead. "Though their
backgrounds and influences are quite different," explained Cadenhead.
"They share an appreciation for Thor that will offer a unique refiguring
of the mythos." Being a Thor fan means Yoshida will be throwing a
pantheon of classic villains at the young immortal as he struggles to find
the ancient sword. Could a certain mischievous half brother be far
behind? "Loki? Oh yes," teased Yoshida. "But there will
be a classic Thor villain involved somewhere down the line and we
definitely have a few surprises in store for Thor and his friends - these
young gods will get roughed up quite a bit!" |
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September 25, 2003 |
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Wizard picks
some Marvel Legends figures they want to see:
Mr Hyde - This monstrous villain
has pestered the Avengers, Daredevil and Captain America for some time
and has even gone into battle against the Incredible Hulk and Thor!
If that doesn't make him deserving of a Marvel Legends figure, what
does?
Loki - This god of mischief not
only stirs up all kind of trouble for his foster brother Thor, but he
does it in style. Sporting one of the coolest original costumes
out there, it'd be criminal not to have the sneaky godling wreaking
havoc as part of your own Asgardian Legends set
A perfect CGC
10-graded copy of Thor:Vikings #1 is apparently worth $150 already - go
figure. |
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August 31, 2003 |
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In an article
entitled "Emissaries of Evil"
The enchantress: As Thor
struggles to build his utopian society over Earth, Asgard's manipulative
minx helps tear it all down when the six-part "Reigning" arc begins with
Thor #68 in September!
And in an
article about JLA/Avengers
Brouhahas you won't see in 'JLA/Avengers':
Superman Blue vs Thunderstrike - In a battle only the Weather Channel
could appreciate, "Electric Blue" Superman disses Thunderstrike's
lightning bolt earring, causing him to conjure an electrical storm that
disperses Supes' molecules back to the land of suck from whence they
came.
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August 22, 2003 |
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From the Marvel
Universe panel at Wizardworld
Thor editor Tom Brevoort
said that the current team on the book will be there for the foreseeable
future, adding that Dan Jurgens� and Scott Eaton�s storyline about the
reign of the Asgardian gods will most likely come to an ending with
issue #75.
Scot Eaton is
the regular artist of Thor beginning #68. Brevoort said that the Gods on
Earth storyline will climax in Thor #75
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August 2, 2003 |
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When Kurt
Busiek writes Dark Horse's upcoming Conan series, the first arc will
include adaptions of classic Conan stories like "The Frost Giant's
Daughter".
From George
Perez's diary on working on JLA/Avengers
June 18, 2001 - I work on the
first meeting between the JLA and Avengers today, and Thor cracks
Superman with his hammer in a scene that's going to be huge! I
would expect no less from Kurt [Busiek]
There was a
feature on the Absorbing Man, where it lists certain issues about him,
including
- First Appearance - Journey Into
Mystery #114
- Best Cover - Avengers #184
- Best Brawl - Daredevil #360
- Most Bizarre Moment - Secret
Wars #7
- Book to Watch - Incredible Hulk
#125
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July 30, 2003 |
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From
Comicbookresources.com |
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In
his most recent mailer,
Michael Avon Oeming
revealed that future editions of his "Hammer of the Gods" series will be
abandoning the mini-series format in favor of occasional 48 to 56 page
one-shots, featuring self-contained stories. Additionally, series
co-creator Mark Wheatley was
featured on NPR's Marketplace
radio show where he talked about Hollywood interest in "Hammer of the
Gods." Bring your Real Player along to listen to this clip. |
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During
a
recent interview
with SBC's own Tim O'Shea, Elektra writer Robert Rodi
revealed that he has big work planned with Marvel artist Essad
Ribic.
I've already written a project for Axel (Alonso)
featuring one of Marvel's big-gun characters, that's being
painted by Essad Ribic; it should be out next year.
Axel Alonso paired us up on that book, just as it was Axel
who reunited us for the Marvel project. I'm excited about
working with Essad again because this time out, I knew his
work much more intimately, and was able to write for his
strengths. I've seen some of the completed pages, and
they're eye-poppers. Just gorgeous.
Now, this project (like most Marvel comics) is supposed to
be on the down low, but some quick google-fu has revealed the
secret.
www.desperadostudios.com
previews a Thor and Loki painting by Essad with a description
that reads, "Painted Prelim of Loki & Thor by Essad Ribic from
the upcoming Loki mini-series from Marvel Comics."
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July 9, 2003 |
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During a press
conference about Marvel's upcoming "1602" project, when asked if Thor
would be in the miniseries, Gaiman replied, "What an interesting
question." . Now knowing that Neil Gaiman is apparently a huge Thor
fan, I get the feeling that he will play a rather large part in this
series.
Newsarama
also has a
preview of the first issue of Thor:Vikings #1 up as well |
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June 18, 2003 |
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Please note: I've taken the
part of this interview that talks about Thor. To read the whole
thing, click
here Joe Quesada: Wizard
World East Interview
Kevin: The question that we touched on earlier, he did, about New X-Men,
when I've read these books and I've read quite a few of them, it doesn't
seem like Marvel is pushing the Gambits, you know what I mean? They're not
pushing the new characters to be all that survivable.
They just kind of phase out. Where in the early 90's you saw a lot
of characters come out of the wood works that are mainstays in Marvel
history right now. Where are those new characters? Why are the old
characters being reinvented, and more new characters not
being created?
Joe:
First, there's several different climates we've
been working under. Back in the late 80s to early 90s, you could blow your
nose on a piece of paper and publish it and you were going to sell 100,000
copies of comics. It was just that kind of...you know,
we had three THOR books, ok. You remember Thor Corp?
Sean: Do I remember it? I've got a question about that!
Sean: Finally, and I ask this because my weekly
comic book column on CHUD is called "Thor's Comic Column." What does
Marvel have in the cards for the god of thunder?
Joe:
(smiling) We have some very cool
stuff. You may actually see two Thor books.
Sean:
Oh, you're kidding me!
