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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: JMS, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 7 of 7
1. SDCC 14: JMS Shoots Straight While Firing From the Hip

By David Nieves

J. Michael Straczynski isn’t one to mess around. Unless it’s an hour of sarcasm and announcements, which his spotlight panel, Comic-Con Saturday, had copious amounts of.

JMS as he’s know to his friends, enemies, and frenemies had a lot of updates on outhouse projects and something he announced at SDCC two years ago, Studio JMS. No doubt Joe wins the award for the self professed best in the world at being humble.

At the top of his update list was a full colored page from Superman Earth One: Volume 3. Not one of the most exciting pages from the book but it did show Adrian Syaf’s take on Earth One Superman. It doesn’t quite have the pulled back cinematic of previous artist Shane Davis but it looks to blend well with JMS’ direction for the character. The book comes out in February.

Studio JMS is shaping up to be a true multimedia one stop shop for comics, television, and film. This will spin out the “Joe’s Comics” imprint under Image. All the books announced during his stage presentation at a previous Image Expo are still on the way.

Ten Grand is currently in negotiations with a major network to be optioned as a TV show.

Sense8 is in production with Netflix for a 10 episode commitment. He talked about a run of meetings alongside his fellow producers, the Wachowskis’ (Matrix), and on their first one they met with Netflix and had the deal done after lunch. Daryl Hanna will appear on the show. You can see the entire cast list here. Several locations around the world from Chicago to the Arctic are being used. He’s selling it as the largest scope ever on television and it seems like that’s a promise he’ll keep.

JMS is a week away from finishing a second draft of the Shadowman movie

Because he doesn’t have enough to do he’s writing a pilot for Universal based on something by Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling.

Two Streets is a TV show he’s doing with Gale Ann Hurd of Valhalla and Universal is also set to produce. There’s nothing to talk about quite yet but he did show a title card for the show. It depicted a golden tinted city alley at night and what looked like a young girl draped in shadow. Could be a new age noir tale, if so I Derek Jeter tip my hat to JMS.

One of the big things he talked about was his current ties to Babylon 5. The original deal with Warner Bros will never show him anymore money from television. However he still owns the rights for a Babylon 5 movie. No studio will take the movie rights with another making money off the deal. The solution, Studio JMS. To the delight of everyone in the room he announced that his initial parlays through the studio would fund a Babylon 5 movie. In 2015 he’ll have a Babylon 5 film script done and WB has a year to make it, IF NOT in 2016 Studio JMS would spearhead the film.

After the announcements he told a story about him fraudulently acquiring his first degree. Apparently he was a terrible student with in his words “negative grade point average”. So in order to graduate from San Diego State he broke into the schools office and put his name on the graduation list. A trend he took one step further on his next academic step. He even put up a slide of his fraudulent Master’s degree.

The chairman of this board opened up to questions from the audience.

First question was about a musical from Studio JMS. He jokingly said, “it’s time.” JMS threw out the idea for Living Dead the musical with Irish step dancers. We’re 90% certain that was a joke but you couldn’t tell from his demeanor.

Another fan asked if anyone like Neil Gaiman would be writing episodes of his upcoming shows. JMS responded by praising Gaiman’s work but said all the episodes were already written by himself and the Wachowskis’.

One of the interesting questions was about if he’d crowd fund at least part of the money for Babylon 5. It took a lot for him to resist that lure. Straczynski joked how he came from “rank fandom and I’m just as rank as the rest of you.” He felt it would be taking advantage of the fans. Personally, I respect that. He even went as far as to say that between all the movies and merchandise, sci-fi and horror fans are the most exploited fans out there.

To close out the panel he gave the crowd some inspiring words of wisdom. “I come from poor, I come from the street, I come from San Diego. I see so many people defeat themselves.” He added, “create the lives you want for yourselves.”

Listening to JMS speak it was clear to hear just who he was deep down. A fan who came from nothing, equipped with some words and passion. Those same qualities that make him the realest guy in comics.

You can listen to the entire panel below

 

 

 

2 Comments on SDCC 14: JMS Shoots Straight While Firing From the Hip, last added: 7/30/2014
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2. HMDD/SDCC2012: J. Michael Straczynski Creates Studio JMS

What an excellent morning for acronyms, as the blazing morning sun peaks cheerfully through the partially-broken front window of Stately Beat Manor. Not only is today simultaneously San Diego Comic-Con and Heidi MacDonald Day, but J. Michael Straczynski has announced the creation of Studio JMS, a new venture which will handle and create various projects through all forms of media.

