19 February 2006

LINK: Runners & Special Clips + Top 5 List

One of my favorite comics of 2005, Runners: Bad Goods, has made the jump to the movies! Well, kind of...

RUNNERS SCI-FI ANIMATED SHORT ONLINE!

The highly-acclaimed sci-fi adventure comic Runners, by Sean Wang, is now a fully animated short! The 3-D computer-animated Runners feature from The DAVE School -- makers of the X-Men Minimates movie ”Darktide” -- is now available online.

Produced by The DAVE (Digital Animation and Visual Effects) School at Universal Studios Orlando, the 6-minute short adapts the first issue of the Runners: Bad Goods comic, in which reluctant smuggler Roka Nostaco and his ragtag alien crew must board a hostile vessel to do battle with a notorious band of pirates intent on stealing their cargo.
For a student project, it's a great piece of video, perfectly capturing the look and feel of Sean Wang's entertaining sci-fi adventure series. PIXAR or Dreamworks should snatch it up ASAP and bring it to the big screen!

Also worth a look is the trailer for Special, a movie I've never heard of but came across via Will Pfieffer's blog.


LES FRANKEN (Michael Rapaport) leads a painfully unremarkable life as a metermaid until he enrolls in a drug study for an experimental anti-depressant. An unexpected side effect of the drug convinces Les he is developing special powers and must quit his job to answer his new calling in life... Superhero.

A very select group of people in life are truly gifted. Special is a movie about everyone else.
The trailer is appealing, suggesting a wry dramedy that plays coy with the question of whether or not Les really does have super powers...or is simply crazy. There's a quick scene, in the bodega, that reminds me of Unbreakable -- still one of my top five superhero movies ever -- and I've always liked Michael Rapaport, one of Hollywood's quintessential everyman character actors, who often steals movies with his supporting turns.

It'll be interesting to see how he pulls off a leading role, and whether its positive write-up on the Sundance web site holds true:

Michael Rapaport so fully embodies Les's desire for empowerment that he actually brings Special much closer to the spirit of early comic-book superheroes (marginalized men expressing fantasies of strength) than the studio films we see. Special is about loneliness and insecurity, and people encumbered by self-doubt. It's a subtle, philosophical comedy that gets its special powers from clever filmmaking.
Oddly enough, it doesn't appear to have been signed at Sundance as I can't find a release date listed anywhere and there's no studio attached to it in any of the reviews I've come across. If and when it does pop up, though, I plan to check it out.

Until then, I'll have to make do with a little Milla, I guess.

Milla would have improved Elektra to a 2-star movie. Le sigh...

PS: I never thought of it this way, but Fifth Element is totally a superhero comic book movie, which means it's on my top 5 list, too. In alphabetical order, that's Batman Begins, Fifth Element, The Incredibles, The Matrix and Unbreakable, only one of which is actually based directly on a comic book character. The rest take elements of superhero comics and spin them off in their own unique directions.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

My god, man. Get you a copy of IRON MONKEY toot-de-flipping-sweet.

Now THAT'S a superhero movie! Donnie Yen, Yuen Woo-Ping, Yu Rong Kwong. Corrupt officials, father-son conflict, kick-ass moves, heroic misunderstandings, unspoken love. And at least one of the characters in the story was A REAL HISTORICAL FIGURE.

Get the Fantastic Four fan fiction out of that list and get this down your eyes.

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Guy LeCharles Gonzalez said...

Looks interesting, but what's with the negative comments about the US version vs. the original on Amazon? Should I be looking for the latter instead?

As for FF fanfic, assuming you're referring to The Incredibles, I'll take over the "real thing" any day. :-P

Anonymous said...

To be honest, I never read that far down. It sounds like a very old version of the film. Judging by that review, I'd avoid that edition. You need to see the full film.

The version I bought, here in the UK, was by HONG KONG LEGENDS. I watched that DVD until it broke (really!). They've since replaced that version with a 2-disc special edition, I think under the PREMIER ASIA label. If you've got access to a Region 2 or regionless DVD player, I'd get that.

If you've ever seen Tsui Hark's ONCE UPON A TIME IN CHINA, Iron Monkey can be considered a near-prequel, as the lead character, the very real Wong Fei-Hung, appears in both.

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