Beyond Where You Stand is officially going on winter break. A new post will appear on Thursday, January 9, 2014. Until then, have a joyful holiday celebration and a very happy New Year.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Graphic Novels in Your School Library Reviews
Guess I should be checking in more often, but I just recently stumbled across two reviews for Graphic Novels in Your School Library. Kids & Books calls it "smart, accessible, and comprehensive." The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy, meanwhile, says "[a] much needed book . . . accessible, to the point, and playful in its subtle humor."Thursday, December 5, 2013
Art Spiegelman and the Jewish Museum (and Me)
Responsible for defining an era in comics and redefining the medium itself, Art Spiegelman is the subject of an exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York City. I will be doing my small part by leading a discussion for educators called Literacy and the Graphic Novel, this coming Monday, December 9th at 4:00. The discussion will be followed by a tour of the exhibition. If you are an educator and are in the area, please join us. You can still register here.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanks 2013
What with Thanksgiving coinciding with Hanukkah this year (Thanksgivukkah?), it seems like an especially good time to be thankful. While there are always bigger things to be thankful for (and to not be so thankful for), as in posts past, here is a short list of some of the smaller things that can brighten a few hours or days and make life a little more interesting.
Dracula by Bram Stoker - The idea of the vampire has become so diluted by their cultural ubiquity, having a look at the original is bound to feel all the more unexpected and powerful. Written as an epistolary novel (people who have never read it are often surprised to hear it), the voices are engaging, the story pulls you right the heck in, and books just don't come more Gothic and atmospheric than this.
Marvel Masterworks: Marvel Two-In-One - A collection of comics from the 1970s, featuring the Thing alongside an array of heroes including Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Daredevil and some other, delightfully obscure characters (ever heard of Man-Thing? Valkyrie?). This is a magical sample of an era when comics were not "kids' stuff" anymore, when the characters had distinct personalities and foibles, had genuine (if fleeting) conflicts with one another, possessed a semblance of actual human psychology; but at the same time, they retained a sense of innocence, wonder, and gee-whiz excitement that today's darker and more psychologically ambiguous and sophisticated comics lack. The twelve stories contained in this volume require no greater knowledge of story or character than is on the page and are just a heaping load of plain old fun.
Old Boy on Blu-ray - Not the Spike Lee version (which I haven't seen yet and could be excellent), but the Korean original. An intricate mystery, an unrelenting thriller and a dark (very, very) study of love, obsession and vengeance. Based on a quite clever manga, Old Boy goes places and does things that no movie made by a studio in the United States has (or maybe will ever) dare to go or do. A jaw-dropping, harrowing, rivetingly entertaining film that will absolutely not let you forget it (in both the best and worst ways). It also contains what must be the longest single-shot fight scene to ever appear in a movie, which is thrilling, if you can take how hard it hits.
Happy Thanksgiving, and don't forget to have a good turkey joke with you at all times.
Dracula by Bram Stoker - The idea of the vampire has become so diluted by their cultural ubiquity, having a look at the original is bound to feel all the more unexpected and powerful. Written as an epistolary novel (people who have never read it are often surprised to hear it), the voices are engaging, the story pulls you right the heck in, and books just don't come more Gothic and atmospheric than this.
Marvel Masterworks: Marvel Two-In-One - A collection of comics from the 1970s, featuring the Thing alongside an array of heroes including Captain America, Iron Man, Thor, Daredevil and some other, delightfully obscure characters (ever heard of Man-Thing? Valkyrie?). This is a magical sample of an era when comics were not "kids' stuff" anymore, when the characters had distinct personalities and foibles, had genuine (if fleeting) conflicts with one another, possessed a semblance of actual human psychology; but at the same time, they retained a sense of innocence, wonder, and gee-whiz excitement that today's darker and more psychologically ambiguous and sophisticated comics lack. The twelve stories contained in this volume require no greater knowledge of story or character than is on the page and are just a heaping load of plain old fun.
Old Boy on Blu-ray - Not the Spike Lee version (which I haven't seen yet and could be excellent), but the Korean original. An intricate mystery, an unrelenting thriller and a dark (very, very) study of love, obsession and vengeance. Based on a quite clever manga, Old Boy goes places and does things that no movie made by a studio in the United States has (or maybe will ever) dare to go or do. A jaw-dropping, harrowing, rivetingly entertaining film that will absolutely not let you forget it (in both the best and worst ways). It also contains what must be the longest single-shot fight scene to ever appear in a movie, which is thrilling, if you can take how hard it hits.
Happy Thanksgiving, and don't forget to have a good turkey joke with you at all times.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
The Cast, Part 2
Last week, I cast the movie version of Those That Wake. The same cast returns, of course, for What We become, with the following additions:
As Aaron, Asa Butterfield
As Rose, Seychelle Gabriel
As Arielle Kliest, Nicole Kidman . . . or maybe Cate Blanchett
As Roarke, Michael Shannon
As Castillo, a younger, more muscular (but not angrier) R. Lee Ermey
Now who would direct? Ah, that's a whole other post.
As Aaron, Asa Butterfield
As Rose, Seychelle Gabriel
As Arielle Kliest, Nicole Kidman . . . or maybe Cate Blanchett
As Roarke, Michael Shannon
As Castillo, a younger, more muscular (but not angrier) R. Lee Ermey
Now who would direct? Ah, that's a whole other post.
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