Tuesday, May 3, 2011

My What a Big Hammer You Have: Week of May 1 Major Video Game Releases

Wonder if he will appear shirtless as often in the video game as he does in film trailer?
Hard to believe, but the summer movie season kicks off Friday with the release of "Thor." Natch, the summer blockbuster video game tie-in season begins as well with Sega's release of "Thor: God of Thunder." It's available for just about every platform (Sorry, PSP gamers; should have bought a DS or 3DS). The game is rated Teen for violence and animated blood.

In the game, players wield Thor's mighty hammer, Mjorlnir, in an effort to save Asgard. Chris Helmsworth and Tom Hiddleson (the film's Thor and his nemesis Loki, respectively) voice their video game counterparts.

Comic book fans' hopes are riding high on this one. I'm expecting them to be dashed, though. Sega doesn't have the best track record ("Iron Man 2" was a bit rusty in my opinion).


Also streeting this week
The third installment of the popular PS3 racing game, "MotorSport: Apocalypse" finally zooms into stores (the  game, which takes place after a natural disaster, was delayed elsewhere because of the Japanese earthquake). Look for my review later in the week.

Monday, May 2, 2011

CYA: the Nordic edition (a k a Operation Asgard)

I agree: for a crazy homeless guy, he is pretty cut. 
Thanks to Friday's blockbuster "Thor," Chris Hemsworth will no doubt be the physical embodiment of the Norse god.
Kids today don't know how lucky they are.  The comic book superhero's publisher, Marvel, didn't seem to be very choosy when it came to licensing the character. Here's how the blonde superhero is remembered by Generation X:
First up, the crappy '60s "animated" cartoon based on the Marvel character. I put the word in quotes because  movement in the show was limited.  He didn't even get a groovy intro like "Spider-Man" did.



This cartoon aired well into the late '70s (Yes, kids. In the days before DVDs and illegal torrent downloads, things would run endlessly in re-runs and we were too naive to realize they weren't new).

The very Sicilian Vincent D'Onofrio opposite the Thor-obsessed Maia Brewton
And who could forget 1987's "Adventures in Babysitting." Though it scored points for some great Chicago locations, I still can't look at the Stone Container building without remembering Brewton sliding down the slided glass roof.

And then there was 1988's "The Return of the Incredilbe Hulk." Eric Allan Kramer.
The image I see in my nightmares.
In the famous words of Stan Lee, nuff said.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Delicious summer wine


Yeah! Finally found my summer wine. Here's hoping Whole Foods keeps it stocked.

Gazela was a bargain at $5.99. It's a dry, sparkling wine that is light with a strong citrus finish. I'm serving it with a roasted chicken today. Yum!

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Charlaine Harris discusses "True Blood"/latest Sookie Stackhouse Novel

Charlaine Harris, author of the popular Sookie Stackhouse Southern Vampire Mysteries.

For most fiction writers, the worlds they create exist only in their heads, on the pages of their works and within the imaginations of their readers.
Charlaine Harris, the New York Times bestselling author of the successful Sookie Stackhouse Southern Vampire Mysteries (the basis for the equally successful HBO series “True Blood”), was able to literally walk into the world she created when she had a brief cameo in season two of the series, sitting at the bar of Merlott's (one of the key settings in her books).
Harris shares a scene with Sam Trammell (Sam Merlott) in a second season episode of "True Blood."
“I had seen the set while they were building it for first season, but it wasn't finished,” the 59 year-old author said. “Being on the completed set was surrealistic. Before we shot my scene, I ate lunch in one of the booths of Merlott's with Alan [Ball, “True Blood” producer and creator]. It was so strange and weird sitting in the booth eating lunch in a place that I created. Not too many people can say they have actually eaten there.
One of Bon Temps' favorite watering holes.

