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“Green Lantern” Movie Premieres!

“Green Lantern” has opened in theatres across the world and GL fans everywhere finally have gotten the chance to see their favorite superhero on the big screen… that’s the good news. The bad news is that the movie has been largely critically panned, its Rotten Tomatoes rating fluctuating all the way down between 20% and 25%. Comparisons are coming up to “Catwoman” and “Wolverine.” Box office results are coming in from the first weekend, placing it as underperforming, behind Thor and behind X-Men: First Class’s first weekends.

Who and what is to blame? A variety of factors are being assessed, some that the movie was overproduced and “made by committee,” and others suggest that fingers can be pointed directly at Geoff Johns, “who also writes the Green Lantern comics and was integrally involved (reputedly even the deciding vote) on every big decision. And he’s respected but also controversial in some quarters” (from Deadline). The script that existed before Geoff came aboard and the shooting script that was arrived at after his involvement was dramatically different, so no matter how the chips fall it seems reasonable that he must carry some portion of the blame.

I personally saw the film last night with objective eyes (not, you know, “I’m looking for things they got WRONG from the COMICS!” because that’s silly) and enjoyed it. It’s a fun, if flawed, little introduction to the world of GL. What seemed lacking to me was a bigger buildup to the Parallax fight at the end, a strong score, and I don’t know… a bigger sense of “wow!”

Discuss the movie in our movie forum here.

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Interview with Artist Justiniano

The following is an interview with artist Josue Justiniano or better known as just Justiniano who provides the art for two issues of the DC Universe title Doom Patrol, both of which tie-into BLACKEST NIGHT. Brought to you by the Green Lantern Spotlight Podcast.

Green Lantern Spotlight: Thanks for taking the time to do this, it means a lot. How about we start off with your start in the comics industry? Take us through the journey.

Justiniano: Growing up, I had no knowledge about anything called the “comic industry”; nor care for that fact. Comic properties like Superman, Batman, Spiderman, and The Hulk, were just part of life like having Frosted Flakes in the morning. You don’t question those things when you’re a kid, you just know they’re there in the morning and expect them the following one…

As far as how I came to grab a pencil to draw these characters, I have no recollection how it started, it was simply there when I noticed. I do believe most of my earlier images came from television; scenes I had seen in a film or serial. My earliest memory of any drawing, is one of the Lone Ranger my father drew for me before heading to work, and since he was in a rush, he drew him with his arms behind him to save some time. That wasn’t enough for me, so I added ropes to show that he was tied up. I was probably 3 or 4.

Comics were just there, and I read them often when I was able to get them. I never paid attention to who drew them, nor wrote them. I just enjoyed getting absorbed by them. If my memories are correct, I think that the first comic to simply blow my mind, was the first issue of Crisis on Infinite Earths. It had a million different characters in it, and the notion that there were hundreds of different versions of Superman and The Flash was completely amazing to me. After that, I wanted to know more, and even more importantly, the urge to create, create, create, had been ignited and I would draw, draw, draw until my eyes and fingers burned. Even still, I never had any plans to work in comics. For me, it was something I just loved doing.

Fast forward about 10 years or so, I attended my second comic convention and met the creators of the now defunct Chaos! Comics, who were on tour to promote their infant company. I learned that their next stop the following weekend was a comic store not too far from my hometown in Connecticut. For some reason or another, I dared to make some samples based on the first few pages of Evil Ernie and when they came around, I gave them copies. I did not hear from them for a while, but eventually, they put up a talent search ad in one of their comics and I sent them the same exact copies I previously gave them. Few days after, publisher Brian Pulido assigned me what became my first published piece.

A few months after that, on the same store, I met a young fellow who claimed he worked at Marvel, and insisted that I showed my stuff to the editor he worked under. For some reason I believed him and sent some stuff out to Marc McLaurin. It worked out, because he called me back a few days after, and hooked me up with an issue of What If…?

That’s how pretty much I broke in. No plans; just happened…

GLS: You’re working with Keith Giffin on Doom Patrol for a few issues. What’s your relationship like with him?

J: I’m working on those issues simply because editor Liz Gehrlein called me up and ask me if I wanted to cover those issues for regular guy Matthew Clark. I said “Hell yeah. I dig the DP!”. That project has been tons of fun, and it hasn’t been the first time I’ve worked with Keith on something. I penciled over his breakdowns on 52, and I drew two chapters of the Doctor Occult back story for Reign In Hell, which he wrote. I’m also drawing over his breakdowns on DP, to say the least. As far as a relationship, we’ve spoken on the phone a couple of times, and exchange a couple of emails as well. He’s a “straight to the point” kind of guy, or so I got from our interaction. I found him very pleasant and very smart. I think he really knows what he’s talking about.

