Showing posts with label Marc Bernardin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marc Bernardin. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Twitter Report: Marc Bernardin Talks The Punisher



Marvel may have regained the movie rights for the Punisher, but not everyone wants them to plow straight ahead into a new film. The Twitter Report covers this perspective, as well as how to talk to your child about Frank Castle today.

Punisher pt. 1: @marcbernardin Were I you, @Marvel, and I just got the Punisher rights back, I wouldn't make another movie. That boat has sailed. Call FX.
-Marc Bernardin, Writer ("The Authority," "The Highwaymen")

Punisher pt. 2: @marcbernardin seriously, the Punisher has had three shots at feature film failure and succeeded every time. Move on. The Punisher is a serial creature.

Punisher pt. 3: @Robwilliams71 Son asked me why The Punisher is so cross. Then he said "I know why. Because somebody spilled his breakfast." Yep, that'll do it.
-Rob Williams, Writer ("Dark X-Men: The Beginning," "Robocop")


Read the full article here.
Source: splashpage.mtv.com

Friday, June 11, 2010

Twitter Report: Marc Bernardin Comments on Donald Glover for Spider-Man




@marcbernardin i will say again, for the stupid seats: I don't think Spidey should be black; I think they should get the best actor, even if he is black.
-Marc Bernardin, Writer ("The Authority," "The Highwaymen")

Read the artilce and other tweets here.
Source: splashpage.mtv.com

Monday, May 24, 2010

Twitter Report: Ron Marz & Marc Bernardin Reflect on LOST Finale



Since the "Lost" series finale concluded Sunday night, Twitter friendships have been placed in jeopardy, "Battlestar Galactica" comparisons have been made, and occasionally satisfaction was experienced. While Brian Michael Bendis was unfollowing spoiler-posters, Ron Marz decided that he was OK with where the episode left everyone. Then there was Dennis Calero, who reached a common ground between the show's failures and successes.

All in all, it was night of fiery words and critical screams in the Twitter Report feed, but I've summed up the big picture in retweets below as best I could. You can read on through to find out where everyone stands, and if you make it to the end I can promise you a glimpse of the most disturbing horse costume you've ever laid eyes on.

This is the Twitter Report for May 24, 2010.

@ronmarz Interesting LOST reactions. People who were more invested in arcane mythology of the island are pissed off about answers they didn't get.
-Ron Marz, Writer ("Green Lantern," "Witchblade")

@marcbernardin man, was that ever better than Battlestar Galactica's finale. BURN!
-Marc Bernardin, Writer ("The Authority," "The Highwaymen")

Read more LOST reflections here.

Source: MTV Splashpage

Friday, January 08, 2010

Marc Bernardin & Tommy Lee Edwards mentioned in year end wrapup on the PW's The Beat



PW's The Beat concludes their Annual Year-End Survey, 2010 edition with the last installment here.

In their words,
It’s the biggest year-end survey ever! We’re going to keep going until it’s all done though. People from EVERY walk of the comics industry sounds off on what they hope for in the new year, and along the way there’s lots of news, and a few previews, too. Previous installments: one, two and three.


The Beat took some time out to ask Marc Bernardin and Tommy Lee Edwards some question:

Tommy Lee Edwards, artist
2010 projects:
TURF, my creator-owned Image comics series with Jonathan Ross.
THE BOOK OF ELI, the Hughes Brothers film I designed
PRINCE OF PERSIA, graphic novel from Disney Press

What was the biggest story in comics in 2009?
The amount of talented comics people shifting their priorities to creator-owned material.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2010?
Iron Man 2

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2010?
Riding my motorcycle on the twisty roads of the Smokey Mountains.



Marc Bernardin, writer

2010 projects:
The Authority (Wildstorm), Nightcrawler: Origins (Marvel), Genius (Top Cow)

What was the biggest story in comics in 2009?
Disney buying Marvel, by a long shot. Intellectual property has always been valuable, but it’s never been made more explicit and overt than this. My favorite sad-but-obvious anecdote of this year: a buddy of mine was pitching a big time, big budget movie producer. The producer loved the pitch, but asked “What’s it based on?” Nothing, this buddy replied. It’s an original idea. “Can’t do anything with it. Can’t get any money for it. These days, everything’s gotta be based on something, no matter how small.” In that light, the Disney-Marvel deal is a masterstroke.

What will be the biggest story in comics in 2010?
Before Oprah ends her talk show, she’ll feature a graphic novel. Which one is anyone’s guess, but I think whichever one she chooses will break huge.

