The Web Haunt of Ryan K Lindsay

Ryan K Lindsay is a young male and an Australian writer. He spends most of his time writing different things; novels, scripts for film, television and comics. Here he discusses his craft, the craft of much better writers and just stuff about books, music, teev, flicks and comics. This site is for when any other shade of brown just won't do.

The Ides of March – A Study In Back Stabbing

Goddamn, this movie is wickedly smart.

Clooney has put together an ode to the 70s political thriller. This flick is as sharp as the knives that stab backs every day. Especially in politics. As far as political thrillers go, this one is a grainy shot noir with far too much daylight and just the right amount of character actors.

We open on Clooney as Mike Morris on the run for the highest office in America. He’s got the sort buzz we most recently saw with Barack Obama. He’s the next great hope of truth and change in a stagnant pool of lies and static policy. He’s everything we want him to be, which of course means he probably isn’t the product were being sold in record amounts. But that comes later. For the intro, we get plenty of ClooneyPolicy which is definitely enough to make you think, if not necessarily agree with every step of his plan. You could be forgiven for thinking this is Clooney’s audition for office. Though, to be honest, his policy will reach more people (and people of the future) through the cineplex than it would through actual politics. Bravo to Clooney for being so subversive in propagating his vision of the future.

Beneath Clooney is Ryan Gosling’s Stephen Meyers. The superstar campaigner who knows exactly what to do in every situation. The charisma of this role is effortlessly conveyed by Gosling (an actor I just can’t bring myself to call The Goose, though he certainly is golden). Gents, you will love Gosling in this role. You will also feel for him because the destructive narrative is mostly set into effect by two of his actions.

These two actions, basically Gosling meeting with two different people, kick starts a series of perforated backs and devious machinations that you expect to be behind the scenes of every political campaign and love to find out about afterwards. Part of this is Gosling’s fault, some of it was just stupid chance and poor decision work.

Two small yet crucial roles are portrayed to seedy and worldweary perfection by Paul Giamatti and Phillip Seymour Hoffman. There is a reason these guys get the best character roles and headline the best indie flicks – they know their game and are so diversely and consistently reliable that you are almost guaranteed a slice of genius in your film. Both men are old school campaigners, guys who have seen it all, know all the tricks, and Gosling should have known to still pay his respects and play it clean. He’s good, one of the best, but that’s just of the new class. The old class, guys who graduated through seedy decades of politics, would always have ways of schooling the young pups who represent the downfall of the old guard.

Gosling becomes connected to a young campaign intern. That word alone, intern, holds so much negative political cache now, and this isn’t any different. The snappy banter of the politicos volleying back and forth gives way to the scenes Gosling and Evan Rachel Wood share. The pacing drops to an afternoon canter and the camera is suddenly close to know us this is personal. We aren’t after sexuality here, or the romantic lure of flirtation. The scenes capturing this connection show you Gosling letting his guard down. This is his downfall, actually being human for a succession of moments.

The narrative drive of this flick is tight. It’s only 100 minutes and everything rockets by effectively because not a single scene is superfluous. The entire movie is a series of building blocks that entertain on their own but build to a cohesive whole. More stories should work this way. There isn’t a big action piece or a filibuster because the genre demands it. Every word is meant, needed, enjoyed. Characters are all introduced effortlessly, the complication is pretty easily dropped in, and the conclusion will provide a great discussion on the drive home.

For my money, I think the hint to knowing what Gosling does at the end is in his last words before going in front of the camera. He tells Ida, “You know you’re my best friend.”. The press is his friend, and he’s about to make it work for him. What would come after those actions I don’t know, and I’d like to think the poster holds a strong clue toward that.

Aside from the slick narrative, the superb acting, and the delightful script, you will watch this movie again because it is so damn well made. The simple cinematography evokes the 70s in a way that replicates and doesn’t just homage. Clooney isn’t making a pastiche of cliches, he is crafting a masterpiece simply using techniques and skills from decades ago. This movie could have come from a Hollywood brat and yet none of them possess the skill to pull this off right now. They are in different stages of their careers while Clooney is still hungry for it.

Clooney might just be one of the most influential filmmakers right now, while never really influencing the box office or public trends at all. No one is going to write about Michael Bay; I’d gladly read all about how Clooney puts these gems together.

