Tag Archives: Thor

What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars 122013

Well, we’ve made it to the finish line for another year of What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars. Thanks for hanging in there and let’s see how we’re closing out 2013.

Thor, God of Thunder

Thor_God_of_Thunder_Vol_1_2_TextlessThe Mighty One has had a pretty good year. His movie opened last month to big box office. He’s played key roles in “The Avengers” and “Uncanny Avengers” this year. His own title, “Thor, God of Thunder” is doing well. And I ran out of things to say about Thor quite a while ago. Oh, I miss the helmet. Movie Thor should wear the helmet some time. He doesn’t have to wear it all the time, but it would make sense when he’s going into battle to have some head gear.

The Avengers

The-Avengers-Movie-Art-3The Avengers Movie Calendar wraps up the year with, appropriately, a group shot of our heroes. Don’t they look imposing? I’m proud to say I was actually able to find this picture online without too much trouble.

And that wraps up another edition of What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars. Hope you enjoyed it far more than I did searching for some of these pictures. Have a happy and pleasant 2014.

What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars 112013

The finish line is in sight. Just one more month and 2013, for good or ill, will be in the history books. But we’re not there yet, so let’s see what will be hanging on the wall for the next 30 days.

Deadpool

Deadpool_1_TheGroup_01One of the great mysteries of modern comics is the surprising appeal of Deadpool. Marvel hasn’t had much luck in recent years creating characters that can hold their own title for very long (Wolverine’s the last one I can think of and he dates back to 1974) and Deadpool is  one such character. 

Created by Rob Liefield and Fabian Nicieza, Wade Wilson first appeared in 1991 in the pages of “X-Force.” Deadpool is a fast-talking, wisecracking assassin. He’s a lot like Spider-Man if Spidey used guns instead of webs and killed people instead of saved them.

Of course once a villain becomes popular, oftentimes comic companies will soften their killer urges and come up with ways to make them more heroic — like having them only kill bad guys. ‘Pool’s popularity comes primarily from the comics as he hasn’t made many appearances in other media. He did (rather infamously) appear in “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” played by Ryan Reynolds. It was not his best moment.

Thor

Thor_Avengers2My Avengers’ movie calendar gives November over to The Mighty One, which is only fitting since he has a movie coming out next week. I couldn’t find the picture on my calendar online so this one will have to do. It looks like the same artist.

I can’t possibly think of anything more to say about Thor that I haven’t already said — especially since Thor Week — so let’s close early so you can scroll on up and read this week’s movie reviews.

What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars 122012

Welcome to the twelfth and final installment of What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars for 2012. Let’s see who takes the honors for the last 31 days of the year.

Thor

The_Mighty_Thor_Vol_1_11_TextlessMy freebie Marvel Calendar dedicates the month of peace and joy to the Norse God of Thunder. Makes sense, I guess. Would’ve made more sense to use Thor last month when Sif was the Woman of Marvel poster girl, but it’s clear that there’s no coordination going on between calendar makers.

For the record, it took me a ridiculously long time to find this exact image. I was about ready to give up and just use some other generic Thor picture but I try to maintain a certain level of professionalism here at What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars. I didn’t recognize the artist and I don’t read Thor comics so I had little to go on. Typing “Thor” into Google Images will get you a whole lotta Thor but not this specific art.

Black Widow

3403923_640pxThe official Women of Marvel 2012 calendar concludes with a nice winter scene featuring Natasha Romanov. You would think she’d zip up out in the snow like that, but hey, comics. Natasha is the one mainstay of the official Women of Marvel calendar that I don’t mind showing up year after year.

The Black Widow had a pretty good 2012. She appeared in the hit “Avengers” movie and was featured in three comics — “Avengers Assemble,” “Secret Avengers” and “Winter Soldier.” She will be having a busy 2013 as well, given that she’s slated to appear in all those comics as well as the rebooted main “Avengers” title.