 

GLS: So what brought you to do these two issues? Was it the zombie-like aspect, or just the chance to draw Elasti-Girl and Negative Man?

 

J: I’ve drawn the DP previously, if only briefly, and I really wanted to draw Robotman. I mean, the fact that it involved the Blackest Night bit, did not hurt that decision, sure, but I jumped on it because it was simply The Doom Patrol. It could have been DP vs The Possessed Pink Bunnies from Hell, and I still would have agreed to do it. You can never go wrong with zombies either. Rotting, flesh eating ghouls are a passion of mine, anyway…

 

GLS: Artistically I hope…If you don’t mind me asking, are you DC Comics exclusive? When can we expect more Justiniano art in the DCU?

 

J: I’ve been under contract with DC since my run on Day of Vengeance, and as far as any DCU stuff after DP, I’m knee deep into a Wonder Womangraphic novel, which I put away to cover some issues of The Spirit and of course, Doom Patrol. Now that DP is done, I’m jumping back into it. That little stunt will keep me busy and out of sight for a few more months easily. I really need to put my whole energy into into it, since I think it will be a fine piece of work and very challenging for me.

 

GLS: With Doom Patrol jumping into the Blackest Night extravaganza, there will be lots of new readers to the title. What can we expect in these two issues from you and Keith? Do you have a favorite scene you’ve drawn in the series thus far?

 

J: I hope that more readers jump into the book. The DP has got many runs, and besides the Grant Morrison days, it hasn’t stuck very long, which I find sort of sad, since they have so much potential. What I’ve read from Keith so far, has been great, and if readers allow him to bring the goods, I’m sure they won’t regret it.

 

Surely, I cannot spill the beans on really what’s happening overall with what Keith, myself, and the whole creative team have in store for those two issues, but expect a good read. I still can’t believe just how much fun stuff was wrapped in just two issues! Surprisingly, as much as I enjoyed the Robotman sequence, I really loved working on the Elasti-Woman pages the best. It’s not everyday I get to draw a giant, nevertheless a fine looking one fighting a hurricane. Also, the cliffhanger from issue one should shock readers. Or not. Who knows. I hope so.

 

GLS: Any indie projects you’re working on? Anything you want to plug or promote?

 

J: Nope, no side projects for me at the moment, though I’ve been brainstorming personal ones in and outside comics.

 

GLS: Thank you for your time, its been great.
Be sure to read Doom Patrol #4 and #5 by Keith Giffen and Justiniano, this November and December.
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Interview with GUY GARDNER Writer Gerard Jones

thegreenlanterncorps.com: It’s a true honor to bend your ear and bounce a few questions off you, Gerard. Now full disclosure here, and it shames me a little: I am of the generation that picked up Wizard one day and saw, “Holy cow, Hal’s going crazy, big things are happening, I think I’ll pick up Green Lantern” when I otherwise might not have. Nevertheless, after working my way backwards, I discovered your works to be a treasure trove of development for Hal Jordan, the Corps, and the mythos in general. I really love the era of GL you ushered in and the direction I believe that seemed to be heading in.

What first attracted you to the mythos of the Green Lantern Corps and all the history that went with it? Had you already been a fan?

Gerard: I loved the John Broome-Gil Kane-Julie Schwartz GLs from the ’60s, although my knowledge of them didn’t go back that far. When I was a young fan I was mostly into Marvel and was completely ignorant of DC’s Silver Age, but around 1979 or 1980 my friend Will Jacobs made me read some of them. GL was a fascinating but sometimes frustrating series in that sometimes it was everything it ought to have been but other times seemed to coast or even lose its way. When I started getting into current DCs in the ’80s I found that that was still the case–and I really didn’t like the way Hal Jordan had been handled since the original team up with Green Lantern. So when it became apparent that I might actually end up writing comics for a living, I conceived the idea that I’d like to restore Hal and GL to something like what they’d been in the early ’60s.

GLC: Green Lantern #19 [Vol. 3] is a fan favorite, which very nicely brought us up to speed with how Alan Scott figured into things in the post-Crisis DCU. But it was also a touching tale that touched on many points in Alan Scott’s history. Were/are you an Alan Scott fan?

Gerard: Actually, no. I’ve never been very interested in those characters from the old All-American Comics line. But that storyline called for some development of Alan Scott, and Marty Nodell told me he’d love to do something for GL again, so I did my best.

GLC: On that note, do you think Alan Scott and the JSA were better off left in the state of Purgatory they were in, or do you think they deserved an active place in the modern DCU?

Gerard: I think if there are good stories to be told, you shouldn’t waste a fun character. So unless you could make them function well from purgatory, like those Kryptonians in the Phantom Zone, they should be set free.

