Is nearly up. We're laying in the foundation and will start attaching walls to the plates soon. Before you know it there will be a roof over our heads and we'll moving in the furniture.
In the meantime please head over there and sign in for updates. The address is:
http://pulp2ohpress.com/
And if you haven't done so already, go over and check out our Facebook page.
If you're not following us on Twitter you're missing out.
There will be several announcements this coming week including pictures and the chance for folks to win some really cool stuff.
(Oh yeah, we're that kind of joint)
Sunday, February 28, 2010
No Explanation Required: ABRAHAM LINCOLN, VAMPIRE HUNTER
The Trailer for the book...
From the folks who gave us PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES.
From the folks who gave us PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES.
Saturday, February 27, 2010
It's My Birthday and I'll Pulp If I Want to...
I'm going to take it easy today. After all it's taken me awhile to get to this place in my life and I want to take a day to at least enjoy what life has given me, and thank it for what it has kept from my door.
I remember when I first got into this game - late. I was old. Mid-30's and going back to school to work in film? It felt like I was starting over and that dread that everyone feels at that point in their life is quite the whirlwind of emotion, indecision, and just plain old, "WTF are you thinking?"
But as I grew older, and hopefully grew in wisdom (though the jury is still out) I've come to realize the feeling of starting over, of learning something new is something to be embraced and nurtured like a relationship. You give it your all. You learn it... nay, know it, and if it doesn't work out you've still learned something you can take to your next relationship.
Which brings me full circle to where I am now in my life. Not rich. Not poor. Not in a relationship, but not alone either. Eager to try new things so I can bring it to the stuff I have already mastered. And realizing that no one ever completely feels they've mastered something until after they're dead, and the "Master" title is bestowed by others.
As I work on Pulp 2.0 Press and all of our projects, I feel as if I have been working toward this my whole life. As I discuss plans with my business partners I chuckle inside as I think "I am using all of the buffalo here. We are mixing books, and design and story and video and the web. We are figuring things out based on others' experiences and our own. And damn it, there's not a day that goes by where we're not excited or not having fun.
Yes, pulp is not a genre nor a medium - it's an attitude. I have 47 years worth, and it ain't over yet.
Happy Pulpday to me...
Happy Pulpday to me...
You're getting there, you bastard...
There are many more Pulpdays to be.
Now if you'll excuse me. There's women to be wooed, cigars to be smoked and pulp to be had.
Bill
Mad Pulp Bastard since 1963
I remember when I first got into this game - late. I was old. Mid-30's and going back to school to work in film? It felt like I was starting over and that dread that everyone feels at that point in their life is quite the whirlwind of emotion, indecision, and just plain old, "WTF are you thinking?"
But as I grew older, and hopefully grew in wisdom (though the jury is still out) I've come to realize the feeling of starting over, of learning something new is something to be embraced and nurtured like a relationship. You give it your all. You learn it... nay, know it, and if it doesn't work out you've still learned something you can take to your next relationship.
Which brings me full circle to where I am now in my life. Not rich. Not poor. Not in a relationship, but not alone either. Eager to try new things so I can bring it to the stuff I have already mastered. And realizing that no one ever completely feels they've mastered something until after they're dead, and the "Master" title is bestowed by others.
As I work on Pulp 2.0 Press and all of our projects, I feel as if I have been working toward this my whole life. As I discuss plans with my business partners I chuckle inside as I think "I am using all of the buffalo here. We are mixing books, and design and story and video and the web. We are figuring things out based on others' experiences and our own. And damn it, there's not a day that goes by where we're not excited or not having fun.
Yes, pulp is not a genre nor a medium - it's an attitude. I have 47 years worth, and it ain't over yet.
Happy Pulpday to me...
Happy Pulpday to me...
You're getting there, you bastard...
There are many more Pulpdays to be.
Now if you'll excuse me. There's women to be wooed, cigars to be smoked and pulp to be had.
Bill
Mad Pulp Bastard since 1963
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Bulletface
Filmmaker Albert Pyun has a special offer for those thinking of purchasing his new movie BULLETFACE.You can go here for the details and a trailer via AICN.
What's interesting to me, and should be to you is how he's using the web to sell his movie. He's created a company and is selling his movies himself. He's also allied himself with websites like AICN and Dread Central that speak to his audience and is using that platform to get the word out.
Also (in his words):
“Noir is about the dark, swampy dark place in the soul where crime ferments.”
That description is very much Bulletface and it is what drew me to the material initially. I really wanted it to be, stylistically, like a contemporary version of those great B crime thrillers from the poverty gulch studios of the time like Monogram. They were shot fast (Bulletface was shot in 5 days), shot on the cheap (Bulletface cost just a bit less than $100,000) and shot with a lot of creative desperation which mirrors the plights of the Bulletface characters.
He's also offering the audience an exclusive bargain when they purchase his movie. These are all techniques that you would do well to emulate should you choose to DIY.
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
No Explanation Required: KILLER WEED
I receive trailer links and screeners all the time and to be frank (not Joe nor Mike) most of that stuff gets placed in the circular file after a quick glance. Do not take that as my saying "Please don't send me things," because nothing could be further from the truth. I will wade through the most foul detritus if only to come across tiny gems like this from Rhys Dyer:
----------------------------------------------------------------
Hi Bill,
Check out the latest teaser trailer for KillerWeed:
Started as a micro-budget project, KillerWeed has somewhat escalated as we've attracted attention from prominent British filmmakers such as Richard Holmes (Producer "Eden Lake"). We're looking to drum up exposure before filming this June around England and the Isle of Man. It would be fantastic if you could support us any way by mentioning KillerWeed in your blog; you could genuinely make an impact in the success of this film, and the amount invested in it.
Sincerely,
Rhys Dyer
(director)
---------------------------------------------------
So keep those cards and letters coming, kids!
----------------------------------------------------------------
Hi Bill,
Check out the latest teaser trailer for KillerWeed:
Started as a micro-budget project, KillerWeed has somewhat escalated as we've attracted attention from prominent British filmmakers such as Richard Holmes (Producer "Eden Lake"). We're looking to drum up exposure before filming this June around England and the Isle of Man. It would be fantastic if you could support us any way by mentioning KillerWeed in your blog; you could genuinely make an impact in the success of this film, and the amount invested in it.
Sincerely,
Rhys Dyer
(director)
---------------------------------------------------
So keep those cards and letters coming, kids!
