Saturday Night Showcase> Fall Of Grayskull Remastered

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In a recent article complaining about why both live-action He-Man movies needed to be set on Eternia, with the upcoming one having to shove it into He-Man’s origin story, I mentioned that I’ve seen fanfilms, something with less budget than a major motion picture and thus could less afford to create the fantasy world of Eternia, set exclusively on the proper planet. I apologize for that run-on sentence and for something else. Someone in the comments (I’m always surprised when someone actually comments) asked if I could recommend one of those fanfilms.

Then my mind drew a blank.

The problem is I haven’t seen a He-Man fanfilm in years. Like, I don’t even think I had this website. So I went looking and found surprisingly few. One was an AI produced film I still need to look at (I think the animation is AI but not the story), but I know that wasn’t it. Was I thinking of an old webcomic I know is no longer online? Was I lying to myself, and thus lying to my readers? If so I again apologize. I’ve seen a bunch of fanfilms that were better than the current output and great fancomics over the years and I’m wondering if I’m mixing memories here. Now I feel like a sham.

It’s actually amazing how FEW fan productions YouTube’s search brought up. One I kind of recognize, produced in 2015, which would be during the time of this site. In fact it already WAS a Saturday Night Showcase. You can check it out here. However, there is updated information and I don’t have time to watch the almost feature length AI movie, so here’s the new version plus new bonuses. The old post has its own extras…and slightly less gore to it. A character melts and it’s kind of graphic for BW’s usual fare but still a good story. Tonight’s remaster has extras not available back then, so there’s still something here to see no matter which version you choose.

If you haven’t seen the original, here’s the premise: The Sorceress dead. Skeletor has taken Grayskull and captured He-Man. Teela is forced to work with Shadow Weaver to free Grayskull…and we know who Shadow Weaver works for. The remaster has a few updated effects, including the face melting part I mentioned, and there’s a good reason Daniel Benedict remastered it (no pun intended), because we also have a sequel announcement and a music video this round. Just remember this is NOT one for the kids, which bugs me now as this is becoming more the exception than the rule, but it’s still worth checking out. Enjoy.

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BW’s Saturday Article Link> The Doctor’s Granddaughter’s Own Backstory

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I love that scene. Shame her New Who appearance was totally wasted like it was, but what do I expect from Waltless Disney and the current BBC these days? This article link isn’t about that, though. Back when even the writers didn’t know where the Doctor and Susan came from, William Hartnell (the REAL First Doctor) and Carole Ann Ford came up with their own backstory for where our two time-travellers came from. Since Radio Times has it behind the wall, here’s a posting on it from the “Winter Is Coming blog” from Fansided.

CBS Transformers> The Second Draft part 4: Return Of The Fleshlings

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We finished the Autobots last time and now it’s the humans’ turn. The human allies to the Autobots don’t get their own “file”, so there’s no intro for them like there are the Autobots and Decepticons. The Autobots’ allies are lumped in as Autobot personnel and we’ll see the same for the Decepticons’ lone ally. For those of you just joining us this is a look at the second attempt to bring the Transformers cartoon to CBS, this time accepting the syndicated miniseries as history but causing a five-year time jump where the Decepticons rule Earth and the Autobots are trying to free the planet.

With this new draft now more inline with “More Than Meets The Eye”, set five years after the miniseries, I wonder if we’ll find out what happened to the Witwickys or if they even planned to acknowledge Spike and Sparkplug, given what they’ve become to the franchise. Chip and the others weren’t introduced until season one proper of the show we got, but it seems like they’re still trying to replace the miniseries as best they can.

The human cast would be added to, giving us two typical characters: the little brother and the pet, in this case a dog, still replacing the established characters. It’s odd that in the world where the Decepticons take over and institute a “big brother” idea with them using the disguises to spy on humans and find the Autobots they would have more allies. Still, that’s what we’re going with as we get to the last set of Autobot personnel files.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Target Comics #1

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But he got his gun at Walmart. Back when you could do that.

Target Comics #1

Novelty Press (February, 1940)

I don’t expect to be “picking up” this comic again. Looking over the Comic Book Plus summary for it there were only a couple of titles that remotely interested me, plus one commenter claimed “This title had many legendary talents involved from the very beginning of the American comic book scene.”, so it’s worth a look for the low, low price of a bit of my time. It just doesn’t look like something I’d read regularly otherwise. So let’s see if it changes my mind.

[Read along with me here]

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BW’s Daily Video> Forgotten Cartoons Of The 1970s

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The Many Intros Of Star Trek> Space Hogwarts

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See that comic cover up there? Go read that instead. It’s better than anything I’ve heard about Kurtzman’s namesake, even from the official marketing material.

Count me among those who didn’t even watch the free first episode. Nothing about Kurtzman’s alleged Starfleet Academy looks like Star Trek, I don’t care what Robert Picardo says. Alex Kurtzman himself said it’s less about continuing Star Trek and more about using the Brand to push his message, thus wrecking the brand with terrible stories, unlikeable and often stupid looking characters, and getting whatever facts wrong they can to the time period, the tech, the tone, and the heart of what Gene Roddenberry created. However, we aren’t here to talk about the show.

In previous installments of the Many Intros series we looked at Star Trek’s intros. For part one we did the original series, the 24th century spinoffs, and because it just came out at the time, the first Kurzman show, Discovery. In part two we looked at more Kurzman intros. There was a huge difference in how they went about things as only the parody Lower Decks and the kids show Prodigy managed to create what made previous intros work. Even Enterprise tried to make space travel look amazing, though thankfully the animated shows went to The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager for inspiration. Kurtzman is more into symbolism and flashy effects…and Starfleet Academy In Name Only continues that trend.

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“Yesterday’s” Comic> Fathom: Kiani V2 #0

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“Homo Aqua? What did you call me?”

Fathom: Kiani vol 2 #0

Aspen Comics (October, 2012)

I think I read this in the wrong order. I’m going by the dating at Drive Thru Comics, saying that this was updated on August 4, 2014 but first posted August 10, 2014. I don’t think I’m using the right info. I’ll have to remember to look into it before the next Fathom review.

“FATHOM” CREATOR: Michael Turner

WRITER: Vince Hernandez

ARTIST: Oliver Nome

COLORIST: John Starr

LETTERER: John Reed

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