Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Disney. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Panel Discussion: Jean Grey or Wile E. Coyote?


Martinex1: Chris Claremont and John Byrne were hitting on all cylinders in the late 70s during their seminal run on Uncanny X-Men, reaching their apex in the Hellfire Club and the Death of Phoenix arcs. Supported by the inks of Terry Austin, the colors from Glynis Wein and the letters of Tom Orzechowski, the books were top notch. It was lightning in a bottle and the character interaction and subplot styles were often imitated as the Bronze Age started to wind down.   Few could capture the magic of that series. 

One of the most memorable pages came from X-Men #137,  a double-sized issue cover dated September 1980.  It of course depicted the tragic death of Jean Grey, the beleaguered and distraught Phoenix.    Considering that the story culminates in the death of a fairly major heroic character, it interests me that the moment is handled in a mid-sized panel on a very busy page.   There is a large amount of text as the last three panels have Cyclops verbalizing what just occurred.  Those middle panels however are exceptional and memorable.

I am going to focus on those panels for the rest of the column, as over the years I have become more and more disconcerted by them.   This short passage, at least for a while defined the Marvel approach.   Stories were laced with tragedy and pathos.   Even the word balloons quivered with the import.   The colors were diffused as the bright light of realization as well as the physical blast struck.   I believe this is a truly historical moment in comics.

Having said that, this is where I take a complete detour in my analysis.  I have developed a strange perception of these three panels, over time I was distracted by some artistic elements.   I could not look at these panels without thinking, "Ditko, Disney, and ACME."   See if you are with me as I dissect this scene.

I don't know if John Byrne was channeling Steve Ditko or paying homage to him in the first panel.  But for years now I cannot look at that Jean Grey and not see the large heavily lashed eyes of a Ditko damsel.  I had feelings of deja vu as I looked upon the arched eyebrows, the peaked hair and the full lips and open mouth; surely this had a Ditko influence.


But my interpretation didn't stop there.   The second panel with Cyclops agape reminded me of something else.   It was the tongue and the open mouth.   In my eyes it was cartoony in a way that super-hero comics tended to avoid.  I know it is an artistic technique in which the bright light highlights certain features - and Byrne uses that technique often and well.   But that mouth and the floating tongue seemed like something from a Disney film.   Again, I could swear I had seen this before.

And then there was the third panel.  An explosive blast disintegrates Jean Grey.   The mighty Phoenix is felled.   But somehow my view of it has shifted to Wile E. Coyote and the various contraptions that ultimately lead to his temporary demise.

Strange I know... a classic scene devolved to Ditko, Disney, and Wile E. Coyote.   You may think I am off the rocker, and you may demand that Redartz take over permanently.  But before you persist take a look at the following scenes that I have cobbled together and tell me then that I am not onto something.

Take a look at Clea with the wild hair, large lashes, and even a tear drop.  And from Hercules, a character yells; indeed this came out some time after X-Men but look at that tongue.  And of course our beloved Coyote blasted to ash.


Still not sure - okay here is another.  Both Betty and Liz have those eyes and curvy eyebrows.   This Disney villain shows a little more throat but you get the idea.   And how many cannons and guns have pointed at Wile over the years?   Still not convinced....
Ditko again.   A "Cyclops" from Disney's Lilo and Stitch" (I don't believe in coincidences).  And a typical Warner Brothers' blast.  Okay, okay, just one more...

Squirrel Girl by Ditko.   Evil stepmother doing the Cyclops yowl.   And nothing but a silhouette.

So that is my art critique for the week.   Tell me that you won't look at this scene differently from now on!  Only at the "Panel Discussion" on the BITBA site can you get such depth!   Cheers all!


Saturday, November 19, 2016

Rank and File: Disney Live Action Films

Martinex1: Here is yet another new series within the Back In The Bronze Age blog: "Rank and File."  When you see the header above, Redartz or I will introduce a topic of mind-numbing importance, and we will ask for you to discuss the category and rank your selections.  Not only can you  rate your favorites, but you can also share what you didn't like.   In the future we may cover comic book titles, characters, or television shows.   Today we will be discussing Disney movies and specifically their live-action movies from our youth.


Note that I don't mind if we deviate and discuss other studios' G Rated live action films as well. We seemed to have grown up in the "G" Golden Age and I myself will address some of those movies below*.