MARS: THE TRAILER
MARS - The Movie [HD Trailer] from Geoff Marslett on Vimeo.
An indie production using "off-the-shelf" software to give their film the look of a graphic novel.
More here.
Canon Rebel T2i / 550D
Stuart Cone - one of our Pulp Legionnaires - informs me of the following re: this new Canon camera hitting the USA:
Heya sir,
Haven't seen it on the blog so I figured I'd throw it out there: Canon is about to release what will be called the Rebel T2i here in the States. It's the "550D" overseas. It's pretty much the 7D with a few trims. I think the sensor, modes and ISO abilities are same the same or ridiculously close in some instances.
It will cost $800. Almost a good hundred bucks cheaper than the 7D. With a lens, $900 (I'm going body-only camera and a $90 "nifty fifty" 50mm lens). For around 2300 bucks I'm about to walk away with the T2i, a Glidecam HD1000, a Zoom H4n recorder, hotshoe, the Pluraleyes syncing plugin for Final Cut Pro and a couple of other things. Everything I need to go out and start cracking on some shorts for less than a single camera used to cost.
Really, there aren't any excuses anymore. I can't imagine 1080p/24fps is going to get much cheaper. It seems like the perfect storm for web-targeted series and films startups.
----------------------------------------------
There is a review of the camera here by Phillip Bloom.
And a fantastic demo video here.
What we need now is someone to go shoot a 24 / Bourne Supremacy / Fringe demo to really put the camera through its paces. If the color and the blacks hold up then... by Jove, I think we've got it!
Oh, and if anyone at Canon is listening, Bill Martell and I have a couple of short subjects for the web for which we could use a just such a camera. Maybe even a whole damn movie....or two....just sayin'...
Heya sir,
Haven't seen it on the blog so I figured I'd throw it out there: Canon is about to release what will be called the Rebel T2i here in the States. It's the "550D" overseas. It's pretty much the 7D with a few trims. I think the sensor, modes and ISO abilities are same the same or ridiculously close in some instances.
It will cost $800. Almost a good hundred bucks cheaper than the 7D. With a lens, $900 (I'm going body-only camera and a $90 "nifty fifty" 50mm lens). For around 2300 bucks I'm about to walk away with the T2i, a Glidecam HD1000, a Zoom H4n recorder, hotshoe, the Pluraleyes syncing plugin for Final Cut Pro and a couple of other things. Everything I need to go out and start cracking on some shorts for less than a single camera used to cost.
Really, there aren't any excuses anymore. I can't imagine 1080p/24fps is going to get much cheaper. It seems like the perfect storm for web-targeted series and films startups.
----------------------------------------------
There is a review of the camera here by Phillip Bloom.
And a fantastic demo video here.
What we need now is someone to go shoot a 24 / Bourne Supremacy / Fringe demo to really put the camera through its paces. If the color and the blacks hold up then... by Jove, I think we've got it!
Oh, and if anyone at Canon is listening, Bill Martell and I have a couple of short subjects for the web for which we could use a just such a camera. Maybe even a whole damn movie....or two....just sayin'...
Monday, February 22, 2010
I Forgot My Anniversary
Like all absent-minded husbands, I forgot my 5th anniversary being married to the old ball and chain... blog here.
My only excuse is I've been busy trying to put food on the table and tending to our newborn Pulp 2.0 Press.
In honor of this event - I point you to my first post wherein your Mad Pulp Bastard attempted to woo the blogosphere with his pulpy ways.
How am I doing so far?
My only excuse is I've been busy trying to put food on the table and tending to our newborn Pulp 2.0 Press.
In honor of this event - I point you to my first post wherein your Mad Pulp Bastard attempted to woo the blogosphere with his pulpy ways.
How am I doing so far?
Sunday, February 21, 2010
The Pulp 2.0 Press Facebook Fan Page
As Dracula said in the now famous scene...
"LET IT BEGIN..."
Here.
As you can see below, we've been preparing this company for awhile:
"LET IT BEGIN..."
Here.
As you can see below, we've been preparing this company for awhile:
Saturday, February 20, 2010
More Comics: ORION THE HUNTER
From the fertile minds of Cliff van Meter (writer) and Joe Querio (artist) comes their webcomic scifi adventure:
ORION THE HUNTER!
First page here. Enjoy.
Edit to add: and if you happen to think this post negates my comments here. Then I would remind the dear reader that this is a webcomic that is outside the norm of the "comics industry" as a whole. It is one of my hopes that I can point to as sign that things will change.
Regarding Comics
I received a comment from my pal Scott Godlewski the other day regarding the quote I posted from James Patterson:
“Comics could reach a much larger audience than they do right now,” says Patterson, who often works with co-authors and whose thrillers are frequently at or near the top of USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list. “With all of the quality work and talent that’s out there, this industry could be so much bigger.”
Scotty asked," Then why don't they?"
Here in the US and Canada we've marginalized comics for so long and in so many ways that we've fallen out of the pop culture radar field, even though we've been making these huge blockbuster movies based on comics properties...
We've concentrated almost exclusively on the superhero idiom. Those that don't are the exception that prove the rule. You don't see these on newsstands anymore:
We've moved comics away from the mainstream retail corridors and into exclusive comic shops which again, limits traffic and potential new readers.
We've elevated the production value of comics making them very expensive per minute in relation to other forms of entertainment - movies, tv, games.
Storytelling has become insular in comics. I can't pick up a comic at a store and read it without having to understand 70+ years of continuity beforehand.
Comics - for the most part as there are some companies that are the exceptions - cater to a marginal audience. Take the audience for comics as a single demographic and compare it to movie-going audiences, game playing audiences, book-reading audiences ; and you'll see that comics is a very small pond.
And even though we are making these huge movies, the comics publishing community is doing little to capitalize on it. To see the numbers of new readers brought into the fold by these movies is disheartening. They are miniscule.
Someone in the industry told me that 10k books shipped for an indie title is a big hit. (Which it is, given that they are mainly going to just comic books shops).
And though the Asian manga and European comic industries have taken their hits of late thanks to the economy and emerging technology, they are still healthier than we are because they are so diverse: In subject matter, audiences and distribution.
They also take a look at where their money is best spent and act accordingly.
Hmmmm....
“Comics could reach a much larger audience than they do right now,” says Patterson, who often works with co-authors and whose thrillers are frequently at or near the top of USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list. “With all of the quality work and talent that’s out there, this industry could be so much bigger.”
