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graphicpolicy · 5 months
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #150 is the Double-Sized Epic, Emotional Finale of the Run
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #150 is the Double-Sized Epic, Emotional Finale of the Run #comics #comicbooks #tmnt
The colossal and cosmic time-consuming megalodon called Armaggon is trying to erase the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles from existence. Now, only the brilliant and determined Donatello can potentially stop the fearsome foe by racing back to the past in a double-sized landmark 150th issue that celebrates more than a decade’s worth of compelling Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMNT)…
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nhacaitangtienvip · 1 year
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Tỷ lệ bóng đá NHA giữa Everton vs Manchester City, 20h ngày 14/5/2023
Tỷ lệ bóng đá NHA giữa Everton vs Manchester City, 20h ngày 14/5/2023 tại nhà cái dagatructiep. Dự đoán tỷ số bóng đá giữa Everton vs Manchester City, 20h ngày 14/5/2023.
Trận đấu của Premier League tại Goodison Park vào Chủ nhật sẽ chứng kiến ​​đội chủ nhà Everton tiếp đón đối thủ Manchester City.
Tất cả các mẹo, cuộc thăm dò ý kiến và số liệu thống kê của chúng tôi về trận Everton v Manchester City đều có thể được tìm thấy tại đây - cũng như các tỷ lệ cược cập nhật.
Everton, đội đã thắng trận đấu trước, sẽ hy vọng vào một kết quả tương tự sau chiến thắng 1-5 tại Premier League trước Brighton & Hove Albion.
Trong trận đấu đó, Everton có 23% thời gian cầm bóng và thực hiện 10 cú sút trúng đích với 5 trong số đó trúng đích. Đối với Everton, những người ghi bàn là Abdoulaye Doucouré (1', 29') và Dwight McNeil (76', 96'). Brighton & Hove Albion có 23 lần cố gắng ghi bàn với 5 trong số đó đi trúng đích. Jason Steele (35' Phản lưới nhà) và Alexis Mac Allister (79') ghi bàn cho Brighton & Hove Albion.
Thời gian gần đây, rất hiếm khi Everton thể hiện được hàng thủ thép. Thực tế là Everton đã bị ghi bàn ở 5 trong số 6 trận trước đó của họ, để lọt lưới 12 bàn trong quá trình này.
Trong trận đấu cuối cùng của họ, Manchester City đã hòa 1-1 trong trận đấu với Real Madrid tại Champions League.
Trong trận đấu đó, Manchester City có 56% thời gian cầm bóng và 10 lần dứt điểm, trong đó có 6 lần trúng đích. Cầu thủ duy nhất ghi bàn cho Manchester City là Kevin De Bruyne (67'). Real Madrid đã có 13 lần cố gắng ghi bàn với 3 trong số đó đi trúng đích. Vinicius Júnior (36') là người ghi bàn cho Real Madrid.
Trong nửa tá trận ra quân trước đó, Manchester City đã ghi được tổng cộng 15 bàn thắng. Manchester City cũng đã không thể không ghi bàn trong những dịp đó. Trong khoảng thời gian đó, họ đã bị đối thủ ghi tới 4 bàn. Tất nhiên, mô hình đó sẽ không nhất thiết phải tuân theo ở đây.
Một cuộc kiểm tra về các cuộc gặp đối đầu trước đây của họ kể từ ngày 17/02/2021 cho thấy rằng những trận đấu này khá khó khăn đối với Everton. Họ đã không thể ghi được bất kỳ chiến thắng nào trong khi Manchester City chỉ mạnh hơn họ, giành chiến thắng trong 83% các trận đấu đó.
Họ đã ghi tổng cộng 17 bàn thắng trong những lần đụng độ đó, trong đó có 2 bàn của The Toffees và 15 bàn của The Citizens. Đó là con số bàn thắng trung bình mỗi trận là 2,83.
Lần gặp nhau gần nhất giữa hai đội là trận đấu ở vòng 18 Premier League vào ngày 31/12/2022 và tỷ số kết thúc là Manchester City 1-1 Everton.
Vào ngày hôm đó, Manchester City có 74% thời gian cầm bóng và 16 lần cố gắng ghi bàn với 3 trong số đó đi trúng đích. Cầu thủ duy nhất của họ ghi bàn là Erling Haaland (24').
Đối với đối thủ của họ, Everton có 2 lần ghi bàn với 1 lần trúng đích. Demarai Gray (64') ghi bàn.
Trọng tài là Andrew Madley.
Amadou Onana (Chấn thương chân), Andros Townsend (Chấn thương dây chằng chéo), Andy Lonergan (Vấn đề đầu gối) và Seamus Coleman (Chấn thương đầu gối) vắng mặt cho huấn luyện viên của Everton, Sean Dyche.
Rất có thể, The Toffees có thể sử dụng đội hình 4-3-3, bắt đầu hiệp một với Jordan Pickford, Nathan Patterson, James Tarkowski, Yerry Mina, Vitali Myklenko, James Garner, Idrissa Gueye, Abdoulaye Doucoure, Alex Iwobi, D. Calvert-Lewin và Dwight McNeil.
Với một nhóm hoàn toàn không có chấn thương để lựa chọn, huấn luyện viên của Manchester City, Pep Guardiola, không phải lo lắng gì về thể lực trước trận đấu này.
Theo quan điểm của chúng tôi, The Citizens có thể quyết định lựa chọn đội hình 3-2-4-1 bằng cách cử Ederson, Manuel Akanji, Ruben Dias, Aymeric Laporte, Rico Lewis, Rodri, Riyad Mahrez, Julián Álvarez, Ilkay Gündogan, Phil Foden và Erling Haaland.
Suy nghĩ của chúng tôi là Everton có khả năng ghi bàn vào lưới đội hình Manchester City này, nhưng một bàn thắng duy nhất có lẽ sẽ không đủ.
Do đó, chúng ta đang kết thúc một trận đấu rất sát nút với lợi thế 1-2 cho Manchester City khi tiếng còi mãn cuộc vang lên. Hãy xem cái này diễn ra như thế nào.
Xem thêm: https://onebox63stone27.com/
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checkthefeed · 3 years
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[ Wormlyfe // Mixtape 14 ]
After a bit of a hiatus we’re back with some new hits and familiar faces coming direct from the one and only Bear Mountain!
Featuring- Kolby Lehman, Aaron Tufts, Connor Hicks, Sean Monahan, Cole Karow, Trevor Wallace, John Hancheck, Matt Cornwall, Brandon Gallagher, Grant Garges, Mike Throck, Brian Nieto, Mark Gama, Tom Bennett. Video by Kevin Lonergan
Music- “Bonzo Goes To Bitburg” by The Ramones “Bezerk” by Big Sean ft. ASAP Ferg
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veterinarymedicine · 4 years
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veterinary medicine textbooks!
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hi everyone! this is my first post on this blog! i thought i could share some of my resources because it takes me so long to find textbooks and i hope other people find them useful too!
i have the following vet med textbooks in this google drive link
An Atlas of Interpretative Radiographic Anatomy of the Dog and Cat  (Coulson, A. & Lewis, N.)
Color Atlas of Veterinary Histology (3rd Edition) (Bacha, W.J. and Bacha, L.M.)
Dyce, Sack and Wensing’s Textbook of Veterinary Anatomy (5th Edition) (Singh, B)
Essentials of Domestic Animal Embryology (Hyttel, P., Sinowatz, F., and Vejlsted, M.) 
Guide to the Dissection of the Dog (8th Edition) (Evans, H.E. & De Lahunta, A.)
Veterinary Embryology (McGeady, T.A., Quinn, P.J., FitzPatrick, E.S., Ryan, M.T., Kilroy, D., Lonergan, P.)
Wheater’s Functional Histology (6th Edition) (Young, B., O’Dowd, G., Woodford, P., Wheater, P.R.)
Textbook of Veterinary Diagnostic Radiology (7th Edition) (Thrall, D.E.)  
Behavior Problems of the Dog and Cat (3rd edition) (Gary Landsberg Wayne Hunthausen Lowell Ackerman)
Domestic Animal Behavior for Veterinarians and Animal Scientists (6th Edition) (Houpt, K.A.)
UFAW The Sciences of Animal Welfare (David Mellor, Emily Patterson-Kane, Kevin J. Stafford)
The Welfare of Animals - The Silent Majority (Phillips, Clive)
Veterinary Microbiology (3rd edition) (Wiley-Blackwell)
Textbook of Veterinary Physiological Chemistry (updated 2nd edition) (L. Engelking)
Nutritional Ecology of the Ruminant (2nd edition) (Peter J. Van Soest)
Animal Nutrition (7th edition) (McDonald, Edwards, Greenhalgh, Morgan, Sinclair, Wilkinson)
Principles of Epidemiology in Public Health Practice (3rd edition)
some other non-vet med related textbooks that i also happen to have in this google drive link
Chemistry The Central Science (13th edition) (Theodore L. Brown)
One Health, The Theory and Practice of Integrated Health Approaches
Molecular Biology of the Cell (6th edition) (Alberts, Johnson, Lewis, Morgan, Raff, Roberts, Walter)
University Physics with Modern Physics (13th Edition)
Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry (6th edition) (Nelson, Cox)
Genetics A Conceptual Approach (6th edition) (Benjamin A. Pierce
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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The Best Comics of 2020
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It has been a year, hasn’t it?
The year started with such tenuous promise, and is ending the same way: slivers of hope among rivers of misery. But even with all the chaos, all the changes forced by the pandemic and that were coming anyway, we still got some incredible comics in 2020. 
Let us be abundantly clear: every work of art made in the last year is a small miracle. Every comic creator who put irons in the fire in a year that certainly didn’t lack fires deserves gratitude and commendation. Picking 20 comics doesn’t do justice to the herculean work and dedication that everyone who works in comics demonstrated – from the creators, to the back office folks who kept the trains running on time and let us know they were coming, to the people who actually put the books in our hands, we should be immensely grateful to all of them. 
To those creators we say: Thank you for giving us a few minutes on Wednesdays (or Tuesdays) to escape…all this. 
With that said, there really were some excellent books, and we’re very excited to talk about the best comics of 2020.