Joe:
(smiling) Yeah, and it's not Thor Corp.
(Laughter)
Sean:
Well, you've got the Garth Ennis' Thor: Vikings coming up...
Joe:
You know, I'm talking two monthly Thor
books.
Sean:
Oh, you're kidding me!
Joe:
Nope. We have a particular angle that we want to take on Thor that does
not affect the current continuity of Thor, and it's just...he is
the most enigmatic character to us. I mean, when Stan created the Marvel
universe it all kinda works, and Thor's
sorta the odd character. You know, he's
this god, it's...
Sean:
He's on the outside.
Joe:
It's very, very weird. He didn't quite fit the formula. But he's so, so
god damn cool.
Sean:
He's awesome.
Joe:
So, we're trying to figure out a way to use Thor that allows us to tap
into some different venues and do a couple of different things, and allows
us to tell a lot of different kinds of stories.
Sean:
Great. |
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June 1, 2003 |
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The controversial
"Spiral" storyline (in which Thor's moved Asgard into the mortal plane and
taken a more active role in human affairs) concludes with Thor #65 in June
and July's #66. "At the end of this story, there will be a final
resolution to Thor's involvement with Earth." says writer Dan Jurgens.
"There has to be a winner, and after this it won't be 'Thor:Lord of
Asgard' - it'll be 'Thor:Lord of Earth.'" August's issue #67
serves as an epilogue to "Spiral" while September's #68 begins a whole new
story that sees the Thunder God become an even bigger player in world
events! |
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As reported at
Wizardworld East
Art
from Garth Ennis and Glenn Fabry's project Thor: Vikings looked
incredible. It was described as Thor fighting against a horse of zombie
Vikings that loot, rape and pillage modern Manhattan. |
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From
Comicbookresources.com |
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May 10, 2003 |
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LAST MAN STANDING:
SUPERMAN VS THOR
Norse god of thunder and prince of the fabled land of Asgard, Thor wields
his enchanted hammer Mjolnir in order to protect his adopted homeland of
Earth from the forces of evil! Strange visitor from another planet
with powers far beyond those of mortal men, Superman fights a never-ending
battle for truth, justice and the American way!
To rid himself of his do-gooder
stepbrother, Loki casts a spell that transports Thor from the golden
streets of Asgard to the busy streets of Metropolis! The bewildered
thunder god - his perceptions altered by Loki's spell - attacks
pedestrians thinking them to be trolls. Flying overhead, Superman
sees Thor rampaging through his city, and flies straight into Thor at Mach
3, slamming the Avenger through the street and into the sewers below.
Thor hurls Mjolnir at Superman who easily dodges it with super speed.
The Man of Steel closes in on the blond powerhouse and pounds away at him
in a flurry of super-fast, super-strong blows - thus playing right into
Thor's hands. Enchanted by Odin to always return to its owner's
hand, Mjolnir returns for Thor's next volley. Dazed, Superman
unleashes his heat vision, which Thor deflects with his hammer, but
is distracted enough for Superman to fly in close and grapple with the
thunder god in midair. Realizing he can't overcome his opponent's
superior speed, the Asgardian calls down a massive lightning strike on
them both. The lightning injures Thor, but being magical in nature,
it pierces the Man of Steel's invulnerability and puts him down for the
count. Standing over the comatose Superman, the bloody and battered
Thor proclaims: "Thou wert truly a worthy opponent - for a mortal!" |
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April 28, 2003 |
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From the Thor Message
Board |
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This is from a post
that I made to Tom Brevoort (editor of Thor). And if this story idea
comes to pass - I just want everyone to know - IT WAS MY IDEA! Heh
heh. Sorry, I can't help it. I'm giddy with the thought that
an idea of mine might see print in the pages of Thor. Anyway, you
can view the
thread
here |
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April 19, 2003 |
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From Joe Quesada
Message Board |
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It has been announced
that we will see volumes 2 and 3 of the Simonson Visionaries TPB's.
We should see volume 2 by the end of this year, and volume 3 the first
part of next year!! WOOO-HOOOOO!!!!!!! |
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Knock-off of the
Month
Behold
Thor, mighty warrior of...ancient Egypt? While the long-lived
Asgardian may have made a trip to the land of pyramids and people who love
cats a lot, we somehow doubt that he did it as "Pharaoh Warrior," the name
of this sad knock-off of Toy Biz' Avengers-series Thor. Wielding a
green version of Mjolnir (actually a long green stick with a laughably
undersized brick at the end), the costume details are almost
passable...except for the fact that the constipated-looking Pharaoh seems
to be wearing the rubber section of a plunger on his head. |
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February 14, 2003 |
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More
recently known for their rather public fight with the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology when the school appropriated armor designs from
their creator owned comic Radix, and used them in a successful
grant application, Ray and Ben Lai (along with colorist Brian Reber) go
from future tech to mythology with next month's Thor #61, as the
two ar the new art team on the book. Newsarama chatted with Ray Lai. First
off, while it's quick and easy to assign the reason for the brothers' move
to Thor to their problems with MIT, their discussions with Marvel
date back earlier. �We got a call from C.B. Cebulski back in spring 2002
before the MIT deal,� Lai said. �He wanted us to do something with Marvel
but not sure what. It wasn't until September when we took the offer to do
a few issues of Ultimate X-Men, but after one issue of that, Tom
wanted us to be regular on Thor, so here we are. We're also working
on this one shot with Marvel but I'm not sure we can talk about it yet.�
Given that the Lai brothers suspended publication of Radix while
the issues with MIT were sorted out, the move to Marvel was made for
financial reasons as it was to draw the characters, although the brothers
will never downplay the importance of Radix in their careers.
�We started drawing comics because we wanted to do Radix,� Lai
said. �It was with Radix samples pages that got us our first comic
gig. But it was when we actually began the process of publishing Radix
with Image that we ran into all kinds of problems. The MIT incident was
the last straw that made us decide to join Marvel.� Lai also said
that just because their two last projects were science fiction, they
shouldn't be pigeonholed as mecha, or tech artists, unable to draw
anything without jointed body armor and pulse rifles.