Scotty asked," Then why don't they?"
Here in the US and Canada we've marginalized comics for so long and in so many ways that we've fallen out of the pop culture radar field, even though we've been making these huge blockbuster movies based on comics properties...
We've concentrated almost exclusively on the superhero idiom. Those that don't are the exception that prove the rule. You don't see these on newsstands anymore:
We've moved comics away from the mainstream retail corridors and into exclusive comic shops which again, limits traffic and potential new readers.
We've elevated the production value of comics making them very expensive per minute in relation to other forms of entertainment - movies, tv, games.
Storytelling has become insular in comics. I can't pick up a comic at a store and read it without having to understand 70+ years of continuity beforehand.
Comics - for the most part as there are some companies that are the exceptions - cater to a marginal audience. Take the audience for comics as a single demographic and compare it to movie-going audiences, game playing audiences, book-reading audiences ; and you'll see that comics is a very small pond. And even though we are making these huge movies, the comics publishing community is doing little to capitalize on it. To see the numbers of new readers brought into the fold by these movies is disheartening. They are miniscule.
Someone in the industry told me that 10k books shipped for an indie title is a big hit. (Which it is, given that they are mainly going to just comic books shops).
And though the Asian manga and European comic industries have taken their hits of late thanks to the economy and emerging technology, they are still healthier than we are because they are so diverse: In subject matter, audiences and distribution.
They also take a look at where their money is best spent and act accordingly.
Hmmmm....
Friday, February 19, 2010
More Pulp In The Mail!
Paul Bishop over at BISH'S BEAT sent over an extra copy of Paul S. Powers' autobiography PULP WRITER. I shall have to think of an appropriate, incriminating response. Hmmmm....
And some mail of mine from France got mixed up and sent to my old address so I received my copy of LES COMPAGNONS DE L'OMBRE (Vol. 5) reprinting my short story Cadavres Exquis. it was sent long ago so I am sure I've slighted my publisher. Aaargh.
I am a bastard. Not necessarily by design (though that happens too), but by neglect.
Thursday, February 18, 2010
MEMOIRS OF AN OCCASIONAL SUPERHEROINE FREE until MARCH 15TH
Valerie D'Orazio has posted her book Memoirs of an Occasional Superheroine online at Scrib'd.
Go and download same.
Tell them the Mad Pulp Bastard sent you.
Go and download same.
- Then READ it.
- It's a nonfiction account of Valerie's experiences in media and publishing. Eye-and heart -opening.
- Tell your friends.
Tell them the Mad Pulp Bastard sent you.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Warren Ellis' Ode to Jetpack Heroes: IGNITION CITY
IGNITION CITY is finally available in trade paperback form and looking very pulpy with its spiffy cover.
Warren himself describes it as " FLASH GORDON via DEADWOOD."
Like his other series (ANNA MERCURY
, BLACK SUMMER
, NO HERO
, APPARAT
), Warren brings a decidedly nihilistic, realistic and craftily thought out perspective on pulp.
Mark this one MUST READ.
Warren himself describes it as " FLASH GORDON via DEADWOOD."
Like his other series (ANNA MERCURY
Mark this one MUST READ.
Happy Birthday to: THE PHANTOM!
74 years ago today, Lee Falk's classic comic strip debuted.
Here's an excellent gallery of images of the many appearances of The Ghost Who Walks in newspapers, books, comics, and movies.
THE PHANTOM IS DEAD! LONG LIVE THE PHANTOM!
Here's an excellent gallery of images of the many appearances of The Ghost Who Walks in newspapers, books, comics, and movies.
THE PHANTOM IS DEAD! LONG LIVE THE PHANTOM!
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
We Have the Geek Vote!
Stefan Blitz over at Forces of Geek (and friend to pulpsters everywhere) made the announcement official:
Brother Blood is a "blood-soaked, blaxploitation, horror monsterpiece set in 1969's Sunset Strip".Saddle up!
Forces of Geek will be promoting the entire line of Pulp 2.0 Press' upcoming line-up, so get ready for for the ride of your life.
PULP 2.0 PRESS IS HERE!
Hi gang!I am overwhelmed with emotion (joy, anxiety, trepidation) as my proof copy of BROTHER BLOOD has arrived.
WOWZA!
This is a freaking cool feeling... Don may have to sit down. It's a momentous occasion as this novel has a lot of firsts attached to it:
First time in book form...
First time in English...
First book for a new publishing/media company...
But there's plenty more entertainment to come.
I will pouring over this proof like a papa over a new born, counting fingers and toes.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need a cigar...
(Please Retweet)
Westward Ho!
In between discussing the classic monsters on Twitter I've been reworking my initial stabs at designing a western pulp. I'm not reinventing the western pulp, but rather enhancing those aspects of the form that equate to creating a distinctive piece of media that stands out in a crowd of other pulp publishers. You take one look at it and know it's a Pulp 2.0 Press book.
Let's face facts that I'm the "little guy" here, so Pulp 2.0 has to try harder to make something that speaks more to the western-reading audience than the multitude of paperback series out there. We have to give the audience what it wants, but in a new and interesting way. If I've done my research properly - that means I'll have a sale.
So I'm not just creating a book out of someone's tale, but rather creating a distinctive collector's item that has and holds value. This is especially true for the print versions of the book which costs more than the digital versions we will eventually produce and release.
So I'm pushing the envelope a bit in some areas, but my thinking has been tracked on going back to the source material and seeing if there were some visual and design tropes we seem to have forgotten along the way as westerns moved from "dime novels" to "pulps" and on into "paperbacks" and hardcover books. I hope I can find some ideas within the 20 or so books I've downloa...er, acquired to review and dissect. Thus far, I've found there are some book/pulp design ideas that seem promising in that, "Oh, that looks interesting," sort of way. I'm not a big fan of western books (that's my father's area), but I'm a western serial fan. I hope to work in some of the details that speak to serials as well.
All of our books have a "movie feel" to them - as if you've heard of that movie, but never saw it, and here you are looking at the novelization. I come from a movie background obviously and tend to see things in those terms. That's while you'll find a movie "credit block" on the back of BROTHER BLOOD. It's a blaxploitation movie that hasn't been made yet.
