Here's a great review of our 1st comic that Samax hipped me to. It's a pretty recent post, and I'm pleasantly surprised to see people are still finding and enjoying our books.
People have approached us many times asking when more Champion of Children will come out. August. How's that for an answer?
Ghostwerks comics will soon be dropping Champion of Children vol. #1. This book will include previously published stories as well as an all new story by Corance Davis and Rasheed Hines.
Stay tuned for previews and other news about this and other comics coming in the future.
And remember; coming in August from Ghostwerks comics:
Friday, April 20, 2012
Sunday, March 25, 2012
God Body #1 on sale, now!
That's right! You heard it! God Body #1 is on sale now at Indy Planet!
Click here to order.
And, coming in August from Ghostwerks comics:
Click here to order.
And, coming in August from Ghostwerks comics:
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Ghostwerks WILL be at STAPLE this weekend!!!
Ghostwerks will be going hard in the paint this Saturday and Sunday in Austin. Check it out:
And if you like that, like this: http://www.facebook.com/stapleaustin
We'll be at table #83 in the annex. Next time ya see me, holla like ya know me!
And if you like that, like this: http://www.facebook.com/stapleaustin
We'll be at table #83 in the annex. Next time ya see me, holla like ya know me!
Friday, February 10, 2012
God Body #1, soon to come!
Yes, a print version of God Body, which will include both existing stories, is on it's way in a few days. Keep checking back for more news!
Saturday, September 24, 2011
The All New, All Different: Star Trek
So, with my man J.J. finally committing to directing the next Star Trek, I thought I'd celebrate by dropping a review of his first effort that I wrote at the time:
art by Brock Rizy |
So
we can all agree that Star Trek was butter (well, not all of us, but
I'll get to that), so I won't waste time trying to convince you to
like it. Instead, I'll try to lend some perspective to the franchise
in light of what we have at this point. Just so we're on the same
page, let's go over what J.J. Abrams did right.
One
of the things that strikes me most now, months later, is how focused
the movie is. It knows what it wants to do and gets right to it.
Kirk's an out of control cowboy, Spock's trying to find himself,
Bones is a spaz (in a good way), and never are we in doubt about
these guys' personalities. The characters are established quickly, as
is the plot. The story is speeding towards it's own resolution almost
from the prologue. I mean, the prologue itself is a complete story:
We establish the villain's goals; the destiny of our star; and the
heroic nature of Starfleet itself. After that the Abrams seems to be
using the ABC method of story telling. Fate seems eminent and,
clocking in at a lean 127 minutes, little time is wasted in
fulfilling it. Kirk's destined to be captain of the Enterprise, Spock
& Kirk are destined to be friends, Sulu's destined to have madd
skillz with a sword: By the time this movie is over, all is as it
should be.
Of
course, the vehicle of all this destiny is the U.S.S. Enterprise.
She's a prime example of what pushes this movie to the next level for
me; perhaps rivaling Star Wars if the merchandise is leveraged right.
I speak, of course, about Stark Trek's mech design. We can start with
the Enterprise herself. Have you seen her? She's built like a
freakin' muscle car! The redesign on the warp engines alone is
revolutionary. The bridge design is pretty much like the classic
bridge, but streamlined so that it still feels futuristic, and
doesn't fall into that future-retro trap. The Narada is a monster of
a ship, which also works, visually, as a mining vessel. Even the
Kelvin with it's single warp engine was pretty cool looking.
Everything down to the phasers and that foldaway sword Sulu had, the
design is brilliant.
Another
positive facet of J.J. Abrams' Star Trek is the strong
characterizations. This has been one of Abrams' strengths through his
career. I would suggest this was accomplished as much by casting as
by writing. Zachary Quinto (Heroes, as if you didn't know) was
probably the least controversial casting decision, and I must admit,
he didn't disappoint. Zoe Saldana(Avatar) as Uhura was another easy
one, though she didn't have much to do (then, Uhura's never had much
to do). Karl Urban was the most pleasant casting surprise of the
movie. His Bone's was genius. He took what at first glance might have
been considered an elaborate McCoy impression and brought us a
brilliant, manic doctor; paranoid, but with good reason. Now, Urban's
a guy who's delivered a healthy dose of mediocrity in the past. I can
only attribute this energetic performance to handling by J.J. Abrams.
Of course, the one everyone was worried about was Chris Pine's Kirk.
Would it be an imitation; or a complete departure? In the end, they
exorcised Shatner from the role, while keeping the essence of Kirk
himself; the spirit of adventure, the cowboy recklessness, the
gravitation to responsibility. This role is probably the one aspect
that creates a wormhole from Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek to J.J.
Abrams' Star Trek.
And
so, I say that to say this: The movie's great. But there's more to it
than that. I think Star Trek made a bit of cinema history. It's an
in-continuity reboot of a franchise. How many of those have we had in
the movie industry? Comics has them constantly, to it's detriment,
but this is the first I've heard of a movie franchise rebooting while
retaining it's continuity. I would suggest that this is due to Abrams
having a comic book state of mind. And when I say “Abrams”, I'm
really referring to his entire writing team. They've shown this state
of mind in the past on Alias and Lost (I wouldn't know about
Felicity, maybe someone out there can enlighten me) and I think it
works in their favor.
And
perhaps it's this state of mind that leads to some of the flaws this
film has. Yes, Star Trek had flaws, and they're worth mentioning
because they speak to what the essence of the franchise was and what
it will be going forward. One of the most noticeable aspects of
Abrams' Star Trek is that, as a sci-fi epic, it's more fi than sci.
Now, that can be taken a-lot of ways, so here's what I mean by that.
