NorthstarThe Week in Gay Geek: Ultimate X-Fates, big screen DC heroes and more!
ULTIMATE X-MEN DISCUSSION ALERT: SAVE US MOVIE SIGN: "Let me start off with saying that within just reading the first few pages, I knew Berlanti, Guggenheim and Green had gotten the character right." Green Lantern Hal Jordan and director Greg Berlanti On the other hand, this part is a tiny bit worrysome "The script, if greenlit, is a sure-fire hit for fan boys, but in scale it's big, VERY big, and we are hearing rumors that it may be too big for the director currently attached, Greg Berlanti." I'll be disappointed if Berlanti is deemed as not having the experience for Green Lantern. After all, Bryan Singer and Christopher Nolan weren't blockbuster movie directors when they brought X-Men and Batman Begins to the multiplexes. And then comes the more surprising rumor of gay icon Cher as a possible Catwoman for the next Batman film. What makes the rumor rather interesting for me is the comment that Cher's Catwoman would be "like a vamp in her twilight years." Which strikes me as an interesting take on the iconic villain. I'd love to see a Selina Kyle who has benefited from years of villainy. Cher and Catwoman On the less-gay front there's talk of the Superman film franchise getting a reboot, Batman Begins-style. In the various reports I've read, I've seen Superman Returns director Bryan Singer compared to Ang Lee (who directed the first unsuccessful Hulk film), which makes it sound unlikely he'll be participating in the next Superman movie. Sigh, that's a lot of gays-getting-booted-from-superhero-movie rumors for one week, isn't it? TAKEI ALERT! George Takei in Red Alert 3 Actually, the Red Alert 3 cast has more than a bit of a gay sensibility. In addition to Takei, the cast includes gay faves like Tim Curry (whose history as a video game voice goes back as far as cult classic Gabriel Knight), Oz bad guy JK Simmons as well as Gemma Atkinson of Hollyoaks and the very gay Hollyoaks spin-off In the City. I'd be rather excited if most RTS strategy games — including the original Command & Conquor — didn't quickly end in frustration for me. After the break: When Fallout 3 is planning on destroying your social life, Hex' Thelma meets Elizabeth Bennett and the latest fates for Ultimate Colossus and Northstar. Submitted by on Thu, 2008-08-28 14:17. The Week in Gay Geek: "Star Trek Online" has gay potential, "Hard Heroes" and more!
THE FINAL MMO FRONTIER:
Star Trek Online It'll be interesting to see if Star Trek Online can capture the appeal of the classic sci-fi franchise. The game is being developed by Cryptic Studios, who gave us City of Heroes (and is also working on the Champions MMO), which has gamers hopeful. On the other hand, Star Trek Online is heading into new(ish) territory when it comes to being the Captain of your own ship; that aspect of Pirates of the Burning Sea didn't work for me and I can't think of an MMO that's become a hit with ship-based gameplay. It'll be interesting to see setting the MMO decades after The Next Generation will help or hurt the immersive feeling of the game. Still, undoubtedly there will be missions in the Mirror Universe (which was even able to give us a good Enterprise episode) which should be pretty cool. Anyone excited about Star Trek Online? What are you hoping for in a Trek MMO?
THE REVOLUTION WILL BE POCKET-SIZED?
"Given the ease with which programming and distribution – via the Apps Store – has been made by Apple, one would imagine it is only a matter of time before some smart gay programmers are out there releasing gay themed RPG's, utilities and other software on the device. Apple are only charging a bare minimum set up cost for the ADK ($100 at time of writing) and they take care of all distribution and credit card transactions (though they take a 30% cut – which is more than fair) linked to the software developed (or you can put it up as a free application)."
Could gay-inclusive games like The Hook Up find their way on the iPhone?
"Technically the iPhone also has additional features your other gaming handhelds lack. Features like the GPS and camera could add additional functionality to games. These aside though the accessibility of the iPhone for developers is where it's way ahead of the pack and with this accessibility should – hopefully – come an array of games which throw old conventions out the window."
Basically, the gay gaming potential of the iPhone lies in open-source development, low barriers to distribution and the creative culture that Apples encourages among its customers. The website for The N (home to queer-inclusive series like Degrassi and South of Nowhere) has a lesbian-inclusive dating sim, The Hook Up, which, from what I've seen, is very popular and is about the right size for a mobile platform. Could the iPhone open the potential for these kinds of games to finally become available? AFTER THE BREAK: Gratuitous beefcake, do you really need more? Submitted by on Thu, 2008-08-21 08:03. Two-Bite Interview: "Ultimate X-Men" writer Aron E. Coleite
Aron E. Coleite, the new writer on Ultimate X-Men, has put the title's two gay characters front and center in his first story arc, though the spotlight certainly has come at a cost. Since the story has gotten gay comic fans talking, I was happy to get to talk to Aron about the story so far, his perspective on Ultimate Colossus and Northstar as well as Perry Moore's list of dead LGBT superheros, "Who cares about the death of a gay superhero, anyway?"
AfterElton.com: Since this is your introductory arc on UXM, I’m curious about what you’re trying to accomplish with this story – what tone are you trying to establish for your run? It was really important for me to do a story that I felt was important to me. I didn’t want to do anything that was middle-of-the-road or safe. Jeph Loeb has this really good advice about writing… anything, let alone comic books. When you write it, you want to feel like ‘Okay, am I gonna cry when I see this?’, ‘Am I going to really feel a connection with that?’ These are characters I felt a real connection to and as long as I was feeling emotional about it and as long as I felt like that it was an emotionally based story, I felt like it was fine. Warning, things get SPOILER-riffic after the break. Submitted by on Wed, 2008-07-30 07:58. "Ultimate X-Men": Troubling turns for gay superheroes Colossus and Northstar
As you might recall, one of the major difference between Marvel's Ultimate X-Men and the regular X-Men titles is that Colossus is gay and currently dating the Ultimate version of the iconic Northstar. Colossus and Northstar play a large role in the current storyline on the title, the first by Heroes writer Aron E. Coleite ... though the latest cliffhanger is certainly raising a few eyebrows. Do gay comics fans have reason to be up in arms over the next development? A spoiler-filled look at the story so far, after the break... Submitted by on Tue, 2008-07-01 10:14. Perry Moore asks, "Who cares about the death of a gay superhero anyway?"
In 1999, the Women in Refrigerators list (also known as "WiR") spurred discussion in superhero comic fandom about the treatment of female characters. Assembled by a group of fans that included Gail Simone — who'd later go on to write superhero comics herself — the list drew reactions from superhero writers and artists and had a lasting effect on readers. The term "Women in Refrigerators" has taken meaning outside of comics as well, like when Television without Pity editors used the term to criticize one season of CSI.
Moore notes, "Yes, bad things do happen to all people, gay people included. But are there positive representations of gay characters to counterbalance these negative ones? Who cares about the death of a gay superhero anyway?" Moore also takes a "by the numbers" approach to gay characters in superhero comics. Here are a few highlights:
Do you feel accepted by the major publishers as a part of the superhero audience? Do you watch for z-list characters who are gay or find hints at minor characters' orientation? When you see a positive development, do you worry that it will be undone? Submitted by on Wed, 2007-09-12 13:41. Mark Millar: Comic book writers don't kill off gay superheroes, supervillains do
Comic writer Mark Millar isn't thrilled to learn that his story was the breaking point that inspired Perry Moore to tell a positive story of a gay superhero. A 2005 story by Millar was brought up in Sunday's New York Times profile of Moore: But things work out relatively well for him, which makes sense given Mr. Moore’s distaste for how some gay comic-book characters have been treated. His hackles still rise at the death of Northstar, a mutant hero who made headlines in 1992 when he uttered the words “I am gay” in the pages of a Marvel comic.
In 2005 Northstar was killed by a brainwashed Wolverine, which enraged Mr. Moore. He thought the murder of Marvel’s biggest gay hero by one of its most popular characters (in comics, films and merchandising) sent the wrong message. “I thought I was going to have to stop buying comics,” he said, but instead, “I waged my own little jihad.” He visited a comic store armed with Post-it notes, which he affixed to copies of the “Wolverine” series (first on the covers, then, more slyly, on interior pages). They asked questions like “Can there be a gay superhero?” “Homophobic?” and “Ask yourself: equal rights?” Death is rarely final in comics, so it’s no surprise that Northstar came back to life. “They couldn’t bother to mention he was gay,” Mr. Moore said of Northstar’s most recent appearance in “X-Men.” Taking a cue from Gail Simone, a comic-book writer who first gained notice as a fan with her Web site, “Women in Refrigerators”, detailing the mistreatment of female heroes, Mr. Moore created his own tally. “Who Cares About the Death of a Gay Superhero?,” which he has delivered as a speech, includes more than 60 gay and lesbian comic book characters who have been ignored, maimed or murdered. “Yes, bad things do happen to all people,” he wrote in it. “But are there positive representations of gay characters to counterbalance these negative ones?” Not nearly enough, Mr. Moore said, and that’s one reason he wrote “Hero,” for which he already has ideas for future installments. Millar wasn't thrilled to see a story he wrote mentioned as a low point in superhero comics' treatment of gay characters, and he reacted on his website: Oh, tell him to f**k off. He didn't die because he was gay. He died because he'd been brainwashed by The Hand. Submitted by on Tue, 2007-09-04 15:25. |
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I'm definitely curious to what trends others see in the list Moore has assembled. For our superhero comic readers, I'm also curious to hear your overall perspective on what it's like to be a gay comics fan and how you react to (positive and negative) developments with gay characters. 

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