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Kevin Chats About Upcoming Green Arrow Run…

July 12th @ 4:19 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Sixpack, Hoser, Eric Haar & Jeff

  • Apparently the View Askew boards aren’t the ONLY areas Kev hangs out in on the net. He recently stopped by DC’s message board to talk about what’s coming up with his 12 issue Green Arrow story arc. Here’s the article summarized by Fandom.Com:
KEVIN SMITH SPEAKS OUT ON GREEN ARROW

Writer Kevin Smith recently stopped by DC’s official message boards to give readers and update and answers some concerns regarding his upcoming – though long-in-development – Green Arrow series

According to Smith, his tenure on the new ongoing title will be 12 issues. It will not be a 12-issue maxi-series as has been previously reported, including here at Newsarama. Posted Smith : “When I leave (which apparently at least a few of you are already itching for me to do), the new writer will pick up the book with issue 13.

Smith then went on to address other concerns…

“Why has it taken this long to get to? Yes – I`ve been busy with other stuff. But DC could`ve went forward with another writer at least two years ago, and opted not to. I never told them to hold out for me (until Bob Schreck came aboard; then I begged him to wait). The folks in charge seem to think the wait has paid off, as I turned in my outline for the year-long run on the book, and they were pretty happy with it.

“I just turned in the full script for issue two this afternoon, and the art team (that`ll be announced at San Diego) is already nearly done with issue one. If we keep this schedule up, any interested parties (i.e. – you guys) will have it in your hands around the first of the year.

“Of the storyline, I`ll say only this: if you`re a long-time Green Arrow fan, you`re going to be happy. If you`re a long-time DCU fan, you`re going to be happy. If you`re one of those anal-retentive belly-achers that hates everything and believes they can do a better job, you`re not going to like it. If you didn`t like my run `Daredevil` over at Marvel, you`re probably not going to like this either.

“But love or hate the story, you`re going to dig the art. The guys fleshing out the not-too-wordy scripts (I think I`ve become a better comic book writer, thanks to the eight issue run on `DD` with Joe Quesada`s tutelage, and the Schreck-monster`s steady but gentle editorial hand) have shown me pages, and they`re top-notch, fan-boy-jeans-creaming stuff.

“So I`m sorry it`s taken us (or rather, ME) this long to finally get this puppy underway, but I think the wait has paid off. Like the `DD` run, this doesn`t ruin any continuity, nor does it make `GA` runs of old irrelevant. Our story takes its cues from what`s went before, and manages to tell a tale that will hopefully stand shoulder-to-shoulder with some of the fave Green Arrow story arcs which have made the Emerald Archer our collective hero of choice in the DCU.”

There ya have it folks…Sounds like it’ll be worth the wait, especially since it’s going to be along the same lines as the Daredevil arc from the sound of things, definitely a good sign. We’ll keep ya posted as we hear more.

Green Arrow Update…

June 10th @ 6:40 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by CB Clerk

  • Here’s a news article that appeared in the Cleveland Plain Dealer with a few details on Kevin’s upcoming Green Arrow stint, which we assume he’ll start working on soon (if he hasn’t already):
After several weeks of Marvel News, it’s time to check in with the other comic goliath, DC.

Here’s what it has cooking. When we finally get to see filmmaker Kevin Smith’s “Green Arrow,” it will be as a 12-issue limited series.

Smith has had recent conversations with DC editors and affirmed that he desperately wants to do the project that will return Oliver Queen to the DC universe, but can’t seem to find the time to write it. He already has a good chunk of it in his head, perhaps all of it, but getting it down on paper is harder.

Maybe it’s time for Smith to adopt a scriptwriter who can take the general plotline and turn it into a book. In an interview three years ago, Smith told how he plans to bring Green Arrow back from the dead and the ramifications of that action.

I said I would not divulge it and I won’t, but it will be so cool it will make Smith’s “Daredevil” look like the “Powerpuff Girls.” Actually, the archer is already back, but you had to be quick — it happened in one panel.