Comics being one of them, although it looks as though JMS’ plan is to take different forms of media and intersect them as seems apporpriate, with the studio also handling TV, film, video games and digital content. No sign yet on a J. Michael Straczynski bluegrass album, although we can but hope. The most interesting aspect of the announcement is that he’ll be reviving his “Joe’s Comics” imprint over at Image, with 4 comics slated for an appearance next year, being Falling Angel, Ten Grand, Guardians, and Sidekick.

Of the overall ambition of the studio, JMS says

It’s all about creating IP. For twenty years, I’ve had the remarkable good fortune to work successfully as a writer and producer in a wide variety of fields, from television to comics and movies. I’ve always dreamed of creating a mini-studio where I can put all of that work under one roof, telling stories that I want to tell and which can be spun up between various platforms: comics that can become TV shows, TV shows that can become movies, and movies that can become comics. With the tremendous recent success of films such as The Avengers, Thor, and the Batman series of films, this feels like the best time to tackle that dream. Best of all, unlike many other startup ventures, I’m not looking to get into these areas, I’m already working in them; now it’s just a matter of taking the next logical step: consolidation.

Running the studio with JMS will be Patricia Tallman, and the pair have a full slate of projects currently in the works - including a TV show with Sam Raimi for Starz, two web-series for MTV, and a film marking JMS’ first work as director on a feature-length project. They also hope to generate one film every 18 months. Doesn’t he sleep?

0 Comments on HMDD/SDCC2012: J. Michael Straczynski Creates Studio JMS as of 1/1/1900
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3. The creator’s position viewed through the lens of Alan Moore

201204250154 The creators position viewed through the lens of Alan Moore

Photo by Jose Villarubia

I wanted to finish up a few things on Before Watchmen and then, hopefully I’ll wrap this up. I finished Monday’s post while I was hopped up on Benadryl and that is not something I recommend for anyone. I was not able to articulate my name the main reason why Before Watchmen (BeWa) can be viewed as a depressing reality for the comics industry.

I’ll start with reprinting one of my comments on the previous thread:

The contract that Moore and Gibbons signed is actually pretty standard in publishing — the rights revert when it goes out of print. Pretty common.

Where it differs is in this: In the book publishing world, in general, when an author such as Alan Moore writes a worldwide smash that is quickly enshrined as a future classic….you try to keep that person working for you so you can make even more money off their future works.

DC, for reasons probably buried in their DNA from Jack Liebowitz, proceeded to alienate Moore by chintzing him on merchandise monies, and then subsequently alienating him by making him change The Cobweb stories and trashing an entire print run of LoeG.

Is Moore a high maintenance creator? Absolutely.

But you’ll note that the main reason Diane Nelson, DC’s current president, was given reign over the company is because she was so good at handling another very high maintenance creator, J.K. Rowling.

Would WB treat Rowling the way DC treated Moore?

I don’t think so.


In one of his searing posts on the matter, David Brothers presented a timeline:

1. Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’s Watchmen is an enormously successful comic book, on creative, critical, and commercial levels
2. Moore and Gibbons both signed a contract that gave DC the rights to Watchmen until the book went out of print for a year (I believe), at which point they’d receive the rights back
3. Watchmen was an unheralded success, and the book has yet to go out of print. As a result, Moore and Gibbons never got their rights back.
4. DC promised to share revenue from Watchmen-related merchandise, and then went ahead and produced merchandise and classified it as promotional and didn’t give M&G anything
5. These shenanigans, along with a coming ratings system that Moore disagreed with, led Moore to cut ties with DC entirely
6. DC brought Wildstorm, which came along with America’s Best Comics. Moore felt that leaving DC again would screw his artists over, so he stuck around
7. DC continued screwing with Moore over the years, from pulping his comics to either sabotaging (or botching to such an extent that it might as well be sabotage) the release of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier
8. Moore cut ties again, and has consistently refused DC’s money, overtures, and renegotiations.
9. Before Watchmen is a series of prequels to Watchmen, some thirty-five issues that will shed light on characters from

15 Comments on The creator’s position viewed through the lens of Alan Moore, last added: 4/25/2012
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4. JMS: “Graphic novels are key to DC’s future.” UPDATED

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WOW — so much e-ink over the news that J. Michael Straczynski, a prominent comics writer and Hollywood show runner, is leaving monthly comics to write an OGN sequel. And now two interviews at CBR and Newsarama to explain what really happened:

At Newsarama, JMS drops perhaps the clearest soundbite of all:

DC, particularly Dan DiDio, feels that original hardcover graphic novels are key to DC’s future, not to supplant monthly comics, but on a parallel track.


Not an earth shattering revelation, but one that is the boldest statement yet that there are two ways on the eightfold path.

BTW, before you read all of this, you might want to check out David Brothers who lays out “JMS: the case against” in pretty strong fashion. Brothers lays out what seems to be a clear pattern of lateness and abandoning projects halfway through, including Brave and The Bold, a JMS book which is now in limbo, and of course The Twelve.

In interviews, JMS takes on most of these complaints, while admitting that both his run on Superman and his run on Wonder Woman were always planned for 12 issues — something that wasn’t always clear in the promos for either book. However, he denies being late.

No. First, there’s only been one delay on Superman due to a recurring lung infection that has, happily, been resolved once and for all. There were no delays on Wonder Woman, and before the B&B hiatus, all of those issues came out on time.

Once the decision was made to shift me from the monthlies a few weeks ago, they put out the word that the next Wonder Woman issue would be pushed, but that was just to buy time to find a new writer to finish the story.

It’s funny…I turned out Spider-Man pretty much like clockwork for years, got the Surfer and Bullet Points and Strange minis out on schedule, I’ve written nearly 200 published comics in about 10 years, but nobody seems to notice when things come out on time, only when they’re late…and I’m more than happy to take the rap for it when it’s my fault, and sometimes it was, and sometimes it wasn’t. Them’s the breaks.


As regards The Twelve, an intriguing homage to Marvels’ original characters that got a strong response when it debuted in 2008, but has languished schedule wise since. (Artist Chris Weston is seemingly a magnet for this kind of thing, as he was also saddled with the years late Ministry of Space by Warren Ellis.) JMS says The Twelve is still underway:

And to the inevitable question: yes, the Twelve is being finished. To recap: there were times I was off the grid, and times that Chris was off the grid in Hollywood, and we kept going round and round on who was available, when. I could never get too far ahead of the art because I always found something in Chris’s [Weston] art that made me want to adjust the story a bit to capitalize on what he can do in his amazing art, so it’s always been a case of me finishing an issue, giving it to Chris, he’s either on or off the grid, time passes, he gets it done, but now I’m off the grid…this past week he caught up on the last pages of script that I gave him, so now the ball is in my court to finish the last bit of this and bring it in for a landing.

12 Comments on JMS: “Graphic novels are key to DC’s future.” UPDATED, last added: 11/12/2010
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5. J. Michael Straczynski leaving Superman and Wonder Woman to write Earth One sequel

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Well.

That was fast

The Superman Earth One ogn has been a BIG BIG hit for DC, topping the NY Times graphic best seller list AND the Diamond charts. So a sequel by writer J Michael Straczynski and artist Shane Davis is a no-brainer. This the DC blog announces it today.

It’s too early to talk art, story or release date, but make sure to stay tuned to The Source for more info. We checked in with the DC Comics Co-Publishers, Jim Lee and Dan DiDio for their thoughts on the success of SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE.

“Joe created a Superman for the modern reader – a Clark Kent that’s conflicted and inexperienced but also focused and determined to embrace his destiny,” DiDio said. “We couldn’t be more pleased with how it turned out.”


However this did not come without a price. JMS is leaving the writing reins of SUPERMAN and WONDER WOMAN to Chris Roberson and Phil Hester respectively.

Starting with SUPERMAN #707 and WONDER WOMAN #605, Straczynski will step back as the monthly scripter of both books, opening the door for two rising talents to step in and complete the books’ respective storylines using JMS’s story notes. Straczynski’s influence will be apparent in both titles – Superman’s Walk Across America continues, the mysteries surrounding Wonder Woman barrel toward a conclusion and in due time you’ll have a second volume of SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE to put on the shelf next to the first.


Art teams include Alan Goldman and Eddy Barrows on Supes and dandy Don Kramer on Wonder Woman. And now the truth can be told:

“I’d originally come to DC to do the Superman Earth One book which, at the time, was top secret so nobody knew about it,” Straczynski said, “and filled out on Brave and the Bold for a while to have fun and get up to speed on the DCU. When I was done with SEO I took on the Superman and Wonder Woman monthlies on the theory that I’d have time to script the full 12 issues before bounding back onto Earth One. But when the huge numbers started coming in on Earth One, and the need to fastrack the next volumes became evident in order to keep the momentum going, I knew there was no way in god’s green earth that I could write that and the monthlies simultaneously. Since DC has had my notes and outlines from day one on both titles, so they’re still my stories, it makes sense to let Chris and Phil keep going from the story beats I’ve set up. I’ll dive in on occasion as needed for important story points. It’s still my story, I’m involved in both books, and they’re going to continue in the direction we set up. I’m looking forward to seeing what Chris and Phil have in store.