Valkyrie

I decided to keep the Thor theme going with my final entry in the unofficial RROY REPORT Women of Marvel calendar. Val has a long and twisted comic history which I shall abbreviate as best I can.

VALKYRIE_1_CoverVal first appeared as a disguise of The Enchantress in an issue of “The Avengers.” She later showed up in “The Defenders” as the mortal Barbara Norris, who was given the powers of The Valkyrie by The Enchantress. Long story short, that version at some point got punted and Val was rebooted as Brunnhilde of Asgard. Brunnhilde was leader of the Valkyrior (the Choosers of the Slain), a group of warrior goddesses who would take slain vikings to Valhalla — assuming they were worthy. How she went from that gig to being a superhero I don’t know.

Val currently is a member of the Secret Avengers but next year she will be fronting a new all-woman squad in a book called “Fearless Defenders.” I just report ’em, I don’t name ’em.

And so wraps up another edition of “What’s On Ronnie’s Calendars.” See you next year.

The Pointless, Worthless List for 05.02.12

Top 10 Avengers

1. Hawkeye

2. Thor

3. The Wasp

4. Captain America

5. Giant Man

6. The Scarlet Witch

7. Iron Man

8. The Vision

9. Black Widow

10. Jarvis

The Pointless, Worthless List for 04.16.12

Top 10 Things Born in 1962

1. The Beatles’ first album

2. Thor (Marvel Comics Version)

3. Bob Dylan’s first album

4. Spider-Man

5. HULK

6. The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite

7. The Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson

8. The James Bond Movie Franchise

9. One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest

10. Me.

The Pointless, Worthless List for 01.06.12

Top 10 Movies of 2011

(in alphabetical order)

The Artist

Beginners

Drive

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol

Moneyball

Thirteen Assassins

Thor

The Tree of Life

Win Win

The Pointless, Worthless List for 12.31.11

13 Most Entertaining Things (not movies) of 2011

(in no particular order)

1. The Dark Angel Saga, Uncanny X-Force 10-18

http://youtu.be/dMF658rThog

2. Damn This Town, John Hiatt

3. Memorial Day Weekend in Kansas City

4. Marvel Legends Hawkeye

5. Impromptu College Reunion Luncheon, Columbia Mo.

6. Rare Bird Alert, Steve Martin and the Steep Canyon Rangers

7. Thor Lightning Hammer

8. Spamalot, Fox Theatre

9. Laurie’s Winery Birthday Extravaganza

10. Don Giovanni, Opera Theatre St. Louis

 11. Mammoths and Mastodons, Missouri History Museum

12. ECHD

13. Christmasaurus!

Free Thor Book Day

So, you made it through one or two screenings of “Thor” on opening day and now you want more. You want to go to the source, but Vikings are hard to find these days, so you turn to Marvel.

Well, good news. It’s Free Comic Book Day.

Yes, Free Comic Book Day, that first Saturday in May when comic publishers send out books to comic book shops throughout the land to be handed out at no charge to the masses. It’s a great day, and I would join you there but I’m stuck in a 15-passenger van with my family on a five-hour drive to Oklahoma.

Did I say “stuck” ? I meant “joyfully sitting.”

For the rest of you, just go to your participating comic book shop or library and check out the offerings. Each shop has different rules on how many free books you can have, so you may have to go to multiple shops. Make a day of it. That’s what I’d do, if I weren’t trapped in a van with my family driving to Oklahoma.

Did I say “trapped” ? I meant “happily riding to Oklahoma and singing along to Garth Brooks Greatest Hits with the Bestest Family Ever.”

If you can only score one free comic, I recommend “Captain America/Thor: The Mighty Fighting Avengers” by Roger Langridge and Chris Samnee. Yes, it’s a blatant tie-in to Marvel’s two movies coming out this summer (poor, ignored “X-Men: First Class”) but the creative team gave us the entertaining but short-lived “Thor the Mighty Avenger” comic, so it’s bound to be good.