�Of course we're known for drawing futuristic stuff since the two
titles we've worked on so far are sci-fi comics,� Lai said. �But in the
last few months, we've worked on three different books and none of them
have tech in it. With Thor, we're going to have to draw things
you'd never see in our previous titles. I think people are going to be
surprised when they see our stuff on the series. I hope we can keep the
old fans happy and maybe get a few new ones.�
Lai said that he and his brother won't be using specific references for
the series, but will be adding their own flourishes to the established
Scandinavian feel of the series. �In our first issue we are slightly
updating some classic characters, while keeping them very close to their
original designs,� Lai said. �We like to do our own thing though when it
comes to what we have control over. Our design work seems to get
attention, so we will be adding our own touches to Thor and his
environments. �That said, there's really nothing easy in working on
Thor. Everything about this book is challenging to us. To think of
it, there's nothing easy about making comics.� The brothers quickly
caught themselves upon writer Dan Jurgens' take on Thor as well as his
current storylines when they started working on the title. �It's like Dan
planted a seed with the �Death of Odin' storyline and we've been watching
it grow with each arc since,� Lai said. �Currently most of the issues have
been pretty much stand-alone issues with an underlying theme that we'll be
exploring in our first arc.� Speaking to the working style he and
Ben share, Ray opted not to break it down into penciling and inking,
specifically. �It's teamwork,� Lai said. �We do work together in the same
room but it's not location but communication. We work the same way with
our colorist Brian, and we're 2000 miles apart. Brian will criticize our
artwork as we do with his colors in order to come out with the best
artwork possible. Right off the bat, I think people will notice our
storytelling and the color scheme. In a good way of course � and I hope
that they'll stay for as long as we're on the book.� |
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January 29, 2003 |
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THOR #156 OLDEST
PERFECTLY GRADED COMIC
Wanna know the best way to get $5,000 out of a 20-buck comic? Start
with a mint copy of Thor #156 from 1968. Stick it in a huge stack,
between hundreds of other comics, to keep it flat and air-free.
Next, throw the stack in a warehouse on Long Island and come back in 17
years. Believe it or not, that's basically how the oldest comic to
earn a 10.0 grade from the folks at Comics Guaranty, LLC (CGC) was born.
Chuck Rozanski, owner of the Boulder, Colo.-based Mile High Comics, bought
the warehouse containing the now infamous copy of Thor #156 in 1985, but
it wasn't until last year that the book was finally dug out. CGC
Primary Grader Steve Borock chalks up a find like this to pure luck.
"It's just a freak when a book from 1968 can earn that high of a grade!"
exclaims Borock. "I remember when I graded it, I was blown away.
It was just an incredible copy - real great colors, tight spine, sharp
corners; everything you look for in a book. I said to myself, 'I
have to be able to find something that's going to knock it down to 9.9 or
9.8 , and I just didn't find anything!" In the three years the CGC
has been open for business, the company has graded more than 235,000
comics, but has unearthed a mere 250 books to earn the much-coveted grade
of 10.0. "And I can almost guarantee that 240 of them are form the
mid '80's and on," says Borock. "So this Thor is just a real
rarity." Once news of the book's pristine condition reached
Rozanski, he immediately donated the book to the Comic Book Legal Defense
Fund. "You send in a stack of 30 books, and one of them comes back
as the best book ever graded!" laughs Rozanski. "you don't
expect that! That's a stroke of good fortune, and my feeling is that
when you get a stroke of good fortune, you should pay back." In this
case, Rozanski wanted the entire comic book community to benefit from his
luck. The book was auctioned off online in late 2002 to benefit the
CBLDF, fetching a closing price of $5,000.04 after an astonishing 47 bids.
Not bad for an issue that's valued at a meager $26 and features no major
first appearance, creative team or story arc. The high grade given
to Thor #156 gives hope to collectors who think they may have an earlier
Silver Age (or even Golden Age!) book that merits a 10.0. As Borock
attests, with a discovery of this magnitude, anything's possible.
"After seeing all these books over the last few years, I've seen stuff I
never though I'd see," laughs Borock. "So I never say never!" |
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January 5, 2003 |
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From several online
news sources |
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Apparently with
April's issue of Thor, along with 12 other titles, there will be a price
increase from $2.25 to $2.99. These titles are supposedly not doing
very well and are borderline on being cancelled outright. Marvel's
response to not canceling these books is to raise the price. So now
is the time to speak out. If you love your Thor and want to continue
to read about him on a monthly basis, you need to do 2 things. 1)
Keep buying it even after the price goes up. Yes I know $3 is a lot
for a comic, but it's either this, or no Thor at all. 2) Tell others
about Thor, let them borrow your issues and see for themselves whether
they like it or not. If readership increases, we'll get to keep our
monthly Thor fix and they may even lower the price back down if sales go
up. |
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2001 NEWS ARCHIVE
Back to top |
| December 23, 2001 |
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Thor is featured on the cover with
Wonder Woman In 2002, with Thor still adjusting to
becoming king of Asgard after Odin's death, he finds himself more powerful than ever as he
receives Odin's power and begins to work on a scale he's never operated on before.
While Odin felt the Asgardians's time was over, Thor begins taking more of an active role
in human affairs. Expect a few people to not be too happy about that prospect.
Watch out for a reappearance of the Enchantress; Disac, the deity slayer from the
Thor annual; and Zarrko the Tomorrow Man. Also, look out for a new costume and some
new characters showing up as the Thunder God takes over Asgard.
