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A New Becky Cloonan Cover for By Chance or Providence is Revealed

By Chance Or Providence

Image Comics has revealed the new Becky Cloonan cover, featuring original artwork, for the upcoming By Chance Or Providence trade paperback reprint. 

By Chance Or Providence collects Becky Cloonan’s award-winning trilogy: “Wolves,” “The Mire,” and “Demeter,” with lush colors by Lee Loughridge and a sketchbook/illustration section. These stories cast a spell of hypnotic melancholy, weaving their way through medieval landscapes of ancient curses and terrible truths. 

Perfect for fans of Emily Carrol’s characteristically dark and atmospheric storytelling—like When I Arrived at the Castle and Through the WoodsBy Chance Or Providence will haunt readers long after they flip the final page.

Fan Expo 2015 Q & A – Jason Momoa

As with many comic book and pop culture conventions, Fan Expo has grown gradually over the years since its inception.  At one time it might have been strange to see a big name there, but it has gotten bigger and so has its influence.  One of the featured guests at this year’s show was Jason Momoa, famous as Drogo from Game of Thrones, but also soon to be taking the lead role in the solo Aquaman film.  He joined a moderator to discuss his career in a tongue-in-cheek manner.

momoa002Moderator:  I am going to ask a few questions off the top, things that are probably on people’s mind.  To start, what can you say about Aquaman and about Justice League?

Jason Momoa:  It’s going to be amazing.  I can say that I am extremely honored and excited, as much as some of you are, it’s a dream come true to be doing something like that.  Being a father, I’m going to be really cool for a little bit.  My children normally don’t get to see a lot of the things that I’m on.  They’re still 8 and 6 and we don’t talk about too many things that papa does.  I’m pretty happy to be Aquaman and showing my children [what I do] for another while.

M:  There’s many ways that you can take the character, obviously you don’t look like the traditional classic look of Aquaman, and you are known for playing these really tough gruff characters, but you are the most chillest calm nice actor.  How do you approach these tough guy characters roles?

JM:  Savage roles.

M:   Yes, savage roles?

momoa003JM:  I think it’s just my forehead.  I think most people get me confused for being angry, I normally smile a lot more often.  I don’t know, I guess I just make a good mean face.  There’s a lot of reasons why Zack got this idea of me playing Aquaman, and I am pretty excited to step into his shoes.

M:  Is he going to be a bit of a chill characters, because Batman and Superman, at least in these recent films, are serious characters?

JM:  I don’t know yet.  I can’t see myself busting out a bunch of jokes.  I don’t think it will be like that.

Question From the Floor:   In comparison to Batman vs Superman, who would Aquaman end up in a feud with?

JM:  I don’t know.

M:  Oh. you know.

JM:  Or I know and I am not going to tell you!

QFF:   What would be your reply to any of the Aquaman related fish jokes?

momoa004JM:  It’s cute and funny, people make fun of him, and there’s a bunch of jokes about him.  But I’m like “Just wait.  Let’s just wait a little bit.  And then we can make jokes.”

M:  I will ask you about Road to Paloma, a film that you wrote and directed last year.  Can you tell the audience about it if they are not familiar?

JM:  I co-wrote it with a buddy, then my friend [Brian Andrew Mendoza] shot it.  It’s a story about this man saying goodbye to his life.  It deals with some issues that are happening, probably in Canada but definitely in the United States, and it revolves around the rapes on Native American reservations.  It’s a huge injustice that I tried to shed some light on.  And you know, I’m on a motorcycle, so there’s fun stuff too, and I beat people up, so you’ll like it too.  It’s probably the closest to who I am that I have ever played.  I’m not like Drogo.

M:  I hope not!

JM:  No, no  I like when my woman doesn’t cry when I have sex with her.  That’s always a sign of a healthy relationship.

QFF:  I have been watching your Pride of Gypsies take on more creative projects and a larger variety.  What is your dream goal or career trajectory that you foresee?

momoa005JM:  I have a small group of ragtag degenerates that are artists.  I am going to be doing these superhero movies for quite a while, and then there’s these movies that I really want to [make] and things that I want to say as an artist.  For instance, we just did these commercials, a new one just came out for the winter spots, I went up to all my favorite companies and people that I really respected, and asked if I could do their commercials.  I just wanted to keep doing art, and moving people, and if I can do it on a commercial level and make you cry in 30 seconds to a minute, then great.  There’s a lot of stories that I want to tell, and one of them being this story in Hawaii, and it’s a period piece, but it’s stuff that we have been talking about for a while.  It’s called Enemy in The Valley.  It’s a finished script but it will go after Justice League.  That’s when I will direct that.  We just wrote another one that Pride of Gypsies is going to be producing, and I am going to be shooting in Canada, in Newfoundland.  I am going to be in Newfoundland for a wwwwwhile.  There’s some other cool stuff happening in the works right now, I don’t really want to curse it, but there’s some new things.