There really isn’t anying wrong with this movie. You could pick a few slight holes but you’d mostly just be an ass for trying. Some of the progressions in the plot of Wood are a little quickly pushed but I’d prefer that brevity which then correlates to speed of the main plot. Watching Gosling crest the wave and then get dumped only to have his infected corpse poison the town’s water supply is the sort of hour and a half I can always find time for.

The Ides of March is an absolute must see. It’s a smart flick that wants you to think about what’s going on as well as apply it to your actual world. This might be fiction but the meaning of it is all too real. Watch this flick, be entertained, and learn about the world. There is no greater cinematic treat to enjoy.

Buy a ticket, sit down in the cinema, and feel like you just went back to the paranoid 70s where flicks showed the worst in the world and inspired you to do your best.

Previously, On CBR – American Vampire #21 Review

I actually had some issues with this issue and yet I still found it to be really good. There’s just one aspect that irked me but it’s a part of the peripheral tale and the main mean — Skinner and Book — is really damn good.

American Vampire #21 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 4 stars because, “The ‘Beast In The Cave’ story is a piece of mythology for the title. It is also a short story to thicken the density of two characters. Skinner Sweet and James Book are taming the wild frontier when a conflict forces their choices and forges their destinies.

Previously, On CBR – The Strain #1 Review

I haven’t read the books by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan, and I honestly haven’t heard that much about them either. This issue was $1 so not a bad toe-dipper and quite honestly worth it. This is a very well constructed introduction to the tale. I’m pretty intrigued and will check it to see where it goes. Nice work, Dark Horse, nice work indeed.

The Strain #1 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 3.5 stars because, “This horror story smartly lays out the characters first. It soaks you in that moment where you want to know more about these people, while also being afraid to get involved because the loss that might strike anyone will hurt all the more for your connection.

State of the RKL – December 2011

It’s nearly the end of the year and I feel compelled to account for myself. I have been decidedly busy this year and here is what I’m currently working on, and what you should keep your eyes peeled for in 2012 – it’s going to be a very big year.

In No Order…

THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILS: EXAMINING MATT MURDOCK AND DAREDEVIL

This is a book of essays edited by from from SequArt about my favourite superhero of all time. I am writing two essays: one details the storied love life of the man, and the other puts Ed Brubaker’s run under the lens of both true noir and 70s cinematic fiction.

Aside from my essays, I have a team of extremely talented writers working into the new year putting together some very thoughtful theses about Daredevil. The depth and interest of these topics, and angles taken while looking at them, has me really excited. I think you’re going to love it.

I have finished my two essays (editing pending), and another essay has already been submitted (and while editing it right now, it is shaping up very well).

SURVIVOR

This story is a 6 page short to be featured in the FASTER THEN LIGHT anthology from Orang Utan Comics label in the UK. It should hopefully be on ComiXology so be ready for me to plug it like a bath tub when the time comes.

The art is by Daniel J Logan and it looks phenomenal. The man is a beast and to prove it, here’s a quick sample.

I’m really excited by this story idea, and how it will be executed on the page, so you’ll hear all about it closer to February when it should drop.

BEGINNINGS ANTHOLOGY

If you haven’t noticed, I’ve been tied up a little with helping organise get this Australian comics anthology off the ground. Well, I didn’t personally do a lot of the hard work, many others did that, but I organised a few things, gave my two cents probably more than anyone wanted it, and I’m certainly super excited to travel to some concs next year around Australian and help shill this awesome work.

I have also written a 10 page short story for this book, titled THE BIG DAY, and it’s most likely the sort of thing you never would have expected from me. It’s kind of sweet, kind of sad (most people expect the sad, the sweet should catch you off guard), and it’s just a love story, really. I feel very personally connected to the pages and the best part is seeing Emma Stewart carve these pages into history. I don’t have any digital files, yet, but these pages look amazing. They truly elevate the story and I cannot wait to see it in the book, with all the stuff, looking all superfly and amazing the crowd.

We crowd sourced our finding through IndieGoGo and aimed for $2,000. We hit that in about 10 days and now we’re just slowly hoping for more to come through to send us to even more cons and put more copies of the books in people’s hands. We have some fantastic perks on offer for high end pledgers but our best selling items have just been the preorders on the book – which is always nice to see people came for the regular crowd.

At present, we have over 2 and a half grand and about 6 weeks left to fundraise so I’d like to see us make over $3k. That would be fantastic.