20. Loneliness of the Long Distance Cartoonist
Adrian Tomine (Writer/Artist)
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Adrian Tomine is here to share his sadness with readers and inspire it in anyone who has ever tried to make art and present it to the world. In what might be his greatest work so far, the cartoonist collects his own diary comics about being an artist and trying to release a book.
The Loneliness of the Long Distance Cartoonist is painfully raw, uncomfortably authentic, and impressively hilarious. It takes guts to make yourself the butt of the joke and to do it so well, but there is such heart and humor here that it’ll speak to any reader whether or not you’ve ever had the (mis)fortune to make your own comics or not. 
19. Witch Hat Atelier 
Kamome Shirahama (Writer/Artist)
Speaking of wonderful manga, this series is one of the best books on shelves in any genre, format, or language. It’s hard to overstate how inventive and imaginative Witch Hat Atelier is but for the sake of this list we’ll try.
Kamome Shirahama paints a wonderful world where magic is real but only a select few can use it. Coco is our heroine and when she accidentally learns the secret behind using magic she’s inducted into a witch’s coven and is thrown into a vibrant world of sorcery, spells, and uneasy friendship with her fellow students. 
18. Daredevil
Chip Zdarsky (Writer); Marco Checchetto, Mike Hawthorne, Francesco Mobili, Jorge Fornes (Artists); Marcio Menyz, Mattia Iacono, Nolan Woodard (Colorists); Clayton Cowles (Letterer)
Chip Zdarsky’s Matt Murdock is terrific. His Wilson Fisk is Hall of Fame.
Fisk is attempting to go legit after discovering as Mayor of New York City that there is a much larger pond he could be swimming in. But the big fish in that pond (the Stromwyns – think Marvel’s Koch Brothers) don’t much get along with someone as insignificant as Fisk. What they do to him, and what Fisk does back, is incredible. 
The art on this run has been the real deal. Jorge Fornes and Marco Checchetto have handled the bulk of the pencils this year, and their dramatically divergent styles do a great job of showing the two sides of Murdock’s world – Fornes excels at the quiet investigatory work that Daredevil does, while Checchetto blows the doors off of some monster action set pieces. No lie, Stilt Man has never looked this good. This run is shaping up to be one of the best Daredevil stories of all time, a very high bar to clear.
17. The Department of Truth
James Tynion IV (Writer), Martin Simmonds (Artist)
What happens in a world where all conspiracy theories are actually true? Or that reality actually warps to accommodate new “truths” as they come into being? Such is the premise of The Department of Truth, which delivers on all the unsettling promise of its premise. The fact that it tells its story in a way that aesthetically calls to mind Alan Moore and Bill Sienkiewicz’s 1988 collaboration Shadowplay: The Secret Team, which told some unsavory details about how the CIA conducted some real world foreign policy only adds to the eerie feel.
With more and more people getting internet brain poisoning thanks to wilder and wilder conspiracy theories somehow becoming mainstream every day, The Department of Truth feels like one of the more timely comics of 2020. We only wish it could be a little less timely in some ways, though.
16. The Green Lantern Season Two
Grant Morrison (Writer), Liam Sharp (Artist), Steve Oliff (Colorist), Steve Wands (Letterer)
Grant Morrison and Liam Sharp have been quietly making one of the best superhero comics in decades over at DC, and although we can’t quite believe we’re saying this, it’s about Hal Jordan. The most boring Green Lantern of all has come to life in this trippy, experimental, and beautiful series which transcends space and time, showcasing the best of what Morrrison and Sharp do.
If you think that superhero comics are all the same, The Green Lantern will change your mind (and likely expand it) as Hal adventures through Sharp’s sprawling and stunning cosmos.
15. Immortal Hulk
Al Ewing (Writer); Joe Bennett, Mike Hawthorne, Butch Guice, Nick Pitarra, Javier Rodriguez (Pencilers); Ruy Jose, Belardino Brabo, Mark Morales, Tom Palmer, Marc Deering (Inkers); Paul Mounts, Matt Milla (Colorists); Cory Petit (Letterer)
Over at Marvel, Al Ewing and Joe Bennett have been equally delighting and horrifying readers with this reinvention of Bruce Banner and the hulking hero he becomes. This is about as close to a horror comic as a mainline superhero title can get as the team delve into the multiple manifestations of Hulk and the man behind them.
Just like The Green Lantern, The Immortal Hulk both reconsiders and revisits the lore that has made the character so iconic, and also features an impressive collection of Hulk-centric characters from throughout history. 
14. Shadow of the Batgirl
Sarah Kuhn (Writer), Nicole Goux (Artist)
DC Comics has been doing a great job bringing new visions of some of their best loved characters to the spotlight and Cass Cain got that treatment this year in this gorgeous graphic novel. Taking the one-time Batgirl and teaming her up with Barbara Gordon’s Oracle was a genius move, but the real magic here comes from the sweet natured take on the hero that Sarah Kuhn and Nicole Goux offer up.
Shadow of the Batgirl is a superhero comic with real heart and a look that feels far more like an indie comic than anything coming out of the big two. Just lovely!
13. Hedra
Jesse Lonergan (Writer/Artist)
Hedra is unlike anything we’ve ever seen before, and probably the same goes for you. It’s a completely silent comic, but it’s a massively dense, intricate storytelling experience. It’s light and cartoony, but it’s got panels that would look at home in an old Wally Wood comic. It’s got so many panels, and yet it’s full of moments that will take your breath away.
Lonergan manages the pace and flow of the storytelling so well that you have to experience it yourself to fully appreciate it. Hedra is a beautiful, smart, fascinating comic.
12. John Constantine: Hellblazer
Si Spurrier (Writer); Aaron Campbell, Matias Bergara (Artists); Jordie Bellaire (Colorist); Adita Bidakyar (Letterer)
Si Spurrier doesn’t seem like the type who gets mad often, but his John Constantine was fucking pissed, and goddamn if it wasn’t the best Hellblazer comic in decades. This too-brief run of comics starring everyone’s favorite dirtbag street mage was as much about England being a dumpster fire as it was about Constantine being a dumpster fire, and that low-key seethe gave this book an edge that many of Constantine’s more recent exploits have been missing.
Campbell and Bergara are gifted at depicting grimy fantasy, and Bellaire continues to be one of the greatest colorists who ever lived. In a sane, just world, a second volume of John Constantine: Hellblazer is being planned as we speak. Let’s hope.
11. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Last Ronin
Kevin Eastman, Peter Laird (Writers); Esau & Isaac Escorza (Artists); Luis Antonio Delgado (Colorist), Shaun Lee (Letterer)
When we saw a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic called The Last Ronin, we had no idea they meant Frank Miller Ronin. The art on this comic is astounding. 
The story is almost irrelevant, in part because it’s only just getting going (only one oversized issue has been released at the time of this writing). But it’s excellent set up – the last living Ninja Turtle assaults a city controlled by the Foot Clan to try and end their long battle once and for all. It’s set in the future, and heavily influenced by the cyberpunk ninja aesthetic so common to the genre, but filtered through a strong Miller lens that makes it a joy to discover.
10. Captain America: The End
Erik Larsen (Writer/Artist), Dono Sánchez-Almara (Colorist), Joe Caramagna (Letterer)
The superhero comic one shot is an underrated – even lost – art form these days. Annuals are often fill-in stories, and unless Marvel or DC are putting out an oversized issue to herald a line wide relaunch or a similar event, it’s rare that you get a nice thick single issue telling a self contained story of any real “importance.” Fortunately, there’s Captain America: The End.
Marvel’s The End line is exactly what it sounds like: an excuse for creators to tell not-really-in-continuity “final” stories for the biggest Marvel heroes. And while Captain America: The End ostensibly presents itself as the “final” Captain America story, it’s way more fun than that. Erik Larsen uses this opportunity to pay tribute to Cap’s greatest creative periods: specifically Jack Kirby’s two-fisted, acrobatic stint on the character in the 1960s, and his socially conscious and psychedelic late ’70s return to the book.
Wall to wall action, with Kirby-esque idea factory energy and dynamism at the forefront, Captain America: The End is one of the most purely fun superhero issues in years. But don’t mistake this for an exercise in nostalgia, as Larsen blends timely (and timeless) messages that help sum up what made Captain America great in the first place, and why we’ll never truly see the “last” Cap story.
9. Maison Ikkoku
Rumiko Takahashi (Writer/Artist)
We can’t make enough noise about how great Viz has been doing recently at making some of the harder to find manga classics available to bigger audiences. This lovely reprint of Rumiko Takahashi’s joyful slice of life comic technically came out decades ago, but most Western comics fans likely only came to it via this new printing.
Maison Ikkoku follows the misadventures of a young apartment building manager and the tenants that she has to keep in check. In turns sweet, silly, and saucy, this is truly a masterwork of manga that you must read. 
8. Billionaire Island
Mark Russell (Writer), Steve Pugh (Artist), Chris Chuckry (Colorist), Rob Steen (Letterer)
This is not Mark Russell, Steve Pugh, and Chris Chuckry’s first time on our lists, but it’s definitely the angriest they’ve been since showing up on here. If we’re really being fair, it’s entirely deserved. 
Billionaire Island is a wild fantasy story definitely based on nothing in reality about the world’s uber wealthy, who control the world, building their own island to ride out climate change while the poors all die off and suffer on the mainland. It follows a reporter with the Miami Herald, and an ex-mercenary who lost his family to Aggrocorp’s sterility experiments in Angola, as they try and bring down the aforementioned billionaires, are trapped on the island, and work to escape. 
It is every bit as hilarious as you would expect from the team who brought us The Flintstones, but there’s an edge to it that wasn’t there in Russell, Pugh and Chuckry’s earlier work. That’s probably because of the villains – The Flintstones skewered society, while Billionaire Island takes aim at the shittiest people in the world. Several of them by name.
Despite the undercurrent of anger, Billionaire Island is still packed with genuinely hilarious moments. Pugh’s sight gags remain incredible, and the comedic timing on display is outstanding. I had high expectations for Billionaire Island coming into it, and it exceeded all of them.
