Every Wednesday, hordes of warriors troop out to comic book stores across the country to pick up the releases of the week. The comic book industry has been riding the coattails of a boom period these past few years, heralded by the rise of Image Comics titles like Saga and financially successful reboot events like DC’s […]
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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Comics, Breaking News, Underdogs, Top News, Top Comics, Exit Generation, Add a tag

Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Feature Film, Underdogs, Argentina, The Weinstein Company, Katie Holmes, John Leguizamo, Bella Thorne, Juan Jose Campanella, Ariana Grande, Chazz Palminteri, Add a tag
Reports are emerging that the Weinstein Company may delay the release of "Underdogs" for the third time.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Feature Film, Underdogs, Argentina, The Weinstein Company, Foosball, Juan Jose Campanella, Metegol, Add a tag
The Weinstein Company has released the American trailer for "Underdogs," which it will release into U.S. theaters on April 10, 2015.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Home, Feature Film, Underdogs, Peanuts, The Little Prince, Le Petit Prince, Inside Out, The Prophet, Storks, Capture the Flag, Kung Fu Panda 3, Ratchet & Clank, The Good Dinosaur, Minions, Monster Trucks, Top Cat Begins, Hotel Transylvania 2, Strange Magic, Beyond the Boundary, Big Fish & Chinese Flowering Crabapple, Doreamon: Nobita's Space Hero Record of Space Heroes, El Americano: The Movie, Little from the Fish Shop, Malá z Rybárny, Miss Hokusai, Psycho-Pass: The Movie, Robodog, Shawn the Sheep Movie, Sheep and Wolves, The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water, Add a tag
If you love animation, you'll want to check out this list of animated features that will be released in 2015.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: The Book of Life, Song of the Sea, Big Hero 6, Cheatin', The Penguins of Madagascar, Rocks In My Pockets, The LEGO Movie, The BoxTrolls, How To Train Your Dragon 2, Award Season Focus, Jack and the Cuckoo-Clock Heart, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, Rio 2, The Boy and the World, Tante Hilda!, Tarzan 3D, Thunder and the House of Magic, Underdogs, Add a tag
With eight months of the year nearly passed, we're beginning to get a clearer sense of who the major contenders will be in the upcoming award season.
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Blog: I.N.K.: Interesting Non fiction for Kids (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Sue Macy, All-American Girls Baseball, underdogs, Annie Oakley, Super Bowl, Nellie Bly, Super Bowl, All-American Girls Baseball, underdogs, Annie Oakley, Nellie Bly, Add a tag
As an author who writes about sports and women’s history, I have a soft spot for underdogs. Indeed, most of the people I write about were underdogs who triumphed, defying expectations and social mores to make their mark in the world. Annie Oakley first came to fame by defeating her future husband in a shooting exhibition she was expected to lose. The women of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL) staked their claim to the American pastime despite an initially skeptical public. Nellie Bly, the subject of one of my next books, broke into New York’s old boy newspaper network despite editors who came right out and told her they wouldn’t trust a woman to cover anything but society events.
Underdogs make good stories, especially when the readers are kids, who often feel disenfranchised themselves. If they can see their struggles reflected in those of the people in my books, the past suddenly seems relevant, and reading about history isn’t a turnoff. And the points of identification don’t have to be obvious. While girls have embraced the female baseball players of the AAGPBL, I often find that boys are more animated and ask more questions when I give talks about the league. Boys who play sports relate to the women as athletes, and love the opportunity to measure their own experiences against those of the Chicks, Peaches, and Daisies.
Fortunately for both authors and readers, history is full of victorious underdogs whose lives and deeds are ripe for examination. Patriots fans can even take heart that in 1781, the ragtag Revolutionary War soldiers who inspired the name of their modern-day football team came away with a clutch victory against the giants of

Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: graphic novel, comics, historical fiction, battles, Lynn Varley, Frank Miller, Add a tag
Author: Frank Miller
Colorist: Lynn Varley
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
ISBN-10: 1569714029
ISBN-13: 978-1569714027
The Battle of Thermopylae is one of history’s most important battles. In 481-480 B.C, the Spartan King Leonidas and his army of 300 met the huge army (more than 100,000 strong) of the Persian Emperor Xerxes and were annihilated. Still, it gave the Greeks time to gather enough force to defeat the Persians. For three days those 300 men stood against that incredible army. How they managed it just defies imagination.
Frank Miller knows how to tell a hell of a story. While his account isn’t historically accurate, it’s a darned good tale and adds to the incredible story it already is. The art is astounding; the battle scenes are just the most intense, bloody and violent as only Frank Miller can make them. No one does blood and guts like Frank Miller.
In 300, Miller focuses on King Leonidas, the young foot soldier Stelios, and the storyteller Dilios. His portrayal of the Spartans makes them human, makes them so much more than just unbelievable historical shadow figures, at least for me. His characters embody the strength they must have had to stand up against that massive army of Persians. Their faces are almost carved of stone they are so chiseled, so rugged, so raw. The hands and fingers are almost square blocks and they are huge.
I love how Frank Miller’s sparse but deeply telling text accompanies his astounding art. His 300 will ignite a whole new group of people to research the history of the Battle of Thermopylae. How great is that? I see kids at the library asking about books on Sparta and I wonder – did you see 300? Did you read the graphic novel? What has you asking about it? I bet some of them are in there because of Frank Miller. Highly recommended but keep the younger kids away – this is graphically violent.