What guilty pleasure (of any kind) are you looking forward to in 2010?
The Expendables. An action flick with Stallone, Lundgren, Willis, Statham, Li, Rourke, and a governor? Sign me the hell up. To bad I’ve gotta wait until next August.

When I think of comics in the 00s I think of:
Two things: the resurgence of the “Event” and Y: The Last Man. Sometimes those events worked incredibly well, creatively — like Blackest Night or Civil War or Secret Invasion — and made you glad for the serial web that only comics can weave. Other times — and you know the ones — they seemed like poorly thought-out and even worsely (is that a word?) executed cash grabs. Sure, events have been around since Secret Wars, but it felt, to me, like the ‘00s took them to a new level. A level where both good and bad could exist simultaneously.

And Y: The Last Man was, for me, the ‘00s’ zenith of long-form storytelling. The characters were phenomenal, the science in the sci-fi was valid (enough), and the cliffhangers were just fantastic. Sure, it had some lulls — what 60-part saga doesn’t? — but when it was firing on even most of its cylinders, it was inspiring work.


Source: The Beat




Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Marc Bernadin and Adam Freeman Talks About His 2010 Top Cow Titles with CBR



What else are you working on, comics or otherwise?

Marc Bernadin: We're finishing "Genius" for Top Cow in anticipation of a SDCC 2010 debut of the first issue, then rolling into another miniseries for Top Cow, an alien-invasion book called "Cell Division." We're finishing up some X-stuff for Marvel as well as working on a couple of OGNs being shepherded by production companies we've got relationships with who are, as they say, looking to get into the space. And then a raft of stuff that it's too soon to talk about.

READ MORE.



Monday, January 04, 2010

Genius Writer Guest Blogs on I09



This week io9 welcomes superpowered guest blogger Marc Bernardin, who will be contributing a handful of posts on pop culture - from the perspective of a critic and a creator.

Here is his official bio:

Marc Bernardin has had a somewhat scattershot career that has included tours of duty as a private investigator (okay, a very short tour), an award-winning screenwriter, a managing editor of Starlog magazine, and a consulting editor for Fangoria magazine. Most recently, he was a senior editor for Entertainment Weekly and EW.com. He's currently a comic book writer, having co-authored — with Adam Freeman — Monster Attack Network (AiT/Planetlar), The Highwaymen (Wildstorm), Push (Wildstorm), Pilot Season: Genius (Top Cow), and The Authority (Wildstorm). Some of those books are being adapted for the screen, while others are content to look quite handsome on a shelf. All of the following are true: He has sat in Captain Kirk's chair, shaken Miranda Zero's hand, and been flipped off by Lucy Lawless.

READ MORE.



Friday, August 21, 2009

Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman talk Genius with Newsarama



In Genius, the winner of last year's Pilot Season from Top Cow, the world's greatest military mind just happens to belong to a 17-year-old girl named Destiny who lives in L.A.'s South Central.

READ MORE.




Sunday, May 31, 2009

EXCLUSIVE: Luke Ross' Witchblade #128 Cover

Top Cow has provided CBR with an exclusive first look at Luke Ross' variant cover for "Witchblade" #128. Written by Ron Marz with art by Stjepan Sejic, this issue's cover is an homage to "Crisis on Infinite Earths" #7. The implications of that - especially when paired with the end of "Witchblade" #127 -- are pretty clear.

READ MORE.



Tuesday, February 17, 2009

The Beat notes Glyph Award nominations

Publisher's Weekly The Beat blog reported on the Glyph Award nominations and we can't help but notice the image they chose to use to highlight the nominees. Excellent choice!

READ MORE.



Monday, February 16, 2009

Congratulations to Genius for 6 Glyph Award Nominations!


THE 2009 GLYPH COMICS AWARDS NOMINEES ARE NAMED; THE FAN AWARD POLL IS OPEN

Now in its fourth successful year, the Glyph Comics Awards (GCA) continue to honor the best in black comics and creators. Many new faces are among this year’s nominees, as well as some old familiar ones.

The nominees for 2009 are:


Story of the Year

Bayou, Jeremy Love, writer and artist

Incognegro; Mat Johnson, writer, Warren Pleece, artist

Justice League of America: The Second Coming; Dwayne McDuffie, writer, Ed Benes, artist

Pilot Season: Genius, Marc Bernardin & Adam Freeman, writers, Afua Richardson, artist

Presidential Material: Barack Obama; Jeff Mariotte, writer, Tom Morgan, artist

READ MORE.