Thus far with this western, I've decided to go with a cream-colored paper to mimic that original pulp paper hue we all know so well. If I can recreate that western pulp feeling then people like my father will buy into the whole story the author is pitching.. It's written in a very classic mold and uses "classic characters" (to say more would give it away).
I'll keep you posted as to my progress. Something just arrived in the mail....
(OMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMG...)
Let's face facts that I'm the "little guy" here, so Pulp 2.0 has to try harder to make something that speaks more to the western-reading audience than the multitude of paperback series out there. We have to give the audience what it wants, but in a new and interesting way. If I've done my research properly - that means I'll have a sale.
So I'm not just creating a book out of someone's tale, but rather creating a distinctive collector's item that has and holds value. This is especially true for the print versions of the book which costs more than the digital versions we will eventually produce and release.
So I'm pushing the envelope a bit in some areas, but my thinking has been tracked on going back to the source material and seeing if there were some visual and design tropes we seem to have forgotten along the way as westerns moved from "dime novels" to "pulps" and on into "paperbacks" and hardcover books. I hope I can find some ideas within the 20 or so books I've downloa...er, acquired to review and dissect. Thus far, I've found there are some book/pulp design ideas that seem promising in that, "Oh, that looks interesting," sort of way. I'm not a big fan of western books (that's my father's area), but I'm a western serial fan. I hope to work in some of the details that speak to serials as well.
All of our books have a "movie feel" to them - as if you've heard of that movie, but never saw it, and here you are looking at the novelization. I come from a movie background obviously and tend to see things in those terms. That's while you'll find a movie "credit block" on the back of BROTHER BLOOD. It's a blaxploitation movie that hasn't been made yet.
Thus far with this western, I've decided to go with a cream-colored paper to mimic that original pulp paper hue we all know so well. If I can recreate that western pulp feeling then people like my father will buy into the whole story the author is pitching.. It's written in a very classic mold and uses "classic characters" (to say more would give it away).
I'll keep you posted as to my progress. Something just arrived in the mail....
(OMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMG...)
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
“Comics could reach a much larger audience than they do right now,” says Patterson, who often works with co-authors and whose thrillers are frequently at or near the top of USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list. “With all of the quality work and talent that’s out there, this industry could be so much bigger.”
via The Beat
-- James Patterson
via The Beat
Taste The Steel of Akira Kurosawa!
One hundred years ago, one of cinema’s greatest visual artists was born: Akira Kurosawa. This March, Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will celebrate the legendary filmmaker’s career with a month-long collection of more than 25 movies. The event will include a 24-hour marathon on Tuesday, March 23, the anniversary of Kurosawa’s birth.
“There are many reasons the name Akira Kurosawa means so much in the world of moviemaking, and we’re going to be showing 26 of those reasons this month on Turner Classic Movies,” says TCM host Robert Osborne. “It’s the largest gathering of Kurosawa films we’ve ever shown in a retrospective of his work, and we couldn’t be more excited.”
TCM’s March celebration of Kurosawa will include such popular samurai films as Seven Samurai (1954 – March 23), The Hidden Fortress (1958 – March 9), Yojimbo (1961 – March 23) and its sequel, Sanjuro (1962 – March 23); the groundbreaking classic Rashomon (1950 – March 23); literary adaptations such as Throne of Blood (1957 – March 9) and The Lower Depths (1957 – March 9); compelling domestic dramas like No Regrets for Our Youth (1946 – March 23), Ikiru (1952 – March 9), I Live in Fear (1955 – March 16) and Red Beard (1965 – March 16); crime dramas such as Stray Dog (1949 – March 23), The Bad Sleep Well (1960 – March 16) and High and Low (1963 – March 16); and the vibrantly photographed Dodes ‘Ka-Den (1970 – March 23) and Kagemusha (1980 – March 30).
Among the films making their debut on TCM are two of Kurosawa’s later films, Dersu Uzala (1975 – March 30), which earned Kurosawa a Best Foreign Language Film OscarÃ’, and Ran (1985 – March 30), which is based loosely on Shakespeare’s King Lear. Also making their TCM premieres are The Idiot (1951 – March 9), based on the book by Dostoyevksy, and The Most Beautiful (1944 – March 23), a World War II drama that wasn’t released in the United States until the late 1980s.
In addition to its slate of Kurosawa films, TCM will present two Westerns inspired by Kurosawa’s work. On Sunday, March 21, a double-feature will include The Outrage (1964), an adaptation of Rashomon, and The Magnificent Seven (1960), adapted from Seven Samurai.
Below is a complete schedule of TCM’s centennial celebration of Akira Kurosawa (all times shown are Eastern):
Tuesday, March 9
8 p.m. Ikiru (1952) – Frequent Kurosawa actor Takashi Shimura turns in a heartbreaking performance as a man who finds out he only has a short time to live. Kurosawa explores the meaning of a man’s life with this poignant drama.
10:30 p.m. Throne of Blood (1957) – Kurosawa’s stunning adaptation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth stars frequent Kurosawa leading man Toshiro Mifune as the feudal lord who kills his rival at his wife’s bidding. Kurosawa skillfully blends elements of Noh drama to craft this fascinating and visually arresting film.
12:30 a.m. The Hidden Fortress (1958) – One of Kurosawa’s more whimsical samurai dramas, this film follows a pair of inept misfits as they try to help a princess pass through a rival territory. Mifune is the general who assists. George Lucas has acknowledged this rousing tale was the primary inspiration for his first Star Wars film.
3 a.m. The Idiot (1951) – Dostoyevsky’s tale of a love triangle served as the basis for this Kurosawa drama starring Mifune and Shimura. Kurosawa’s original cut was edited down by the studio before release, but much of Kurosawa’s brilliance remains.
6 a.m. The Lower Depths (1957) – Kurosawa’s adaptation of the Maxim Gorky play is a character study of a group of people living in poverty. Mifune leads a fine cast. Jean Renoir tackled the Gorky play in 1936, but Kurosawa remained more faithful to the original than the French master.
Tuesday, March 16
8 p.m. The Bad Sleep Well (1960) – In this variation of Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Kurosawa captures the feel of the great Warner Bros. crime dramas. Mifune stars as a man determined to exact revenge against he high-profile businessman he blames for his father’s suicide.
10:45 p.m. High and Low (1963) – Mifune plays a shoe company executive whose son is targeted for kidnapping. But the kidnappers end up taking his chauffeur’s son instead. This cat-and-mouse thriller, based on an Ed McBain novel, provides a unique view of Japan in the 1960s.