If you wish to give money to get good comics then DONATE TO BEGINNINGS ANTHOLOGY

LOVESICK

This one is kind of a secret project – you should really listen to THE PROCESS to know exactly where this 5 page short will be going. It’s a very nasty love story and I cannot wait to see reader reaction to this final panel. Nasty is only the first word that comes to mind.

Oh, but I’m only writing the words. I won’t announce it all now but when I drop the names of the talent involved in putting these pages together you are really going to flip. There is a high chance this thing might just come out perfect – if my words can connect bat to ball with a sweet crack of victory.

UNTITLED SEQUART SECRET PROJECT

Yeah, I’ve already got my Daredevil book locked into the pipeline but I’m a forward thinker. I’m already tinkering on the plans for the next gig. I’ve chatted with the publisher, juggled with my thoughts, and sometime in 2012 I’ll be pitching a shorter book – all by me – to the company man and hopefully we can turn it around quickly. This one excites me just as much as the Daredevil book on so many levels. Stay tuned.

HEIST

This one is very close to pitching. Seriously.

A LOVE SUPREME

I just got inks in for this project – it looks damn good. It’s about a sorceress who is about to die so she transports her consciousness into the body of her boyfriend, Reed. They figure their pure love will keep them together in there. Forever.

Four months later, they’ve broken up.

There is also a sorceress serial killer, a new girl to flirt with, and plenty of arguments in Reed’s head. It’s a bubblegum mystic love story, with a twist. Here’s a page to wet your whistle.

Be damned if that isn’t gorgeous, look at that first panel. Golden.

CBR

I’m still pumping out 3 reviews a week – you’ve no doubt seen them all link farmed on here, right?

thoughtballoons

Over 80 one page scripts in and I’m still loving it and still having a blast. Maybe 2012 will bring some changes to the site, we’ll have to wait and see.

THE PROCESS

It’s not writing, though some of it is scripted. My comics writing podcast hosted with Jeremy Holt and Kurtis Wiebe is trucking along nicely. In fact, it’s going fantastic. I love recording these because they keep me on track. Doing a fortnightly Progress Report not only makes me feel like I need to constantly be making progress but it also stops me and shows me how much progress I actually am making on a regular basis. It’s also nice to be so transparent.

The other very cool aspect is the amount of guests we have lined up to be on the show. We’ve had some very cool creators come on and talk their process and there are certainly many more just waiting for their chance. It’s nice that this podcast has struck a chord with people because I certainly don’t feel anything else out there tackles the content we do or like we do it.

It is certainly a privilege to be part of this but most importantly it is fun.

HUSBAND AND FATHER

Outside of all this, I still make time for my gorgeous family. They are both very good at providing me with time and inspiration to do all this, work a full week, and be healthy and happy.

So, if you are wondering what I’ve been up to there it is. If I ever seem distant or miss an email perhaps you’ll forgive me. I’ll try to update this again during 2012 just to see how things are turning out.

I hope you’ve been busy, too.

Dark Horse 50% Off Purchases

I love a good sale. It’s even better when I can enjoy the sale without having to wait in line, get annoyed by the presenc eof other people, or risk getting caught testing my pepper spray in the vicinity of people. To say I was happy when Dark Horse Comics offered a one-time use 50% voucher for all digital content was putting it mildly. This was fantastic, I just had to figure out what I wanted to get.

Now, this voucher was for as much content as you wanted but you could only use it once. No good running through check out and then seeing something else really cool the next day. I had to get everything pieced together straight away. I also didn’t want to take forever because that sort of shopping can take forever. I wanted to find a few modest items and slam my voucher down.

I’m proud I managed to pick just a few things, and didn’t take forever, here’s what I selected:

De:Tales

Gabriel Ba & Fabio Moon have pretty much written a lifetime blank cheque of street cred after putting “Daytripper” together. This was an earlier work and it’s apparently pretty damn cool. I’m keen.

Lone Wolf & Cub

I’ve always heard good stuff about this so I’m dipping in with the first three volumes. I’m not a manga reader – only read maybe 2 in total – but I’m a massive fan of good story and comic form is just the cherry on top. I can’t wait to get into these.

The Best News

These digital trades are already pretty damn cheap. However, with the voucher they came in at $3 each and that’s a price tag I cannot turn down. Also, i was only going to get the first 2 volumes of LW&C but for some reason I had $1.99 sitting in the tank at Dark Horse and so it was being creditted to my account. I figured with a third volume for $1 how could I say no?