Monday, November 03, 2008

Bernardin & Freeman talk Top Cow's Genius

What if the greatest military genius of our generation was born and raised on the battleground of South Central, Los Angeles? That’s the question that writer Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman set out to answer in “Genius,” their entry in Top Cow’s second annual Pilot Season competition. Now that their fan-favorite entry has emerged as one of the top two vote-getters of Pilot Season 2008, Bernardin and Freeman are being given the opportunity to continue the story, and CBR News caught up with both writers to get the details.

The military genius in question is a young girl named Destiny Ajaye, who Bernardin likens to Hannibal, Alexander, Patton or Washington. “She’s a savant-level military genius,” Bernardin told CBR. “Now, she was born in South Central, L.A., into an environment that has been known to eat its young, or have its young taken by the authorities. She decides that enough is enough and secedes a two-square-block area from Los Angeles proper. And given her natural skill set, that involves lots of blood.” READ MORE.



Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Bernardin & Freeman talk Top Cow's Genius

What if the greatest military genius of our generation was born and raised on the battleground of South Central, Los Angeles? That’s the question that writer Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman set out to answer in “Genius,” their entry in Top Cow’s second annual Pilot Season competition. Now that their fan-favorite entry has emerged as one of the top two vote-getters of Pilot Season 2008, Bernardin and Freeman are being given the opportunity to continue the story, and CBR News caught up with both writers to get the details.

The military genius in question is a young girl named Destiny Ajaye, who Bernardin likens to Hannibal, Alexander, Patton or Washington. “She’s a savant-level military genius,” Bernardin told CBR. “Now, she was born in South Central, L.A., into an environment that has been known to eat its young, or have its young taken by the authorities. She decides that enough is enough and secedes a two-square-block area from Los Angeles proper. And given her natural skill set, that involves lots of blood.” READ MORE.



Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman talk about winning Pilot Season

These days, you know when something's popular when it produces a sequel. And for Top Cow, last year's Pilot Season contest proved so popular that they quickly brought it back for a second round earlier this year. The now-annual initiative pits six one-shot "pilot comics" head-to-head for two spots as ongoing series. After all issues are released, Top Cow allows readers to vote for their favorite.


READ MORE.



Monday, September 22, 2008

Interview with Top Cow Pilot Season 2008 Winners

We recently asked the winning writers of Top Cow's 2008 Pilot Season competition to tell us about the winning titles and about the competition process. The following interviews with Troy Hickman (Twilight Guardian) and Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman (Genius) were conducted via email by Peter Jaffe. READ MORE.




Friday, September 19, 2008

MESSAGES FROM THE 2008 PILOT SEASON WINNERS


Hey Pilot Season fans!

Here are messages from the creative teams behind the 2008 Pilot Season winners, TWILIGHT GUARDIAN and GENIUS:

"I can't begin to thank all the people who put Twilight Guardian in this wonderful situation, though rest assured I'll be trying to do so for a while (so if you get a strange call at two in the morning...). For now, I'll just say thank you to Reza for his fantastic work, and to everyone who voted and got the word out there, and all the gang at Top Cow for giving it a chance. It's great to win this, but it's even cooler to know we've got folks behind us." -- TROY HICKMAN

"First and foremost, a huge 'thank you!' Many fans bitch that they want new, fresh ideas while simultaneously rejecting anything that is not mainstream. You put your vote where your mouth is. For whatever reason, something in Genius grabbed you and, as the creators, there is no bigger compliment. You've put the pressure on us to deliver. We will not disappoint you." --ADAM FREEMAN

"And we appreciate you coming to the table with an open mind. Genius is not your average comic book. This is the story of a villain, presented as if she's the hero, free of any of the 'comfort' trappings one usually gets in comic fiction. There are no costumes, no secret identities, no lanterns of power or irradiated spiders. We're playing in the real world, telling a story with real-world parallels. The fact that Genius didn't scare too many people away is incredibly heartening." --MARC BERNARDIN

"A million thanks to you who voted and took the time out to read and give your opinions, support and well wishes. You chose Genius and it's a privilege to continue doing this story knowing easily you could have picked any of the other really great books in Pilot Season. We won't let you down." --AFUA RICHARDSON



Thursday, September 18, 2008

Announcing the winners of 2008 Pilot Season!


TOP COW ANNOUNCES WINNERS OF 2008 PILOT SEASON

Fans vote for TWILIGHT GUARDIAN and GENIUS to get their own series

LOS ANGELES, Calif., September 18, 2008 – Top Cow Productions, Inc. announced today that the winners of the 2008 Pilot Season campaign are Twilight Guardian by writer Troy Hickman and artist Reza and Genius by writers Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman and artist Afua Richardson.