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| December 20, 2001 |
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On December 17th, Marvel finished an online poll as to
who is the mightiest hero, and of course Thor won. The results:
Thor - 64,767 votes
Hulk - 59,176 votes
Silver Surfer - 19,691 votes
Doop - 3,454 votesSo that proves it once again, and I won't
even say "I Told You So!" |
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| November 13, 2001 |
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Christopher Golden is teaming with Hellboy creator Mike Mignola on a
second Hellboy novel, Hellboy: The Bones of Giants. The 200-page prose novel is written by
Golden and Mignola, with black-and-white illustrations by Mignola. Here's how Dark Horse
describes the book:
"On the frozen shores of Sweden, lightning strikes from a clear sky. The skeleton of
a huge man is revealed, its fingers clutched around the handle of an iron hammer. No one
who comes to see this marvel from Norse mythology can lift it -- no one but Hellboy, who
lifts the hammer just in time for lightning to strike again, welding it to his hand and
leading him towards a bizarre series of visions and encounters."
"I've loved Norse mythology since I was in elementary school," Golden said.
"Not comic-book Norse mythology, mind you but the actual myths. "There was a
book by Dorothy Hosford called Thunder of the Gods that I must have read 15 times back in
the day. Once upon a time Mike Mignola mentioned to me that he had this story in his head,
these images of lightning striking the skeletal corpse of Thor on the frozen shore inn
Scandinavia, of the lightning hitting Mjollnir, and of Hellboy being the only one who can
lift the hammer. Well, you can imagine, I had to write that story. And I did. "The
Bones of Giants is very much a Hellboy adventure, but it's also laced with dark traces of
Norse mythology." The book will go on sale Dec 5 and will cost $14.95. |
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| October 26, 2001 |
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- From an article in Wizard.
There's something to be said about making a good first impression. With a
one-page pitch, Jose Armenta caught the eye of Marvel Editor Tom Brevoot and managed to
land himself a deal at the House of Ideas. Armenta won the writing portion of
Marvel's New Talent Search, earning the right to pen an eight-page back-up story in an
upcoming issue of Thor. His story will be penciled by an established artist, Entrant
Marlan Harris also turned in a winning idea, but skirted the "one-page plot
only" rule and turned in a full-script. Brevoot was so fond of Harris' story,
however, that he elected to also purchase it for use in a future issue.
Concerning the character of Thor in the upcoming "Ultimates" book.
"A New Age guru in his spare time, Ultimate Thor's published a whole series of
life-changing books and is often seen causing trouble in the middle of riots. Thor's
had visions telling him he's the Son of Odin, epiphanies that have convinces him it's his
mission to save us all. 'How do they persuade Thor, a guy who believes he's the
messiah, to work for America?' Bryan Hitch (artist) teases. 'It's gonna be fun watching
these characters come together.'" Here's
a picture of Thor from Wizard.
In an article entitled "Under the Microscope", Wizard takes a look
at Thor.
Why It's Good
- The last six months or so of Stuart Immonen's art has looked
absolutely fantastic! Immonen could easily be the quintessential Thor
artist if he committed to the book long-term. And the recent death of Odin storyline
had more action and drama than our dating scene, and that's always a good thing
- Why It's Bad
- We're not crazy about the idea of Thor as leader of Asgard, and
that's the direction it looks like this book's going. He needs to be our
adventuring, not mulling over the day-to-day operation of the Norse Gods. Also, we
dig the idea of Thor having a dual identity, but we've never like Jake Olson all that much
- we never felt connected to him the way we did with Don Blake, Thor's former alter-ego.
And we definetly don't like Thor and Jake's lives intermingling so much; the cast
gets way too unwieldy with so many folks running around.
- Bottom Line
- Keep Immonen! No disrespect to upcoming artist Tom Raney, but
Immonen's the guy to propel this title. Also, eliminate the Jake Olson identity,
which'll free up Thor for more cosmic, godly type adventures and also tighten up the cast.
And don't keep Thor in Odin's chair for too long; there's gotta be someone in that
Norse pantheon of gods who can make for a good leader.
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| October 20, 2001 |
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From Kirk and Pamela Jarvinen |
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This couple
was nice enough to send me some pictures of their wedding - congratulations!!!! |
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From YourMan@Marvel |
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This probably isn't a smart thing for me to say, but "Hey,
Thor, you dress like a ballerina."
I
mean, he's a Norse God, right? The Heir to the Throne
(especially now that Odin's gone)? The mightiest warrior of
all fabled Asgard? So how come he wears blue tights with
matching briefs?
Now, don't get me wrong. The design of Thor's costume is a
definite classic. I mean, Jack Kirby is the master, "The
King," and he wasn't fooling around when he whipped up the
Asgardian Avenger's costume. 40 years since its inception and
it still looks good... as a design. But let's think
about it for a second. Thor fights monsters, be they Frost
Giants or the Absorbing Man. That's what his role is, what he
was made to do. Balder the Brave, Hogun the Grim, the Lady
Sif... they're warriors... so they wear armor. Makes sense,
right? So what's up with Thor's spandex? Does he stick
with the tights to blend in with Earth's other super humans?
Or does it just cut down on chafing? Whatever the reason,
while I both respect and admire the design, I always
questioned whey the God of Thunder, a Viking deity, would
dress like a normal crime-fighter.
Which
is why I was so pumped when Earth's Mightiest Editor Tom
Brevoort showed me the cover to THOR #45, which happens
to be the debut of new ongoing penciler Tom Raney (ULTIMATE
X-MEN, Stormwatch). As you can see, the cover is a
close-up of Thor's head... but how cool is that new helmet?
The wings on the side, which always struck me as simply
decorative and rather goofy, have now rotated to the front,
providing protection and plenty of attitude. See, now those
wings make sense... they ward off blows, and provide a jolt of
intimidation to all who face him. But that was just the tip of
the proverbial iceberg.
Because
then Tom brought me into his office, opened the drawer that
contains the THOR art, and showed me Tom Raney's design
of the Thunder God's new armor... and I literally gasped with
surprise. And, yeah, I said armor. Just take a look at the new
duds that the hammerin' hero will soon be wearing.
From the straps on the boots to the chainmail tunic to the
chrome discs to the fur-lined cloak, this is what the Son of
Odin should wear into battle. I look at the metal shoulder
pads and knee guards, not to mention that kick-butt
belt-buckle, and I think: now that's a God.