GLC: Picking things up with Volume 3, how much of an obligation did you feel to following up on what had been going on in Action Comics Weekly previously?

Gerard: I really wanted a clean slate, but my editor, Andy Helfer, felt strongly that we needed to build straight from the Action Weekly issues. So I tried to tie that stuff up and move on as fast as I could. Which is not to express any judgment of those stories, I just wanted to move on to a new conception of GL.

GLC: What has always been disappointing to me (and it’s no one’s fault, really), personally as a fan, is the bit of a disconnect between the end of your run on the third volume of GL and the beginning of the Ron Marz run. Now, I do enjoy the Ron Marz run, but I was left with – and I’m fairly certain I’m not alone – the distinct impression you were going in a very different direction. To begin with, in your opinion, how do you feel Hal Jordan was truly affected by the destruction of Coast City? Did it really shake him to his foundation, or was it kind of more in the lines of, “Well, that is terrible, but life goes on”?

Gerard: Much more the latter. The idea that people go crazy because something terrible happens–especially people like superheroes who are supposed to be used to keeping their heads in the midst of the worst crises–always struck me as a really cheap way to twist a plot. I have to admit, though, I hated the whole idea of Coast City being destroyed, so I really resisted dealing with it in my plots. I think that was very frustrating to Kevin Dooley, whose attitude, quite reasonably, was, “Maybe you hate the idea, but that’s DC continuity now, so deal with it.”

GLC: Like other fans, I’ve read the vague bits and snippets about your original plan regarding an alternative to “Emerald Twilight” and I’ve been fascinated with what that was all about. Forgive me if I’m way off base here, but I’ve read they involved the spawn of the Guardians and Zamarons after they left the universe during “Millennium” (to this date, that’s still a thing that’s been left unexplored), the original Guardians, and Hal becoming/ascending into the persona of “The Protector.” Will you talk at all now about where you going with this, had this been given the go-ahead?

Gerard: It sounds like you’ve read some pretty accurate assessments. I hadn’t settled on everything that was going to happen after issue 50, but I was seriously entertaining those various elements. Although I wasn’t expecting to stick with the name “the Protector.” That was basically just a place holder until I thought of something better. I definitely wanted the Zamarons to give birth, although I was still working on what that might lead to when the series took a sudden change of direction. I remember Kevin and I joking about what the babies would look like. One of us, I forget who, suggested that the boys should be blue and the girls should be pink. Or vice versa, to create more drama.

GLC: You kicked off Guy Gardner’s own solo series as well. Any memories from that, or the character’s evolution over the decades?

Gerard: I really liked writing Guy. I especially liked his four-part story in GL and his “Reborn” mini-series. No one is more fun or satisfying to work with than Joe Staton. That was sheer joy. Unfortunately by the time Guy’s own series started my relationship with DC was getting pretty crappy. I’m afraid I didn’t put in nearly as much work as I should have to the texture and ongoing storylines that a series really needed. In retrospect, I shouldn’t have taken the series on–but I’d been looking forward to it so much and I just didn’t admit that things weren’t going well.

GLC: OK, let’s talk Mosaic. Was #18 – more or less – always intended to be the end of the series?

Gerard: No. It was planned to be open-ended, and after our strong early sales I thought we had a series that could keep running for a while. I had plans to build to some big events in issue 25, some truncated versions of which appear in #18. But I was rushing it fast toward the end, because 18 was the most I could talk DC into giving me. I think they originally wanted to end it at 16 or 17, though, so I’m glad I got the extra room.

GLC: Would you care to say a little bit about where would you have gone with things in Mosaic if editorial hadn’t decided to take things in a different direction? If we’d have gotten to read a Mosaic #100 written by Gerard Jones, where would we see John Stewart?

Gerard: I hate to admit it, but it’s been too long. I stopped thinking about Mosaic the day I finished the script for #18, and many years have passed. As I say, I had a more fleshed-out version of the same general events planned through #25. And I had a bunch of ideas for developing John’s new status as a sort-of Guardian, with some new challenges befitting the role coming from the various peoples on Oa. I wanted the planet to evolve out of the chaos of the early issues, for various “lands” to start adjusting to their new reality and for political alliances to form among different peoples. But the specifics are gone, until and unless I stumble over any of my old notebooks.

GLC: This remains a big mystery to this day – Katma Tui. John Stewart resurrected her (or did he?) with his Guardian powers. Was she the real deal, was there something else going on, and can you tell us anything about the original plan for her?

Gerard: I had some spooky stuff in mind. John himself was going to begin doubting whether it was really her. She would know things the real Katma Tui had no business knowing, and it would emerge that she had a certain connection to Guardian-consciousness, but it was distorted somehow. And that red connection was going to hook into Sinestro, bring him back as a follow-up to that “Something Red” story.