1:15 a.m. Red Beard (1965) – Kurosawa and Mifune worked together for the last time with this gentle drama about a doctor and his intern, played by Yuzo Kayama.
4:30 a.m. I Live in Fear (1955) – Mifune, nearly unrecognizable thanks to old-age makeup and a superb characterization, plays a successful businessman whose fear of nuclear war leads him to want to move his entire family from Japan to South America.
6:15 a.m. Scandal (1950) – This Kurosawa drama stars Mifune as a painter who sues a magazine over a scandalous story. His lawsuit is threatened when his lawyer, whose daughter is deathly ill, takes a bribe to lose the case.
Sunday, March 21 - Adapted from Akira Kurosawa
8 p.m. The Outrage (1964) – In this remake of Kurosawa’s Rashomon, Paul Newman plays the bandit who attacks a couple, played by Laurence Harvey and Clair Bloom. Each of the three has a different perspective on what exactly happened. Edward G. Robinson and William Shatner co-star.
10 p.m. The Magnificent Seven (1960) – John Sturges’ thrilling western is based on Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai and stars Yul Brynner as the head of a gang of gunslingers who come to the aid of a village threatened by bandits. Steve McQueen, Eli Wallach, Horst Bucholz, James Coburn, Charles Bronson and Robert Vaughn co-star. Elmer Bernstein provided the memorable score.
Tuesday, March 23
6 a.m. Sanshiro Sugata (1943) – Kurosawa’s first feature film as director is the simple tale of a young judo fighter who must battle another fighter over a woman. The outstanding use of photographic composition and sound make this one of the more striking martial arts films of the era.
7:30 a.m. The Most Beautiful (1944) – Kurosawa’s story of young women working in a factory during World War II stars Shimura as their difficult foreman. This interesting early work from Kurosawa includes several elements of pro-Japanese propaganda.
9 a.m. The Men Who Tread on the Tiger’s Tail (1945) – Based on a Kabuki play, this film tells the story of a lord who disguises himself and his generals as monks in order to avoid detection from the lord’s murderous brother. This film was banned twice in Japan, first for not being faithful to is source material and then again by the occupation forces for its favorable depiction of feudal militarism.
10 a.m. Sanshiro Sugata Part 2 (1945) – Bordering on outright propaganda, this government-suggested film uses judo as the background for a story extolling the virtues of Japanese warriors.
11:30 a.m. No Regrets for Our Youth (1946) – In this revealing domestic drama, a young woman learns about life after leaving the politically charged atmosphere of Tokyo and going to the country house of her executed boyfriend’s parents.
1:30 p.m. One Wonderful Sunday (1947) – Dreams and despair collide in this gentle drama about a couple who try to spend a Sunday afternoon on just 35 yen.
3:30 p.m. Drunken Angel (1948) – An uneasy friendship between an alcoholic doctor and a gangster is at the center of this gripping drama featuring Shimura and Mifune in two early Kurosawa performances.
5:30 p.m. Stray Dog (1949) – A grueling heat wave becomes its own character in this outstanding drama about a pair of police officers determined to track down a gun that was stolen from one of them. Shimura and Mifune play the cops. Kurosawa uses the story as an opportunity to shed light on the difficulties Japanese soldiers faced when they came home from the war.
8 p.m. Rashomon (1950) – This groundbreaking film established a new story-telling style using the different points of view of several characters to explore the meaning of truth. Mifune is a bandit who attacks a couple and kills the husband. But as each person’s story reveals, truth may be in the eye of the beholder. This film won Kurosawa an Oscar for Best Foreign Film. The title has now become synonymous with the multiple-storytelling style the film established.
9:30 p.m. Seven Samurai (1954) – Considered by many critics to be among the greatest films ever made, this extraordinary tale follows a group of ronin (masterless samurai) who agree to protect a village against bandits. Kurosawa explores everything from class distinctions to the nature of violence in this deeply humanistic film starring Shimura, Mifune and a host of stock Kurosawa performers. Tatsuya Nakadai, who would later play the lead roles in such Kurosawa epics as Kagemusha and Ran, can be seen briefly as one of the samurai walking through the town in the first half of the film. Kurosawa’s use of slow-motion death scenes greatly influenced the work of Sam Peckinpah.
1 a.m. Yojimbo (1961) – This Cold War allegory features Mifune as a samurai who plays two sides of a warring town against each other. Kurosawa uses satire and cynicism to tell a story that in many ways reveals the worst in human nature. This film was later remade by Sergio Leone as the 1964 spaghetti western Fistful of Dollars.
3 a.m. Sanjuro (1962) – Mifune returns as the nameless samurai in this humor-laced action flick. This time around, he helps a group of young warriors expose corruption within the leadership of their clan.
4:45 a.m. Dodes ‘Ka-Den (1970) – Kurosawa’s first color film is a character study of various people living in a Tokyo slum. The director uses his painters’ eye to craft a unique color scheme. The title refers to the sound Tokyo streetcars make as they travel down a track. Noted symphonic composer Toru Takemitsu created the enchanting score.
Tuesday, March 30
8 p.m. Dersu Uzala (1975) – Kurosawa won his second Oscar with this story of a Goldi tribe hunter who teaches a Russian explorer how to survive in the harsh Siberian terrain. The pair gradually come to understand one another, despite the remarkably different worlds from which they come.
10:30 p.m. Kagemusha (1980) – George Lucas and Francis Coppola served as producers on this extraordinary epic about a thief who is used as a double for a noble lord. But when the lord dies, the thief has to become him. Tatsuya Nakadai plays the thief, a role that was eventually supposed to go to box-office star Shintaro Katsu, but Kurosawa objected to Katsu’s demand that he have his own personal video crew on the set and fired him. At the time this film was made, Kurosawa was having difficult securing financial backing. So he appeared in a series of Suntory Whiskey commercials shot on the set. Kagemusha marked Kurosawa’s final film with actor Takashi Shimura.
1:45 a.m. Ran (1985) – Kurosawa adapted Shakespeare’s King Lear with this lavishly produced film about a lord who divides his kingdom among three sons, inviting disaster in the process. Nakadai once again takes the lead as the lord, who eventually goes insane as he sees his entire land descend into chaos. Mieko Harada, as the lord’s daughter-in-law, creates one of cinema’s most memorable and conniving villains. Gender-bending star Peter plays the lord’s jester. Costume designer Emi Wada took home an Oscar for her work.