Tom tells me that while you'll see most of the new look by the
end of THOR #44, which is also his 'Nuff Said issue,
you'll see the entire ensemble in issue #45, which slams into
stores on January 2nd. And guess what? The changes don't stop
there.
Not
only does Thor get an impressive new look, not only does he
get a new artist in the form of Terrific Tom Raney (whose work
I've admired for many a moon), but he also gets a brand-new
logo! Yep, as of issue #45, the Thunder God's book will read
THE MIGHTY THOR: LORD OF ASGARD!
Now do you believe us when we said that the death of Odin
would mean big changes?
Oh, and Thor? Lookin' good, big guy!
Reporting From Inside The House,
Your Man @ Marvel |
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| September 12, 2001 |
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Concerning "The Ultimates",
the new Ultimate book about the Avengers. Mark Millar based Thor on a British New
Age guru; a television sportscaster who decided, in "a moment of divine
madness," that he was the Son of God. "In much the same way," Millar
says, "Ultimate Thor is just an ordinary guy from Norway who discovers that he's the
Son of Odin and all his friends think he's lost his mind...even his teammates aren't sure
if he's the genuine article or just a lunatic with a big hammer."
In issue #8 page 20 panel 1 of the DC book "Top 10" you can see
Loki in the background to the left of the information booth. And in issue #9 page 4
panel 1, you see an adult billboard with the logo "Journey Into Mammary".
The 1960's cartoons of Marvel Superheroes, featuring Thor, was rated 83 out
of the top 100 cartoons of all time.
In "The Worst Moments of Teen Superheroes" they do an item on Thor
Girl. It's been said before, but here it goes again: Mjolnir is Thor's
"sledgehammer" in more ways than one. So what happens when a female wields
the mighty weapon - or, as in this issue, a reasonable facsimile thereof? Thou dost
not need much creativity to create a young female derivative of the Thunder God; you don't
have to lose the hair, the attitude, the speech, the costume or even the physique.
Just throw in a smaller waist size, downsize the hammer into a dinky wooden mallet and
there you have it - Thor Girl. Symbolic castration at its finest. |
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| August 8, 2001 |
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From various website news sources |
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Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch are teaming up on the fourth
Ultimate title from Marvel Comics, called The Ultimates. The Ultimates team will include
Iron Man, Hulk, Thor, Captain America, Wasp and Giant-Man. The formal announcement for The
Ultimates was scheduled to take place in conjunction with Wizard, but - similarly to the
creative team on Captain America of John Ney Reiber and John Cassaday - word leaked out
over the weekend. "Contractually, believe it or not, neither me nor Hitch can even
talk about this right now," Millar told The Continuum. "After Wizard World, this
will be pretty different, but in the meantime my lips are uncharacteristically
sealed."
Marvel Comics has followed up on the 'death' of
that character with a "long and rich history in the Marvel Univese", that has
been the source of fans speculation over the last few months. For those not yet up to
speed, in last Wednesday's Thor #40, Odin, king of the Norse gods and Thor's dead
old dad, was the character that joined the tenor section of the choir invisible.
"Most people seem to be reacting to the surprise death at the end of Thor #40
as a climax, an ending," said Senior Editor Tom Brevoort in a press release.
"But that's not how we see it. Instead, it's a beginning - and from here on in,
Thor's going to be moving into uncharted territory as the demise of this character changes
virtually everything about the Thunder God's world. The death wasn't the point -
everything that comes after it is!"
So Odin is dead, right? Or is he? Maybe
he's not, and the whole thing is just a ruse to really surprise readers in September when
Marvel kills off Captain America and Spider-Man
together..? Nah...he's dead.
But there's a ton of confusion spreading like weeds throughout readers. The thing is,
instead of September (teased by Joe Quesada as the month when one of Marvel's "oldest
and richest" characters would die), Odin died in August. Also, over in the pages of Fantastic
Four #46, the Silver Surfer appears to have taken the dirt-nap as well,
virtually melted by an energy ray into nothingness. Since a.) it's not September, and 2.)
more than one character seems to have died, some readers have been left with that
not-so-fresh, confused feeling. Some accept that it was Odin, others the Surfer, while
still others are voicing the opinion that both were red herrings, and the "real"
death Quesada was taking about is coming next month, regardless. Time to rain on
parades
"Odin's death was the death of a long-time Marvel character that Joe
was talking about," Thor editor Tom Brevoort told Newsarama. "He let that
tidbit out after a discussion with me over what we could do to start building anticipation
and buzz. In terms of the Surfer, that was entirely a fluke - and I don't think I'm really
spoiling things too much by saying that, given that the Fantastic Four is in the middle of
a reality-altering story and that only the opening chapters of that story have been
published, there's more going on than meets the eye. "I'm frankly quite astonished
over the amount and intensity of the outcry - though not entirely surprised
Iron
Man readers reacted in the same way when Tony gave away his fortune and assumed the
Hogan Potts identity, despite the fact that that was the first part of a four-part story
as well. And, like those Iron Man readers, as the story unfolds you'll get a better
understanding of what is going on as well as why - and then we'll be either vilified or
heralded depending on how it all goes over." But if Odin was the character Joe
was talking about, why did he die a month early? Script revision.
"Initially, we were planning to leave matters a little bit more vague at the end of Thor
#40, and only really confirm the death of Odin in issue #41 - hence, the September date
that was given. But in actually executing the story, it became apparent to us that the
delay served no real purpose, so the sequence was scripted in a more straightforward
manner." Okay, so the thing with Odin dying at the hands of Surtur is
well, it's
kind of turned into a bit of a habit of his. Long-time readers know it happened to him
once before, back in Walt Simonson's classic run on the series. And given that comic book
deaths have the reputation of changing with the direction of the wind, Odin's death in Thor
#40 has left some fans asking, "what's the point?" Brevoort is the first
to admit that a death in comics is not always a death, but as long as he has anything to
say about it, Odin is Asgardian wormfood. "First off, there's absolutely no way to
100% guarantee that Odin or any other character won't turn up alive tomorrow,"
Brevoort said. "Certainly, Mike Carlin could wake up one morning and decide to
resurrect Barry Allen. But given that, our intentions - mine, Dan's, Joe's - are that
Odin's death is the real deal, and that he's not coming back. We'll show you the body, and
we'll cremate it before your eyes. So as long as any of us are around, don't expect to see
Odin alive and kicking outside of flashbacks. As for what makes it significant, you and
the readers will get to see that in Thor over the next year." And as for
the guy who's got his hands on the steering wheel? "In my mind, Odin is dead,"
Jurgens said. "In the way I approach the stories and characters, Odin is dead. In all
the plans for the future of the book, Odin is dead. In fact, the book will very much
become the story of Odin being dead and Thor's evolution as a character because of that.
