September 14, 2011
About that "Fright Night" remake...
Last month in the post "Scream and Scream Again", I made a defense of horror remakes, and the new 3-D Fright Night in particular - that we should judge all of these movies on their own merits. Well, I just want to say, having now actually seen the new Fright Night, that it's actually one of the better studio horror movies I've seen in some time. Shocking, great twists, and intense. Kudos to all involved. If you're a horror fan and your boycotting it out of some misguided loyalty to the original film, shame on you, because you're missing out.
Labels:
chris sarandon,
colin farrell,
fright night,
horror,
mclovin,
movies,
remakes,
vampires
Jawjacking with Gods, or why I love Grant Morrison.
For those of you who don't know, Grant Morrison is a comic book writer. Most recently, he's worked on the relaunch of Superman in the new Action Comics #1 and has been writing Batman for the last 4-5 years. His big projects include JLA, New X-Men, Final Crisis, Doom Patrol, Animal Man, as well as his amazing creator-owned work We3, The Invisibles, and The Filth.
All of which probably mean absolutely nothing to you if you don't read comic books.
But what's fascinating about Grant (@grantmorrison) is that he treats his role as a comic writer in much the same way that someone like David Bowie treats his role as a musician. Grant wants to find the magic in comics and bring that world to life here in the real world.
As he says in the documentary below, "the bomb before it was the bomb was an idea. But Superman is a better idea, so why don't we try to make that one real."
I felt like I never experienced both the humanity and the wonder of The Justice League or The X-Men or Batman until they were written by Grant. And only grant could make an idea as insane as We3 (logline: household pets are kidnapped and turned into cyborgs by corrupt military scientists before going on a killing spry to find their way home to their owners) into something so equally beautiful, horrific, tragic, and triumphant, all at the same time.
When I write, I want to be more like Grant Morrison.
I highly recommend watching this entire documentary. It's so worth it.
All of which probably mean absolutely nothing to you if you don't read comic books.
But what's fascinating about Grant (@grantmorrison) is that he treats his role as a comic writer in much the same way that someone like David Bowie treats his role as a musician. Grant wants to find the magic in comics and bring that world to life here in the real world.
As he says in the documentary below, "the bomb before it was the bomb was an idea. But Superman is a better idea, so why don't we try to make that one real."
I felt like I never experienced both the humanity and the wonder of The Justice League or The X-Men or Batman until they were written by Grant. And only grant could make an idea as insane as We3 (logline: household pets are kidnapped and turned into cyborgs by corrupt military scientists before going on a killing spry to find their way home to their owners) into something so equally beautiful, horrific, tragic, and triumphant, all at the same time.
When I write, I want to be more like Grant Morrison.
I highly recommend watching this entire documentary. It's so worth it.
Labels:
batman,
comics,
david bowie,
grant morrison,
jla,
magic,
superman,
we3,
writing,
x-men
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