7. The Magic Fish
Trung Le Nguyen (Writer/Artist)
Feel like crying a lot? Because The Magic Fish got almost everyone we’ve seen read it. It’s an incredibly powerful yet quiet comic about a 13 year old coming to terms with who he is and how to talk with his parents about it. 
Tien, the aforementioned 13 year old, is a first generation Vietnamese-American with a crush on a friend and a mother who is still processing her move to the States and the family she left behind. Much of the story is about Tien trying to figure out how to broach the subject with his mother.
What stands out about The Magic Fish is how Nguyen tells the story. Much of it is is told by retellings of fairy tales – two modifications of the Cinderella story, and one of The Little Mermaid. The colors are especially effective in setting up the mood and tone of the sections of story, elegantly communicating so much about Tien’s emotional and intellectual state. And the fashion and hair are magnificent. Nguyen draws Alan Davis-good hairstyles. 
Nguyen’s The Magic Fish is accessible, deeply moving, and beautiful, a book that should be shared with friends.
6. Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen
Matt Fracion (Writer), Steve Lieber (Artist), Nathan Fairbairn (Colorist), Clayton Cowles (Letterer)
It’s probably good that the prank war issue, where Timmy Olsen stole the wheel off the Batmobile for Youtube clout, was published last December, because otherwise this entire entry would be the Den of Geek reciting bits to each other like this was comics Anchorman. And all that time we’d spend telling each other we sure have created some…content…would distract from the fact that Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen is one of the nicest, most thoughtful, best put-together comics in years. 
Beneath all of the gags – and there are a ton – Fraction, Lieber, Fairbairn, and Cowles put together a deceptively complex character study of Jimmy, Superman and Metropolis. This is a book that is as much about what Jimmy Olsen means to the people of Metropolis as it is about Dex-Starr puking blood on the remnants of Jimmy’s Gorilla City wedding, or the army of Kevins attacking him.
Lieber and Fairbairn were the perfect choices for art on this story: Lieber’s facial expressions and Fairbairn’s bright color palette sell every joke and set every mood that the story requires, and the way the creators play with time and information release is masterful. Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen is essential reading, both because of its importance to the Superman universe as a whole, and because it’s just that damn funny.
5. Once and Future (READER’S CHOICE!)
Kieron Gillen (Writer), Dan Mora (Artist), Tamra Bonvillain (Colorist), Ed Dukeshire (Letterer)
Turns out letting Dan Mora draw his way through an English lit degree is a really good idea.
Joking aside, our readers have excellent taste, naming Once and Future their top pick for comic of the year.
Kieron Gillen takes the “story about a story” formula, smashes several more stories into the first one, and then lets Dan Mora and Tamra Bonvillain go ham on the whole thing, and the resulting comic is breathlessly exciting, and gorgeous to look at. It remixes Arthurian legend and this year added a sprinkle of Beowulf and developed the magic a little more, while juxtaposing that rich fantasy world with the mundanity of things like a senior living facility.
Mora draws monsters exceptionally well, and Bonvillain gives several scenes an ominous glow that sets a hell of a tone. Once and Future is a great pick by our readers, and is comfortably one of the best books of the year.
4. Dracula, Motherf**ker!
Alex de Campi (Writer/Letterer), Erica Henderson (Artist)
You may not realize that you need a grindhouse ‘70s story about Dracula’s brides being extremely done with his shit, but trust us, you need Dracula, Motherf**ker! in your life.
This book isn’t especially long, nor is it terribly complex. We get a lot of echoes of the original Dracula story updated to a dingy 1970s Los Angeles, and a lot of what you’d expect from a grindhouse horror comic, but it’s done exceptionally well by two incredibly talented storytellers. 
In retrospect, it’s hard to believe this is the first time de Campi and Henderson have ever worked together. Dracula, Motherf**ker! felt a lot like someone discovering peanut butter cups for the first time – there’s that dawning realization as you’re reading that it really works well, and then a secondary shock that nobody had ever done it before.
De Campi is a pro’s pro and a veritable cluster bomb of ideas. Henderson is a gifted sequential artist who gets to show off her mastery of color art as a storytelling device in these pages. The final package is outstanding. 
3. Far Sector
N.K. Jemisin (Writer), Jamal Campbell (Artist), Deron Bennett (Letterer)
The quality level of Far Sector is almost impossible to believe. Jamal Campbell doesn’t have an enormous comics resume, and this is N.K. Jemisin’s debut comic story. And yet the skill evident in every panel screams that this was made by a team of master craftsmen. 
Far Sector is the story of Jo Mullein, a new Green Lantern with an experimental, self-charging ring, dispatched to a floating megacity run jointly by three alien races; the Nah, a group of spacefaring fishtailed/winged bipeds; the keh-Topli, a group of carnivorous plants; and the @at, a race of sentient ethereal memelords. Jo is there at the request of the ruling council to investigate the City Enduring’s first murder in centuries. 
Her investigation is our way into Jemisin and Campbell’s vibrant imaginations.
This is a stunning book to look at – at least once an issue, Campbell draws something completely mind-bending. And Jemisin writes with the easy confidence and command of the form that people who have been writing comics for 50 years can’t match: there isn’t a wasted word on a single page of this entire series. It’s elegantly topical, stunning to look at, and a ton of fun to read. Far Sector is handily one of the greatest Green Lantern stories of all time.
X of Swords
Jonathan Hickman, Tini Howard, Leah Williams, Benjamin Percy, Vita Ayala, Zeb Wells, Ed Brisson, Gerry Duggan (Writers); Pepe Larraz, Carlos Gomez, Viktor Bogdanovic, Matteo Lolli, Carmen Carnero, Rod Reis, Phil Noto, R.B. Silva, Mahmud Asrar, Leinil Francis Yu, Stefano Casselli, Joshua Cassara (Artists); Marte Gracia, Israel Silva, Matt Wilson, Edgar Delgado, David Curiel, Nolan Woodard, Sunny Gho, Guru-eFX, Rachelle Rosenberg (Colorists); Clayton Cowles, Joe Caramagna, Cory Petit, Ariana Maher, Travis Lanham, Joe Sabino (Letterers)
X-Men fans are not commonly known for our penchant for consensus. We can and will argue over everything, from who’s a better partner for Cyclops to which story arc in the ‘90s was actually rock bottom. So when you get near unanimity that X of Swords is the best X-Men crossover since Inferno, you can pretty much take that to the bank. 
The culmination of the first phase of the X-universe’s post House of X/Powers of X plan, X of Swords tied all the mutant comics back together to take on a couple of the biggest ideas dropped in and immediately after HoXPoX. It did something that was nearly impossible: it paid off a year’s worth of stories from ten different series, with satisfying climaxes for more than a handful of storylines. 
It did this in part because several creators are making the jump to superstardom. Larraz somehow managed to do even better work than on House of X, delivering massive beat after massive beat in the final issue of the crossover. Tini Howard spent a year making Excalibur the best book in the line, and wove her plot threads through the crossover she co-shepherded (with Boss X or whatever they’re calling Hickman) to give us a foundational Otherworld and Captain Britain story. All the while, Howard also made sure that this Excalibur-centric crossover paid homage to the first Excalibur series – packing it full of magical silliness and genuine heart. Vita Ayala only got one issue in the crossover, but that issue will go down as one of Storm’s best stories of all time. And Joshua Cassara drew two issues of fights and competitions, and dropped multiple staggering spreads.
The X-Men line as a whole is the best it’s been in decades, and there’s no better proof of that than in X of Swords.
Blue in Green
Ram V (writer), Anand RK (Artist), Aditya Bidikar (Letterer)
Fiction is especially tough when the storyteller isn’t up to the subjects. If someone is writing a book about the smartest person in the world, the writer has to be smart enough to believably put brilliance in that character’s mouth. If someone is making a comic about a drug that makes everyone indescribably beautiful, then the art has to be angelic, or the book falls apart. 
But when a creative team IS up to the task, the end result can be sublime. That’s what Ram V, Anand RK and Aditya Bidikar gave us with Blue in Green. A comic about jazz that so perfectly evokes the form of its subject matter that I’m willing to bet this comic is taught in years to come. Blue in Green is incredible comics. 
Blue in Green’s story is broadly familiar: it’s the crossroads tale, where the Devil meets a gifted musician and trades the musician’s life for magnificent talent. Erik is a talented saxophonist with a rough family history who’s pissing away his talents half-heartedly teaching kids how to play. He goes home for his mother’s funeral, makes his deal, and wakes up days later, after a fugue state that included him blowing the doors off of a jazz club with his sax. Eventually, the bill comes due. 
The presentation has a uniquely loose flow to it, moving from rigid grids to collage with prose attached, with surreal, disorienting colors that match the mood of the section of story marvelously. The way the storytelling shifts from section to section, the way the form changes so that it can tell the story as much as the words or art can, is one of the most skillful feats of comics creation I’ve read in years. It’s like its own kind of visual jazz. Blue in Green is an astounding piece of comics storytelling, and I can’t wait to read what’s next from everyone involved.
The post The Best Comics of 2020 appeared first on Den of Geek.
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popculturebrain · 5 years
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Best Musical Ain’t Too Proud—The Life and Times of The Temptations Beetlejuice Hadestown The Prom Tootsie
Best Play Choir Boy by Tarell Alvin McCraney The Ferryman by Jez Butterworth Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus by Taylor Mac Ink by James Graham What the Constitution Means to Me by Heidi Schreck
Best Revival of a Musical Kiss Me, Kate Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!