M:   Have you been to Newfoundland before?

JM:  I haven’t and I am pretty excited to go there.  It looks pretty raw.

momoa006QFF:   When did you first learn the Haka (traditional Polynesian war dance) and what does that mean to you?

JM:  I first learned it when I was little.  I had been to many events where that had happened.  When it really connected to me, my cousin had passed away, he was a football player and all his best friends were doing it when we were taking the casket and lowering him down.  I had never seen grown men put out so much energy and love and hurt.  I could see tears squirting out of their eyes.  It’s designed so that if we are about to go into battle, some guys are more equipped for other things, but we’re all equal, but the Haka is designed to bring us all as one, and you are basically calling upon your ancestors, and you’re grounding yourself and getting ready for battle.

QFF:  How much do you draw on you heritage for your roles?

JM:  All the time, all the time.  I think that it is one of the things that I can offer the most.  Having that native blood, I just like being able to identify with it.  For different characters, I did a lot of study on Geronimo and Cochise, different warring chiefs, and there were many things that I drew from to find that power.

QFF:  What is the back story of your tattoo?

JM:  That is the Aumakua, it’s a guardian for my family.  It’s the shark.  It’s funny, Aquaman and shark.  Snyder wanted to take this and put it all over my whole body, which I thought was amazing.  It’s to bring the darkness out of the heart and bring the light in.  I got it before my son, and it’s kind of like little wolf fangs too.

batmanQFF:  What is your favorite Canadian food?

JM:  Canadian bacon and Hawaiian pineapple, you’ve got Hawaiian pizza.  Which makes no sense.  It hate that and all the Hawaiians hate it, we don’t even eat that much pineapple.  Why does it have Canadian bacon on top of it?  It should be a Canadian pizza with pineapple.

QFF:   What role did you read for that you really wanted but didn’t get?

JM:  I read for a role in Magnificent Seven, that was the best role in the whole movie.  I got very close, but it didn’t work out.  It’s the only one that ever got away that I was like “ooof, I really wanted that one”.

QFF:  Who is your favorite superhero?

JM:  Batman.  I grew up when that was coming out, I was at the prime age when Michael Keaton’s Batman came out.  It’s kind of cliche but Batman is my favorite.

QFF:   I’m a big fan of Barry Windsor-Smith’s Conan.  Your portrayal of him was much closer to Barry’s vision, but knowing that you were following in the shoes of Arnold Schwarzenegger, what trepidation did you have going into that role?

momoa007JM:  I didn’t have any, me and Arnold don’t have anything in common.  So, it’s two completely different versions, and I feel like I was a huge Robert E. Howard fan and a huge Frank Frazetta fan.  That’s where I got my Conan.  I love the Dark Horse comics too, but I felt that Arnold didn’t really capture what Frank or Howard truly was.  [With Arnold] they definitely made it fit that piece, to this bodybuilder size.  He looks great and looks amazing.  I’m not a bodybuilder, I’m an actor, he was a bodybuilder [at that time].

QFF:  Were there every any accidents when filming fight sequences on Stargate Atlantis?

JM:  Well, yeah.  I worked with a lot of people that didn’t know how to do that, Chris Judge and Rachel [Luttrell], they’re just kind of pretty faces.  It looks like they know how to fight but they really don’t.  Those people hit me all the time.  Rachel definitely punched me in the eye. [In one episode] she just hauls off and punches me.  They used the take where she was supposed to hit me in the chin [but she hit me in the eye] and I turned my head and said “You fucking hit me!”, and I turn back to her, and you could see the red right here around my eye.  And they kept it!  So then all thee grips, they sent flowers.  They’re rubbing it in that I got hit by a girl.

Stargate Atlantis TV series starring Joe Flanigan, Rachel Luttrell, David Hewlett, Jason Momoa, Torri Higginson, Paul McGillion, Jewel Staite, Robert Picardo, Amanda Tapping, Rainbow Francks and Mitch Pileggi [dvdbash.wordpress.com]

QFF:  What is your personal opinion of filming Games of Thrones?  What is it like really?

