News Around the Net!
Click here for a wonderful look at the films of the Coen Brothers. This fellow re-watched all of the Coen Brothers’ films (which sounds like a wonderfully fun project, by the way), and writes about his impressions of their body of work. It’s an impressive article, and I love his assessment of the Coens’ wonderful characters, who “verge on caricature yet have a vivid particularity that makes them hard to forget and easy to return to.” That’s a good a description as I have ever seen!
I love this look at Six Comedians We Wish Would Return to Stand-Up! I wholeheartedly agree. (There are some wonderful video clips embedded in that article.)
Motivational posters inspired by The Wire? Awesome. (This piece on badassdigest.com selects some of the best.)
This fascinating oral history of the very short-lived Dana Carvey Show makes me want to track down those episodes and watch them immediately.
I am a big, big fan of Dave Sim’s sprawling comic book epic Cerebus, the unprecedented “300 issue limited series.” It gets pretty crazy (and, at times, pretty unreadable) near the end (I am a subscriber to the theory that Dave Sim went insane while working on his magnum opus), but the vast swaths of the story that are good are REALLY REALLY GOOD, some of the finest comic books ever created. It’s fun to see some writers giving Cerebus some much-deserved attention these days. Click here for a lengthy excerpt from the Comics Journal’s recent look back at the series, and I also am really enjoying the series of pieces running at comicbookresources.com, written by a writer who is reading through the complete epic for the first time. Click here for part one, and here for the even stronger part two. Although I personally choose to believe that the Cerebus story ends on the final page of Rick’s Story, I appreciate this author’s debunking the commonly-held notion that the last hundred issues of Cerebus are entirely without merit. He writes, and I agree, that it’s only in the series’ final stretch of issues — Dave Sim’s bizarre exegesis of the Torah — when the comic really becomes unreadable.
This is a great piece by A. O. Scott of the New York Times about three summer 2011 movies worth debating. I’m sad to say I haven’t seem any of them yet, but this wonderful article reinforces the desire I already felt to try to track all three films down as soon as possible. (The fact that I haven’t seen Terrence Malick’s Tree of Life but I have seen Cowboys and Aliens makes me feel a little sad inside.)
Can J.J. Abrams just hurry up and tell us that he’s directing the next Star Trek sequel, already?? It seems crazy to me how long it’s taken to get the next Trek film off the ground, considering how well-received the 2009 reboot was.
Speaking of Star Trek, the folks at Mondo Tees have been doing these awesome, extremely-limited-edition posters for each Original Series Star Trek episode. Instead of extremely limited I really should say insanely limited. I haven’t been able to get a single one. I don’t know why they don’t print more of these amazing works of art! Check out this astounding piece for “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield.”
Did you all follow my instructions and check out my new favorite thing: Kevin Pollak’s Chat Show? No? This two-hour long interview with Rob Reiner is a must-watch. Check it out, and thank me later:
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