Best Revival of a Play Arthur Miller’s All My Sons The Boys in the Band by Mart Crowley Burn This Torch Song by Harvey Fierstein The Waverly Gallery by Kenneth Lonergan
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Musical Brooks Ashmanskas, The Prom Derrick Baskin, Ain’t Too Proud Alex Brightman, Beetlejuice Damon Daunno, Oklahoma! Santino Fontana, Tootsie
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Musical Stephanie J. Block, The Cher Show Caitlin Kinnunen, The Prom Beth Leavel, The Prom Eva Noblezada, Hadestown Kelli O’Hara, Kiss Me, Kate
Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role in a Play Paddy Considine, The Ferryman Bryan Cranston, Network Jeff Daniels, To Kill a Mockingbird Adam Driver, Burn This Jeremy Pope, Choir Boy
Best Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Play Annette Bening, Arthur Miller's All My Sons Laura Donnelly, The Ferryman Elaine May, The Waverly Gallery Janet McTeer, Bernhardt/Hamlet Laurie Metcalf, Hillary and Clinton Heidi Schreck, What the Constitution Means to Me
Best Book of a Musical Ain’t Too Proud, Dominique Morisseau Beetlejuice, Scott Brown and Anthony King Hadestown, Anaïs Mitchell The Prom, Bob Martin and Chad Beguelin Tootsie, Robert Horn
Best Original Score (Music and/or Lyrics) Written for the Theatre Be More Chill, Joe Iconis Beetlejuice, Eddie Perfect Hadestown, Anaïs Mitchell The Prom, Matthew Sklar and Chad Beguelin To Kill a Mockingbird, Adam Guettel Tootsie, David Yazbek
Best Direction of a Musical Rachel Chavkin, Hadestown Scott Ellis, Tootsie Daniel Fish, Oklahoma! Des McAnuff, Ain’t Too Proud Casey Nicholaw, The Prom
Best Direction of a Play Rupert Goold, Ink Sam Mendes, The Ferryman Bartlett Sher, To Kill a Mockingbird Ivo van Hove, Network George C. Wolfe, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus
Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical Andre De Shields, Hadestown Andy Grotelueschen, Tootsie Patrick Page, Hadestown Jeremy Pope, Ain’t Too Proud Ephraim Sykes, Ain’t Too Proud
Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Musical Lilli Cooper, Tootsie Amber Gray, Hadestown Sarah Stiles, Tootsie Ali Stroker, Oklahoma! Mary Testa, Oklahoma!
Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Play Bertie Carvel, Ink Robin De Jesús, The Boys in the Band Gideon Glick, To Kill a Mockingbird Brandon Uranowitz, Burn This Benjamin Walker, Arthur Miller's All My Sons
Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play Fionnula Flanagan, The Ferryman Celia Keenan-Bolger, To Kill a Mockingbird Kristine Nielsen, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus Julie White, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus Ruth Wilson, King Lear
Best Choreography Camille A. Brown, Choir Boy Warren Carlyle, Kiss Me, Kate Denis Jones, Tootsie David Neumann, Hadestown Sergio Trujillo, Ain't Too Proud
Best Orchestrations Michael Chorney and Todd Sickafoose, Hadestown Larry Hochman, Kiss Me, Kate Daniel Kluger, Oklahoma! Simon Hale, Tootsie Harold Wheeler, Ain’t Too Proud
Best Scenic Design of a Musical Robert Brill and Peter Nigrini, Ain’t Too Proud Peter England, King Kong Rachel Hauck, Hadestown Laura Jellinek, Oklahoma! David Korins, Beetlejuice
Best Scenic Design of a Play Miriam Buether, To Kill a Mockingbird Bunny Christie, Ink Rob Howell, The Ferryman Santo Loquasto, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus Jan Versweyveld, Network
Best Costume Design of a Musical Michael Krass, Hadestown William Ivey Long, Beetlejuice William Ivey Long, Tootsie Bob Mackie, The Cher Show Paul Tazewell, Ain’t Too Proud
Best Costume Design of a Play Rob Howell, The Ferryman Toni-Leslie James, Bernhardt/Hamlet Clint Ramos, Torch Song Ann Roth, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus Ann Roth, To Kill a Mockingbird
Best Sound Design of a Musical Peter Hylenski, Beetlejuice Peter Hylenski, King Kong Steve Canyon Kennedy, Ain’t Too Proud Drew Levy, Oklahoma! Nevin Steinberg and Jessica Paz, Hadestown
Best Sound Design of a Play Adam Cork, Ink Scott Lehrer, To Kill a Mockingbird Fitz Patton, Choir Boy Nick Powell, The Ferryman Eric Sleichim, Network
Best Lighting Design of a Musical Kevin Adams, The Cher Show Howell Binkley, Ain’t Too Proud Bradley King, Hadestown Peter Mumford, King Kong Kenneth Posner and Peter Nigrini, Beetlejuice
Best Lighting Design of a Play Neil Austin, Ink Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer, Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus Peter Mumford, The Ferryman Jennifer Tipton, To Kill a Mockingbird Jan Versweyveld and Tal Yarden, Network
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stainedglassgardens · 5 years
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Favourite films watched in 2018
I arranged them into broad categories -- other than that they’re in no particular order.
Indie
River of Grass, Meek’s Cutoff and Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 1994, 2010 and 2013)
Tangerine and The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2015 and 2017)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Comedy
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
Experimental
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Classics
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
Horror
Creep and Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2014 and 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes and As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2007 and 2014)
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Science fiction
Primer and  Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2004 and 2013)
Resolution and The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012 and 2017)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
Action
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Full list of 306 films watched in 2018 under the cut!
January
The Devil’s Candy (Sean Byrne, 2015)
A United Kingdom (Amma Asante, 2016)
Creep (Patrick Brice, 2014)
The Witch (Robert Eggers, 2015)
The Blues Brothers (John Landis, 1980)
The Lost Boys (Joel Schumacher, 1987)
Midnight Special (Jeff Nichols, 2016)
Arrival (Denis Villeneuve, 2016)
We Need to Talk About Kevin (Lynne Ramsay, 2011)
Life (Daniel Espinosa, 2017)
Logan (James Mangold, 2017)
Creep 2 (Patrick Brice, 2017)
The Discovery (Charlie McDowell, 2017)
Otherlife (Ben C. Lucas, 2017)
The Dressmaker (Jocelyn Moorhouse, 2015)
Bokeh (Geoffrey Orthwein and Andrew Sullivan , 2017)
February
Get Out (Jordan Peele, 2017)
The Handmaiden (아가씨, Agassi, Park Chan-wook, 2016)
Brick (Rian Johnson, 2005)
Looper (Rian Johnson, 2012)
Winter’s Bone (Debra Granik, 2010)
Thelma (Joachim Trier, 2017)
The Guest (Adam Wingard, 2014)
Beach Rats (Eliza Hittman, 2017)
Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in, Tomas Alfredson, 2008)
Cameraperson (Kirsten Johnson, 2016)
Sweet Bean (あん, An, Naomi Kawase, 2015)
The Hallow (Corin Hardy, 2015)
Cloverfield (Matt Reeves, 2008)
10 Cloverfield Lane (Dan Trachtenberg, 2016)
The Cloverfield Paradox (Julius Onah, 2018)
Moonlight (Barry Jenkins, 2016)
28 Days Later (Danny Boyle, 2002)
Take Shelter (Jeff Nichols, 2011)
Ginger Snaps (John Fawcett, 2000)
River of Grass (Kelly Reichardt, 1994)
Old Joy (Kelly Reichardt, 2006)
Reflections in a Golden Eye (John Huston, 1967)
March
Raw (Grave, Julia Ducournau, 2016)
Palo Alto (Gia Coppola, 2013)
By the Sea (Angelina Jolie, 2015)
Lady Bird (Greta Gerwig, 2017)
Jupiter Ascending (The Wachowskis, 2015)
Irreplaceable You (Stephanie Laing, 2018)
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter (David Zellner, 2014)
Annihilation (Alex Garland, 2018)
Ravenous (Les Affamés, Robin Aubert, 2017)
The Bad Batch (Ana Lily Amirpour, 2016)
Notes on Blindness (Peter Middleton and James Spinney, 2016)
Breathe (Respire, Mélanie Laurent, 2014)
Night Moves (Kelly Reichardt, 2013)
Carol (Todd Haynes, 2015)
Lovesong (So Yong Kim, 2016)
Upstream Color (Shane Carruth, 2013)
April
ARQ (Tony Elliott, 2016)
Primer (Shane Carruth, 2004)
Meek’s Cutoff (Kelly Reichardt, 2010)
Certain Women (Kelly Reichardt, 2016)
The Lady from Shanghai (Orson Welles, 1947)
Waking Life (Richard Linklater, 2001)
Roman Holiday (William Wyler, 1953)
American Honey (Andrea Arnold, 2016)
Maurice (James Ivory, 1987)
The Silent House (La Casa Muda, Gustavo Hernández, 2010)
Viral (Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost, 2016)
Buster’s Mal Heart (Sarah Adina Smith, 2016)
Waitress (Adrienne Shelly, 2007)
Grey Gardens (Albert and David Maysle, 1975)
Ginger & Rosa (Sally Potter, 2012)
Cracks (Jordan Scott, 2009)
Into the Forest (Patricia Rozema, 2015)
A New Leaf (Elaine May, 1971)
Vertigo (Alfred Hitchcock, 1958)
The Beguiled (Sofia Coppola, 2017)
Scarface (Brian De Palma, 1983)
The Violent Years (William Morgan, 1956)
The Ritual (David Bruckner, 2017)
Casting JonBenet (Kitty Green, 2017)
Slums of Beverly Hills (Tamara Jenkins, 1998)
We’ve Forgotten More Than We Ever Knew (Thomas Woodrow, 2017)
Love and Other Cults (Kemonomichi, Eiji Uchida, 2017)
You Were Never Really Here (Lynne Ramsay, 2017)
Shirley: Visions of Reality (Gustav Deutsch, 2013)
Catfight (Onur Tuckel, 2017)
Pyewacket (Adam MacDonald, 2017)
May
Lick the Star (Sofia Coppola, 1998)
Scorpio Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1963)
Novitiate (Maggie Betts, 2017)
The Tree of Life (Terrence Malick, 2011)
The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki (Hymyilevä mies, Juho Kuosmanen, 2016)
Dead Reckoning (John Cromwell, 1947)
Human Flow (Ai Weiwei, 2017)