This will change Thor and the balance of the book a great deal. We've hinted at a
momentous future for Thor and we're definitely going in that direction." As for
a hint of that future and those ramifications, both Jurgens and Brevoort contend that
Odin's death will get Thor off of the path that was starting to stagnate a little, and
take him down a new road, changing him from semi responsibility-free young god to ruler of
a realm. "This won't be a situation where Odin's dead and Thor goes on to fight
the Wrecking Crew again, while wailing for his father," Jurgens said. "It will
be deeper than that as Thor is confronted with responsibilities to Asgard that can't be
denied. With Odin's death, we have an opportunity to explore new territory and we plan to
take advantage of it. We were motivated to do this because we have a chance to tell a new
type of Thor story, and that's exciting to all of us." Brevoort sees Odin's
death as the first step on a new path for the character. "This is territory that has
never been truly explored in Thor before," Brevoort said. "We've seen
Odin seemingly die before, we've seen other people try to take up the reins of leadership
before, but we've never seen Thor have to grapple with his responsibilities as prince of
Asgard quite this way before. "There's always been a central triangle at the
heart of Thor - that being Thor, Loki and Odin. By taking Odin out of the equation,
we're turning that triangle on its head. What happens now? Does Thor take the throne, the
way his father intended? Does he want to? Is it even a good idea? If he does take up the
reins of power, does that mean that Thor will be confined to Asgard? Is he up to the
challenge of dealing with the kinds of problems Odin grappled with every day--the sorts of
affairs which never really got delved into before now, due to the fact that the book was
about Thor rather than Odin. How does Thor think the Asgardian Gods should conduct their
affairs? And, of course, what's Loki's take on all of this? "Despite the surface
similarities with Odin's death during Walt Simonson's run, which is due to poor timing on
our parts - we'd already started setting up this Surtur story when the notion struck us to
kill Odin - and while we could have done that in a follow-up tale, it seemed too long to
wait. So, we bit the bullet, knowing there'd be comparisons, and figured that the next
couple of months would allay people's fears; we're moving into uncharted territory from
here on in. And that's exciting. Both Dan and I have been feeling like we've been falling
into a routine on Thor a bit too much, and this direction is our response to that.
We'll be giving the long-time readers some of the things they've most been asking for,
while at the same time blowing the doors off in a manner that'll hopefully get the
entirety of the readership talking. "The story isn't the death - it's what happens as
a result of that death. So Thor #40 isn't a conclusion - it's the opening gun on a
new era." And finally, Brevoort was hesitant to say that since Odin is dead, everyone
else under his watch is therefore automatically safe. "This is the Marvel Universe -
no character is ever entirely safe," Brevoort said. "So yes, it is still
possible that Bruce Banner or Tony Stark or whomever will die or be horribly mutilated in
an upcoming story. All we've done for certain is to pay off on Joe's death proclamation
from a couple of months ago - but nothing's stopping us from radically altering other
characters if there's a good story to be had from it."
Marvel
Comics has released more information about the future of Thor, following the death of Odin
in Thor #40 last week. "Most people seem to be reacting to the surprise death at the
end of Thor #40 as a climax, an ending," said Thor editor Tom Brevoort. "But
that's not how we see it. Instead, it's a beginning -- and from here on in, Thor's going
to be moving into uncharted territory as the demise of this character changes virtually
everything about the Thunder God's world. The death wasn't the point -- everything that
comes after it is!" Marvel has released the following solicitation copy for
November's Thor #43, which is written by Dan Jurgens, with art by Joe Bennett and Klaus
Janson: "Thor: King of Asgard! With the shocking death in issue #40 turning his world
upside down, the Thunder God grapples with his new position -- and his new power -- as
Tarene does battle with a foe from Thor's past -- a conflict that will take the thunderer
beyond the pale of death itself." |
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| August 3, 2001 |
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DAN JURGENS TALKS ODIN'S DEATH
Thor #40, which went on sale Wednesday, marks the death of Thor's father, Odin. The
Continuum caught up with Thor writer Dan Jurgens to discuss the development.
The Continuum: Is Odin really dead?
Jurgens: As far as I'm concerned, yes. We all know what "death" means in comics
and that we can't answer for what future writers or editors will do, but for me, this is
it.
The Continuum: Why did you decide to do it?
Jurgens: Tom Brevoort and I have always talked about the danger of complacency on the book
and the idea that every now and then, you have to change things up. Today's audience is so
much older and more jaded that creators have to go to greater extremes. I liken our
audience of today to hardcore roller coaster riders. As kids, they were satisfied with
tamer rides. As they aged, they need more speed, more twists and turns and harsher
extremes.
The Continuum: So Thor will struggle with this?
Jurgens: Naturally. This will push him in a bit of a different direction and certainly
have implications for the way he views his responsibilities on Earth.
The Continuum: Will there be a funeral?
Jurgens: Yes.
The Continuum: Will you miss him?
Jurgens: I will. I always enjoyed the dynamic and tension between Odin and Thor. But this
also provides opportunity, as Thor will have to change. |
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| July 28, 2001 |
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From Marvel.com |
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Also in
January, Tom Raney (New X-Men) will pick up Mjolnir and step into the role as
ongoing penciler of Thor, starting with issue #45. |
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During an online chat, a high-ranking member of Marvel's
editorial staff hinted that a major character in the company's pantheon is gonna be
heading for a long dirt nap this summer. Though the editor refused to divulge
anything further, athe rumor mill hints the mysterious mortification will take place in
the pages of a Mighty big book. (READ: Odin bites the dust and Thor assumes
the leadership of Asgard)
Here is
a picture of Thor as done by Joseph Michael Linsner.