Another Blatant VA Mention in New DareDevil…

April 7th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Ranting Wacko, Neil Cameron, Herbie, Bizarro, Bents, Brian & Bents

  • By far the most popular submission today is the news of the quite obvious View Askew reference in the latest issue of Daredevil, #11. Matt Murdock goes to check out a flick that’s near and dear to our hearts. We’ll let the above scan do the talking.

Chasing Dogma Hardcover (And Clerks On The Way?)

February 5th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Make Ardunio, James Theobald, & Graphitti Designs

FrontBack

  • Our “Chasing Dogma” limited editions arrived late this week, and we gotta tell you folks something…If there was ever a cool View Askew collectible, this is it. Graphitti has gone all out in putting together this one. Signed, numbered, with a brand new cover (click the above scans for a look at the front and back), as well as a full color edition of ALL the Jay & Silent Bob books…Wow. And this is the only place you’ll see it. Search one out, most comic shops online have them, and of course, so does the Stash! Get them before they’re just another part of View Askew history.

By the way this website lists an item we have yet to hear of, and it sounds legit to us…Could it be yet ANOTHER cool hardcover is on its way to your local comic shop? Check THIS out:

Clerks: The Limited Hardcover Book
Ships in April
Regular Price $59.95
Our Price is $47.96 (20% off)

by Kevin Smith, Jim Mahfood, Phil Hester & Ande Parks

What better way to exploit the March TV debut of the new Clerks: The Animated Series than with the release of the Clerks Limited Edition Hardcover Book. Features the Kevin Smith stories from Oni Press’ Clerks: The Comic Book, Clerks: Holiday Special and Clerks: The Lost Scenes with art by Jim Mahfood, Phil Hester, Ande Parks. Limited to just 2500 copies, each hardcover book features an illustrated, individually-numbered signature page, signed by Kevin Smith and Jim Mahfood. This deluxe presentation also includes Smyth-sewn hardcover binding with debossed cover, full-color dustjacket (with new exclusive art by Chris Bailey, art director for the animated show!!) and special end pages. This is the Clerks you’ve been waiting for!! Quantities are limited. Order may be allocated.

LTD. HC, 96pg, b&w

Signed Dogma One-Sheets & DD #1/2 At The Stash!

September 29th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Ming

  • Two MAJOR COOL new additions at the Stash today. First of all, the item that ALL of you must rush to the phone and place your order for immediately…The OFFICIAL Dogma one-sheet, personally signed by Kevin Smith himself! And for only 30 bucks? Hell, you should buy two of ‘em. Ming says:
Offical Dogma One-Sheet Yes you read right, now available through the Stash, the Official ‘Dogma’ One-Sheet poster. You’ve seen it, you’ve downloaded it, now OWN it!

The ‘Dogma’ one-sheet poster measures a standard 27 x 40 inches and features the principle cast (A winged Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, Salma Hayek, Chris Rock, Alan Rickman, Linda Fiorentino, Jason Mewes and KevinSmith) against an orange sky background. The ‘Dogma’ logo is featured prominently underneath along with the cast and crew credits.

And to top that off – it comes signed by Kevin.

$30.00 + s/h ORDER HERE!

And this big news on an incredibly LIMITED item…Ya better call right away!

Cover #1/2 We’ve got 50 copies of the Wizard #96 Exclusive issue of Daredevil ready for sale at the Stash. Features include the Smith, Quesada, Palmiotti issue of Daredevil #1/2, a special Wizard protective cover, and a Certificate of Authenticity. All this for only $10.00 + s/h ORDER HERE!

Quesada’s Quickies…

May 30th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brian Wolski

Finally today, we’d like to thank Alex, alex213 and SmooSmee for the new poll topic.

Thompson of CBG Reviews DareDevil…

March 29th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by John Hilderbrand

  • Maggie Thompson of the Comics Buyers Guide gave the Daredevil collection of issues 1-3 a good review. This was in issue #1324. It’s great to see an established comics fan enjoying Kevin’s work as much as us twentysomething (and younger) fans are:
“It was big news when the team of writer Kevin Smith and artists Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti announced they’d be working together on Marvel’s Daredevil. Now the first trade paperback of the project, reprinting #1-3, is available. The title seems to be simply Daredevil (Jan 99, ISBN 0-9851-0715-0, $9.95), which is going to spaz out indexers. eventually. And Smith has certainly combined dynamite plot elements with wild possibilities. Unlike many trade paperbacks, this one doesn’t contain a complete story arc. The episodes are “…And a Child Shall Lead Them,” “The Unexamined Life,” and “Dystopia,” from which readers might suspect a religious tale. Readers would be right.