JM:  To date, it’s the greatest thing that I have ever done as an actor.  The hardest character to play, and it is the most artistic and beautiful piece of work.  The crew and the cast and the first season was really really amazing.  It’s the greatest experience that I have had in my acting career.  Doing Game of Thrones before it really hit … I think that it would be really challenging now and harder, because I’ve got to spend a lot of time with Kit, Richard and just a lot of the cast members.  Rory.  We were all there at once, and we just shot episodes, not blocks of them.  So now some cast members don’t even cross over, but I was there the longest, I got to really hang out and become family with everyone.  I’m really glad that I got to experience that.

QFF:   They have talked about the fluffy pink sock that happened on the set …

JM:  The fluffy big pink sock, you don’t want to knock any of those adjectives out.

momoa009QFF:   Right, can you tell us what went through your mind to use that instead of a modest sock to cover your privates?

JM:  There’s a lot of reasons!  You’re going to have to stick around and watch what my mind does.  There’s a lot of people in there talking that do stupid things.  If I am really uncomfortable, I’m a big fan of laughing, that helps when you are naked around a whole crew of people in the middle of January in Belfast, Ireland.  It’s cold, not that cold, but the fluffy pink sock brings a little levity to the situation.

M:  Did you anticipate it becoming the global phenomenon that it is when you took the job?

JM:  I knew that it was going to be huge.  HBO put everything into it, and … it’s HBO.  I just wanted to be in the room talking to HBO, let alone get that role, it’s the role of a lifetime.  I will never get a role that will ever have that big of an impact.  It’s going to be tough to beat.

M:  Sounds like Aquaman is going to be pretty cool

JM:  It is, [but Game of Thrones was different], there was only like 5 or 6 episodes where I really have to come off one way, and turn it around and make you fall in love with me, make you hate me then make you love me, then make you cry.

 

M:  What is like having become a sex symbol?

momoa010JM:  It’s weird.  I just kind of go “uhhhhh.”  You don’t really know what to do with it.

 

QFF:  Does your family ever have a reaction to you after your work on Game of Thrones?

JM:  When I ripped that guy’s throat out, my daughter was sitting on set knitting, she was with the wardrobe people.  She would come sit with me and say “Papa, you’re so silly!”  The only time that kind of freaked them out was when I did Wolves, it was five hours of makeup, putting on a wolf suit, I had the teeth in and everything, and I was like “Hey kids!”  And they were like “Papa?”  And I was like (in a kid’s voice) “Hey, I’m a wolf”.  And they grabbed momma’s leg.

They’re cool with it, but when I shot Game of Thrones, I couldn’t grow a beard that long that quick, plus Hawaiians aren’t that hairy.  So they made me shave [my beard] off and they would glue all of it on, and I kept the mustache.  I had this  70s porn mustache.  I’m 6′ 5” running around Belfast, which is pretty white.  It’s hard [to get eyeliner out], I don’t have time to get it all out, so I just wipe it off and go to bed, or go to the bar first.  So I go to the bar, and for a whole season, everyone’s just like “there’s the big drag queen!”  They didn’t know anything about Game of Thrones.  They were just like “He’s cool, he’s harmless”  I just have my [eyeliner] on and my mustache and my long hair.   When I went back the second season it was a total different vibe.

 

 

Review: Becky Cloonan’s Wolves, The Mire, and Demeter

Wolves

Wolves CoverAs a lone hunter tracks an elusive beast through the forest, he reflects on his life and past love through a series of flashbacks, bringing the story to a climax that is as romantic as it is violent. This powerful mini-comic lends itself to multiple read-throughs, never giving concrete answers but (like the best enigmatic endings) leaves your own conclusions satisfying.

The fact that this self-published comic is more readily available through digital comics, it felt like a good time to finally review it along with Cloonan’s other similar releases.

Wolves is absolutely amazing standing up to multiple reads with each leaving you questioning what you read in a good way. The story is open ended, leaving it to be interpreted by the reader and each will come to different conclusions. The story is simple enough, a hunter tracks a beast, but the simple story is given multiple layers through the way it’s plotted out and the details that are given and not given.

Though in a way it’s an action comic, the tale is very much a love story and that of loss. It’s romantic and sad at the same time, a simple read that’s more complicated and deep than it might seem through a quick glance.

