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TAKING NO PRISONERS

Superman
Warner Bros. and the creators of Superman Doomsday are at it again with Justice League: The New Frontier, an upcoming animated movie debuting February 26th on DVD and HD formats. This time it looks like they are raising the bar in every way. In this 1950's era origin story of the Justice League, it seems they are really pushing American animation to the limits of how serious and mature a show can be. It's still a show about superheroes in tights and yet it seems this one will play more real than many TV dramas.

The list of names in the voice cast alone makes it clear that they are not playing games with this movie, nor are they casting it aside as a "cartoon" and spending no time and effort on it. With well known screen actors voicing the main characters, they sound better than I could have ever hoped to see animation in english sound in my lifetime.

Flash
I was extremely impressed with Superman Doomsday and the level of writing that went into the characters and relationships in that tale. This time they have a much larger canvas to play with and because of the time period, they've opened the door to dealing with some serious issues which still need addressing today. These serious issues are not dealt with as one might expect of a cartoon. In this show, people die and there is blood.

While Beowulf, at the box office, may have done little to help advance the cause of more mature animation, Warner Brothers and D.C. seem to be showing that there is a market for it and that they are glad to make the content to serve that market. I hope this is yet another taste of greater things to come.
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A Strange Visitor Brings Hope

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That strange visitor I speak of is none other than Superman, strange visitor from another planet. What I mean by hope is what I saw in the direct to DVD movie Superman Doomsday an animated film based on The Death of Superman story arc from the comic series many years ago. The hope that this movie brings to American animation is that is shows that there is potential for well done, more mature animated content, and that American creators can do it as well as any foreign studios. Being 2D, the grunt work of animation is, of course, done overseas, this time in Korea, but I'm talking here about good character development, dialogue and awesome voice acting.

The movie brings back memories of the theatrically released Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, which proved that more serious and dark animation for older audiences can find viewers that crave it. You will note in the credits some names associated with that film are also present on Superman Doomsday. This movie also shows that there are still areas where animation shines, able to present things that, even in our CG effects laden world, would be impossible or far too expensive to do in a live action film. This has more city destruction than Armageddon, bigger military battles than Transformers and more super action that Superman Returns. It would cost over half a billion to attempt such a feat in live action. This is a movie made for animation and it was made well.

Still, with all the amazing visuals and explosions, they find the time to give the characters real lives. It's nothing like those cartoons where the characters have no life or thought outside of their current mission. Characters drink, break down and cry, sever relationships, basically do real human things. The voice cast features Adam Baldwin, Ann Heche, James Marsters and Ray Wise among others, like anime notable John DiMaggio. The actors play the characters very real in some scenes and make them very believable.

I could go on about this, but needless to say I was very impressed. I can only hope this leads to more such productions, not just from Warner Animation, but other studios as well. I also hope it leads to such quality being put into animation of all genres in the future.

HAPPY NEW YEAR! I expect great things in 2008! How about you?
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A TIME OF RESTING

After getting the first episode online, I decided on a day, or so, of resting. Sure enough, in keeping with the idea of rest, someone from Warner Bros. handed me a DVD of the direct to video feature Rest Stop, starring Jaimie Alexander.

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I knew I recognized her from something I had seen previously, but I could quite remember where. An imdb search revealed that I remembered her from Kyle XY a TV series I had seen on iTunes. Rest Stop is definitely a small movie, the kind I like actually, with very few characters and even fewer locations. Too many horror movies these days try to be too big with too much action.

I was not at all surprised to find it was written and directed by one of the writers and producers on the Warner Bros. series Supernatural. It could easily have been a part of that series. In fact, there was an episode in season 2 that was on the road in the same fashion. Being an unrated film, though, it is much more grisly that Supernatural, and that's saying a lot since that show can be pretty gruesome at times.

While resting, I am also slowly but surely visualizing the next episode. There's so much I want to do, but finally I feel that it is not beyond me anymore. There is a way to present it finally! There is a way to get that story told! And it is a way that works for the creator and not against.
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