For over a month, fans went to the Top Cow website, the Pilot Season website or other sites once per day, every day, to vote for their favorite 2008 Pilot Season one-shots. Pilot Season is an annual initiative Top Cow began in 2007 that borrows its concept from the television industry: Six “pilots” are submitted for consideration to be “picked up for a season,” except instead of TV executives deciding their fates, it’s the fans! 2007’s top two vote getters, Cyblade and Velocity, will debut with new series later this year. 2008’s winners will debut with new series in 2009.

Twilight Guardian and Genius beat out Urban Myths by Jay Faerber and Jorge Molina, The Core by Jonathan Hickman and Kenneth Rocafort, Alibi by Joshua Hale Fialkov and Jeremy Haun and Lady Pendragon by Matt Hawkins and Eru.

Twilight Guardian
is about an average woman with a particular kind of OCD that drives her to patrol a nine-block area in her neighborhood every night, and about the other “night people” and situations she encounters because of it. Genius asks the question, “Alexander, Hannibal, Napoleon, Patton. What if the greatest military mind of OUR generation was a 17-year-old girl who grew up on the tough streets of an urban war zone?” Both books resonated with a majority of the voters and their creators are ecstatic, excited and even surprised.

“Holey crullers! I really don’t know WHAT to say,” said Troy Hickman. “I feel like I did once at a convention years ago when I somehow wound up on an elevator with Mr. Curt Swan, and I remember thinking, ‘Something’s gone terribly wrong. They’ve accidentally let me on the IMPORTANT elevator!’ The creative teams on the other Pilot Season comics are just terrific, some of the most talented people working in this, or any, medium, and I feel so proud to even be included in this competition. And big congrats to Genius for winning the other spot!”

“I’m shocked, really,” said Adam Freeman. “Genius is not a traditional comic and I suppose that is one of its greatest assets as well as its biggest obstacle. We weren’t sure how readers would react but we knew it was a story we were passionate about. Kudos to Top Cow for being the only publisher willing to take that risk with us. Someone wiser than me once said, ‘Never underestimate your audience’ and, truth be told, we did a little on this one. We didn’t think people would ‘get it’ but apparently they did.”

“Hell, I’m just thrilled to have won something,” added Marc Bernardin. “Seriously though, it’s like Adam said: We knew Genius was an uphill battle, but every now and then, those uphill battles get WON.”

“I blew my voice squealing like a happy pig for a half hour and came up with at least five victory dances,” exclaimed Afua Richardson when she found out Genius was one of the winning titles. “I feel like I won one for all the oddballs out there—all the artists left of center, for the chicks who fight stigmas in comics, all of them!”

Now that the winners have been declared, the creative teams will work with Top Cow’s editorial department to start planning out their series, which will debut in 2009.

“Issue #1 of Genius sparked a few pretty heated debates in some circles but that was only the first act to a much larger story,” explained Freeman. “There is a lot more to tell. I am very curious how the future issues will be received because, trust me, this book is not going where you think it is.

“We’re going to dip a bit into Destiny’s back-story and the forces that combined to make her the woman she is today,” teased Bernardin. “And we’re going to show just how bloody revolution can be.”

“I look forward to a) seeing what happens next; b) getting the chance to work with Marc and Adam again; and c) really getting a chance to show my stuff,” asserted Richardson. “I just really want put my best foot forward on this.”

“Well, now comes the fun part: making comic books,” conveyed Hickman. “Let’s see if we can take Twilight Guardian where comics haven’t gone before. I don’t want to give anything away, but I promise you there will be comedy, and drama, and plenty of the unexpected. Maybe she’s a Skrull…”

“Everyone here at Top Cow wants to wish a hearty congratulations to the teams on Twilight Guardian and Genius for a hard-won victory in this year's Pilot Season,” proclaimed Top Cow Publisher Filip Sablik. “It was an incredibly close race across the board and these two teams campaigned hard for the fans' votes. The fans have spoken and we've already got the wheels in motion to give them more of what they want!”



Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Bernardin & Freeman - Creating Top Cow's "Genius"

When you look to the history books, the greatest military minds stand out as generals, conquerors and kings. Names like General Patton, Hannibal, Napoleon, Alexander and Genghis Khan. READ MORE.




Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Wizard Spotlights Genius & interviews Bernardin

You don't need to be a brainiac to see the appeal of Top Cow's latest Pilot Season book Genius. With political undertones, intense action and poignant storytelling, the work speaks for itself. READ MORE.




Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Read Marc Bernardin's Guest Blog on Newsarama

Pilot Season: Genius co-writer Marc Bernardin is guest blogging on Newsarama.com all week in anticipation of the release of the issue on June 18.

Click here to read his first blog post.