downthetubes is undergoing some main site refurbishment...

This blog is no longer being updated

The downthetubes news blog was assimilated into our main site back in 2013.

Hop over to www.downthetubes.net for other British comics news, comic creating guides, interviews and much more!
Showing posts with label Walt Simonson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Walt Simonson. Show all posts

Friday, 7 September 2012

In Review: Alien - The Illustrated Story

by Archie Goodwin & Walter Simonson
Publisher: Titan Books
Out: Now

The Book: Two of comics greatest talents joined forces in 1979 to bring Ridley Scott's epic Alien motion picture to comics. Out of print for over thirty years, this brand new edition has been meticulously restored from original artwork in Walt Simonson's studio  presenting for the very first time the definitive artists edition of the greatest sci-fi horror ever.

The Review:  There are some books that I've kept for years, partly because they are great books and partly because there's some specific memory attached to them. Then there are the few that remain part of my library simply because, for me, they're the very best a certain genre offers.

The original Alien: The Illustrated Story is one of these, and I'm delighted British publisher Titan Books has reprinted it.

And no, not just reprinted it - they got artist Walt Simonson along for the ride, carefully restoring the original art for this stunning new edition, published as both a gorgeous-looking original art edition, and a more modestly-priced softback edition.
Somehow, I recall managing to read the original graphic album, published by Heavy Metal, before I saw the movie. Possibly a mistake in terms of movie enjoyment as its more memorable events (the chest-bursting over the breakfast table scene, being the most obvious) were no longer a surprize. But it's no wonder I cheated - how could you not want to read this New York Times best-selling graphic album as soon as it fell into your paws?

And it's just as I remembered it (albeit gloriously enhanced thanks to Walt's restoration). Archie Goodwin's script is, for me, still one of the best move adaptations to comics ever – no surprize given his abilities and track record – and Simonson's art is just a masterclass in visual storytelling, the tale moving at breakneck pace as Ripley and co try to defeat the near-indestructible alien.

It's no wonder the movie went on to become a successful comics line when this calibre of work went into the first Alien comics adaptation.

It's still as gripping as it was back when I first read it. Track a copy down and enjoy.

Check out the Alien: The Illustrated Story restoratio page on Facebook

Thursday, 12 March 2009

Simonson On Air and Other Podcasts...

Alex Fitch talks to artist and writer Walter Simonson on Resonance FM which week, the creator whose exceptional four-year run on the Marvel comic The Mighty Thor in the early 1980s remains the most appreciated version of the character since Stan Lee and Jack Kirby brought the Viking hero to Marvel comics a generation before.

Alex and Walt talk about combining European mythology and space opera, esoteric character design (why does Beta Ray Bill have a face like a horse's skull?), turning the Norse god of war into a talking frog and the joy of revisiting classic heroes.

• Strip!: The Mighty Thor by Walter Simonson airs at 5.00pm Thursday 12/03/09, repeated 11.30pm Sunday 15/03/09, Resonance 104.4 FM (London), streamed at www.resonancefm.com / extended podcast after transmission at www.panelborders.wordpress.com


Also this week, Resonance FM's weekly show about Asian Culture,
Lucky Cat: Live Action Manga, regular host Zoe Baxter invites Alex Fitch (Electric Sheep Magazine) and Helen McCarthy (The Animé Encyclopedia) into the studio to discuss live action manga adaptations such as 20th Century Boys and Death Note and how these compare to animé versions and adaptations of Western comic books such as Watchmen. The show includes Zoe's regular eclectic mix of Asian music from the last half century and live tastings from the Dim Sum Lunchbox...

• Lucky Cat: Live action Manga airs at 9.00pm Tuesday 17/03/09, Resonance 104.4 FM (London), streamed at www.resonancefm.com

Online now at www.sci-fi-london.com/audio, downthetubes readers may also be interested in Reality Check: The Invisible Art of Acting for Radio, in which Alex Fitch talks to actor Rupert Degas about his various roles in genre radio and audio dramas such as playing David Warner’s sidekick “Rizla” in the BBC7 adaptation of Robert Rankin’s The Brightonomicon and playing the father of a cyrogenically preserved child in Kim Newman’s Cry-Babies which was recently broadcast on Radio 4. Alex and Rupert also talk about his roles in Dan Dare, Dirk Gently and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy plus his uncredited role voicing the devil in Exorcist: The Beginning

Latest News on downthetubes.net

Contact downthetubes

• Got a British Comics News Story? E-mail downthetubes!

• Publishers: please contact for information on where to post review copies and other materials: editor@downthetubes.net

Click here to subscribe to our RSS NewsFeed

Powered by  FeedBurner