Multiplex - a comic strip about life at the movies
DELETED SCENES


Franklin Explains EVE Online

In this Kickstarter backer comic for Chase Davis, Jason and Becky have decided to let Franklin teach them how to play EVE Online, a science fiction MMO that I was addicted to for the better part of two months about a year ago. It’s such an amazingly deep game that it’s all but impossible to sum up in only one page, so I had to cut out massive swaths of dialog until you get what you see here. But people familiar with the game will understand what they’re talking about. And hopefully some of the rest of you will, too.

This is probably the last of the Kickstarter backer comics I’ll be sharing here. The others have requested their strip not be posted online. But there will be other hand-drawn Multiplex comics coming… sooner or later. This is what Deleted Scenes is all about.

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Review: The Proposition

The Proposition

Directed by John Hillcoat.
Written by Nick Cave.
Starring Guy Pearce, Ray Winstone, Danny Huston, John Hurt, David Wenham, and Emily Watson.

The Proposition is a 2005 Australian Western centering a British lawman in a small Australian town Captain Stanley (Ray Winstone), and deal he makes with… not the devil, but a devil — namely Charlie Burns (Guy Pearce). Charlie is presented with an ultimatum: to save his younger brother Mikey from hanging, he must kill his older brother Arthur (Danny Huston), the leader of a small gang of heinous, psychopathic criminals.

As Charlie sets out to find his brother, he runs afoul of a racist bounty hunter (John Hurt, in an amazing glorified cameo), Captain Stanley attempts to protect his wife (Emily Watson) from the horrors of his job and their newly adopted home, a slimy piece-of-crap politician (David Wenham, a.k.a. Faramir) throws a cog in Stanley’s plan, and a bunch of messed up shit happens.

It’s that B story between Stanley and his wife that prevents the film from being too unrelentingly bleak, like director John Hillcoat’s follow-up, the Cormac McCarthy adaptation, The Road. The tender exchanges, sublimely etched by the two actors, almost erase the shocks in nearly every other scene. More than anything else, they give the film its humanity, and yet they also give you perspective from which to register the more shocking moments that much more intensely.

I don’t say this too often, and I don’t say this lightly, but The Proposition is a perfect film. From its first disorienting seconds to its gut-wrenching last, the film does everything it needs to, exactly when it needs to, exactly how it needs to. The violence is sickening, as it should be, to justify exactly why Arthur Burns needs to die. The impeccably shot Australian landscape is, at turns, gorgeous and oppressive, as it should be. The dialogue is exquisitely chosen. And the pace, though it may fool you in a few scenes, never lets up for a moment. The screenplay by Nick Cave (yes, that Nick Cave) is just that good.

This is the Western with all the hokum and fantasy sucked out, folks. It’s ugly, it’s difficult, and it’s an absolute masterpiece.

The Proposition is available from the Criterion Collection on DVD, Blu-Ray, Amazon Video On Demand, and Netflix (via disc and streaming).



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Skeleton in the Closet

Here’s another one of the Kickstarter backer comics, this one for Phat Do (yes, that’s his real name), who gave a rather detailed outline of how he wanted to strip to go, rather than a vague idea.

Not my best inking job, I’m afraid. I attempted to pencil it more loosely than perhaps I should have (and another example of why I prefer to letter digitally — or at least do the balloons digitally), but there’s bits I like in it.

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Changes/additions to the Multiplex pre-order drive…

I’ve decided to make some changes to the Multiplex pre-order drive. You can read the new deal on the Multiplex sales page, but the gist of it is this: instead of 250 pre-orders, the goal is $5000 (a whopping $12.50 higher in dollar terms, based on the regular edition of the book). However, all purchases from the Multiplex store count towards the goal now — so we’re significantly closer to the goal than we were before. I think this is a fair change for everyone.

Like before: if (and only if) we reach the $5000 goal by September 18th, anyone who has pre-ordered a book will get a free bookmark, including Kickstarter backers and anyone who has pre-ordered the book to date.

But additionally: if we reach the $5000 goal, anyone who has pre-ordered the book will be entered to win one of TEN Multiplex/Memento mini-posters and one of TEN T-shirts of their choice (dependent upon availability in your size, I’m afraid) — again, including Kickstarter backers and anyone who has pre-ordered the book to date.

NOTE: Only people who have pre-ordered tbe books will receive bookmarks and be eligible to win the free posters and shirts — including $30 and up Kickstarter backers. Donations, while appreciated, do not count towards the goal. I’m not holding my hat out — at least, not exactly. I want to sell you something.

Questions? Comments?


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