Saturday, March 19, 2011

Brandon Routh goes from Superman to supernatural sleuth in DYLAN DOG: DEAD OF NIGHT

Brandon Routh is abandoning the cape and packing silver bullets in the new horror/comedy DYLAN DOG: DEAD OF NIGHT, scheduled for theaters on April 29, 2011.

While DYLAN DOG: DEAD OF NIGHT is based on a popular comic book, which has sold over 60 million copies worldwide, this is a different kind of comic-book hero.

Dylan Dog is a private investigator specializing in affairs of the undead.  His PI business card reads "No Pulse?  No Problem." Armed with an edgy wit and carrying an arsenal of silver and wood-tipped bullets, Dylan must track down a dangerous artifact before a war ensues between his werewolf, vampire and zombie clients living undercover in the monster-infested backstreets of New Orleans.

Routh stars as Dylan Dog. The cast also includes Sam Huntington, Anita Briem, Peter Stormare and Taye Diggs. The film is directed by Kevin Munroe and written by Thomas Dean Donnelly and Joshua Oppenheimer.

For more info, check out:

The official website:  http://www.dylandogdeadofnight.com
The YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/dylandogdeadofnight

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Honey West #3 with Ronn Sutton art hits comic shops March 9

Honey West vs. evil robot in #3 - Art by Ronn Sutton
Ready for some super-cool retro good-girl action?

On March 9, 2011, Moonstone Books releases Honey West #3, the first part of the trilogy story "Murder On Mars" by writer Elaine Lee and artist Ronn Sutton.
 
As reported earlier this year, this three-issue story arc features fictional detective Honey West joining the cast of a mid-1960s low-budget science fiction B movie (Amazons of Mars) to investigate the murder of the film's starlet, Zu Zu Varga. Honey must find out if the culprit is a scheming ingenue, a down-on-his-luck director, a jealous agent or an aging teen heartthrob.
 
This storyline runs through Honey West issues #3, 4 and 5, after which artist Ronn Sutton will be penciling and inking some other Honey West projects in 2011.
 
"I'm currently wrapping up the artwork on my third issue," comments Sutton. "I've spent a lot of time drawing these issues, so to speed things up a little I've brought in a model with a belly dancing and burlesque background to help me create all the major Honey West poses in issue #5."
 
The character Honey West was created in the late 1950s by Gloria and Forest Fickling for a series of detective novels written until 1971. In 1965, Anne Francis starred in a Honey West TV series, after the character first made a brief appearance on the Burke's Law TV show. 
 
Honey must find the murderer!
 
"I'm having a lot of fun working on these issues," Sutton says. "In the original novels, Honey West was a much sexier character than she was portrayed on television. So I'm trying to re-instate that."
 
Ronn Sutton captures 1960s style
"The story takes place in 1965 and I've worked hard to visually recreate that era: the hairstyles, clothes, furniture, etc.," the artist says. "The mid-60s was also probably the last hurrah for that very girly-girl sex kitten image. That's what I'm trying to bring to my version of Honey. She's very alluring, well-built and she's always on the verge of spilling out of her clothes."
 
Sutton knows a fair bit about drawing sexy women after having drawn issues of Claypool Comics' Elvira, Mistress of the Dark for nine years. Prior to that he had worked on a number of other female protagonists such as Draculina, the vampress Luxura, a Vampira movie comic, and She-Dragon (for the Savage Dragon animated TV series).
 
"I'm attempting to portray a very specific look, something that was fleeting and now is long gone," he says. "But you see a certain sexiness in the way women dressed then, the way they walked, a particular sort of sexy sophistication that disappeared when go-go, hippie and unisex styles invaded."
 
Honey West is published by Moonstone Books. Each issue is 32 color pages for $3.99. The comic ships with three variant covers including one photo cover of Honey West actress Anne Francis, who passed away on January 2, 2011. Script by Elaine Lee, pencil and ink art by Ronn Sutton, colors by Ken Wolak.