Surreal might also be a good word to describe her wildly successful novels that follow telepathic waitress Sookie Stackhouse, whose unique gift of reading other people's thoughts has made her an attractive target to the supernatural community. Fairies, vampires, werewolves shape shifters, witches and other things that go bump in the night have all sought to exploit the plucky heroine's talents.
Dead Reckoning, the 11th book in the Sookie Stackhouse Southern Vampire Mysteries, is out May 3. Things kick off with a bang when someone throws a Molotov cocktail through the window of Merlott's and Sookie must unravel the mystery of whether she, the bar's shape-shifting owner Sam, or someone else was the intended target.  
The book is already receiving high praise from some fans of the series. Round Lake Beach, Ill. native Liz Henderson is the co-creator of True-Blood.net, one of the leading fansites for the HBO series that gets upwards of a million hits when the show airs and about half that during its hiatus. She got an early look at the book and said she likes the direction the new book is going. 
“The last couple of books in the series have gone to a really dark place, so I was glad that things lightened up a lot with Dead Reckoning,” Henderson said. “We get to see a lot of the old, snarky Sookie. She's not this Barbie-like barmaid from Merlott's. She is very strong now because of everything she has been through. This should please the fans a lot.”
Another book, The Sookie Stackhouse Companion streets Aug. 30. Not just an encyclopedia of all things supernatural and undead in both book and series, the Companion will feature a new short story featuring Sookie.
 “I was hoping it would come out before the next book as the novella takes place before Dead Reckoning,” explained Harris, who lives with her husband and three children in Magnolia, Ark. “It also features a timeline by my continuity person Victoria that is exhaustive. There's some recipes for food that has been mentioned in the books, a brief history of the an club, a map of the town of Bon Temps drawn by me and my best friend Paula, interviews with myself and Alan Ball and so much more, I can't remember.”
The world of Sookie Stackhouse has become so time-consuming that Harris intends to end the series after the 13th book.
“I am grateful for the success, but Sookie has taken over my life for the past dozen years,” she said.  
Though much of her focus has been on Sookie Stackhouse, that hasn't stopped Harris from keeping her other creations alive. Lily Bard, a cleaning lady-turned-slueth from Harris' five-book mysteries series set in the fictional town of Shakespeare, Ark., features into the plot of Dead Reckoning.
Still, Harris says the end is nigh for the Sookie series.
“I've known how it will end for a long time how it would end,” she said. “The very first scene I ever wrote in the series was the last one and it will be in the that last book. It will have taken me a long time and a few detours, but I'm working my way to there.”“I've known how it will end for a long time how it would end,” she said. “The very first scene I ever wrote in the series was the last one and it will be in the that last book. It will have taken me a long time and a few detours, but I'm working my way to there."
Fans should be able to feed their Sookie addiction with additional seasons of HBO's hit series, “True Blood,” though. That show returns with new episodes in June. The events of Dead to the World, the fourth book in the series, are expected to figure largely into the plot, but there are no guarantees.
Ball, the creator of “Six Feet Under” and now "True Blood", hasn't colored too far out of the lines in adapting the books for television.
"True Blood" creator Alan Ball (center) surrounded by the cast (from left to right)  Nelsan Ellis (Lafayette Reynolds), Anna Paquin (Sookie Stackhouse), Rutina Wesley (Tara Thornton), Sam Trammell (Sam Merlott) and Stephen Moyer (Bill Compton).

“He is respecting the source material. That's what he likes and it is what he brought when he optioned the books. So, I'm not surprised he's using me as the general outline for the series,” Harris said. “He and the rest of the writers on the series are all terrific, though. And I'm glad they've been able to put their own spin on things. They never tell me what I should do next in the books, so I am fine with them doing there own thing." 
Henderson said changes to the book were inevitable.
“The books are written in first-person from Sookie's perspective,” she said. “Ball and the other writers have remained true to the spirit of the books while adding a bit more color to this world and letting us see what happens when Sookie isn't in the room.”
Harris even said she was a bit envious of one of the additions to the television series, young vampire Jessica, played by Deborah Ann Wohl.
Wohl, right, with Paquin on the set of "True Blood." 
“She is a wonderful idea and the perfect foil for Bill [a Civil War-era vampire played by Stephen Moher],” Harris said. “I with I had thought of her.”

Harris appears at the Rivoli Theater (5021 Highland Avenue, Downers Grove) at 7 p.m. on May 5. Tickets, $36 (includes a copy of Dead Reckoning, admission to the author program and a screening of an episode of “True Blood”). To purchase tickets, call Anderson's Bookshop at (630) 963-2665 or visit andersonbookshop.com. 
Catch Harris on the web at Charlaineharris.com.
You can read the first chapter of the new book here.
A version of this story originally appeared online April 28 and in print May 1 in the Chicago Sun-Times. You can read that version here.




