Showing posts with label J. Michael Straczynski. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J. Michael Straczynski. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Captain America #1 Spotlight

 


Writer: J. Michael Straczynski

Artist: Jesús Saiz

Colorist: Matt Hollingsworth

Letterer: Joe Caramagna

Publisher: Marvel

Price: $5.99

Release Date: September 20, 2023

 

Captain America may have saved the world from a Robot Apocalypse, but that doesn’t mean he can keep his apartment. So when the owners decide to evict tenants, raze the aging building, and sell the land, Steve Rogers assumes a new title: landlord! Now, between missions with his fellow supes, he's doing building maintenance and looking out for the less fortunate. 

 

 


 

 

Along with this heartwarming tale about caring for your neighbors, Captain America #1 looks back to Steve’s past. The story reflects on the young man in the 1930s after his mother died and the landlord evicted him from his home. We see the determined, hardworking young man before he gains his superpowers.

 


 

 

Captain America #1 boasts cinematic action scenes and art that often evokes beautiful paintings. Word size doesn't strain the eyes, and Straczynski never loses you switching between present and past. Still, this felt more like the introduction to a miniseries than an ongoing one. Nor did I feel like his origins needed further exploration. While beautifully told, Captain America #1 leaves me wishing the creator of Babylon 5 had focused more on the present than dwelling on the past.

 


 

Still, I enjoyed the issue, and plan to check out Straczynski's Captain America #2. Keep your eyes peeled for Shadows, Steve!




 

For a sneak peek at interior art and a more seasoned reviewer's thoughts, see Dispatch DCU's review at Comic Book Dispatch.

 

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Michael Garibaldi's Motorcycle


The first season episode "Eyes," written by Larry DiTillio, transports us to Babylon 5 in the year 2258. Aboard this space station, where people of all species and planets can learn to like and respect different beliefs and ways of life than their own, disagreements often give way to violence. An air of tension and turmoil remains a constant inhabitant, given the need for everyone to get along with people who look different, who act different, who hold different values, and who belong to a nation or culture that may have wronged another people or planet in the past. This uneasy peace often gives way to out-and-out rioting, whenever news of some outrage--a politician's unfortunate statement, a military incursion, whatever--reaches the space station. Still, the space station remains a melting pot of culture and ideas, and many see this process--this constant proximity and interaction--as essential to promoting universal peace.


Security Chief Michael Garibaldi,
played by actor Jerry Doyle

No one wants peaceful coexistence more than Michael Garibaldi. As the Security Chief, it's his job to ensure the harmonious operation of Babylon 5. Yet in "Eyes," we learn what he does in his off-time. He's got a project he's working on: rebuilding a 1990s era Kawasaki motorcycle. We never learn why he decided to build an old gas-powered motorcycle while living on a space station, but he's gradually tracked down all the parts, and won a manual in a card game. Unfortunately, the manual is written in Japanese. Thus, it's fortunate for him that Lennier, the assistant to Minbari Ambassador Delenn, enjoys studying other cultures, learning new languages, and putting things together.


Minbari aide Lennier, played by Bill Mumy,
who in earlier days played young Will Robinson
in the TV series Lost In Space

Garibaldi's Kawasaki isn't the central story in this episode. As events unfold, we learn that Commander Jeffrey Sinclair's command of Babylon 5 is under attack from an Earth inspector who believes he should be running the space station instead. Naturally Sinclair's friend and right-hand man Michael Garibaldi gets swept up in these events. While Garibaldi accepts Lennier's offer, and grants him access to his quarters, he doesn't believe that the Minbari aide will make much progress in his absence.

Thankfully, the Commander is able to fight off the inspector's attacks, and retain command of Babylon 5. And when the dust has settled from this latest conflict--ironically one solely between humans--Garibaldi returns to his quarters to find that Lennier has not only assembled his motorcycle in his absence, but replaced the gas-powered engine with a Minbari propulsion system. At first Garibaldi is miffed, as he had looked forward to the conquering his seemingly impossible project, but then he accepts Lennier's tremendous gift of assistance and friendship gracefully, and takes him on a two-wheel tour of the mammoth space station. As Commander Jeff Sinclair and Lieutenant Commander Susan Ivanova watch them ride past, with the Earth inspector banished, they reflect on how nice it is that things on Babylon 5 have gotten back to normal.


Garibaldi, Lennier, and the completed Kawasaki motorcycle

"Eyes" is a wonderful episode, revealing all the rivalry and hatred Humans can bear toward each other, but also filled with the love and the desire to embrace the different that made J. Michael Straczynski's series so important to TV history. DiTillio's story also seems to have inspired those authors who wrote Babylon 5 novels. John Vornholt references DiTillio's character, Psi Corps agent John Harriman, in his novels. In The Touch of Your Shadow, the Whisper of Your Name, Neal Barrett Jr. has a religious motorcycle gang riding nuclear-powered Harley Davidsons through the station. They identify with Michael Garibaldi, as he's a fellow biker, and get the humorous idea that Susan Ivanova is his moll. Lots of fun!

The influence of "Eyes" seems surprising, if not downright strange, given how many more episodes contained significant plot elements, and portrayed events that generated higher stakes for those living on the space station and other planets. It is a quieter, more personal story, rather than one of the major foundation-stone episodes that significantly impacted the overarching stories behind the series. But sometimes it's those smaller-scale, quieter, more personal stories that linger in the mind, and prove more memorable and important to you later on, don't you think?

Dragon Dave

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

J Michael Straczynski & Robert Silverberg: Lend a Helping Hand

Gray says:
Maybe I should start my own version of PsiCorps.
You know, to help my fellow Daleks.

In J. Michael Straczynski's TV series Babylon 5Psi Corps monitors and controls everyone with telepathic abilities. Its members regard Psi Corps as their true mother and father, because of the mentors who educated and trained them in their youth. As a result, they were able to properly employ their powers build decent lives for themselves, and to also serve others. Unlike Talia, David Selig has no career or job satisfaction, and no friends or anyone to love. David Selig thus serves as an example to us all, of someone who had a tremendous talent, but failed to properly build upon it. But this is a common failing, and only makes him all the more human. Often, the reason we end up off-track and lost, is because we have great talents and abilities, and are seeking to utilize them to fulfill a great dream. 

The biographies of most truly great people testify that, at one point or another, they had to spend a few years in the wilderness, until they found themselves, and discovered a way to get back on course. So if you find yourself wandering and lost, remind yourself that there are no straight paths to success. Practice patience, and refuse to give up. 

Oh, and amid your wanderings, show pity to others. People like David Selig in Robert Silverberg's novel Dying Inside, may be totally confused about what path they should have followed in the first place, and what destination they should have chosen for themselves. If you can, give them a helping hand now and then. After all, we all get a little lost sometimes. 

Yes, even during the holidays.

Dragon Dave

Monday, December 22, 2014

Robert Silverberg on Getting Your Life Back On Course

Eton College has formed and shaped
some of England's greatest leaders. 

What do you do when you realize that you've gotten off-track? Your first inclination is obvious: just get back onto your desired course, right? But what if every effort you make to steer yourself back toward the road leads you down a false path, and you end up back in the wilderness again? How can it be that you've gotten so lost, when the way ahead seemed so clear?

For David Selig, in Robert Silverberg's novel Dying Inside, life seems to have veered wildly off-course. Because he was able to read other peoples' minds, he knew what those around him were feeling and thinking. He could anticipate their reactions, and structure his interactions with them accordingly. Yet he ends up friendless, and earning his living by ghostwriting term papers for students at his old university. You can bet he didn't plan on that happening!

People may not know that he can read minds, but the way he interacts with them usually puts them on edge, at least in the long term. He's had friendships, lovers, and jobs, but none of them lasted. Perhaps it would have been better had he announced to the world that he could read minds: at least then he would have been a celebrity, perhaps a prized talent utilized by the government. But he always feared the other possibility more, that people would revile him for his gift, and that he would end up an experimental lab rat. It's difficult to fault his logic, as his sister Judith, the one person he tells--or at least, the single nontelepath he tells--ends up hating him as a result. So, while he can immerse himself in the lives of everyone around him, he only ends up feeling more alone.

If only he had spent more time developing other abilities, instead of merely exploiting the gift he was born with. 

Dragon Dave

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

J. Michael Straczynski on Reading People's Minds Part 2

Gray Dalek says:
Give Mr. Garibaldi a chance, Talia.
He likes you.

In J. Michael Straczynski's TV series Babylon 5, we meet a beautiful blonde telepath, Talia Winters, when she reaches the space station. She uses her abilities to oversee business transactions, question criminals, and help others. Her PsiCorps training allows her to selectively shut out all the voices of nearby "normals," nontelepaths who can't help but broadcast their thoughts and emotions. Had she not learned this crucial ability, the constant assault of these radiated thoughts and feelings would have driven her mad. Even with her training, she finds it difficult to enter into any sort of relationship with a nontelepath. Even loving another telepath is problematic and worrying. So she clings to the memory of a psychic she had loved long ago, knowing how the toll of entering into a romantic relationship with another psychic--lowering all her mental defenses, and experiencing all her partner's feelings and emotions--requires a higher than she is willing to pay.

Then an agent from PsiCorps visited Babylon 5, and used his psychic abilities to rip aside all of Talia's defenses. Suddenly Talia Winters hates all the friends she's made on the space station, and despises all nontelepaths. She had always been someone else, it seemed: researchers in PsiCorps had implanted an imaginary consciousness in her mind. The Talia they knew had only been a veneer, an actor playing the role of the ultimate spy, someone who utterly believed her new identity and did not suspect that a darker personality hid behind her, watching and waiting for the right time to cast aside this mental mask and regain mastery of their body.

Superhero movie fans are already looking forward to the release of "Captain America 3: Civil War" in 2016. Comic book fans have often wondered how Tony Stark could side with the government and order all mutants and those with superhuman powers to register with the government. J. Michael Straczynski, who has long written for Marvel Comics, is under no illusions about the dangers of blindly trusting others to right by its citizens. He knows the dangers of blindly trusting others. But then, he constantly had to fight the networks to keep his show on the air. If only he could have read the network executives' minds. Then he would have better known how to appease their desires, and Babylon 5 sequel series and spinoffs might still be on TV.

Oh, and if you've got latent psychic abilities, don't tell me about them. After all, I already know your secrets. 

Oops.

Dragon Dave

Related Dragon Cache entries
Talia Winters' Plight

Monday, December 15, 2014

J. Michael Straczynski on Reading People's Minds Part 1

Gray Dalek says:
Listen. I'm projecting my thoughts to you.
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me now?

Scientists and Science Fiction writers have often speculated on the capabilities of the human mind. They've wondered if abilities like telepathy lay dormant in the brain, just waiting to be unlocked. Wouldn't it be great, they asked, if you knew what people were going to say before they said it? Wouldn't that be a useful skill? 

Most of the time we don't say what we're really thinking. Sometimes, we're just being kind and thoughtful, and repress our reactions because we don't want to hurt our friends. Then again, sometimes "friends" lie to us, and sometimes we don't learn the truth until years later. Wouldn't it be great if you could read other people's minds?

In his TV series Babylon 5, creator J. Michael Straczynski foresees a future in lots of people demonstrate psychic ability. Eventually this number grows so large that Earth's government passes laws to regulate individuals with psychic or telepathic abilities. Anyone identified with such abilities must enlist in a governmental agency called Psi Corps, be properly trained, and agree to abide by a strict code of conduct. These laws protect the privacy of nontelepaths, and prevents those with psychic abilities from preying on "normal" people. But they also help those with psychic or telepathic abilities to perform useful roles in society, and live a somewhat normal existence.

So if you're hearing voices, and you're not sure where they're coming from, you might very well be a telepath. But don't rush down to your government office and join PsiCorps. At least, not until you read tomorrow's post.

Dragon Dave

Related Dragon Cache entries
John Vornholt's Mars Novel

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Role of Mothers in Babylon 5: Part 1

With Mother’s Day approaching, I began to muse on fictional mothers, and the roles they played in our heroes’ lives.  Aside from a few notable examples, such as Lady Jessica in Frank Herbert’s novel Dune, I had a difficult time recalling strong mother-characters.  So I pulled out my reading log for 2013, and surveyed the books I read this year.  Two of my favorite novels were literary tie-in books for the TV series Babylon 5, created by J. Michael Straczynski.  Both feature strong female protagonists, such as Psi Corps telepath Talia Winters, and Commander Susan Ivanova, neither of whom enjoys a mother’s love and support.

The show takes its name from the space station on which humans and aliens live and work side-by-side.  The major characters tend to have important positions, serving as representatives of their organizations, in Earth’s military, and as ambassadors for their respective governments.  But regardless of how important they are, space travel is expensive, which means none of them have enough frequent spacer miles to bring their mothers along.  Of course, that assumes that they have mothers to begin with.


John Vornholt’s novel Voices primarily concerns Talia Winters, who is accused of setting off a bomb during a Psi Corps Convention.  When she demonstrated telepathic abilities at five years of age, she was taken away from her family to be trained by Psi Corps.  As we all know, the organization strips away all other loyalties, and indoctrinates its members with the oft-repeated phrase: “The Corps is Mother, the Corps is Father.”  Talia is a likeable person, but only enjoys a few brief romances, all of which end badly.  Talia herself enjoys but a few happy years on Babylon 5, before her life takes a tragic turn.  We can only speculate what her mother was like, and how Talia’s life might have been better, had her mother played a stronger role in her life.

Due to his fixation on Commander Susan Ivanova, Harriman Gray decides to hold the ill-fated Psi Corps Convention on Babylon 5.  He uses the opportunity to pursue her, but she spurns all his advances.  Despite numerous declarations of love, she cannot get past the fact that he is a member of Psi Corps.  Susan was born in St. Petersburg, Russia.  Her mother had telepathic abilities, but chose to take drugs that inhibited her abilities rather than join Psi Corps.  Over time, those drugs depressed her spirits and drained away any love for life until she eventually committed suicide.  Her mother’s experience led Susan to hate Psi Corps, and fractured relationships with the rest of her family (particularly her father).  Despite Harriman Gray’s optimism, this makes any sort of close relationship with her impossible. 


Susan Ivanova takes center stage in Lois Tilton’s novel Accusations, in which she is linked to a conspiracy against Earth, labeled a terrorist, and stripped of her duties in Command and Control.  While Security Chief Michael Garibaldi worked hard in Voices to clear Talia's name, this time he faces the even more difficult task of clearing Susan’s.  Eventually, he does so, and Susan goes on to serve several more years aboard the space station.  Yet due to her experiences growing up, Susan finds it difficult to draw close to anyone, even when Psi Corps doesn’t stand in the way.  Despite the wall she has surrounded herself with, the ranger Marcus Cole never stops trying.  After his death, she finds it difficult to forgive herself for not letting him in, and abandons her post on the space station.  As with Talia, we can only wonder how Susan might have developed, had her mother not been blessed with telepathic abilities.

Based on these two examples, I think it's safe to say that a mother's love and support is crucial to a child's development, wouldn't you?

Dragon Dave

Related Dragon Cache entries

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

A Sense of Mission


J. Michael Straczynski had established himself in Hollywood.  Everyday, he contributed to different TV shows in a number of ways, including that of a scriptwriter.  One day, the idea of a “novel for television,” of a five-year saga concerning a space station, struck him.  Suddenly, his former success wasn’t enough for him.  So, even though a Sci-fi series on this level had never been attempted on American television, he sketched out the broad strokes of his idea, and embarked on the long and difficult process of trying to sell it to the major studios.  After he finally sold the series to Warner Brothers, and won the right to serve as its executive producer, this was only the beginning of his work on Babylon 5.  Throughout the entire series run, he would oversee every aspect of the show’s production, including writing most of the scripts, to ensure that the vision he had conceived reached its fullest potential on our screens.  He even spent time regularly traveling to Science Fiction conventions, personally answering fan mail, and interacting with fans though the burgeoning power of the Internet.

A woman at my mother’s church, let’s call her Ms. Milton, felt so affected by the shooting at Newtown, Connecticut, that she could not dispel the conflicting emotions and questions raised by the incident.  She wondered how and why the event took place, but came up with no satisfactory answers.   Finally, she started writing a poem, and by the time she finished it, found she had brokered a partial peace in her heart between the event's physical reality and its spiritual implications.  This last Sunday, she shared the poem with her congregation, in the hopes that it would help others similarly affected by the tragedy.

Another couple at the church, let’s call them Mr. and Mrs. Credit, once served as missionaries.  To celebrate his ninetieth birthday, they sold an old trailer they no longer used, and visited a church in South Africa they had once ministered in.  Mrs. Credit shared with the congregation that, while in college, their denomination rejected them as candidates for their missionary program.  So the couple opened themselves to any organizations that would send them to the mission field.  They sacrificed in every area of their lives, always scrambling to fund their endeavors.  But because they operated as independent, “Faith Missionaries,” they visited more countries and ministered to more disparate groups than they could have, had they been enjoyed the more secure funding from one denomination.  They may be retired now, but the couple donated the proceeds from the sale to the South African church’s building program, in the hopes that the congregation could more effectively serve their community.

A gift from the Credits, to remind us of Africa,
and the importance of following our calling
with A Sense of Mission.

Mrs. Credit offered this advice: pursue your passion today, where you live.  Don’t wait on fate or circumstance, or an invitation from anyone.  Whether your calling leads you, like the Credits, to missionary service, like J. Michael Straczynski, to helm a TV program, or like Ms. Milton, to tackle smaller (but no less important) tasks such as writing the occasional poem, follow your calling.  What is your passion in life?  Do you feel a sense of mission: that what you wish to accomplish is not only important to you, but to others as well?  Whatever it is, I wish you all the success in the world, as you determine, and then pursue your project with the sense of mission that it deserves.

Starting today.

Dragon Dave