What Did You Get?

If you use Dark Horse Digital, you no doubt also got a 50% off voucher – what did you buy on the cheap?

Previously, On CBR – Animal Man #4 Review

Animal Man is one of the best DCnU titles, if not the best. This issue continues the quality as things get messed up but the writing still nails home tiny inflections of characterisation. Hit the link below:

Animal Man #4 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 4 stars because, ““Animal Man” continues to be one of the very best titles coming out of DC. All it needs is a loyal audience who can stomach the wide ideas and horrific violence and it is well on its way to becoming a true classic. Each issue of this reintroductory arc has offered at least one massive moment of glorious creativity.

Previously, On CBR – Jennifer Blood #7 Review

Jennifer Blood was a title by Garth Ennis. It was kind of fun. It’s the sort of oddity well worth a look but possibly only once – unless it strikes a really personal chord with you. I liked it enough and to see it as an ongoing surprised me but I’m happy to say Al Ewing – the new writer – does a damn good job of proving to me that this deserves to be a story that continues. He wets my whistle, and that’s pretty cool. Hit the link below:

Jennifer Blood #7 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 3.5 stars because, “Ewing comes on board and shows our titular heroine isn’t just a one-trick pony. He doesn’t try to replicate Ennis’ run but instead builds gloriously up from it like an ambitious kid making a three story sandcastle with wi-fi and a car wash. The first arc was just the introduction, now we need to see Jennifer reap the blood she worked so hard to sew.

Previously, On CBR – Irredeemable #32 Review

I’m still massively digging on Irredeemable and this is the sort of issue anyone can pick up and figure out just why. Hit the link:

Irredeemable #2 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 4 stars because, “It’s been a long and twisted tale so far, and so this issue gloriously gives you a present: a pretty clear jumping-on point. It doesn’t matter if you’ve read a single issue or not at this stage for two reasons: the basic premise of the Plutonian is summed up in the opening pages and the rest of the issue is so concerned with moving forward it does not matter who did what beforehand.

Previously, On CBR – Spaceman #2 Review

I haven’t read 100 Bullets and the first issue of Spaceman didn’t win me over – not even for a dollar. However, I needed something to review and so I thought I’d dip into the second issue. Perhaps it would get better. It did. This issue pushes the story more into places I want to see it go, it makes more sense, and it’s knockout gorgeous. I could look at these pages for a very long time. To know more hit the link below:

Spaceman #2 review on CBR by Ryan K Lindsay

I gave it 4 stars because, ““Spaceman” is a difficult comic to quantify because it feels like so many things. The problem is each of these aspects feels like it could be the heart of the tale. Working out if it’s pulp or sci-fi or dystopian commentary could either confuse the reader or elevate the material; it’s a gamble. The melding of these genre tropes works well and the overall book is certainly more than the sum of its parts. You just need to work out if the new flavor is a recipe you want to store or ignore.

Beginnings Anthology – Halfway Funded

To be honest, I have always thought we’d make the fundraising quota we set ourselves. It’s only $2,000, and we’ve got lots of friends who will chip in, and great incentives, and a great product to promote/create. I was always optimistic about the end result.

What I never thought about was the time of the process.

As it stands, we are currently 4 days into our 60 day campaign and already we’ve reached over the halfway funded mark. That’s over a grand in 4 days (technically about 3 and a half days; and technically $1,047). I am completely astonished by this astounding show of uncanny perception amongst the comics community and their amazing gift at understanding our desire and drive. Most of this money has come from pre-orders and this is the best part. People want to get their hands on our book – I guess this means we better make it a damn good one.

You actually don’t need to worry on that front, I’ve seen most of the art for my story and it looks glorious. Like a choir of angels, washing cars in bikinis, and doing it slow-mo to great 80s hair metal.

But halfway there means we’ve still got halfway to go (well, technically $953) and so I don’t want things to slow down. If you’re excited about this anthology, or you’ve heard about some of our really exciting perks, then head to the link:

BEGINNINGS ANTHOLOGY INDIEGoGo CAMPAIGN

We appreciate every dollar, and every link you send out.

You can also head to our site where we’re putting up all sorts of different information that will excite and entice you more.

BEGINNINGS ANTHOLOGY site

Or you can also chat with us on Twitter through #beginningsanthology or @Beginnings_A

I thank you all for so much, and I hope you continue to support indie comics and local talent.