Monday, February 15, 2010
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Pulp Requires A Certain Look...
And it takes persons of a certain sensibility to achieve that look.
People like Kevin Conran.
Go. Look. Learn.
People like Kevin Conran.
Go. Look. Learn.
SHARKTOPUS ATTACKS!
via Nikki Finke:
Seems O'Hara is tweeting the greenlight announcement AFTER asking her twitter audience what they would like to see in a movie named SHARKTOPUS.
Now we know this sort of thing has happened before with SNAKES ON A PLANE...
But those were re-shoots and editing decisions on a movie that was already shot. SHARKTOPUS hasn't gone to script yet!
Ms. O'Hara we tip our pulp chapeau to you... not only for getting the pulp movie formula correct (audience response to the concept first, then movie) but also for bringing Mr. Corman and crew to your channel.
(And FYI , I happen to know someone who has a movie that would be perfect for your channel. The story features rapidly evolving mutant, killer [REDACTED] attacking a group of [REDACTED] at a [REDACTED].
Back on January 3rd, I posted this Mogul Tip: Make More Movies With Sharks after the straight-to-video pic Mega Shark vs Giant Octopus finished No. 8 on Yahoo's Top 10 most viewed trailers of 2009. Now the Internet is all atwitter because Karen O'Hara, the director of original movies at Syfy, has announced via Twitter a greenlight for the long gestating Sharktopus!. Legendary director Roger Corman is a natural for the project because he's already given us Supergator, Dinocroc, and Dinoshark. If only Peter Benchley were still alive. Above is graphic artist Matt Leach's rendition of what the creature feature might look like.
From a development perspective, this is where the story gets interesting.
Seems O'Hara is tweeting the greenlight announcement AFTER asking her twitter audience what they would like to see in a movie named SHARKTOPUS.
Now we know this sort of thing has happened before with SNAKES ON A PLANE...
But those were re-shoots and editing decisions on a movie that was already shot. SHARKTOPUS hasn't gone to script yet!
Ms. O'Hara we tip our pulp chapeau to you... not only for getting the pulp movie formula correct (audience response to the concept first, then movie) but also for bringing Mr. Corman and crew to your channel.
(And FYI , I happen to know someone who has a movie that would be perfect for your channel. The story features rapidly evolving mutant, killer [REDACTED] attacking a group of [REDACTED] at a [REDACTED].
Saturday, February 13, 2010
MOVIES BY FRIENDS OF MINE: DINOSAUR VALLEY GIRLS
A fading movie star is zapped back to a savage prehistoric never-land of exotic cave girls, brutish cavemen and stalking dinosaurs! Frontline Entertainment's first theatrically released cult classic, restored & remastered for a 2-disc Special Edition set. Guest-starring Emmy winner William Marshall (BLACULA), Mr. America Ed Fury and Oscar®-nominee Karen Black (TRILOGY OF TERROR)!Released by FRONTLINE ENTERTAINMENT, INC.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Website: http://www.tempevideo.com
It Never Snows in SC - Ha!
My Sister-in-law Gail sent me these pics from their sudden snowfall last night in the normally temperate wilds of Columbia, SC.
Course, if you go here, you can see how we deal with snow here in LA...from afar.
Course, if you go here, you can see how we deal with snow here in LA...from afar.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
No Explanation Required: GAMERA
Because if the world where giant turtles fly and shoot fire is wrong... I don't wanna be right.
Coming soon on DVD.
More info here.
Buy here: Gamera: The Giant Monster
Coming soon on DVD.
More info here.
Buy here: Gamera: The Giant Monster
Speaking of Monetizing the Web...
Ted Hope over at Truly Free Film offers this from the folks who brought you THE PIRATE BAY:
Flattr
Flattr.com - How Flattr Works from Flattr on Vimeo.
See? All the time smart people are thinking up new ways to solve problems because there's money to be made by doing it. Content creation is not going to hell and everyone isn't going to the poor house.
Things are changing. We have to change with it.
Rethink. Adapt. Adopt.
Overcome.
Someone at the Pirate bay decided to do just that. They went from being pirates to being corsairs.
Let's hope it works. If it doesn't we move on to something that does - not just for the companies leveraging the content from creatives, but for everyone.
That's not a socialist idea - it's one firmly rooted in capitalism.
Flattr
Flattr.com - How Flattr Works from Flattr on Vimeo.
See? All the time smart people are thinking up new ways to solve problems because there's money to be made by doing it. Content creation is not going to hell and everyone isn't going to the poor house.
Things are changing. We have to change with it.
Rethink. Adapt. Adopt.
Overcome.
Someone at the Pirate bay decided to do just that. They went from being pirates to being corsairs.
Let's hope it works. If it doesn't we move on to something that does - not just for the companies leveraging the content from creatives, but for everyone.
That's not a socialist idea - it's one firmly rooted in capitalism.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
No Excuses: Part 23,472
For those of you like me who have been enmeshed in writing and actually, ya know, producing material - this bit of news may have passed you by:
The Screenplay Database is up and running and they are uploading more and more scripts all the time.
Huge resource for the writer-types out there who would do well to use as much as possible. You and I can't get better until we know what the standards are when it comes to screenplays. You can't be a good writer without being a good reader - they go hand in hand. So get to reading...
I am currently stacked with scripts thanks to my good buddy Stefan over at Forces of Geek. He has loaded me down with some pulpy scribblings that will take me awhile to wade through, but wade through it I must because:
When it comes to pulp, the juice is worth the squeeze.
The Screenplay Database is up and running and they are uploading more and more scripts all the time.
Huge resource for the writer-types out there who would do well to use as much as possible. You and I can't get better until we know what the standards are when it comes to screenplays. You can't be a good writer without being a good reader - they go hand in hand. So get to reading...
I am currently stacked with scripts thanks to my good buddy Stefan over at Forces of Geek. He has loaded me down with some pulpy scribblings that will take me awhile to wade through, but wade through it I must because:
When it comes to pulp, the juice is worth the squeeze.
Tuesday, February 09, 2010
BROTHER BLOOD Cover in Progress
Sitting on my worktable is the cover proof for our upcoming premiere Pulp 2.0 Press release, BROTHER BLOOD (Unfortunately, you can't hear the ghoulish glee in my inner voice as I type this).