Mystery Train (Jim Jarmusch, 1989)
Dawson City: Frozen Time (Bill Morrison, 2016)
The Killing of a Sacred Deer (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2017)
I Am Not a Witch (Rungano Nyoni, 2017)
Cléo from 5 to 7 (Cléo de 5 à 7, Agnès Varda, 1962)
Orbiter 9 (Órbita 9, Hatem Khraiche, 2017)
M.F.A. (Natalia Leite, 2017)
Lipstick Under My Burkha (Alankrita Shrivastava, 2016)
Kedi (Ceyda Torun, 2016)
Deidra and Laney Rob a Train (Sydney Freeland, 2017)
The Most Dangerous Game (Irving Pichel and Ernest B. Schoedsack, 1932)
Girl Asleep (Rosemary Myers, 2015)
Always Shine (Sophia Takal, 2016)
The Monster (Bryan Bertino, 2016)
Desert Hearts (Donna Deitch, 1985)
Addicted to Fresno (Jamie Babbit, 2015)
Beyond a Reasonable Doubt (Fritz Lang, 1956)
The Fits (Anna Rose Holmer, 2015)
Hell or High Water (David Mackenzie, 2016)
The Midnight Swim (Sarah Adina Smith, 2014)
The Quiet Hour (Stéphanie Joalland, 2014)
Synchronicity (Jacob Gentry, 2015)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (Mike Nichols, 1966)
Pod (Mickey Keating, 2015)
Turn the River (Chris Eigeman, 2007)
Tangerine (Sean Baker, 2015)
Frequencies (Darren Paul Fisher, 2013)
Spring (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2014)
Time Lapse (Bradley D. King, 2014)
Meet Me There (Lex Lybrand, 2014)
Ex Machina (Alex Garland, 2014)
The Florida Project (Sean Baker, 2017)
Berberian Sound Studio (Peter Strickland, 2012)
Laggies (Lynn Shelton, 2014)
Starlet (Sean Baker, 2012)
Dead Ringer (Paul Henreid, 1964)
The Doom Generation (Gregg Araki, 1995)
The Riot Club (Lone Scherfig, 2014)
Berlin Syndrome (Cate Shortland, 2017)
Dude (Olivia Milch, 2018)
Nightcrawler (Dan Gilroy, 2014)
June
Hello I Must Be Going (Todd Louiso, 2012)
Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion (David Mirkin, 1997)
Mystery Road (Ivan Sen, 2013)
The Double (Richard Ayoade, 2013)
Dear White People (Justin Simien, 2014)
The Selfish Giant (Clio Barnard, 2013)
Don’t Breathe (Fede Álvarez, 2016)
Marina Abramović: The Artist is Present (Matthew Akers, 2012)
Hot Bot (Michael Polish, 2016)
Beneath the Harvest Sky (Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly, 2013)
Tim’s Vermeer (Teller, 2013)
The Firefly (La Luciérnaga, Ana Maria Hermida, 2015)
Twinsters (Samantha Futerman and Ryan Miyamoto, 2015)
Resolution (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2012)
Enemy (Denis Villeneuve, 2013)
Mother of George (Andrew Dosunmu, 2013)
We Are What We Are (Jim Mickle, 2013)
The Battery (Jeremy Gardner, 2012)
Crystal Fairy & The Magical Cactus (Sebastián Silva , 2013)
Boy (Taika Waititi,2010)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Steven Chbosky, 2012)
White Bird in a Blizzard (Gregg Araki, 2014)
The American (Anton Corbijn, 2010)
Ocean’s Eight (Gary Ross, 2018)
Compliance (Craig Zobel, 2012)
Seeking a Friend for the End of the World (Lorene Scafaria, 2012)
Weekend (Andrew Haigh, 2011)
Under the Skin (Jonathan Glazer, 2013)
July
Martha Marcy May Marlene (Sean Durkin, 2011)
Safety Not Guaranteed (Colin Trevorrow, 2012)
Hard Candy (David Slade, 2005)
Duck Butter (Miguel Arteta, 2018)
The Artist (Michel Hazanavicius, 2011)
Another Earth (Mike Cahill, 2011)
Melancholia (Lars von Trier, 2011)
Woodshock (Kate and Laura Mulleavy, 2017)
Hanna (Joe Wright, 2011)
Snowtown (Justin Kurzel, 2011)
Aloft (Claudia Llosa, 2014)
A Fantastic Woman (Una mujer fantástica, Sebastián Lelio, 2017)
The Feels (Jenée LaMarque, 2017)
The Endless (Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, 2017)
Shuttle Life (Tan Seng Kiat, 2017)
I Origins (Mike Cahill, 2014)
The Taking of Deborah Logan (Adam Robitel, 2014)
Chasing Ice (Jeff Orlowski, 2012)
Manchester By the Sea (Kenneth Lonergan, 2016)
The Bar (El Bar, Álex de la Iglesia, 2017)
Mr. Roosevelt (Noël Wells, 2017)
Woman Walks Ahead (Susanna White, 2017)
The Manual (William Magness, 2017)
The Conjuring (James Wan, 2013)
Oculus (Mike Flanagan, 2013)
The Eye (Pang brothers, 2002)
August
The Overnight (Peter Brice, 2015)
Axolotl Overkill (Helene Hegemann, 2017)
Little Sister (Zach Clark, 2016)
Witchfinder General (Michael Reeves, 1968)
Secretary (Steven Shainberg, 2002)
The Quiet Earth (Geoff Murphy, 1985)
The Hunger (Tony Scott, 1983)
They (Anahita Ghazvinizadeh, 2017)
Revenge (Coralie Fargeat, 2017)
Cargo (Ben Howling and Yolanda Ramke, 2017)
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (Amy Heckerling, 1982)
Radius (Caroline Labrèche and Steeve Léonard, 2017)
17 Girls (17 Filles, Delphine Coulin and Muriel Coulin, 2011)
The Deuce of Spades (Faith Granger, 2011)
The Bank Job (Roger Donaldson, 2008)
La Jetée (Chris Marker, 1962)
Train to Busan  (부산행, Busanhaeng, Yeon Sang-ho, 2016)
As Above, So Below (John Erick Dowdle, 2014)
Liquid Sky (Slava Tsukerman, 1982)
Wild Zero (Tetsuro Takeuchi, 1999)
Multiple Maniacs (John Waters, 1970)
The Lifeguard (Liz W. Garcia, 2013)
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (Les Parapluies de Cherbourg, Jacques Demy, 1964)
The Beales of Grey Gardens (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Ian Markiewicz, 2006)
The Edge of Seventeen (Kelly Fremon Craig, 2016)
Salesman (Albert Maysles, David Maysles and Charlotte Zwerin, 1969)
Easy Living (Adam Keleman, 2017)
Going Back (Adam Keleman, 2010)
A Series of Acts (Adam Keleman, 2006)
Long Days (Adam Keleman, 2012)
Okja (Bong Joon-ho, 2017)
Before I Fall (Ry Russo-Young, 2017)
The Poughkeepsie Tapes (John Erick Dowdle, 2007)
Three Colours: Blue (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1993)
Three Colours: White (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Three Colours: Red (Krzysztof Kieślowski, 1994)
Island of Lost Souls (Erle C. Kenton, 1932)
Khadak (Peter Brosens and Jessica Hope Woodworth, 2006)
The Lure (Córki dancingu, Agnieszka Smoczyńska, 2015)
Vagabond (Sans toit ni loi, Agnès Varda, 1984)
Little Evil (Eli Craig, 2017)
September
The Harder They Come (Perry Henzell, 1972)
Isle of Flowers (Ilha das Flores, Jorge Furtado, 1989)
Beat Girl (Edmond T. Gréville, 1960)
On Body and Soul (Testről és lélekről, Ildikó Enyedi, 2017)
Village of the Damned (Wolf RIlla, 1960)
Tampopo (タンポポ, Tanpopo, Juzo Itami, 1985)
Mustang (Deniz Gamze Ergüven, 2015)
Outside In (Lynn Shelton, 2017)
Voyeur (Myles Kane, 2017)
The Land of Steady Habits (Nicole Holofcener, 2018)
Clouds of Sils Maria (Olivier Assayas, 2014)
Already Tomorrow in Hong Kong (Emily Ting, 2015)
Tig (Kristina Goolsby and Ashley York, 2015)
Shortwave (Ryan Phillips, 2016)
The Loss of a Teardrop Diamond (Jodie Markell, 2008)
Sexy Beast (Jonathan Glazer, 2000)
October
The Most Assassinated Woman in the World (La Femme la plus assassinée du monde, Franck Ribière, 2018)
I Think We’re Alone Now (Reed Morano, 2018)
The Woman Who Left (Ang Babaeng Humayo, Lav Diaz, 2016)
The Babysitter (Brian Duffield, 2017)
The Frighteners (Peter Jackson, 1996)
Emelie (Michael Thelin, 2015)
21 Grams (Alejandro González Iñárritu, 2003)
Apostle (Gareth Evans, 2018)
Phantasm (Don Coscarelli, 1979)
Banshee Chapter (Blair Erickson, 2013)
Joshua (George Ratliff, 2007)
Office (오피스, Hong Won-chan, 2015)
The Nightmare (Rodney Ascher, 2015)
The Spy Who Dumped Me (Susanna Fogel, 2018)
Before I Wake (Mike Flanagan, 2016)
The Most Unknown (Ian Cheney, 2018)
Private Life (Tamara Jenkins, 2018)
Octavio is Dead! (Sook-Yin Lee, 2018)
Leave No Trace (Debra Granik, 2018)
Cube (Vincenzo Natali, 1997)
Galveston (Mélanie Laurent, 2018)
Growing Up Coy (Eric Juhola, 2016)
Texas Chain Saw Massacre (Tobe Hooper, 1974)
November
Murder My Sweet (Edward Dmytryk, 1944)
Madeline’s Madeline (Josephine Decker, 2018)
Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur, 1947)
Mandy (Panos Cosmatos, 2018)
Crossfire (Edward Dmytryk, 1947)
The Lobster (Yorgos Lanthimos, 2015)
Silent Light (Stellet Licht, Carlos Reygadas, 2007)
Shirkers (Sandi Tan, 2018)
Berlin Express (Jacques Tourneur, 1948)
Red Road (Andrea Arnold, 2006)
Angels Wear White (嘉年华, Vivian Qu, 2017)
Interstellar (Christopher Nolan, 2014)
The Italian Job (F. Gary Gray, 2003)
In the Aisles (In den Gängen, Thomas Stuber, 2018)
Edge of Seventeen (David Moreton, 1998)
Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller, 2015)
Columbus (Kogonada, 2017)
I Don’t Feel at Home in this World Anymore (Macon Blair, 2017)
The Full Monty (Peter Cattaneo, 1997)
Daisies (Sedmikrásky, Věra Chytilová, 1966)
Blue My Mind (Lisa Brühlmann, 2017)
December
The Tokyo Night Sky is Always the Densest Shade of Blue (夜空はいつでも最高密度の青色だ, Yozora wa itsudemo saiko mitsudo no aoiro da, Yuya Ishii, 2017)
Michael Lost and Found (Daniel Wilner, 2017)
The Trader (Sovdagari, Tamta Gabrichidze, 2018)
Valley Girl (Martha Coolidge, 1983)
The Kindergarten Teacher (Sara Colangelo, 2018)
Everything Beautiful is Far Away (Pete Ohs and Andrea Sisson, 2017)
McQueen (Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, 2018)
Better Watch Out (Chris Peckover, 2016)
I Feel Pretty (Abby Kohn, 2018)
Eighth Grade (Bo Burnham, 2018)
A Simple Favor (Paul Feig, 2018)
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story (Alexandra Dean, 2017)
Grandma (Paul Weitz, 2015)
Bird Box (Susanne Bier, 2018)
The Man in the Wall (האיש שבקיר‎, Evgeny Ruman, 2015)
Tout ce qui brille (Géraldine Nakache and Hervé Mimran, 2010)
Gas Food Lodging (Allison Anders, 1992)
Love, Cecil (Lisa Immordino Vreeland, 2018)
16 notes · View notes
fuckyeahatwell · 6 years
Link
When “Agent Carter” was canceled in May 2016, Hayley Atwell was fine. No shade intended, but she was ready to say goodbye to Peggy Carter and Marvel Studios when the TV show’s pink slip arrived.