Linsner did this piece a few years ago, just for fun. Now it's got a practical
application. Linsner will draw Thor in an issue of Ultimate Marvel Team-Up, teaming
up with writer Brian Michael Bendis. "I was at a convention in Seattle and
bumped into Bendis, and he just said , 'Hey man, I'm doing Ultimate Marvel Team-Up.
Wanna do one?' Having my head on straight, I told him that I'd love to do
Thor." But Linsner won't do it for a while. "Bendis has got 22 or 23
guys ahead of me in line, every one a winner," Linsner says. "But his is
something I'm really dying to do."
These
are the websites that Thor writer Dan Jurgens likes to visit: "In a
word...sports sites, particularly during fantasy football season. I play in a leage
with Phil Hester and Andy Park so we center the leage at CBSSportsline.com. I also
hit fanball.com quite a lot. Beyond that there's sportstalk.com and a few business
sites. I'll also visit washingtonpost.com and nytimes.com for the editorial pages.
Thrilling stuff, I know. But didja think I was really gonna 'fess up on the
porn sites?" |
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| June 24, 2001 |
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DAN JURGENS TALKS THOR - AND MORE
Dan Jurgens told The Continuum that he has plans for "major, major events" in
Marvel Comics' Thor and a future one-shot collaboration with Kurt Busiek. Jurgens
currently writes both Thor and Top Cow's Tomb Raider and is ending his run on Captain
America. The Continuum caught up with him on Tuesday to see what's coming up.
The Continuum: Thor #50 is not that far away. Are you already planning for something?
Jurgens: Yes, we do have something planned. It's safe to say that we're changing the
status quo in Thor, which means we'll be moving several of the characters in new
directions.
The Continuum: It was recently announced that Tom Raney will follow Stuart Immonen's run
as the regular artist of Thor. Do you know when he starts?
Jurgens: I believe Tom will be starting with Thor #43 or #44. That's not 100 percent
definite yet as we want to make sure everyone's schedule --Tom's, myself, Marvel's and
Stuart's -- don't get compromised in the switchover. Tom and I have talked and I think
he's the perfect guy to move Thor in the direction we're headed.
The Continuum: Can you give a sneak peek into Thor's future?
Jurgens: We have a large cast, which is about to get smaller. I've said before that the
proper approach to Thor is a balance between Earth and Asgardian stories. We'll keep that
up, even though our character focus will change.I want to see Thor become a more emotional
character and I'd also like to see his life become more complicated. In addition, we've
been hinting at some major, major events in Thor's future. Those matters will eventually
surface in the book.
The Continuum: After Captain America's run, will you be drawing again soon?
Jurgens: Yep. I have a project in the works that I'm very, very excited about. It's a bit
too early to announce but all I know is that I can't wait to get started. One of the
things I'll be drawing after Cap is a one-shot project that Kurt Busiek is writing. It's
been a long time since I've drawn something written by another writer and I'm looking
forward to it.
The Continuum: More plans for any lithographs?
Jurgens: We just wrapped up the 225th Captain America litho for Dynamic Forces and I'm
very, very happy with the way it turned out. We'll be following that up with another one
featuring a different Marvel character as soon as I find the time to do it. |
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| June 6, 2001 |
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From Yourman@Marvel |
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He can shake down lightning from the sky. He wields the mighty Mjolnir. He's
backed by the Avengers, the Warriors Three and the armies of Asgard. What could possibly
pose a threat to Thor, Norse God of Thunder? This is the conundrum Marvel creators have
faced for four decades. And if writer Dan Jurgens and Co. have their way, Thor may not
live to see the next decade! If you've been reading Thor lately, you were treated
to a horrifying sight: the return of the grand fire demon known as Surtur. The last time
his flaming foot scorched the ground, Odin's No. 1 son was facing replacement at the hands
of Beta-Ray Bill and the trickery of Malekith the Dark Elf. And the stunning pencils of
Walt Simonson told the tale. Tapping into that Simonson magic, Jurgens already has brought
back Bill and Malekith. So it was only a matter of time before Surtur singed Thor's cape
once again. And how will Surtur's burning blade cut the Asgardian Avenger this time? Thor
editor Tom Brevoort is keeping even me in the dark, perhaps fearing I'd spoil the swerves
for you loyal readers. So I guess we'll all just have to experience the tale's twists
firsthand. But would it hurt to let you read the story synopsis to August's Thor #40?
No, I didn't think so either. So here it is: "Everything changes as Thor and the fire
giant Surtur collide in cataclysmic combat! The searing Surtur stands ready to bring about
the end of the world! Asgard's legions strike valiantly against him! But in the end, a god
must fall -- ushering in a new and startling status quo for this title!" So what does
that enigmatic entry mean? Will the Thunder God finally head off to Valhalla? Will another
god take over the title? Will Thor be renamed Balder the Brave, the Allmighty
Odin or The Savage Sif? Hey, we killed Colossus. Could this be the next
shocker? Speaking of Sif, perhaps the lethal lovely will go down in flames, driving Thor
mad -- as has been foretold recently in the pages of his comic? Is "The
Reigning" upon us? That I do not know. But I do know that Thor will be featured in a
number of books in August! Hey, are editors sneaking in appearances by the Thunder God
before he's gone? Only Odin knows. But I can report that while the battle-weary Avengers
jet off to Washington, D.C., to hear the government's solution to the Ultron problem, Thor
will have a "heart-to-heart talk" with Firebird in the pages of Avengers #45.