This is the first English-language release for BB - a blood-soaked, blaxploitation, horror monsterpiece set in 1969's Sunset Strip. The book is written by Donald F. Glut.
(An earlier version premiered in the 70's German Horror magazine HORROR, but this is an expanded 370+ pages version available for the first time in English)
Cover art by Nik Macaluso.
I will be reviewing the book proof in the next week or so when it arrives here at Pulp 2.0 HQ. As we move toward the official launch (opening up the Createspace and Amazon stores, issuing press releases and starting our Facebook page) I will give you some behind-the-scenes fun facts about this and some of our other upcoming releases.
Any comments, questions, quips, quotes or conundrums may be left here in the comments section.
Friday, February 05, 2010
Files are Uploaded for BROTHER BLOOD
Spent the last moments tweaking this and that for the book's cover as well as the page files.
This has been, to say the very least, a learning experience. I emailed Don and let him know the extra hoops I didn't expect, but realized after completing the jump that it was pretty easy, and I didn't need to get nervous about the process.
This is going to get easier every time, or rather my confidence level will rise to match any challenge set before us in publishing 13 more books in this first go round. This is why I am alwaysyelling at ... encouraging you to get off your collective asscheeks and do it. It does get easier every time - because you get better every time.
And thankfully, technology is keeping pace. The interface and options with services like Createspace or Lulu or Issuu or whatever are going to get better too. We'll be able to create and market and sell a bunch of stuff... cool stuff.
----------------------------
Been having a keen discussion with Cousin Trevor and Henshaw on a few things going on around the web. It's got the gears turning, but I have to reign in the A-D-D and focus on the books... and the movies... and the writing... and the comics...
Oh boy.
Anyway - as stated earlier this week I will be posting a pic of the cover as soon as the file is cleared by Createspace.
This has been, to say the very least, a learning experience. I emailed Don and let him know the extra hoops I didn't expect, but realized after completing the jump that it was pretty easy, and I didn't need to get nervous about the process.
This is going to get easier every time, or rather my confidence level will rise to match any challenge set before us in publishing 13 more books in this first go round. This is why I am always
And thankfully, technology is keeping pace. The interface and options with services like Createspace or Lulu or Issuu or whatever are going to get better too. We'll be able to create and market and sell a bunch of stuff... cool stuff.
----------------------------
Been having a keen discussion with Cousin Trevor and Henshaw on a few things going on around the web. It's got the gears turning, but I have to reign in the A-D-D and focus on the books... and the movies... and the writing... and the comics...
Oh boy.
Anyway - as stated earlier this week I will be posting a pic of the cover as soon as the file is cleared by Createspace.
Thursday, February 04, 2010
Conventional Wisdom Redux
Alex Epstein over at Complications Ensue has a post up titled: Conventional Wisdom Overheard at the Telefilm Multiplatform Conference.
There's some good stuff in this, but I wanted to focus on one aspect of Alex's post:
Okay, point taken, Alex. But you didn't address the quote. What the quote is saying is that the actual productions must be financially responsible because they have no money to spend. Productions must now spend relative to the expected return. You can't throw money at the problem.
Again, the money isn't there anymore... and really, that's okay. Two points:
Sophistication is a function of story and character. I can tell a sophisticated story in any location. And thankfully, technology in the hands of talented people has resulted in high quality images - production value - at low cost. You can shoot anywhere now - meaning the pool of talented actors and others aren't just working in the usual suspect cities. If you're a fan of opera then you realize there are lavish spectacles in theater and there are stories told on a bare stage - both can be compelling.
So the line in the sand you're trying to draw here between web series as just cat videos** and television is already blurred. There's quite a few sophisticated-looking, compelling web series out there. Here's one. Here's another. Both made for peanuts compared to television shows.
(and both are better looking than some shows we've both seen on the tube)
To paraphrase Rogers from a conversation we had awhile back - the only difference between the look of an expensive Hollywood production and an indie is just giving a damn. The tech is there.
So let's put to bed this idea that it costs a lot of money to create compelling cinematic stories with high production value that people will pay for. That's an artificial barrier that doesn't exist. We know that people will pay for what interests them. The point is that this business has spent a lot of money that hasn't shown up in story or on screen. That's part of the reason people have flocked to other forms of entertainment (video games, web videos).
It's our job to change that... to look at the story and say, "How can I get the most entertainment value, the story, to my audience for the money I have?" Because if we don't do that - if we don't rethink the business and how it operates hand in hand with story and not just money - then there will be fewer and fewer shows, and more and more people out of work.
Then we all lose.
2. This is also part of why multi-platform is being discussed in the first place.
If you can't put all the story in the show then you NEED other ways for people to become part of your story's world and characters. Inexpensive ways - art, text, audio, games, etc... Immersive ways.
People won't stop wanting "sophisticated stories that are well-acted and well-produced." We'll just have to create them for less and tell those stories across multiple platforms.
We can do that.
** to be fair, there's a lot of cat videos.
There's some good stuff in this, but I wanted to focus on one aspect of Alex's post:
2. “Expensive-to-produce content is doomed.”
Really? I like LOLcats as much as the next guy, but it’s fun the way pork rinds are yummy. Don’t we still want the filet mignon of MAD MEN? I don’t believe people will stop wanting sophisticated stories that are well-acted and well-produced. But I’m an opera fan, so draw your own conclusions.
Okay, point taken, Alex. But you didn't address the quote. What the quote is saying is that the actual productions must be financially responsible because they have no money to spend. Productions must now spend relative to the expected return. You can't throw money at the problem.
Again, the money isn't there anymore... and really, that's okay. Two points:
- Well-acted and well-produced are not terms that are dependent on budget.
Sophistication is a function of story and character. I can tell a sophisticated story in any location. And thankfully, technology in the hands of talented people has resulted in high quality images - production value - at low cost. You can shoot anywhere now - meaning the pool of talented actors and others aren't just working in the usual suspect cities. If you're a fan of opera then you realize there are lavish spectacles in theater and there are stories told on a bare stage - both can be compelling.
So the line in the sand you're trying to draw here between web series as just cat videos** and television is already blurred. There's quite a few sophisticated-looking, compelling web series out there. Here's one. Here's another. Both made for peanuts compared to television shows.
(and both are better looking than some shows we've both seen on the tube)
To paraphrase Rogers from a conversation we had awhile back - the only difference between the look of an expensive Hollywood production and an indie is just giving a damn. The tech is there.
