From Zombos Closet

Magazines: The Walking Dead Magazine Issue 1

WalkingDeadMagazine

Zombos Says: Very Good

The Walking Dead magazine debuts today. Newsy bits on everything you can stuff a Walking Dead survivor or zombie into abound. Both the comic book series and the AMC television series are covered. Toys, games, events (like the 2012 San Diego Comic Con), you name it, it's all here, published quarterly. Here are some highlights of what I enjoyed reading the most in this first issue.

Stuart Barr's The Story So Far…covers the comic book's storylines up to the present. Don't read it if you're skittish on possible spoilers for the television series (or the comic book if you're a spotty reader), but here's your chance to come up to speed on the Walking Dead comicverse. And just when you come up for air the third season preview does tempt you with spoilers; I love spoilers, especially the who-lives-and-who-dies kind. Just keep in mind the television series and the comic series don't always jive, so expect surprises and fresh takes on characters and their travails. Looks like the Governor and Woodbury will be popping up, though, sooner than later.

Tara Bennett takes us to the West Georgia Correctional Facility set (Raleigh Studios, Atlanta) to provide us with some insight on the design, like how the prison cell lighting is toned to create just the right mix of gloom and despair, and there are a horde of interviews covering a wide range with Charlie Adlard talking about drawing the Walking Dead comics and Glen Mazzara, the show's executive producer and showrunner, giving us his daily grind on making the television series. Of course there's an interview with Danai Gurira and her new role as Michonne, the Katana-wielding zombie slayer with her two leashed, and defanged, walking buddies. Gurira talks about her prep work for the role.

A quick read but very informative is the article, Anatomy of a Story. In this first installment, A Larger World (a storyline which played across comic issues 91 through 96) is examined. Storyline insight is not only useful to writers looking at how key elements of character development drive successful plots, but it also can be fun for any Walking Dead fan who's interested in knowing why they are a fan. Sure, the zombies are cool, but it's the walking living that keep us coming back for more.

Speaking of cool, there's a shot of Gentle Giant's The Walker Horde, a scrumptious set of little plastic zombie figurines, due on toy shelves sometime in 2013. Here's my plan: I take these little terrors and pile them up around my Clone army. Yeah, baby, now that's what I'm talking about. Lightsabers, Clones, and zombies! George?

For completists, here are the variant covers:

 

Comickaze Retail Variant Cover

Comickaze Retail Variant Cover

Forbidden Planet & Ultimate Comics Retail Variant Cover

Forbidden Planet & Ultimate Comics Retail Variant Cover

Midtown Comics Retail Variant Cover 1

Midtown Comics Retail Variant Cover 1

Midtown Comics Retail Variant Cover 2

Midtown Comics Retail Variant Cover 2

Redd Skull Comics Retail Variant Cover

Redd Skull Comics Retail Variant Cover

 

Movie Pressbook:
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

Here's a nifty Halloween treat from Tony Rivers. He notes: "This one's a little tricky…I used to have the press book for ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN and photocopied several pages.  I also have the Philip Riley script book,  but he only had 11 of the 12 pages.  At one time I did take photographs of each page with a camera so I had to use the photo I took of page 10 to have the complete press book but the image is small and you can't really read what it says on page 10….so until I can find a better version, here's the "complete" 12 page ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN pressbook."

abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
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abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
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abbott and costello meet frankenstein pressbook
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Movie Pressbook: The Face of Fu Manchu (1965)

A coloring contest for The Face of Fu Manchu? Sure, the cover of this pressbook is fantastic, but I'm not sure using a coloring contest (see next to last page) is a suitable promotional gimmick. I think Tsai Chin as his daughter stole the show. This series left quite an impression on me when they originally appeared in the theaters. I read the Sax Rohmer books after seeing Christopher Lee's sinister performance. 

face of fu manchu pressbook
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face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
face of fu manchu pressbook
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Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954) Pressbook

The original theater 3D release of Creature from the Black Lagoon used the gray polarizing lenses, not the red and blue ones. This is one of the few 3D movies that looks good in 3D, especially the underwater photography. Still a treat to see today, the Creature will always be with us.

Comic reader version: Download Creature from the Black Lagoon Pressbook

See more pressbooks From Zombos’ Closet.

Creature from the Black Lagoon Pressbook 01