The tapestry Smith weaves is complex and thought-provoking: How should people react, in the face of a Second Coming? Could you judge the difference between God and a lying Devil? And, in terms of the fate of comic-book characters, what are the consequences of some of their past actions for Karen Page and Matt Murdock? Smith’s addressing many aspects of characters in the existing mythos of Daredevil – and it may be that none will escape unscathed. What’s important is how well the story is being told, and the team keeps the reader turning the pages.

The richness of the references even extends to elaborate backgrounds featuring the art of Gustave Dore, whose scenery…works great in the published form. This is clearly a labor of love – expressed in the midst of cynicism. But what will happen next?”

  • Thanks for stopping by the ‘ol site today…We’re happy we finally had some stuff worth reporting. There’s still a few more tidbits we’re chasing down as we speak, so look for more updates tomorrow, most likely. ‘Til then…

Offical Dates From Oni…

December 20th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Joe Nozemack

  • We received an e-mail direct from Joe Nozemack, confirming that the Clerks Holiday Special will be in stores on Wednesday December 23rd, AND Jay and Silent Bob #3 will be in stores on Wednesday, January 6th! Merry Christmas, indeed!
  • DareDevil #4 Hits Shelves…

    December 18th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by TwLght Man, Robert Getz, Mike Travis & Sean

  • DareDevil #4 hit the streets yesterday, and the fantastic reviews have been piling in. Everyone loves the book and the series as a whole. Also, many of you spotted this issue’s View Askew reference. At the end of the issue, Bullseye is reading Catcher in the Rye and there are quotes from some familiar names on the back. ” A classic” – Bryan Johnson/ “Awesome” -Walt Flanagan/”A spellbinding tale” -Scott Mosier/ “Too many words, man” -Jay. Watch our DareDevilsubpage for scans of this and more info on the issue soon (as soon as we pick it up, actually!)

    Sadly, the Clerks Christmas Special is still nowhere to be found. We’ll do our best to get all the info on when the book will indeed hit shelves (though we’re hopeful it’ll still somehow make Christmas!). Stay tuned.

  • Ad Age On Kev’s DareDevil…

    December 2nd @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Steve Cohn

  • Here’s the full text from an old Ad Age article we mentioned back in October…We finally got a data copy, so we thought you’d want to take a look and see what they had to say about Kevin’s Daredevil writing stint:
      Ad Age, Oct 19th issue, 1998 issue pg 24

      Chasing glory: Filmmaker tries hand at comics

      Kevin Smith moonlights as writer, boosts publisher’s sales to young males

      By Jeff Jensen

      Acclaimed filmmaker Kevin Smith last scored with a provocative romantic comedy set in the cavernous subculture of comic creators and fanboys. Now the director of “Chasing Amy” is writing comics himself.

      In fact, he’s being hailed as a super hero for helping to reverse the comics’ industry’s recent slide.

      Marvel Comics last month relaunched its struggling “Daredevil” with Mr. Smith as the writer. The title was selling 50,000 copies per moth last year; industry estimates have Mr. Smith’s debut moving more than 90,000 issues.

      This follows the unexpected success of “Bluntman & Chronic,” a comic written by Mr. Smith and based on two wacky and whacked out characters that have appeared in each of his three films. Published by Oni press, the comic is in tits sixth printing.

      Marvel Knights

      Mr. Smith was lured to “Daredevil” by Joe Quesada and Jimmy Palmiotti, a popular art team hired by Marvel to revamp four titles now gathered under a new imprint, Marvel Knights.

      Messrs. Quesada, Palmiotti and Smith tell a similar story, of rediscovering comics in college following a mid-to-late-1980’s creative renaissance drive by independent publishers and more sophisticated approaches to superheroes.