Friday, April 29, 2011

My gift to Will and Kate: other favorite TV weddings

Everyone needs some pop culture to discuss on their wedding night, right? So, in honor of the future king and queen of England's recent nuptials, here are some of my favorite TV weddings of all time. You may kiss the bride. Or not.

Always a trend-setter, Carol opts for a yellow wedding dress instead of off-white.
Mike and Carol, "The Brady Bunch"
"Oh, Mike. Thank goodness you saved the cake!" The story of a lovely lady with three girls and a man with three boys of his own kicked things off with a comedically chaotic second wedding for the widow and widower on Sept. 26, 1969.

And they said it wouldn't last (and it didn't)
Rhoda and Joe, "Rhoda"
Mary Richards (Mary Tyler Moore) may have been able to "turn the world on with a smile," but it wasn't enough to keep her from getting ditched at the altar. Her bestie Rhoda Morganstern beat Mary to the alter on Oct. 28, 1974. The nuptials were one of the highest-rated prime time television events in the 1970s, easily defeating the ratings king ABC's "Monday Night Football."

Can't wait to see the hate mail I get for posting this pic.

Kevin and Scotty, "Brothers & Sisters"
Contrary to public opinion, Kevin Walker and Scotty Wandell were not the first same sex couple to waltz down the prime time wedding aisle when they exchanged vows in the season two finale of the hit ABC show on May 11, 2008. American television's first gay wedding was actually on Oct. 20, 1991 on the critically-acclaimed, but little watched "Roc" when Roc's uncle married his partner. Still, Kevin and Scotty's big day brought big drama and ratings.
Sure, tragedy struck, but Blake saved a fortune on the open bar.
Amanda and Prince Michael, "Dynasty"
And speaking of drama...and royals....who could ever forget one of the greatest television cliff-hangers of all time, "The Moldavian Massacre" on "Dynasty?" The royal wedding of Blake and Alexis' daughter Amanda to Prince Michael of Moldavia occurred on May 15, 1985 and the over-the-top series topped itself when rebels crashed the wedding and opened fire on guests, caters, and the wedding party. The rebels turned out to be lousy shots, though. Despite all the bodies on the floor, only two minor characters were killed off when the series returned in the fall.

Well, at least the marriage has already been consummated.
Luke and Laura, "General Hospital"
Only on a soap opera would a rape survivor actually marry her rapist and have Elizabeth Taylor crash their nuptials. "LnL" (as soap opera chatroom folks refer to the couple) tied the knot on Nov. 16-17, 1981. 30 million viewers (the highest-ratings for a daytime soap every) didn't seem to mind that Laura wore white for her second wedding.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

"Book of Mormon" seeking to convert Hollywood

Packed and heading to Hollywood?
One of this Broadway season's breakout hits, "The Book of Mormon" may just be heading to to the big screen if the show's book writers Matt Stone and Trey Parker have their way.
Though the plot of the show is hardly traditional movie musical fare (or Broadway for that matter; it's about naive Mormon missionaries sent to convert an Ugandan village where poverty, AIDS and violence are rampant), Trey and Stone, who also have a little hit called "South Park" on Comedy Central, told Deadline.com that if they show continues to do boffo Broadway box office, a movie adaptation is almost a given.
"We've learned in our careers that as long as something is successful, they will give you money for it," Parker told Deadline.com. "They just want to make money in Hollywood, they don't really care. As long as the musical continues to do well, I don't think it's going to be hard at all."
I caught the show in previews and thought despite the occasional raunchy bits, felt the overall experience was sweet and uplifting. With tickets to the musical on Broadway hard to come by, a movie musical just might gain a few more converts to this brilliant and touching show about the power of faith.
You can order tickets to the Broadway show at the show's website here.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Remembering the prehistoric ha ha: "Dinosaurs" turns 20

You know you're getting old when something that still seems fresh in your pop culture noggin is actually turning 20!

ABC's sitcom "Dinosaurs" made its debut 20 years ago today. My evil twin was a huge fan of the show and I post the following clip in his honor. Please to enjoy it, Bryan: