For the last little while, I've been contributing the occasional comment to the Jim Shooter blog, as a way of keeping my toe in the watery world of Comics.
On another matter, I, myself, just turned 48 years of age last Friday. The completion of four dozen circuits of crawling about this slippery planet, futilely trying to make sense of anything.
At this point, I'm not disillusioned enough to think I have an audience. If anyone visited cared a wit about the words contained herein, I'd be absolutely flabbergasted. It is not for readership that I write, then, it is for something else.
Recently, on December 13, 2011, I walked out on belief in God, and kept walking. With the death of Christopher Hitchens, I decided to take another look at "anti-theism" and found some clarity, if not happiness.
So what if there is no God, maybe humanity can take a smarter role in not letting our often-beautiful planet become a wasteland. Do comics play any role in saving our planet? Perhaps, in the absence of an "absolute creator," solutions may be found with those creative voices we have, which are not just writing for entertainment purposes.
Life is still serious business. Some might say unforgiving in every way. It is so unbelievably vast, from an individual human perspective. If comics have conveyed anything to modern culture, it is a belief that anything is possible, and as one famous character, Spider-Man (created by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko), came to understand more than 48 years ago, "with great power come great responsibility."
Human beings may be small in their ability to change the world, but neither does it diminish their duty to make a difference, anyway they can.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Progress 2011
September 13, 2011 -
Can this be the first day of a new world?
My, how life moves along. It's the year of the Rabbit, by the Chinese Calender. This is my fifth, of those, my forty-eighth year. You might ask me, "how did you find your way to this Google Blogspot? It that what you endured all that time, to become?"
I don't know how I'd answer you, only knowing that this is merely a stopover on life's journey, and it may or may not resonate with you.
The word of the day is Proprietary. Does publishing a blog on blogspot, a division of Google, mean that Google is the ultimate owner of this post? Does my contribution become meaningless, knowing your viewing of same is dependent on that internet giant? User-content value, lending legitimacy to ... who knows what.
What will the world look like in the future? Will it resolve the property issues that give the glory to the giants, at the expense of the ants? Points to ponder, as a new world emerges, and people come to terms with the ever-occuring fall-out.
Can this be the first day of a new world?
My, how life moves along. It's the year of the Rabbit, by the Chinese Calender. This is my fifth, of those, my forty-eighth year. You might ask me, "how did you find your way to this Google Blogspot? It that what you endured all that time, to become?"
I don't know how I'd answer you, only knowing that this is merely a stopover on life's journey, and it may or may not resonate with you.
The word of the day is Proprietary. Does publishing a blog on blogspot, a division of Google, mean that Google is the ultimate owner of this post? Does my contribution become meaningless, knowing your viewing of same is dependent on that internet giant? User-content value, lending legitimacy to ... who knows what.
What will the world look like in the future? Will it resolve the property issues that give the glory to the giants, at the expense of the ants? Points to ponder, as a new world emerges, and people come to terms with the ever-occuring fall-out.
Thursday, July 14, 2011
To think, ten years ago, I never even heard of J. K. Rowling.
An end of an era is taking place, and although my poor brain is pock-marked by distraction, wear and tear, it is only right to take a moment and give the author her due.
The series certainly came at the right time for me, as I was complementing medical disability social assistance, with a new job, the current one, and in need of a new way of looking at things. It crept in quietly, at the request of a "friend," but became quite an influential force over time.
It must have been after re-reading such books as Winnie the Pooh, Charlotte's Web, and even Anne of Green Gables. I can't quite recall where the Narnia series fit in, but all that was part of trying to build a new way of approaching the world, to replace a shattered hopeless reality, of sorts.
It was also in anticipation of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring, but the first Harry Potter movie set the stage, in a nice, contemporary, magical kind of way.
The new millennium had been sort of humdrum. The fizzle of Star Trek was taking place. Insurrection hadn't renewed any sensations, and Nemesis was yet to disappoint, but wherever there is a vacuum, there will surely be something to take its place. In the world of film, it was Lord of the Rings, with Harry Potter making a strong charge.
Around the time, the movies were being released, I figured it was time to do some reading. something meticulously avoided, probably due to the lack of good stuff.
Digging into Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, by J. K. Rowling, was a totally fresh experience. It was lively, and it jumped off the page. Such good writing. I wasn't so impressed with the movie, which has been the case with each release, EXCEPT each movie serves to remind me of the beauty of that writing.
I read the second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets out loud. It was certainly a gateway into a marvellous new world, and along the way, I was continuing a process of re-examining growing up, and learning. It helps put things in perspective.
That was 2001. Wow, not so long ago.
In 2002, Nemesis buried the Star Trek franchise, no longer connecting the way it had. The 2nd HP film came out. The 2nd Lord of the Rings thrilled with the reinterpretation of the Tolkien classic. At that time, I finally dug in and read the Lord of the Rings trilogy, so it was good times.
A good friend of mine, Leanne, lent me books 3 and 4 of the Harry Potter series, which I devoured enthusiastically, especially Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. What a wild ride, and I got to meet my favourite Rowling character, Sirius Black. The way the lives of the older generation were interweaved into a grand tapestry was a constant thrill.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire was cool, too, and introduced Portkeys and the Quidditch World Cup, and the House-Elf Liberation Front, and Death-Eaters. Great stuff.