      “Before I became a filmmaker, I wanted to write comics but was told it was too tough a market to crack, so I went into films, which oddly enough proved more accessible,” said Mr. Smith, who owns a comic-book store in Red Bark (sic), NJ.

      Comics Correction

      Mr. Smith’s celebrity has given the business a much-needed spark. In the early ’90’s, the industry was booming, fueled by speculators looking to invest money in collectibles. Publishers old and new fed the market with products tricked out with gimmicks ranging from reflective covers to sensationalist story lines. The zenith was reached in November 1992, with D.C. Comics’ “Death of Superman.”

      But the deluge of cheapened comics’ investment value, forcing prospectors out. And lesser quality products quickly turned off new readers. Combined with increased paper costs and other factors that drove up pricing, the comics market took a nosedive.

      From a decade long high of $850 million, the industry stabilized last year at $400 million, said John Jackson Miller, managing editor of Comic Buyer’s Guide. Since 1993, he said, the number of comics stores has dropped by more than half, from 9,000 to 4,200.

      Still, the stabilization of the market and the excitement generated by Mr. Smith’s appointment are among the reasons Mr. Miller is encouraged.

      “We may be at the end of the industry’s recession,” he said.

      Hollywood Tries Comics

      It’s not unusual for Hollywood talent to try their hand at comics. In the past, though, their interest has been short lived, motivated by novelty or youthful nostalgia. But Mr. Smith is among a group of unabashed fans who can talk trivia and trash with the best fanboy, as comics followers are known.

      And it appears more of them are giving comics a long-term shot.

      Mr. Smith will write the first seven issues of “Daredevil” and has pledged to write another story line next year. In between those ventures, he will be the writer on D.C. Comics’ relaunch of Green Arrow.”

      “I hope to keep doing it,” Mr. Smith said. “My only problem is my day job. Writing comics takes a lot of time to do right, and I don’t like to rush things.”

      At D.C. Comics, the editors of the company’s cash cow Batman titles have made the unprecedented move of hiring a team of non-comics writers to execute major yearlong story line next year.

      Bob Gale, who co wrote the “Back to the Future” Films, is on that team.

      Each writer will develop a story line encompassing four tot five issues.

      Possible Backlash

      But hiring talent such as Mr. Gale doesn’t assure sales success. There is a potential for backlash, said D.C.’s Batman editor, Dennis O’Neil.

      “Traditionally, the core fans prefer one constant creative team,” Mr. O’Neil said. “But these new creators grew up reading comics, know the medium and see it as a legitimate art form. We’re in good hands.”

      Although there are fewer comics reaching fewer kids than in 1993, they do reach a high concentration of teen-age and twenty something males. And advertisers have taken notice.

      D.C. Making An Ad Space

      D.C. Comics said ad sales have increased sharply since 1996. The company will soon eliminate the letters page of it s adult-targeted Vertigo line to make room for more ad space.

      Marvel’s first issue of “Daredevil” had ads from Levi Strauss & Co., a “Got Milk?” ad from the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotions Board and ads from a host of movie studios and top toy brands.

      “You don’t see as many sea monkey ads anymore,” said Steve Bobowski, exec VP-sales and marketing at Marvel, noting Mr. Smith’s “Daredevil” “is going to make our sales job much easier. When you have a hot property, it creates a glow for our entire line.”

      Hot titles create ad sales opportunities, but not necessarily hot creators, said Paul Levitz, exec VP-publisher of D.C. Comics.

      Delivering Audience

      “Advertisers don’t usually buy because of one ingredient in a comic book but because of the delivered audience we are reaching.,” Mr Levitz said. “Now, if Tina Brown was editing the magazine maybe the masthead brings in advertisers.”

      Ad sales growth hinges on strategies that can boost readership. Time will tell if name-brand Hollywood writers will be among them.

      But industry observers note that names such as Mr. Smith’s also have brought new faces into stores.

      “A lot of my film audience doesn’t read comics,” Mr. Smith said. “The smart retailers should merchandise the hot products with other good stuff that my film audience would like. Once they’re in the door, it’s up the retailers to keep them coming back.”