“That was just a job to me,” Atwell told me during an afternoon at a New York City bar last month. “I put as much into her as I have into ‘Black Mirror’ or any kind of my stage work. It just happens to become special because, when you’re in a franchise like that, it has more commercial interest.”
The 36-year-old British-American actor, who got hooked on theater growing up in inner-city London, knows she’s more recognized for playing Peggy, the love interest to Captain America, than, say, for her recent, critically acclaimed performance on the BBC One-Starz collaboration “Howards End.”
“It was press attention and public attention I never had before,” she said of her Marvel experience, which crossed from TV into film. When I asked whether she might return to the cinematic universe ― in light of that shocking “Avengers: Infinity War” ending ― Atwell laughed and admitted she hasn’t seen the $2 billion worldwide box-office smash.
“Really,” she muttered when I told her about the multiple deaths and timeline tricks that could allow her character, Agent Carter, to come back.
“To get a call now would be like, ‘Oh, God!’” she said. “I’m sure anything could happen, but it’s this genre world that’s so multifaceted it’s like, will it ever die?”
Not that she’d want it to. “I really like them, and I love the way ... they made me feel safe and also empowered,” she said of Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige and his associates. “That’s the best thing to come out of it. It’s not this kind of ― from my experience ― scary, patriarchal, dominant, body-shaming Hollywood sphere machine. It was just really nerdy guys who love what they’re doing.”
Ultimately, Atwell, a self-professed “loner” kid, would rather talk about her historical rom-dram miniseries, which wrapped its arc on Starz at the end of April. “Howards End” follows 20th century Englishwoman Margaret Schlegel and her two siblings Helen (Philippa Coulthard) and Tibby (Alex Lawther), characters originally developed by beloved novelist E.M. Forster, as they navigate the social conventions of their time. To Atwell, portraying the dauntless, self-sufficient woman (crafted by Oscar-winning writer Kenneth Lonergan for the screen) was a thrill all its own.
In a time in the entertainment industry when actresses are expecting to play more fully developed characters than former eras afforded them, books of the past, like the socially driven adaptation of The Handmaid’s Tale, can provide a compelling template, she said.
“There’s something to be learned from them.”
“Howards End” focuses on Margaret’s love affair with widower Henry Wilcox (Matthew Macfadyen), a powerful businessman whose morals don’t quite align with those of Margaret’s family. In Atwell’s eyes, their situation is relatable, reflective of “the constant roaring between opposing sides” happening today.
“It’s easy with the world that we live in to be righteous in your opinion or headlines or soundbites or memes of the extreme left or the extreme right,” she said. In “Howards End,” “you have opposing sides not using their differences against one another but using them to create interesting conversation, to exchange ideas and hone one’s own or be willing to be challenged and change or be changed. That is, I think, more human, more evolved and much more living in the gray area.”
“These are not characters who, within the limitations of being women at a time that they live in, are aggressively fighting anything. They’re seeking to understand and change the system from within.”
Atwell is not the first actress to bring Margaret’s character to life. Emma Thompson played the iconic role in the 1992 film version of “Howards End.” Following in her footsteps was surely intimidating, but when asked about it, Atwell was steadfast: Portraying someone like Margaret Schlegel, she said, or Jo March or Lady Macbeth should always be an option for actresses.
“I was speaking to Emma Thompson about it, that question of, ‘Do you feel scared?’” she said. “Just because Judi Dench played a great Macbeth in the ’70s with Sir Ian McKellen doesn’t mean now no one else should. Those stories should be retold because they’re dealing with very human ideas. As an actor, you want to feel the challenge of having to say those words and bring them to life and be enriched by them. That’s the exciting thing, being able to fully inhabit someone who asks you to not reduce her to who you are.”
On the heels of “Howards End,” Atwell has packed up one character and is on to the next. She’s set to appear in a gender-swapping version of Shakespeare’s “Measure for Measure” in London’s West End this fall, which will see her and “Dunkirk” star Jack Lowden alternate the male and female roles of the Puritan Lord Angelo and Isabella in the tale set in a corrupt Vienna. She’ll also play Christopher Robin’s wife, Evelyn, alongside Ewan McGregor in a Winnie-the-Pooh live-action movie hitting theaters in August.
For Atwell, she took on both projects with the same goal in mind.
“What I’ve discovered is I’m searching for a connection, for a relationship between telling a story and experiencing that story and having the response of someone witnessing it in whatever capacity that is. I know what Marvel is and where it sits for people, and I equally know where some plays sit for people .... There’s space for everything to coexist and have its place.”
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wazafam · 3 years
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When a cast member leaves Saturday Night Live, they can either disappear into obscurity and occasionally return to the show to do a fan-favorite impression – which is the most common path – or become a huge A-list movie star like Eddie Murphy or Bill Murray – which is rare, for obvious reasons.
RELATED: SNL: 10 Best Movie Parodies
A bunch of immensely talented performers in the latter category, from Mike Myers to Chris Rock to Adam Sandler, came to prominence in the 1990s. Some of the funniest comedies of the ‘90s starred Saturday Night Live cast members (and one of them was directly adapted from a recurring SNL sketch).
10 Tommy Boy (1995)
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Chris Farley was close with all his SNL castmates, but perhaps none more than David Spade. The duo united for Tommy Boy, the tale of a slacker’s attempts to save his family’s business with the help of a snooty accountant after his dad dies.
Farley and Spade’s chemistry proved to be so electric that they reteamed for another comedy, Black Sheep, but it was nowhere near as well-received as Tommy Boy.
9 The Wedding Singer (1998)
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Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore have made a few romcoms together over the years, but their most memorable collaboration is still their first, The Wedding Singer.
Sandler plays the titular wedding singer and Barrymore plays a bride-to-be that he falls for. The Wedding Singer is one of Sandler’s sweetest, most grounded movies.
8 Analyze This (1999)
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Harold Ramis’ Analyze This stars Billy Crystal (who hosted SNL before becoming a cast member) as a psychiatrist and Robert De Niro as the mob boss who he befriends after an unfortunate chance encounter.
Co-written by Ramis and Manchester by the Sea’s Kenneth Lonergan, Analyze This is a delightfully dark comedic romp. SNL legend Molly Shannon also appears in a supporting role.
7 Dogma (1999)
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Kevin Smith’s controversial, but affectionate religious satire Dogma stars Matt Damon and Ben Affleck at the height of their Good Will Hunting fame as a pair of fallen angels who discover a loophole that can get them back into Heaven.
Since the success of their plan would prove God to be fallible and make all of existence moot, everybody in the universe is determined to stop them. SNL cast members Chris Rock and Janeane Garofalo appear alongside such icons as Salma Hayek, Alan Rickman, and George Carlin in the movie’s star-studded ensemble cast.
6 Rushmore (1998)
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Wes Anderson wrote the role of industrialist Herman Blume in his second movie Rushmore with Bill Murray in mind, but didn’t expect him to take it. Murray read the script and was so impressed with Anderson’s vision that he not only took the role; he’s appeared in all of Anderson’s movies since.
RELATED: 10 Funniest Quotes From Rushmore
Murray stars alongside Jason Schwartzman, who plays Blume’s prodigious 15-year-old friend Max Fischer, and Olivia Williams, who plays the schoolteacher they both fall for.
5 Austin Powers: International Man Of Mystery (1997)
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Mike Myers forced the 007 producers to rethink their strategy after ridiculing all the tropes and traditions of the Bond franchise in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery. Myers’ hysterical title character mixes the style of Bond with ‘60s swinging culture.
Myers also plays the villainous Dr. Evil, a spot-on riff on megalomaniacal Bond baddies, and SNL’s Will Ferrell appears in a small role as one of his henchmen.
4 There’s Something About Mary (1998)
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The Farrelly brothers brought their distinctively crass comedic sensibility to a love story with There’s Something About Mary. Cameron Diaz stars as “it” girl Mary, and Ben Stiller plays her high school prom date who wants to get back in touch with her. Unfortunately for him, just about every creep in America – including the private eye he hired to find her – is obsessed with Mary.
SNL cast member Chris Elliott plays Stiller’s seemingly harmless married friend who turns out to be Mary’s most dangerous stalker of all.
3 Groundhog Day (1993)
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Bill Murray finds himself living the same day over and over again in Groundhog Day. He plays Phil Connors, a TV weatherman who gets stuck reliving his most painfully mundane assignment – covering the Groundhog Day celebrations in Punxsutawney – again and again.
