Let’s do this, 2010. Let’s DO THIS!

In the early minutes of 2009, I said to myself, with great humility and terrible exhaustion, “At least this year won’t be as awful as 2008.”

The universe heard me and apparently mistook my quiet little plea for some kind of brazen challenge or dare, because 2009 began badly and progressively found new and increasingly inventive means of dishing out cruelty. I’m glad it’s over, and I’m glad it’s gone.

So, 2010, I’m the one who’s challenging you to be better. I’ll certainly be doing my part. Can you rise to the challenge?

Hopefully I’ll have some Hercules news I can share with you in the near future — it’s going to be awesome. My writing partner Kevin Rice and I are working on some other things, too, that I can’t tell you about until I can. But it’s all good stuff.

Sometime this week I’ll try to do Top 10 lists for the music and movies of 2009. Or maybe not. I don’t know. One of my resolutions for 2010 is to spend less time in front of a computer, and if the ghost town this blog became in 2009 is any indication, it shouldn’t be that difficult a goal to accomplish.

Bad things (and people) that happened in the last two years aside, the good people in my life continue to remind me constantly that we’ve all got a lot to be thankful for.

In fact, let’s listen to our good friend Glen Phillips sing a song about it.

Here’s to your amazing 2010, and to mine.

Onward and upward!

Three Bat-comic reviews for December

I’d once again like to thank Bill “Jett” Ramey, the hardest working Batman fan on the planet, for giving me the gig of reviewing three of DC’s monthly Batman titles for his website, Batman on Film.

Here are my December reviews for the three titles I’m assigned:


Review: Detective Comics #860


Review: Gotham City Sirens #7


Review: Streets of Gotham #7

I think Detective is the best comic book on the market today, and that Batwoman is currently the most interesting (and most certainly hottest) character out there. Check it out!

1977-2009

Gaaaaaaaah.

Every day I think of 11 things I’d like to write about on here, but I’m so busy writing things everywhere else that I never get around to it, which makes me even sadder that what I’m finally writing about is this.

Brittany Murphy died today at the age of 32. She was beautiful and wonderful, with a smile as engaging and as mesmerizing as her talent.

I haven’t seen nearly everything she was in, but I loved her in everything I did.

And I always thought she’d have made an amazing Harley Quinn in a Batman movie.

As much as I enjoyed seeing her on film, my favorite performance was one that came from behind the camera.

Because no matter how busy the rest of her career became, she always made time to record her lines as the voice of Hank’s sweet, endearingly naive niece, Luanne Platter, on King of the Hill.

She was truly something special, and that’s forever.