Star Trek, since it's inception, has been about exploration and
diplomacy in space. J.J. Abrams' Star Trek has neither. No scientific
discovery; no sociological anthropology; no nothin'! Even the bad
guy, while very three-dimensional and who's story was capable of that
social anthropology I mentioned, wasn't really gotten into because,
in the end, Nero and his beef weren't the point. The point was that
Kirk and Spock are great friends and great adventurers. Now, this was
simply Abrams playing to his own strengths: that's what he's supposed
to do, it's quality control. But, having said that, is this what we
can expect from a J.J. Abrams Star Trek? And let's not forget the
Romulan question. Trekkies have been complaining about the
miss-characterization of the Romulans for years now, and while,
granted, Nero isn't the modal Romulus native one would come across in
a Trek story, this representation did nothing to allay such
grumblings. And that's important. 'Cause here's the stakes:
Star
Trek is a decades old, world famous sci-fi franchise; 2nd,
some would say, only to Star Wars. This latest movie has set itself
up not just as a narrative reboot, but a cultural reboot. It is no
longer Gene Roddenberry's Star Trek; it's J.J. Abrams' Star Trek: And
Abrams does, or seeks to do, what Bryan Singer couldn't do with
Superman; make it relevant to today's audience. But now that it's
relevant again, can it rest on just the adventurism and cool
characters? Will the audience require more mature themes in the
future? After all, this film brims with energy, but it's a sophomoric
energy, a trait Star Trek shares with MI:3, lest we forget. Can that
be maintained as a sufficient status-quo through future movies as not
only the cast, but the audience ages?
And
what of television? Is this strictly a movie franchise now, or can we
expect another series. And what would it possibly be about? Certainly
not Kirk and Spock; that's the movie's territory. Perhaps this will
force the producers to give us a perspective that goes beyond a
captain and his crew on a Starfleet vessel. As much as I liked
Abrams' Star Trek, it does leave questions about the franchise's
future. Great things are possible, but it requires someone with fresh
ideas and a commitment to depth as an integral quality of the Star
Trek universe. Can J.J. the take this thing beyond the first film of
a franchise reboot? We shall see.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
God Body: Return of the Protege-full version
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Mature Themes: The Ecstatic by Mos Def
When
I first read about the Hitchens incident, the article made it sound
as if Christopher Hitchens humiliated Mos Def and made him look like
an idiot. It then started making excuses for Mos, saying he was
playing devil's advocate in defending the Taliban, etc. Of course,
when I finally saw the exchange, I had a different perspective. In my
view, Mos Def asked a simple question regarding the deeper motives of
the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and those who support them. Hitchens reacted
with dismissive sarcasm, and none of the panel had the courage to
delve into the issue any deeper than the “they're evil guys who
want to take over the world” scenario. Weather you agree with Mos'
point of view or not, this incident was a good example of him as
someone with a unique perspective. He asks questions no one else is
asking; and he's making music no one else is making.
![]() |
cover to The Ecstatic by Mos Def |
One
thing that jumps out at me on The Ecstatic, is Mos' attitude toward
song structure. People like Souls of Mischief, Doom, along with Mos
Def are favorites of mine partially because of their willingness to
either play with, or abandon the
verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/breakdown structure of the average
pop song. One dalliance in this area is what I call the “one
verser” or the “perfect little song”. It's a technique I'd be
wiling to bet he got from Doom. The best example of this might be
Revelations: Using the “one verser” method, the rhymer will set
the beat moving, and spit one long verse; perhaps 32 to 48 bars.
However, the verse will have physical breaks or changes in them,
cadence or rhyme pattern which, taken as a whole, connote a chorus
and verse, but wouldn't be apparent to the listener until the end of
the song. Mos also perfects on this album a technique he's used with
varying results on the last 2 albums. I call it the “reprise verse”
technique. This is where the rapper spits a short verse, maybe 8 bars
or so, and then spits it again, but either with different subject
matter or different words for the same rhyme scheme. For a great
example of this, go to track #3, Auditorium feat. Slick Rick, or even
better, track #12, Worker's Comp. This may seem like a simple trick,
but Mos Def uses this technique to lend great poignancy to very
simple rhymes.
Of
course, Mos Def's singularity doesn't end at the Rhymes. I don't know
if Mos actually made the beats on this album, but he's credited with
producing the whole thing, so I assume that means he at least chose
and mixed the beats that are used. Whatever the case, there are beats
on this album that can literally be heard no where else in hip-hop. I
don't know what he's been listening to in order to find the
instrumentation and samples used on The Ecstatic, but I will say that
a-lot of it reflects his fascination with Islam. Auditorium is
clearly sampled from some sort of middle-eastern pop music, and The
Embassy on track #8 is a great example of him rapping over an
old-school, stripped down Arabic beat.
Before
I finish, can I just say: It's great to have an MC with a subject
and a predicate. One of the songs that made me a hip-hop head when I
was young was My Philosophy by KRS-1. It showed me that there could
be an entire class of MC out there whose claim to fame was
intelligence. Nowadays, even amongst the Underground, one might have
to search long and hard for rappers who use madd skillz to provoke
intellectual curiosity. Thanks to Mos Def, we have an MC who
understands black perspectives and issues, and takes them seriously;
has mature and thoughtful ideas in his lyrics; and makes songs on a
wide range of subjects. I don't think he made one drug sales
reference the entire album, and he even stays away from the trap of
harping on “the struggle” over and over again which a-lot of so
called positive rappers fall into. The Ecstatic is an all positive
album of unlimited subject range.
So,
since Mos Def didn't get an NAACP image award, I'll present him with
the Corance/GhettoManga Blackest Man In America award. Because he
doesn't shoot people or sell drugs in his rhymes; he doesn't run
around with his shirt off; he doesn't disrespect women. In fact, he
brings new respect to the black community by saying things no one
else is saying through music no one else is making. Brilliant!
-Corance
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