Knowing Firebird's religious leanings, and with Thor being a Norse god, I'm betting this
will be one interesting discussion of faith. I also recently learned that the great run by
Jurgens and penciler Andy Kubert will be collected in Thor: Across All Worlds, a
208-page trade paperback scheduled for publication in September. This $16.95 book will
reprint Thor #29 to #35 -- in which our hero with the hammer faces the
aforementioned Malekith, Pentigaar the ice giant, Kurse and the intergalactic Gladiator!
If you haven't read this series since Simonson's majestic run, I can safely say you'll
enjoy this collection. In fact, why take my word for it? Even the Comics Buyer's Guide's
esteemed "Publisher's Picks" panel deemed it worthy reading, decreeing that
"Jurgens does a great job and seems to be having an enormous amount of fun ... And
Kubert's art is amazing, capturing the majesty of Thor and his Asgardian brethren
wonderfully." So be forewarned, children of Midgard: Dark days are approaching for
Thor. Which proves that even to the days of the Thunder God, a little rain must fall. |
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Tom Raney told The Continuum that he will be the new regular artist of
Marvel Comics' Thor. "As soon as I wrap up my commitments with the X-office I'll be
jumping over," Raney told The Continuum. " I'm very excited about it. It's been
a while since I've had a book of my own, so I'm thrilled. "Also, it's pretty much the
only solo character book I've ever worked on, so I'm looking forward to that experience.
I've been a fan of Thor since I was a kid. Getting the chance to put my stamp on Thor is
something I've been hoping to get a shot at for the longest time." Raney, who has
been the regular fill-in artist on X-Men and Ultimate X-Men, will likely start with Thor
#45. Dan Jurgens continues as writer, and Scott Hanna will ink. |
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| April 29, 2001 |
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From Wizard #117 |
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In an upcoming Ultimate Marvel
Team-Up, we will see Joseph Michael Linsner do his version of Thor.
Shockrockets artist Stuart Immonen takes over on Thor starting with
June's issue #38. The gig, tentatively scheduled to last three issues, will reunite
Immonen with former Superman collaborator Dan Jurgens |
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| April 11, 2001 |
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From Fandom.com |
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Kurt Busiek has already spent a few years dealing with
the superheroic side
of Thor, the God of Thunder, in the pages of The Avengers, and now later
this year, hes going to get a chance to deal with the characters
mythological side in Thor: Godstorm, a September-debuting, three-issue, 32
pp. mini-series from Marvel illustrated by Steve the Dude Rude. According to
Busiek, each issue is one of a set of three interlocking adventures of Thor, all dealing
with the same recurring, dangerous threat - the Godstorm, presented
as much as legends as they are as superhero stories. "One of the legends takes
place during the Tales of Asgard era, when Thor`s still young and new to the
hammer," explained Busiek. "One`s set in the Stan Lee/Jack Kirby days, and
features an appearance by the Avengers of that era; and the third is set in the present
Jake Olson era. It`s pretty sweeping in scope - I was looking to do something
that would deal with Thor as god, Thor as myth, within the context of Thor as
Marvel-character. I was a nut for Norse mythology long before I was a comics reader, and I
wanted to get some of that feel into things." And as the promo shot by Rude
illustrates, Busiek said the first two stories "at least" will
have a fair bit of Stan-and-Jack influence, as they occur in time periods defined by Lee
and Kirby, though he added Rudes Kirby-esque style isnt influencing his
approach to the story. "When I was invited to write this project, I talked to
Steve and outlined the approach I wanted to take, with mythic overtones and a legendary
feel, and he got very enthusiastic about it," the writer said. "So I`m plotting
the book very much to that core idea - the idea that these aren`t just adventures, they`re
legends, and they should feel that way. And then Steve draws them, and that`s where his
style comes into play - he`s reinterpreting and re-pacing my plots in his own way, and
making the story richer and more powerful as he does so. Then I go back into it in the
script, and I`m playing off on not only my original intent, but Steve`s treatment of it.
So far, it seems to be working out just fine, and I`m eager to see the finale. Steve`s
already done with #2, so we`re working on the final issue already."
September
Publication
Thor: Across All Worlds (160 pgs. $15.95)
Though not listing an author, here is Amazons book description: "Thor, god of
Thunder, is a god with more than a passing interest in the doings on Midgard (Earth to you
and me). His sense of duty and morality forces Thor to merge his life-spirit into the
mortal body of paramedic Jake Olson. Thus, he finds himself a god divided, with loyalties
to the court of Odin, ruler of the Norse Gods, and as a man with obligations to friends
and family. This powerfully told story follows the attempt by Lord Malekith the Dark
Elf to take over Asgard by unleashing the immeasurable power contained within the Cask of
Ancient Winters. With Thor tending to matters on Earth and mighty Odin undergoing the
necessary Odinsleep to renew his powers, it falls to Lady Sif to rule and protect the
Realm Eternal. Sensing opportunity, Ulik, leader of the Trolls, also decides the time has
come to
ravage Asgard, so the gods themselves have their hands full." |
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| April 4, 2001 |
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From my own observation |
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In the episode titles "Wheezin' Ed" of the
cartoon "Hey Arnold!", at one point a kid finds a jelly bean and says
"Praise Thor, the Thunder God!" - hilarious! |
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From Yourman@Marvel |
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Jumping ahead
a week, Avengers #44 sees Earth's Mightiest pushed to their breaking point, yet
fighting back on three different fronts against the aforementioned Kang! I've also been
told Thor will go berserk because an Avenger will fall! So who gets hurt? Kurt, penciler
Rick Leonardi and inker Karl Kesel will reveal all July 25! Speaking of the Thunder
God, we saw him separated from his Jake Olson persona in the double-sized Thor #35.
And just in case you thought that was a fleeting plot twist, think again! Issue #39, on
sale July 4, opens with Thor still split from his human persona ... and the fire giant
known as Surtur walking the Earth! If you've never encountered the flaming monster before,
you might want to check out Thor Visionaries: Walter Simonson, which finally has
reached stores! As for issue #38, it features the work of writer Dan Jurgens, penciler
Stuart Immonen and inker Wade Von Grawbadger ... not to mention a cover by Barry
Windsor-Smith! |
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