GLC: It almost seems silly to ask, but you having the sole distinction of having written for Hal, John, and Guy in their own respective series… c’mon, who’s the favorite here, Gerard?

Gerard: I always thought Hal was potentially the mostly interesting, although I never quite got my head around him. Or maybe never quite got all the way inside him. I’d call him the most compelling but frustrating of them, but John was the one I felt closest to, since I basically reinvented his personality for Mosaic. He felt almost like my creation in that context.

GLC: Are there any Green Lantern projects in your future and if not, hypothetically, if you did have some GL stories that’ve been left untold, could they be told within the current status quo with the GL-verse?

Gerard: I’m sure I’ll end up writing comics again in the not-too-distant future, but I don’t expect it to be on the DC Universe. If someone asked me to write a GL story for old times’ sake I’m sure I’d come up with something, but he’s not a character I think about anymore.

GLC: Do you have any memories – fond or otherwise – from your time as pretty much THE GL writer of the time that can be told, now that enough time has passed?

Gerard: It was incredibly fun to be sort of running the whole show for a little while there. I remember doing charts on how the Corps stories, the Hal stories, the Guy stories and the Mosaic stories could all build on each other. Trying to get the whole complexity of the GL-verse into my head at one time. There was a quality of play to that part of the work that I rarely experienced in comics. It was all a great experience.

GLC: Gerard, if you will I’ve got some questions I’ve gathered from some fans on our forum at www.thegreenlanterncorps.com. From the top: Did you have any specific plans for the Lanterns you created; Boodikka, Brik, Kreon, Tomar-Tu, etc.?

Gerard: Not many specific plans as of the time I left the series, but I wanted to create a body of GLs who could function together as a sort of repertoire company. I was consciously creating a range of contrasting personalities who could play well off each other, and I intended to have them appear in GL, Mosaic and occasionally Guy Gardner to help weave those together.

GLC: We have the current Geoff Johns explanation about the gray temples on Hal (it was Parallax/the Yellow Impurity/Living Incarnation of Fear reaching out and influencing Hal even before Volume 3 began)… what’s yours?

Gerard: I thought he was a guy whose hair started turning gray at the temples. But I appreciate Geoff’s cleverness in working even that detail into continuity.

GLC: Your recruits were still rebuilding the Corps when Hal returned to Earth; did you have ideas for any more original Green Lanterns, and if so, what were they like?

Gerard: I did have a few more in mind–and hoped to use them in that repertoire company I mentioned–but I’m afraid the details have faded from mind. They weren’t very thoroughly developed yet, because I was in no particular hurry. I wanted to develop the ones I’d already created more. But making up new Green Lanterns is part of the fun.

GLC: I’d like to close with thanking you for your hard work on the third volume of Green Lantern, your professionalism in the face of the curveballs thrown your way, and the bold strides you were making with Hal Jordan and the Corps in its pages. Is there anything you’d like to add in closing?

Gerard: It’s very gratifying to know that 16 years later, or however long it’s been, people are still thinking about those stories. It’s funny, that’s about how much time had passed from the Silver Age to when I was first thinking about how I’d like to do something with GL. I’ve become an old-timer at last!

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Interview with Artist Darryl Banks

thegreenlanterncorps.com: Darryl, this is the highest honor and a literal childhood thrill to be able to bounce some Q&A off of you.

Thank you for agreeing to this – yours is the art that I first saw in the very first GL comic I ever picked up off the shelf.

Darryl Banks: Hello, everyone!  I’m honored to answer these questions.

GLC: If you’ll allow me, let’s just knock this one out right away. OK, everyone has been asking for years… what are the chances or odds of you working on Green Lantern again? Are you even down for that in the here and now? What seem to be the challenges/hurdles involved that stop such a thing?

DB: Green Lantern seems to have creative teams in place and I don’t know how or if DC would be willing to see me do the book again.  If I could I’d do a special or one-shot to familiarize myself with drawing the cast.

GLC: What about working for DC at large, beyond GL? Have you approached them or been approached about any work since your last with them?

DB: Recently I’ve done work with DC regarding licence property artwork, Mattel action figure reference for an example.  No comics, though.

GLC: Without having to get too much into specifics, can you talk at all about under what circumstances or terms you departed Green Lantern? DC at large?

DB: After being affiliated with Green Lantern for eight years I was finally ready to move on to another title.  The split wasn’t the way I had hoped and there is MUCH more to the story (ask me in person).  Thankfully I got to do some JLA work because of editor Dan Raspler.  That’s all I’ll say in writing for now. Click here to read the full article.