RELATED: Groundhog Day: 5 Ways Phil Connors Is Bill Murray's Best Character (& 5 Alternatives)
After the initial fun wears off and he realizes the time loop won’t let him take his own life, Phil finds a new purpose in his life when he falls for his producer Rita (Andie MacDowell). Chris Elliott also appears in this one as Phil’s cameraman.
2 Happy Gilmore (1996)
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While Adam Sandler’s breakout hit was Billy Madison, his first true classic – and the movie that solidified his status as a comedy superstar – was Happy Gilmore.
Sandler plays the title character, a hothead hockey player whose grandmother is being kicked out of her home. When he realizes his aggressive hockey tactics can be transferred to the golf course, Happy enters a tournament in the hopes of using the prize money to buy back his grandma’s house.
1 Wayne’s World (1992)
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Mike Myers and Dana Carvey first introduced the world to Wayne Campbell and Garth Algar in a recurring SNL sketch, but the subsequent movie adaptation showed audiences their lives outside their public access show Wayne’s World.
With plenty of fourth-wall-breaking and no regard for realism, Wayne’s World is a ton of fun. Along with The Blues Brothers, it’s one of the only bona fide classic feature-length comedies adapted from an SNL sketch.
NEXT: SNL: 10 Great '80s Comedies Starring Cast Members
SNL: 10 Best '90s Comedies Starring Cast Members | ScreenRant from https://ift.tt/3c5jBL3
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lakelandg · 3 years
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GetixHealth Announces Kevin M. Lonergan As New CEO
GetixHealth Announces Kevin M. Lonergan As New CEO
GetixHealth, LLC a rapidly expanding Revenue Cycle Management company providing technology-enabled BPO solutions to multi-discipline healthcare organizations nationwide, has announced the promotion of Kevin M. Lonergan to Chief Executive Officer (CEO).  Lonergan, a 6-year GetixHealth veteran, served previously as the President and Chief Operating Officer (COO).  In his new role, Lonergan is…
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francis-alianovna · 3 years
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ARTIST LIST J - K
If you find any mistakes here, please let me know! Continually updating this (by hand) so it is a work in progress. THANK YOU artists for creating so much beauty and bringing me so much happiness over the years!
J
j.bone - jacketpotatoo - jackiesny - jackrussle - jackxangelica - Jacob Andrews - jacobbyart - Jacopo Camagni - jadenite - Jae Lee - jaimito - jaisamp - Jake Parker - jakemooreartist - jaknighton - jamesholden - janddrawn - janedoemmmmm - janefosterzz - jango-draw - januariat - januarius-gates - Jared Kessel - jarvisuanddumetoo - Jason Kim - Jason Masters - Jason Oakes - Jason Saldajeno - Jay Fosgitt - jaymiefraser - jaysinkpen - jbbsrart - jbeiden - JD Theriault - jea-rao - Jeff Dekal - Jeff Spokes - Jeff Wamester - Jeffrey Chamba Cruz - jellydoodlesquad - Jemma Salume - Jen Bartel - Jenn Menze - jenbendraws - jenncandraw - Jenny Frison - jennymstead - jeremiagoeswoah - jeremyhawkass - jeremyjohnirons - jeremyrenner-liferuiner - Jesse Lonergan - jessielucidart - jevanlee - jeusus - jfgdraw - jiaolongs - jigokuen - jimin-myeuphoria - jimmymcwicked - jitterbugbear - jiucunmu - jiuge -  jkdfdkjsfjkdfkdslkf - jkimsketches - jlyarts - jmjey - jnwiedle - joannaestep - jodocho - Joe Quinones - joebloodyhunter - joewinklerTA - Joey Mason - johanirae - John Tyler Christopher - John Yandall - johnnykitten - jojoseames - jokeritadoodle - jollyhawkeyes - jollyjoules - Jordan Gibson - jories-life - Joseph Giampietro - Josh Dykstra - Josh Nizzi - Josh Ulrich - jovaline - Juan Albarran - juizyya - julepart - julia666 - juliaereck - julianbashir - juliangrayart - juliedillon - julientel (aka tenshi-inverse) - Julio Pachecho - juney-chan - justanotheranoymousatrtist - justasfacelessasever - justlous-art - justm3h - justmemorgane - Justin B. Addison
K
K - kaciart - kadabbs - kadeart - kadie36 - kai-ran - kaitsthings - kakijbird - kamethehermit - KanaHyde - kanapy - kangofu-cb - kannibal - kaoru-doodles - karicykiro - karmakarmacola - karolasdaydreamsparkle - katanutella - katdensetsu - Kate Bradley - Kate Sherron - Katie Cook - katoskakid - Katy L. Wood - katyzgm - kawaiibrutality - kawaimi-san - kayaczek - kayadraws - kaylerinarts - Kaysha Siemens - kayvsworld - keariart - kebwinsart - kehinki - Kelsey Shannon - kelslk - kelvinoh - kendrawcandraw - kenkuz (aka clintsbarton) - kenny-lol - Kenny Santos - kerolunaticat - kestrelsketch - kevinkomics - kevinraganit - Kevin Wada - keygrin (aka arrowsandsnark) - kfawkes - kghoul - Khary Randolph - kiasdo - kiick318 - kiilea - kilimiria - kim-danva - kimberleigharts - kimmydolldoodles - kimoreilly - kimorrow - kindahappyart - kingbirdkathy - kingfuc - kingofhellordoftime - kingsdarga - kingstoken - kinjiinto - kipg - kiri - kiriska - Kirsty Mills (aka kymerakirsty) - kiserinn - kissedbifire - kisu-no-hi - kitswana - kitten-nuggets - kittrose - kittycow - kiwibee - kiwiitin - kkachi35 - klaine03 - kleinmeli - kmkibble75 - kmy-creations - kneel-for-lokitty - knivesama - knock-knock-mr-criminal - kogla - kokeyaw - komboh - konradwerks - koreanrage - kosmicdustart - kota-stoker - kravchikfreak - krebs62 - kreugan - Kris Anka - krispykreeme - kuma-la-la - kunishirou - kuroco - kurouri-gth - kushusk - kvit-ravn - kwanstermonster - kymerakirsty (aka kirsty mills) - kyoka - kyokaiba - kyuzukipoi
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rabbittstewcomics · 4 years
Text
Episode 273
DC Feb Solicits
Comics Reviews:
Dark Nights: Death Metal - Infinite Hour Exxxtreme by Becky Cloonan, Sam Humphries, Frank Tieri, Rags Morales, Tyler Kirkham, Denys Cowan, Bill Sienkiewicz, Chris Sotomayor, Andrew Dalhouse, Arif Prianto
Punchline 1 by James Tynion IV, Sam Johns, Mirka Andolfo, Antonio Fajardo Jr.
Teen Titans Go: Roll With It by Heather Nuhfer, P.C. Morissey, Agnes Garbowska, Sandy Jarrell
Taskmaster 1 by Jed MacKay, Alessandro Vitti, Guru eFX
Kick-Ass vs. Hit-Girl 1 by Steve Niles, Marcelo Frusin, 
Scarenthood 1 by Nick Roche, Chris O'Halloran
Resident Alien: Your Ride's Here 1 by Peter Hogan, Steve Parkhouse
Power Rangers 1 by Ryan Parrott, Francesco Mortarino, Angulo
Miskatonic 1 by  Mark Sable, Giorgio Pontrelli, Pippa Bowland
Terminal Punks 1 by Matthew Erman, Shelby Criswell, Micah Myers
Cutting Edge: The Siren's Song 1 by Francesco Dimitri, Mario Alberti, 
Planet Paradise 1 by Jesse Lonergan
Tomorrow TP by Peter Milligan, Jesus Hervas, Clem Robins, James Devlin
Additional Reviews: Annabelle comes home, I Hate Suzie, Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey, Twilight Zone s1
News: Predator comes to Marvel in 2021, Marie Javins new EIC at DC, Young Hellboy spinoff series from Dark Horse, X-Men Legends revives 90s X-Men plots, Mirka Andolfo's first project as a solo writer and someone else on art, Three Jokers sequel, Black Lightning spin-off, Ablaze acquires Grumpy Cat, new DC digital-first anthology, new Image book by Johns and Frank, Darkwing Duck spinoff from Ducktales, new book by Lemire - Maze
Comics Countdown:
Punchline 1 by James Tynion IV, Sam Johns, Mirka Andolfo, Antonio Fajardo Jr.
Scarenthood 1 by Nick Roche, Chris O'Halloran
Seven Secrets 4 by Tom Taylor, Daniele Di Nicuolo, Joan Moldez Oday, Walter Baiamonte
American Vampire 1976 2 by Scott Snyder, Rafael Albuquerque, Dave McCaig
We Only Find Them When They're Dead 3 by Al Ewing, Simone Di Meo, Mariasara Miotti
Hawkman 29 by Robert Venditti, Fernando Pasarin, Oclair Albert, Jeromy Cox
Oblivion Song 28 by Robert Kirkman, Lorenzo De Felici, Annalisa Leoni
Detective Comics 1030 by Peter Tomasi, Bilquis Evely, Mat Lopes
Green Lantern Season Two 9 by Grant Morrison, Liam Sharp, Steve Oliff
TMNT 111 by Sophie Campbell, Jodi Nishijima, Ronda Pattison, Kevin Eastman
Check out this episode!
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atlanticcanada · 4 years
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2020 Nova Scotia municipal election results roll in
With polls closing on Saturday evening for Nova Scotia's 2020 municipal election, votes are being counted and winners are being announced. CTV Atlantic will update this article as new results are announced.
Cape Breton Regional Municipality
Mayor
Chris Abbass
Cecil Clarke
Kevin MacEachern
Archie MacKinnon
Amanda McDougall (Elected)
John Strasser
For the Cape Breton Regional Municipality, Amanda Mcdougall is the new mayor. Mcdougall won with a vote count of 24,319. Incumbent Cecil Clarke came in second with 20,789 votes. Mcdougall becomes the first female mayor of CBRM.
