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Tag: Darwyn Cooke

This page an archive of posts that have been tagged with the Darwyn Cooke topic.

Brave and the Bold (vol. 1) #28 – The Cover

Brave and the Bold (vol. 1) #28 was the comic book that launched the Justice League, but it’s also one got of those classic covers that gets continually aped and copied. Here are a ten recreations, homages, and pastiches of that classic cover.

0. Mike Sekowsky — The Original

This is the original on the left and the Justice League Archives vol. 1 recolouring on the right. The tones are nicely matched, but there is something about the original – the depth of the colours and the patina of age – that makes it truly fantastic.

1. Alex Ross — Justice League Secret Origins

Superstar painter Alex Ross did this reverse perspective flashback to BB #28 for his Justice League tabloid with writer Paul Dini.

2. Mattel 2010 SDCC Exclusive

As a promotional offering for last years San Diego Comic Con Mattel produced a special Justice League and Starro boxed-set with special sound effects recorded by Kevin Conroy (Batman from Batman: The Animated Series).

3. Run Frenz & Sal Buscema — Alter Ego #33

Alter Ego use to have two covers, one for the Golden Age half and one for the Silver Age half. When celibrating JLA artist Mike Sekowsky that had a classic marvel cover showing DC characters and this classic DC Cover shing Marvel’s Human Torch, Submariner, Captain America, and co.

4. John G. Mathews — Brave and the Bold Statue

From DC Direct’s description: “the cover of THE BRAVE & THE BOLD #28 by Mike Sekowsky and Murphy Anderson (March, 1960) is recreated as a stunning hand-painted, cold-cast porcelain statue, sculpted by John G. Mathews.”

5. Jim Lee — JLA #50

Upcoming Justice League artist Jim Lee drew the JLA’s encounter with Starro as a variant cover for Justice League of America (vol. 2) #50.

6. Darwyn Cooke — DC: The New Frontier

Darwyn Cooke’s excellent DC: The New Frontier retold the adventures of DC’s heroes in a setting contemporary to their first published appearances. It cumulated in the heroes coming together as the Justice League and featured a rather special final splash showing the BB #28 encounter with Starro.

That scene also made it into JLA: The New Frontier, the animated adaptation of Cooke’s comic book.

7. Craig Hamilton — Justice League Gallery

From 1997′s Justice League Gallery comics this recreation of BB #28 by Craig Hamilton and Ray Synder.

8.Warren Martineck — JLA Archives sketch card

Warren Martineck is one of the arts who has provided sketch cards for the Justice League Archives Trading Cards. One of those featured the JLA (with JSA) and Starro in a very BB #28 like tussel.

9. Bart — Sears DC Cosmic Teams 1993

DC Cosmic Teams 1993, the then JLI, fighting Starro by Bart Sears [via: the Bart Sears Checklist]

10. Alé Garza — Teen Titans #52

Comic Book Artist Vol 2 Covers

The original Comic Book Artist magazine was a brilliant counterpoint to the revived Alter Ego zine. It was the foundation of the publishing empire that is Two Morrows, but it unfortunately had its day. There was a relaunched, shiny vol 2. a few years ago, but I personally didn’t think they recaptured the original brilliance. What they did have, however, was some of the best comic book magazine cover art ever.

My favourite has to be Comic Book Artist V2. #1 (July 2003) which is a collaboration between Neal Adams (pencils) and Alex Ross (paints). I’ve posted the image before, but it seems to be missing from the gallery so here it is.

Another favourite of mine is Darwyn Cooke’s where’s Waldo/Wally style cover to Comics Book Artist V2. #3 (March 2004). It’s from around the time that DC: The New Frontier was out and shows the cast of that series intermingled with other famous characters that Cooke has worked on.

Look for Harley Quinn aiming for the Invisible Woman or Agent J scoping out Wonder Woman.