“Meanwhile, I’m taking full advantage of the situation to take a one- to five-year sabbatical from writing monthlies in order to go exclusively into writing graphic novels like Superman Earth One and Samaritan X, along with the occasional high-visibility minseries. I think that’s where the business is going, and creatively, limited series and graphic novels have always been my strong suit in that they let me tell cohesive stories with a beginning, middle and end. They can also be written and drawn before anything is ever announced or solicited, as was the case with Earth One, which has been one of the greatest and most creatively rewarding experience of my career. At some point I’m sure I’ll come back to monthlies — it’s just too darn

15 Comments on J. Michael Straczynski leaving Superman and Wonder Woman to write Earth One sequel, last added: 11/11/2010
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6. SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE preview

SM_EARTHONE_CASE copy.jpg

DC has released a few pages of SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE the much-anticipated Superman reboot graphic novel by J. Michael Straczynski and Shane Davis. The book goes on sales next month.

This is a Superman for the 21st century.

With SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE, Straczynski and Davis inject the folk tale and legend that is Superman’s origin with a modern, vital and forward-looking energy that makes for a refreshing, epic and challenging super-hero adventure.

In SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE – the first original graphic novel retelling Superman’s origin — Clark Kent is a man looking for meaning in a new city and an age of failing newspapers, hand-held devices and instant gratification. But when you can fly through the sky and burn objects with a glance – things become a tad more complicated. Doubly so when a fleet of alien ships arrive on your doorstep.

SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE channels the best tales of Superman with a look toward the future, by two of the brightest talents the industry has to offer.

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15 Comments on SUPERMAN: EARTH ONE preview, last added: 9/3/2010
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7. Followup on the news: Earth One, NEMESIS, etc., etc., etc.

The Earth One story has been mostly cleared up as J. Michael Straczynski has responded to Robot 6 with a clarification:

This was the actual exchange, as I remember it.

Someone asked me on the panel if Superman Earth One was only coming out as a hardcover or as issues at the same time or afterward. I said, as near as I can remember it, “This is coming out first in hardcover, unlike B&B, which is single issues collected into a hardcover” (which I slipped in to promote the book, which is coming out I think this week or next week). So it went in both directions, which prompted the fan to note, “I’m confused,” and I joked back, “So am I.”

That was the entirety of the exchange. Basically, the two different subjects got conflated in the hurry to transcribe what was being said, so they got lumped into one sentence.


Where the mystery comes in is that you can actually listen to the panel and hear the whole thing about 2 minutes from the end. JMS doesn’t really mention B&tB at all which makes it sound like he’s talking about Earth One.

We’re going to call off the conspiracy hounds here however and just say it was San Diego, people were tired, it was the end of a panel, and…it’s 99.99% nothing at all. Obviously, JMS didn’t know the audio is up on the internet and was just recalling what he thought he said. Which was that he was confused.

So, let’s move on.

BONUS: While we were looking for the audio of the panel, we found this nice page of DC downloads where you can get screensavers (like Seaguy) and listen to podcasts and stuff.
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Seaguy!

More news followup:

§ That video game developer who outraged everyone with his clueless comments on deceiving artists? He’s only 16 years old. Which explains a bit of the cluelessness. So he’s more of a twerp than an asswipe.

§ Mark Millar talks more about NEMESIS the movie and passes long casting ideas:

“With Nemesis, you’ve got two great roles for two A-list stars,” he says. “The thing is, one guy has to be as good as the other. You’ve got Holmes versus Moriarty here or Batman versus The Joker, so each one has got to be a $20 million actor, really. I think you could go for the A+ list and get Johnny Depp as Nemesis and Brad Pitt as Blake Morrow.”

Say what you will about the Scot, but he doesn’t lack ambition. And, if Scott does bag Depp, it’ll bring Millar’s long-term plan to fruition. “When I was writing the comic, I genuinely saw Johnny Depp as Nemesis,” explains Millar. “He’s a thin-faced guy, slightly creepy, a cross between Heath Ledger and Christian Bale, and someone who could pull off both those things at the same time is Depp. He would get it. He goes slightly crazy in his roles!”

§ This is not followup, but you can watch a video of the whole 15 Comments on Followup on the news: Earth One, NEMESIS, etc., etc., etc., last added: 8/11/2010

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