Councillors
District 1
Andrew Doyle
Danny Laffin
Gordon MacDonald (Elected)
Daniel Pero
Shara Vickers
District 2
Jim Dunphy
Earlene MacMullin (Elected)
District 3
Cyril MacDonald (Elected)
Esmond Marshall
Glen Murrant
John Whalley
District 4
Steve Gillespie (Elected)
Yianni Harbis
Donalda Johnson
District 5
Christina Joe
Nigel Kearns
Shawn Lesnick
Eldon MacDonald (Elected)
Scott MacQuarrie
District 6
Barbara Beaton
Keith MacDonald
Glenn Paruch (Elected)
Todd Riley
Joe Ward
District 7   
Ivan Doncaster
Kevin Hardy
Steve Parsons (Elected)
Adam Young
District 8
James Edwards (Elected)
Tracey Hilliard
Diane MacKinnon-Furlong
District 9
Steven James MacNeil
Clarence Routledge
Kenny Tracey (Elected)
District 10
Darren Bruckschwaiger (Elected)
Matthew Boyd
District 11
Dale Cadden
Jennifer Heffernan
Jeff McNeil
Johnny Miles
Arnie Nason
Chuck Ogley
Darren O'Quinn (Elected)
Laura Scheller Stanford
District 12
Trevor Allen
Gary Borden
Donald Campbell
Lorne Green (Elected)
Kim Sheppard
  Halifax Regional Municipality
Mayor
Mayor Mike Savage (Projected winner)
Max Taylor
Matt Whitman
Councillors
District 1 (Waverley - Fall River - Musquodoboit Valley)
Cathy Deagle Gammon (Projected winner)
Stephen Kamperman
Steve Streatch
Arthur Wamback
District 2 (Preston - Chezzetcook - Eastern Shore)
David Boyd
David Hendsbee (Projected winner)
Nicole Johnson
Tim Milligan
District 3 (Dartmouth South - Eastern Passage)
Vishal Bhardwaj
Clinton Desveaux
Lloyd Jackson
Becky Kent (Projected winner)
George Mbamalu
District 4 (Cole Harbour - Westphal)
Ryan Burris
Marisa DeMarco
Kevin Foran
Darryl Johnson
Jerome Lagmay
Jamie MacNeil
Tania Meloni
Chris Mont
Trish Purdy (Projected winner)
Jessica Quillan
John Stewart
Caroline Williston
District 5 (Dartmouth Centre)
Sam Austin (Projected winner)
Mitch McIntyre
District 6 (Harbourview - Burnside - Dartmouth East)
Douglas Day
Tony Mancini (Projected winner)
Ibrahim Manna
District 7 (Halifax South Downtown)
Richard Arundel-Evans
Waye Mason (Projected winner)
Jen Powley
Craig Roy
District 8 (Halifax Peninsula North)
Virginia Hinch
Dylan Kennedy
Lindell Smith (Projected winner)
District 9 (Halifax West Armdale)
Bill Carr
Shaun Clark
Shawn Cleary (Projected winner)
Stephen Foster
Gerry Lonergan
District 10 (Halifax - Bedford Basin West)
Andrew Curran
Mohammad Ehsan
Renee Field
Sherry Hassanali
Christopher Hurry
Debbie MacKinnon
Kathryn Morse (Projected winner)
Kyle Morton
District 11 (Spryfield - Sambro Loop - Prospect Road)
Stephen Chafe
Matthew Conrad
Bruce Cooke
Patty Cuttell (Leading as of 10:37 p.m.)
Bruce Holland
Kristen Hollery
Jim Hoskins
Ambroise Matwawana
Lisa Mullin
Hannah Munday
Dawn Edith Penney
Pete Rose
In district 11, the election is too close to call. According to Halifax's unnoffical results, as of Sunday morning, Patty Cuttell lead the race with 1,634 votes; however Bruce Holland trailed behind with 1,605 votes.
District 12 (Timberlea - Beechville - Clayton Park - Wedgewood)
John Bignell
Eric Jury
Iona Stoddard (Projected winner)
Richard Zurawski
District 13 (Hammonds Plains - St. Margarets)
Tom Arnold
Derek Bellemore
Tim Elms
Robert Holden
Nick Horne
Darrell Jessome
Pam Lovelace (Projected winner)
Iain Taylor
Harry Ward
District 14 (Middle/Upper Sackville - Beaver Bank - Lucasville)
Lisa Blackburn (Projected winner)
Greg Frampton
District 15 (Lower Sackville)
Mary Lou LeRoy
Anthony Mrkonjic
Jay Aaron Roy
Paul Russell (Projected winner)
David Schofield
District 16 (Bedford - Wentworth)
Tim Outhit (Acclaimed)
  Town of Amherst
Mayor
Ed Childs
David Kogon (elected)
Vaughn Martine
Councillors
George Baker (Elected)
Vince Byrne
Sheila Christie (Elected)
Hal Davidson (Elected)
Lisa Emery (Elected)
Paul "Skippy" Farrow
Dale Fawthrop (Elected)
Darrell Jones
Leon Landry (Elected)
Wayne "Butch" Mackenzie
Roy T. Pettigrew
Terry Rhindress
  Town of Yarmouth
Mayor
Charles Crosby
Gregory Doucette
Pamela Mood (Elected)
Angie Romard
Councillors
Don Berry
Steven Berry (Elected)
Byron Boudreau
Timothy Clayton
Wade Cleveland (Elected)
Gil Dares (Elected)
Brandan Gates
Heather Hatfield (Elected)
Clifford Hood
Mark Hubbard
Derek Lesser (Elected)
Daniel MacIsaac
Neil Mackenzie
Sean MacLellan
Jim MacLeod (Elected)
James Ogden
  Truro
Mayor
W.R. “Bill: Mills (Elected)
Terry Baillie
Councillors
Ward 1
Wayne Talbot (Elected)
Alison Graham-Fulmore (Elected)
Gregor Archibald
Cheryl Fritz
Ward 2
Jim Flemming (Elected)
Bill Thomas (Elected)
Terry Matheson
Jessica Frenette
Vince Roberts
Ward 3
Cathy Hinton (Elected)
Juliana Barnard (Elected)
Danny Joseph
District of Lunenburg
  Mayor
Carolyn Bolivar-Getson (Elected)
Caleb Wheeldon
Councillors
District 1
Leitha Haysom (Acclaimed)
District 2
Martin E. Bell (Elected)
Morgen Reinhardt
District 3
Lee E. Nauss
Wendy Oickle (Elected)
David Sutherland
District 4
Pam Hubley (Elected)
Bud Webster
District 5
Cathy Moore (Acclaimed)
District 6
Claudette Garland
Sandra Statton (Elected)
District 7
Wade S. Carver
Michelle Greek (Elected)
District 8
Kacy DeLong (Acclaimed)
District 9
Frank Fawson
Reid A. Whynot (Elected)
District 10
Josh Healey
Chasidy Veinott (Elected)
Ann Westhave
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/3lYeVcj
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checkthefeed · 6 years
Video
youtube
[ Johnny Hancheck | Bear Mountain 2018 ]
Johnny Hancheck aka @jhancheck and his 2018 snowboarding season @Bear_Mountain
Filmed by Edson Ramirez aka @yoguietto Kevin Lonergan aka @kevthurdy Heather Vargovic aka @heather_varg And many more homies with an iPhone.
Thank you to the following companies for their support.
@NicheSnowboards @686 @VansSnow @ElectricSnow @diecutstickersdotcom @BentMetalBindingWorks
#NicheSnowboards #BentMetalBindings #Vans #VansSnow #686 #ElectricSnow #BMBWlogic #BearMtn #BigBear #BearMountain #Bear #BearBuilt #snowboarding
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Work Experience - Day 7
Program of the day:
§  Painting/Drawing with Niamh Kelly
§  Art Appreciation with Ray Lonergan
 I started the day working on tones in my sketchbook and then went to the library to get some of my photos printed. Niamh gave us a short demo of the technique she wanted us to practice and it was very helpful.
I first covered the A3 sheet with horizontal and then vertical lines using compressed charcoal – this was the easy part.
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 I used my photo to transfer my face onto the page, this was faster than sketching it as the focus of the day was really on tones. I then started reproducing the highlights using an eraser and the darker areas using the compressed charcoal. It was not easy at all as there wasn’t very much contrast on the photo I used.
I didn’t get to finish the whole portrait today but I will have some time again tomorrow to work on it.
After lunch, we had Appreciation of Art with Ray. We covered Futurism (Early 20th Century) and looked into some artists such as Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Giacomo Balla,….
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We then moved onto Pop Art (Neo-Dada from the mid to late 1950’s) and talked about Andy Warhol, Roy Lichenstein, Robert Rauchenburg…. My favourite being Roy Lichenstein as I used to be into comics when I was younger, it was then very popular in Belgium.
It is fascinating how the visual representation of movement and speed varies from one artist to another.
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I enjoyed this class very much and it was really interesting to be able to make a comparison between Art Deco, which we covered last week with Kevin and Pop Art.
Practical Skills
Learn new drawing techniques and imagine I can feel the bones and muscles when blending the charcoal - similar to working with clay.
Work with compressed charcoal and eraser, rather than black pencils.
Further knowledge of Futurism and Pop Art. I feel the Art Appreciation class is opening a wide range of areas to be explored and I find it really exciting.
Personal & Interpersonal Skills
Be patient with myself
Attention to detail
Learn from others
Challenges Encountered
Still a bit of frustration today but less than yesterday, however, I enjoyed the day very much
Positive Learning from Challenges
All about practice!
Conclusion
Another great day! I feel I have learned so much and it gives me a lot of motivation for the days to come. I wish I could spend more time in St. John’s as I feel it’s really a place where I could grow.
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sireneatspoetry · 4 years
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Kevin Dennis, Kathleen Cain, Elyssa Lewis, Trixie Light, Sarah Schantz, Trista Emmer, Violet Mitchell, Devi Lockwood, Anita Lonergan, Mari Williams, thank you so very much for playing exquisite corpse with me! I will address and send your stickers no later than next week! 💕🙏🏽 https://www.instagram.com/p/CCnK4jcFQlJ/?igshid=16yi94c5238wa
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