Darwyn Cooke’s monochrome trinity

Burton, of the Original Comics Book Art blog, reports the sale on eBay of several large pieces of stunning Darwyn Cooke (Spirit, DC: The New Frontier) artwork. The piece from which is the above is taken is a large monochrome piece featuring Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman that sold for 2,500 dollars.

Justice League: The New Frontier (I)

Capsule review for Justice League: The New Frontier = fantastic. I’ll post up my proper review soon, but in the meantime here is a list of New Frontier trailers, websites, interviews, and reviews culled from around the internet.

Websites

Justice League: New FrontierIMDB

Trailers

Trailer:

Early Preview w/talking heads:

Reviews from around the Net

  • IGN Review (Eric Moro and Christopher Monfette) — 9/10 — “By the standards of similar comic-book-to-film translations, Justice League boasts a fairly remarkable picture. The color, clarity and vibrancy of the image is seldom in question, splashing across the screen with tremendous appeal.”
  • DVD Talk (Jamie S. Rich ) — Recommended — “Despite what reads as a long list of stunt casting, all the actors are particularly well chosen, and none of them trade on any prior image or overly recognizable verbal tics.”
  • Animated Shorts (Steve Fritz) — “or some reason, while organizations such as Marvel and Starz will produce 90-minute direct-to-DVD animated features, Warner Bros. feels compelled to maintain an under 75-minute limit. As one can imagine, and had been confirmed by both series creator Darwyn Cooke and scriptwriter Stan Berkowitz, that means a lot of the original graphic novel has to be cut.”
  • Animation Magazine (Ryan Ball) — “These characters are more than lantern-jawed, one-dimensional do-gooders who swoop down to save the day with a wink and a smile. They’re complex individuals with powers tempered by insecurities.”

Darwyn Cooke

Darwyn Cooke (Consultant, author original series) — CBR — “I was also involved in the storyboards for the film. I think it works out to about ten percent of the movie. And I was also involved in a lot of the color and consulting art direction; creative consulting, I suppose. Again, I worked really closely with the director. He and I basically kept in contact on a daily basis throughout that part of the production, to go over the story and adding a lot of thing back into the film that the script couldn’t accommodate.”

Darwyn Cooke’s Isotope Party — Newsarama — “The party was tailored specifically to Cooke’s style, with people in suits and dresses form the 50’s and New Frontier themed cocktails. Asked if this is how he imagined how his party would go Cooke replied; ‘Goddamn right, why not? The New Frontier is all about the 50’s, so yeah, let’s back it up and have a good time.’”

Darwyn Cooke Panel at Wondercon — Newsarama — “Cooke said of all of New Frontier, the John Henry story was the most difficult to write, but at the same time, it’s the part he’s proudest of. The difficultly, Cooke explained, was due to something very basic: ‘I’m white – it’s really difficult for me to even begin to think that I understand the situation or what I’m writing about.’”

Cast/Crew Interviews

Stan Berkowitz (writer) and David Bullock (director) — Wizard — “As an adaptor, you get nervous about changing things that the public has already chimed in on, and that they’ve liked. Plus, you don’t want to hurt someone’s feelings by cutting out something they loved, or changing something, or adding something that feels alien to them.”

David Boreanaz (Hal Jordan) – Comics2Film — “The voice director, Andrea (Romano), was unbelievably fantastic in the way she guided me through Hal’s course of emotions, and really helped me get to know the character”

Kyle MacLachlan (Superman) – Comics2Film — “There’s a sort of moral imperative that Superman has, and I think the language he uses is a little more proper — he’s just not a guy who uses his words casually. [...] So maybe, unconsciously, that 1950s tone just creeps in there for me.”

Brooke Shields (Carol Ferris) – Comics2Film — “There’s a strength in Carol – she’s not willing to lose her sexuality by being in a man’s world, and she’s determined to be respected for having the same intelligence and ability to stay on course, and be par for the course, with the men that she’s surrounded by.”