I can remember occasionally traveling to the Studio Theater that existed in a nearby neighborhood.  It was a mysterious box of a building down busy 95th street in the Southwest suburbs of Chicago.  It had a large parking lot adjacent to one of those giant slides that you rode a potato sack down.   And the theater always showed the Disney movies and usually in a double-feature format.   I can remember driving over there in our family's red station wagon; I rode backwards facing the rear window on hot summer days.  We'd park and get our tickets and look at the movie posters.   No candy or pop for us, unless my mom hid some M&Ms or Good and Plenty in her purse.  It didn't matter because I was mesmerized by Dexter Riley's adventures, or The Apple Dumpling Gang, or Escape to Witch Mountain.


I know I didn't  see every Disney film, but we sure saw a lot of them.   In the 70s it seemed like the studio produced more live action vehicles than it did animated films.   My memory may be cloudy on where I saw the movies, as many also appeared on Disney's Sunday night program Wonderful World of Disney.  I also saw some made for TV movies there as well like the great Mystery in Dracula's Castle.

Besides those already mentioned, here is an incomplete list of the Disney movies in this category that I viewed somewhere back in the haze of my youth:


Big Red
Emil and the Detectives
That Darn Cat! 
The Ugly Dachshund
The Gnome-Mobile
The Boatniks
Superdad
The Barefoot Executive
The Million Dollar Duck
One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing
The Shaggy D.A.
Herbie Goes to Monte Carlo
The Cat From Outer Space
Hot Lead and Cold Feet
The North Avenue Irregulars
The Devil and Max Devlin
The Black Hole
The Watcher in the Woods





Seeing these again, the storylines are sometimes quite vapid, the special effects cheesy, and the acting is a bit hammy.  But I love them anyway.  Sometimes nostalgia beats artistry.
  
So here are my Top Five Disney Live Action Films and some notes about each:
1) Now You See Him, Now You Don't is the second film in the Dexter Riley trilogy starring Kurt Russell.  The others were The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes and The Strongest Man In The World.  In 1972, five-year-old me couldn't get enough of the invisibility hijinks at Medfield College and the treachery of Caesar Romero's A.J. Arno.  Oh, I so wanted to turn invisible!
2) Gus is the story of a field goal kicking mule and the beleaguered professional football team that hires him and his caretaker.  The joy of seeing slow motion muddy football craziness cannot be beat.  Plus it has Tim Conway as a criminal and Don Knotts as the coach.   I still cannot figure out what the magic word is that makes Gus kick (it sounds like "oyage') but I loved this movie.
3) The Mystery In Dracula's Castle. The above mentioned made-for-TV movie always captivated me.   Two brothers who decide to film a Dracula movie during their summer vacation stumble upon some jewel thieves at their lighthouse castle location.   They of course manage to foil the criminals in a particularly spectacular fashion when they light off fireworks to draw attention. 
4) The Parent Trap. I saw this one on TV also.   I laughed heartily along with my sisters when the camp pranks were in action.  I could not wrap my tiny mind around the fact that Hayley Mills was playing both roles of the twins.  
5) Freaky Friday.  I was mesmerized by the thought of a mind switch.  Oh boy, if I could be somebody else for a day - how much fun would that be? Redartz and I better not make any magic wishes!


So those are my top picks, but there were also some movies that I did not like.  I have to say that One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing left me cold.  I saw it on a double bill with The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again.   I don't remember much about it other than a group of nannies chased down the skeleton of a dinosaur stolen from a museum.   I remember really not liking it at the time.


And now for the asterisks...


*How can there be a discussion of great children's movies without including the 1968 classic from Warfield Productions, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (boy did that Child Catcher creep me out) or the 1971 Wolper Pictures' masterpiece Willy Wonka &The Chocolate Factory  Those honestly would be way up on my list if I  didn't limit the favorite five to Disney flicks. 


*On the other side of that coin, I have to say that when I was in grade school, Benji seemed to be everywhere.  I remember posters, numerous sequels, books in the monthly Scholastic offerings, etc.   And the kids in my school seemed to love the little mutt.   But he bored me to tears.  Sorry animal fans - Benji is in the doghouse in my book.


Did you see a lot of these films?   Below are some posters and photos of some of the "classics", but there are countless others.  What were your memories?  What were your favorites?  And what did you not like?   Were you more of an animation fan or did you enjoy these fictional forays as well?   Rate them. Rank them, And share your thoughts.  Cheers!






















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