Sunday 30 October 2011

Happy Halloween!



So in simple fashion, I'm going to wish you all a very safe Halloween with some of my favourite Halloween based comic covers.

These covers are all SUGAR & SPIKE!

I'll say a little about the comic just incase you don't know who these two are, otherwise I will let the covers do the talking!

Sugar Plumm and Cecil "Spike" Wilson, communicate with each other in baby talk and to other infants, but not to adults.

Sugar and Spike speak with not only human infants, but baby animals as well.

There are very few characters in these comics other than Sugar and Spike and their parents but you do get to see some reoccurring characters.

Little Arthur: A "big boy" too old for baby-talk.
He;s a spoiled brat and bully, Arthur torments Sugar and Spike, but is invariably outwitted by them in the end.

Uncle Charley, a bachelor and police officer who is a stereotypical "fun uncle", often playing with the kids and giving them gifts when he comes to visit. He is Sugars uncle.

Bernie the Brain, a child genius who, despite being the same age as Sugar and Spike, is an accomplished scientist and inventor he speaks and understands "grown-up talk". He is there go to when they don't understand grown up behaviour!







Wednesday 26 October 2011

Hex Appeal!


So we are two months into the DC re-vamp; some of it I totally passed on - I’d dropped Batgirl by issue two; Action will get to #3, and I am enjoying what we see Grant Morrison bring back to the character, but it is falling short for me. Batwoman got to issue two, probably not an issue three from me, but Animal Man I’m loving and All- Star Western I am smitten by! And today saw the release of #2. This comic replaced the series DC series Jonah Hex after a wonderful seventy issues.


Co-written by Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray, we, of course, are still reading about that same character, and as Jonah high-tails it into town, he is still this comics’ star. We see Palmiotti write the main story and the back-up feature in every issue; he is joined by Spirit artist Moritat. These new  stories are set in the wild frontier of Gotham City at the height of the 1800s, introducing  characters which are related to both Batman’s history as well as to DCs western titles. Certainly it can be said that Palmiotti and Gray have helped re-popularize this character, as well as bringing him back to All Star Western after a staggering thirty-four years!


Jonah Hex originally appeared in the pages of "All-Star" in 1972, created by writer John Albano and artist Tony DeZuniga, which then became Weird Western Tales, and then stopped being printed in 1977. Then Hex became the star of his own title, which lasted right through to the mid-eighties.
2005 saw Palmiotti and Gray revive Hex, and he was placed back his own series, which gave him that needed limelight. So we now see these two guys work their magic again on some long forgotten western characters like the original El Diablo (also a back-up feature during Hex’s original run), Bat Lash and the Indian lawman Pow-Wow Smith.
At this stage of the game I must also point out that the back-up El Diablo strip has the wonderful art of Jordi Bernet.  As much as I admire Moritat, I do feel it is a real shame that Bernet was not asked to continue with the headliner strip after his astounding work on Hex.
pic from: ronniedelcarmen.blogspot.com

While reading this comic, you can feel the grit between your teeth. Filled with suspense, intrigue, and brutal encounters; I certainly want to read more, and for my money this is certainly the best read on the shelves at present.



Sunday 23 October 2011

The Man With Gold Dust In His Hair!



Before Lady Gaga, there was Sigue Sigue Sputnik, then Mike Monroe, New York Dolls, Marc Bolan and we finally get to the glam overlord David Bowie.
But way way before these famed glamsters there was Stephen Tennant.
The son of Scots peer, Lord Glenconner and Pamela Wyndham, one of The Souls.
His mother was also a cousin of Lord Alfred Douglas, Oscar Wilde's lover and a sonneteer.
 Tennant's androgynous looks and flamboyant style led sculptor Jacob Epstein to describe him as the most beautiful creature he had ever seen and I have to partly agree with this.
His looks are very charismatic and was known to decorate himself with sprinkling gold dust into his hair and to out line his lips... he could be described as if Brian Jones and David Bowie had an unholy love child?
THIS would be the guy!!



The Bright Young Things of the social set were all about attention-grabbing antics, wild partying and competitively outlandish fashion.
The week long themed parties were raved about... fueled with alcohol and cocaine.
They were the 1920s and 30s London prototype celebrities.
Before them, the British press’s gossip columns amounted to nothing more than society announcements.
The young and privileged people changed this with scandalous outfits and behaviour, and the papers’ fascination with them and their intrinsic link to fashion has grown and grown.