So let's put to bed this idea that it costs a lot of money to create compelling cinematic stories with high production value that people will pay for. That's an artificial barrier that doesn't exist. We know that people will pay for what interests them. The point is that this business has spent a lot of money that hasn't shown up in story or on screen. That's part of the reason people have flocked to other forms of entertainment (video games, web videos).
It's our job to change that... to look at the story and say, "How can I get the most entertainment value, the story, to my audience for the money I have?" Because if we don't do that - if we don't rethink the business and how it operates hand in hand with story and not just money - then there will be fewer and fewer shows, and more and more people out of work.
Then we all lose.
2. This is also part of why multi-platform is being discussed in the first place.
If you can't put all the story in the show then you NEED other ways for people to become part of your story's world and characters. Inexpensive ways - art, text, audio, games, etc... Immersive ways.
People won't stop wanting "sophisticated stories that are well-acted and well-produced." We'll just have to create them for less and tell those stories across multiple platforms.
We can do that.
** to be fair, there's a lot of cat videos.
Pulp Happenings Around the Web
Piers Beckley has set up a screenwriter forum for those in the UK here. I may hop over there in my bloody boots and have a pint or twenty leaving scarlet footprints over the carpet.
Occasional Superheroine Valerie D'Orazio has put the 1st book in her trilogy THE END OF THE VAMPIRE CRAZE IN NYC online here. (Val - I want to know the results of this free experiment!)
Francesco Francavilla and the boys over at Comic Twart are drawing Abuli and Bernet's TORPEDO. I may have an idea or two to throw their way - not that they need me at all. They bring the awesome quite well on their own.
Max Allan Collins liked my review of THE LAST LULLABY.
Go visit them and leave a comment telling them the MPB sent ya!
I'll be here writing & publishing.
Occasional Superheroine Valerie D'Orazio has put the 1st book in her trilogy THE END OF THE VAMPIRE CRAZE IN NYC online here. (Val - I want to know the results of this free experiment!)
Francesco Francavilla and the boys over at Comic Twart are drawing Abuli and Bernet's TORPEDO. I may have an idea or two to throw their way - not that they need me at all. They bring the awesome quite well on their own.
Max Allan Collins liked my review of THE LAST LULLABY.
Go visit them and leave a comment telling them the MPB sent ya!
I'll be here writing & publishing.
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Fantastic Foreground Miniatures
Every production needs what is called "production value" - those things that no matter how little they cost scream "this is a big, expensive production." Production value can be anything from glorious costumes, inventive lighting schemes and camera moves or...
Foreground miniatures.
Foreground miniatures add all sorts of fantastic elements to your shows - rocketships, castles, tanks - just about anything you can think of has been miniaturized and placed strategically within the shot to appear larger than it is in reality.
Today, Boing Boing is profiling just such a craftsman - Michael Paul Smith - who's mixing his model building with his photography and coming up some very realistic shots.
Foreground miniatures.
Foreground miniatures add all sorts of fantastic elements to your shows - rocketships, castles, tanks - just about anything you can think of has been miniaturized and placed strategically within the shot to appear larger than it is in reality.
Today, Boing Boing is profiling just such a craftsman - Michael Paul Smith - who's mixing his model building with his photography and coming up some very realistic shots.
Check out the rest of Michael's work here. And start thinking about how you can add a miniature element or two to your establishing shots to give it that 'pop' that genre fans expect from their pulp movies.
Monday, February 01, 2010
Reed Hastings of Netflix: It's Not The Number of Titles, It's The Stream
New TeeVee has a nice piece this morning regarding Netflix as it adds more and more indie titles to its catalog of offerings to its subscribers.Reed Hastings, CEO of Netflix says that the 100,000 titles catalog is not a good barometer for the company's success. To him, success equals the number of streams going out:
Instead of looking at the streaming service’s title count, Hastings urged analysts to think about how many of Netflix’s users are streaming video to determine how successful the service is. Netflix said on the call that about 48 percent of its subscribers used the Watch Instantly service in the fourth quarter, compared to 41 percent in the third quarter and 28 percent a year ago.
“What you really want to ask is, ‘When are we going to have two-thirds of our subscribers streaming? When is the content so good that two-thirds of our subscribers choose to stream?’” Hastings said. “The answer to that question for you, I would guess about one and a half years, just based on current trends of what we have seen growing.”
The Pulpable Feast: What's Been on my Plate
Had an interesting solitary weekend working on BROTHER BLOOD - editing the InDesign document and tweaking the book's cover. All of this prior to compiling the chapter files into one document and uploading it to Createspace.
Ah yes, the glamor of the publishing business.
But really, I'm a bit of a control freak on these things and it has been a learning experience working on the files myself. The second book will go much more quickly as I know what works and what's shit. It also gives me the confidence to say, "If I can do this, then with a bit of practice you can too." It's all about making a decision and giving a crap about how the final product looks.
I've decided to work on getting the print editions out first, then work on the digital formatting for other venues like Kindle and so forth. This is due in no small part to the immaturity of the digital market (on soooo many levels) and the need to work on our marketing plan.
In between all this - when my eyes stop bleeding - I'm wrapping up a few short stories, an outline for a graphic novel/mini-series, a web serial proposal and of course, the project I'm working on with Bill Martell.
I'm also going to shoot out a short Pulp Legion Electrogram (wow, that sounded sexual) before my dreaded birthday at the end of the month.
More rants later related to making decisions and giving a crap.
Ah yes, the glamor of the publishing business.
(Thanks go to Rashad for the electro-mechanical assist via email)
But really, I'm a bit of a control freak on these things and it has been a learning experience working on the files myself. The second book will go much more quickly as I know what works and what's shit. It also gives me the confidence to say, "If I can do this, then with a bit of practice you can too." It's all about making a decision and giving a crap about how the final product looks.
I've decided to work on getting the print editions out first, then work on the digital formatting for other venues like Kindle and so forth. This is due in no small part to the immaturity of the digital market (on soooo many levels) and the need to work on our marketing plan.
In between all this - when my eyes stop bleeding - I'm wrapping up a few short stories, an outline for a graphic novel/mini-series, a web serial proposal and of course, the project I'm working on with Bill Martell.
I'm also going to shoot out a short Pulp Legion Electrogram (wow, that sounded sexual) before my dreaded birthday at the end of the month.
More rants later related to making decisions and giving a crap.
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