So, when Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix came out, in 2003, it became the first of the series I bought in hardcover. And did it disappoint? Not in the slightest, except for a certain death, but these are things you have to get over.
Later that year, I enjoyed seeing Lord of the Rings: Return of the King, with family, in Saskatoon. I'm sure I was wildly enthusiastic about the Harry Potter series as well.
In 2004, we got the nifty third HP film, and in 2005, the harrowing Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince book, and the fourth HP film. All that was pre-Facebook, but weren't things lively and magical back then, all the same.
2007 brought us the seventh book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, and the sixth HP movie. What a magical time that was, in Assiniboine Park, celebrating in tents and happy crowds, amongst wonderful exhibits, and joy.
Oh, what a thrill going through that final book, finding out the goings-on, and sharing the amazing journey of "the boy who lived" life to the fullest. Thank you Joanne. What wonderful times of joy you shared.
2009 gave us the sixth film. 2010, the seventh. Now, here, in 2011, we are on the eve of the eighth and final movie. What a thrill ride it's been. Even after viewing the final movie (in IMAX-3D yet), there will always be those wonderful words of which to return, if I ever need a smile.
As well, for anyone who has shared those words, there will be a common bond, points of reference, and a kinship to draw upon. As Lucy Maud Montgomery so nicely pointed out, in Anne of Green Gables, "Kindred spirits are not so scarce as I used to think. It's splendid to find out there are so many of them in the world."
I hear some talk of fans not knowing what to do, afterwards. I would just recommend, read the books, and … live your lives, appreciating your friends, and even your enemies, along the way.
Copyright 2011 Chris Hlady
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Comic Book Dreams
Once upon a time, I dreamed of being a comic book creator. Here's a link to some of the stuff I was working on. Can't say I ever made a dime off of them, but it was was a lot of fun.
Chris Hlady Art Albums
Feedback is always welcome.
Chris Hlady Art Albums
Feedback is always welcome.
Thursday, April 28, 2011
Jim Shooter: Storytelling Lecture, Huckleberry Finn
Jim Shooter: Storytelling Lecture, Huckleberry Finn: "Storytelling Lecture Series, Part 4 (From the transcript of a 1994 seminar) (JayJay here. I posted this blog straight from the transcript,..."
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I'm really enjoying this series. Lots to share.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Star Trek '09 movie album
For generations, Star Trek has set the standard for pushing people's imagination forward into the future.
With the new movie, coming out in May, a change is coming again, and it is right that it comes at the onset of the new Obama administration.
The world faces unprecedented challenges, and it's up to our collective imagination to keep up with the change.
This picture is interesting. A policeman arrives upon young Jams Tiberius Kirk after the boy has ditched a fancy old car into a big canyon.
For better or worse, J.J. Abrams is telling us that this is part of what the future looks like.
With the new movie, coming out in May, a change is coming again, and it is right that it comes at the onset of the new Obama administration.
The world faces unprecedented challenges, and it's up to our collective imagination to keep up with the change.
This picture is interesting. A policeman arrives upon young Jams Tiberius Kirk after the boy has ditched a fancy old car into a big canyon.
For better or worse, J.J. Abrams is telling us that this is part of what the future looks like.
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Charles Biro

Dave said his dad brought home a copy of Boy Comics with Crimebuster when he was seven years old. The artist/writer/editor on that book was Charles Biro.
Now, I've never heard of the fellow before today, but with the internet, I can get a sample of his art, and read about Biro's life on wikipedia. I can imagine the world he lived in, especially when you consider a current television program, Mad Men, about Madison Avenue advertising culture.
More than that, I can share that interest with you, for whatever it's worth.
I've been thinking about Blogs lately, and their ability to quickly share details on any range of subjects. So why not make a blog about comics, or at least my reflections on them.
Biro appears to have been pre-comics code authority, which means that comics were still pretty much up to the imagination of their creators, and to the will of the free market. Comics like these, sold like hot cakes. People couldn't get enough.
This was a strange time in our history. I grew up with only regulated comics that were expected to set examples of good triumphing over evil, and all that, which in stories is reassuring, because it's very antisocial to believe that crime pays. It certainly doesn't present a realistic portrayal of the world, but it does appeal to an individuals need for justice in their perception.
I think Cockrum, in his art, projected a sense of Biro's pre-code art, in a palatable way that appeal to this perception.
It's hard to say whether the Comics Code was good or bad, in retrospect. They may have been influential in defining the counter-culture to a degree, because there were clear cases of great talent that were being suppressed, that needed an outlet. While people could agree with the need for regulation to prevent the worst of the abuses which were becoming far too common. On the other hand, people tend to seek out the creative and excellent, which exists outside of any regulation's confinement. There is a constant conflict between these forces, some threatening to tear everything down, while others strive to lift things higher. In the end, the Code basically disintegrated as comic creators sought to express their talents in smaller markets (which has had it's own negative consequences).
Perhaps this Comics Court blog is a way of seeking the best of both worlds, to acknowledge excellence while maintaining some sense of order in what receives praise and exposure.
For the moment, Charles Biro gets a big kudos for his work influencing Dave, and I'm sure, many others.
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