Tennant’s outfits ranged from indulgently luxe over-the-top opulence to theatrical, gender-blurring fancy dress.
The gossip column from a 1927 edition of The Daily Express described Tennant’s headline-making style in this way:
“The Honourable Stephen Tennant arrived in an electric brougham wearing a football jersey and earrings."

Like any self-respecting tabloid darling, Tennant made it his business to be photographed as much as possible, and quickly became a muse to British photographer Cecil Beaton.
Beaton’s portrait of Tennant in fancy dress as Prince Charming is currently on show at the National Portrait Gallery.



The rest of Beaton’s extensive photographs of the bright young set are archived at Sotheby's.

Stephen Tennant was known as the "Brightest", within the "Bright Young People."
Friends included Rex Whistler, Cecil Beaton, the Sitwells, Lady Diana Manners and the dubious Mitford girls – part of the set that made the Nordstrom Sisters popular at The Ritz in 1939.
He is widely considered to be the model for Cedric Hampton in Nancy Mitford's novel Love in a Cold Climate; one of the inspirations for Lord Sebastian Flyte in Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, and a model for Hon. Miles Malpractice in some of his other novels.



During the 1920s and 1930s, he had an affair with the poet Siegfried Sassoon.
Before this he had proposed to friend, Elizabeth Lowndes, but had been rejected as he insisted his nanny would have to be with them including their honeymoon.
His relationship with Siegfried Sassoon, was to be thought his most important: it lasted some four years before Tennant  put an abrupt end to it.
It was reported that Sassoon was depressed for months after, until Sassoon married in 1933 and became a father in 1936.
For most of his life, Tennant considered  himself a writer he tried to start or finish a novel - Lascar.
It is believed that he spent the last 17 years of his life in bed at his family manor at Wilsford, Wiltshire, which he had redecorated by Syrie Maugham.

Though being idle, he was not truly lethargic: he made several visits to the United States and Italy, and struck up many new friendships, despite his later reputation as a recluse.
This only became increasingly true towards the last years of his life until his death in 1987.
Yet even then, his life was not uneventful: he became landlord to V. S. Naipaul who immortalised Tennant in his novel The Enigma of Arrival.
There appears to be only one book about the life of this charismatic Lothario: Serious Pleasures by Phillip Hoare and one I shall be most certainly be tracking down.



Monday 10 October 2011

Equine Hawkgirl!


(Comet from comicsallience)


There are plenty of horses within comix.


Comet the Super horse, (though he is half man at one point) Silver known as the Lone Rangers horse, Tornado who is ridden by Zorro, of course Jonah Hex has a horse, Winged Victory belonging to the Shinning Knight,  and of course there are various horses within Amethysts' Gem World.

Personally; I LOVE horses, both my son and I ride and I have had a love horses for as long as I can remember.


SO...


When does it come the time to put the paint brush down for a little while from making little men for other people to picking up the paintbrush and making something I would like to see as an adult, yet it strikes a chord with my inner child.


There is a sub culture of customisers out there known as the 'Bronies', guys who customise My Little Pony into superheros and popular Sci-Fi characters.


They do, at times sadly come under criticisim.


Raiding my local toy store and seeing what was on sale; my attentions turned to the My Little Pony. 


Yes, I collected them as a child, but their stumpy shape still kinda bugged me.


I don't really want to call it a MLP knock off but the next shelve down had a product called Twilight Ponies, these are slightly bigger and have a real pony shape and half the price of the leading brand.


I was happy!


Off to the counter I trotted!... and bought the leader of the Twilight ponies who just happened to have wings.


It shouted HAWKGIRL PONY!!! to be made.



 
She had a nylon mane and tail. This could be a problem, and it was!!


I spent the afternoon dying a toys plastic hair to try and get a decent red stain as I knew the trad way of hair dye wouldn't work.


It didn't work, it rinsed clear every time.

Leaving the dye to dry and combed through gave it a sticky look which I wasn't going to work with.




Off to the pony parlour!!


Time for mane and tail cut...


I did feel a tad mean doing this!!


It was easier to go with cutting it off and sculpting one instead.


I have plans to do more of these things and the sculpted hair could really bring character to the generic toy sculpt.



I may have over thought this a little as I was trying to work out how the costume would work if you, I or anyone else for that matter would dress a horse up as Hawkgirl... (not that I condone that I must add.)


Anyhow! there's not much more to say... so without further a do!


I present my first pony superhero  HAWKGIRL!!  I hope it raises a smile, laugh or even a snort... :)