Through this release alone, you have to wonder why this talent isn’t given a series of her own. I love to check out her art, but this comic blows away much of what’s been written in the last five years. Brilliant in it’s simplicity and execution.

Story and Art: Beck Cloonan
Story: 10 Art: 10 Overall: 10 Recommendation: Buy

The Mire

The Mire CoverThe much anticipated follow-up to 2011’s Wolves, The Mire is a self-contained story set on the eve of battle, when a humble squire is given the task of delivering a letter to a decomposing castle in a swamp. Met with mysterious apparitions, he slowly unveils the truth about why he was sent there, as his past is re-written over the course of twenty two pages.

Continuing with the fantastic twist she pulled off with Wolves, this comic is a bit more straightforward and not as open for interpretation. However, we’re left wondering the point of this squire’s journey to the very end. Much like Wolves, this comic also deals with love and loss as well.

There’s a vibe about the comic, it’s not quite horror, but there’s still something that makes you tense as you don’t know what to expect when the comic reaches its conclusion. The story and art are a fantastic marriage that come together to produce this unease.

The comic is another great example of Cloonan’s talent and again makes you question why she hasn’t been given a greater spotlight as a writer.

Story and Art: Beck Cloonan
Story: 9 Art: 10 Overall: 9.5 Recommendation: Buy

Demeter

Demeter coverA fisherman’s wife tends the garden and animals while her husband is at sea, but secrets buried under the waves begin to bubble to the surface revealing a secret treachery and forgotten truth.

The third and final book in the trilogy of comics by Becky Cloonan. This one too deals with love but also life and death as the title suggests. Demeter is also a Greek goddess who presided over the harvest but also the sanctity of marriage, law and cycle of life and death.

While the first two comics in this trilogy were puzzles, this one is a pretty straightforward story, but asks the reader to fill in the blanks and interpret what’s presented. Unlike Wolves, I don’t see this one as open to interpretation though. It’s an interesting tale that took me two or three reads to really “get.”

The vibe I get though is also interesting. The comic reminded me of Highlander mixed with Blair Witch. Not the whole movies, but certain scenes or plot details from them. It has a spooky vibe and more of a poetic tone as far as it’s presentation than the previous two releases.

Much after I’ve read it, the comic still haunts me as I try to work through the beautiful imagery mixed with an eerie vibe.

Much like the other two releases, this is an absolute buy.

Story and Art: Beck Cloonan
Story: 8 Art: 9.5 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Becky Cloonan Debuts Demeter on comiXology!

Becky Cloonan is a beyond talented creator, primarily known for her artwork, but she’s also put out now three well regarded indie comics. This past Wednesday saw the debut of Demeter, her latest creator owned comic series which debuted on comiXology as well as a small print run. It’s just one of the numerous indie comics that are getting in to the hands of the masses through the successful comiXology Submit portal.

An award-winning cartoonist and illustrator, Cloonan made history in 2012 by breaking a glass ceiling by becoming the first female artist to draw the Batman main title in the caped superhero’s 70-plus year history. In addition to illustrating works for publishers including DC Comics, Tokyopop and Vertigo, Cloonan has successfully self-published print versions of her own original comics. Cloonan’s comics The Mire and Wolves have consistently been the two top-selling books on comiXology Submit, and have been available since the portal launched earlier this year.

We’ll have all three comics reviewed tomorrow, but you shouldn’t waste your time, get them now! They’re a great indie read from a talented creator.

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It’s been a pretty quiet weekend so far, but while you were out enjoying it, here’s the news you might have missed.

Around the Blogs:

Archcomix – Audio from the Joe Sacco Comics Journalism Panel @Stanford, 6/5/11I don’t always agree with what he has to say, but the man is a pioneer in comics journalism.

Bleeding Cool – Thor Press Kit Causes Terrorist AlertA lot less causes terror alerts here in DC.

Color Lines – Where is Our Culture’s Racial Subconscious? In Comic BooksAn interesting article on race and comic books.

Bleeding Cool – With Only 407 of 6000 Comics Sold So Far, Gary Dahlberg’s Collection Tops $1.38 MillionPretty sure my collection would bring in about $1.38.

Around the Tubes Reviews:

Fangoria – Hellraiser Masterpieces Vol. 1

Inside Pulse – Wolves

Martin’s View – Comic Books of the Week (5/11/11) part 3