You should also pick up a free Heroclix Green Lantern. And pick up one for me while you’re at it. I have one already, but it’s lame Kyle Rayner, not the one, true Green Lantern. I’d rather they were giving away Thor or Captain America figures, but I don’t run the Heroclix operation.

Read Thor About It

If you seek more Thor, Marvel is glad to oblige you. They’ve been pumping out an insane amount of Thor comics over the past year in anticipation of the movie. I haven’t read most of them, I doubt if anyone at Marvel has, so instead I will point you to the Thor books that have the RROY REPORT Seal of Approval.

1. The Essential Thor, by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and many others. If you want to go back to the very beginning, the Essential line offers large, cheap collections of Thor comics beginning with Journey Into Mystery 83. The downside is they’re in black and white. If you must have color, turn to the Marvel Masterworks line. They’re more expensive and don’t have as many issues per volume, but that’s the price of color.

Be warned that many early ’60s comics haven’t aged well and Thor is no exception. There’s some pretty silly stuff in the first volume.

2. Thor Visionaries – Walter Simonson. In the 1980s writer/artist Walt Simonson began a run on Thor that is considered definitive by many fans, best remembered for the introduction of Beta Ray Bill and a story in which Thor is turned into a frog (OK, the silly stuff wasn’t limited to the ’60s).

Those comics have been collected in a series of five volumes or you can buy the whole run in one Frost Giant-sized omnibus. I don’t know why anyone would buy an omnibus given how heavy and unwieldy they are, but they seem to be popular these days.

3. Thor by J. Michael Straczynski, Olivier Coipel and Marko Djurdjevic. If you want to read Thor comics written in the 21st century, this is the most recent relaunch of the character and sets the stage for where he is now. As you can see, this is where his movie costume came from. Straczynski is also co-credited with the story for the film.

Straczynski’s run gave us the return of Don Blake, Asgard in Oklahoma and Loki in drag. It’s available in three volumes or another oversized omnibus. Straczyski’s run wasn’t nearly as long as Simonson’s, so this omnibus is not that big of a doorstop.

4. Thor: The Mighty Avenger by Roger Langridge, Chris Samnee and Matthew Wilson. If you enjoy this year’s Free Comic Book Day “Captain America/Thor” book, this is more of the same in that same all-ages style, but without Cap. The series was sadly canceled after 8 issues so it’s available in two paperback collections.

—————————————————

And that, at long last, brings us to the end of  Thor Week. Hope you’ve enjoyed it as much as I’ve enjoyed bringing it to you. Although I am pretty sick of Thor right now. Not really.

Thor Week is dedicated to my late Norwegian Elkhound, Thor: Dog of Thunder. Sadly, while movie Thor can take getting hit by a car, dog Thor could not.

At the Movies: Thor

Yeah, I probably should’ve gone to see that new romantic comedy with the guy from “The Office” whose last name I can’t spell, and I probably should’ve gone to that movie about jumping brooms, but neither one of them had Thor in them and, well, it’s Thor Week and the rules are the rules.

Thor

Boy, if this movie sucked I would be in a really awkward position right now, having dedicated the past five days to hyping it. Fortunately, it doesn’t suck. In fact, “Thor” ranks among the top comic book movies.

Oh, and it would have been so easy to make a sucky Thor movie (The Sci-Fi Channel people are probably working on one right now). The whole god among men thing, the way they talk, the costumes — there’s a reason there’s never been a Thor cartoon or TV series.

But director Kenneth Branagh has artfully combined Norse myth and Marvel comic into a fun and satisfying action-adventure romp.

The only thing about “Thor” that sucks is the 3D. Save your money — the 2D version will be just as good and you don’t have to bother with the dumb glasses. A shame they couldn’t do it right, because the hammer of Thor coming right at you would’ve been a sight to see.

So, at last, the movie: Chris Hemsworth stars as Thor, an arrogant warrior god and son of Odin (Anthony Hopkins), king of Asgard. On the day Thor is to be crowned Odin’s successor, the ceremony is interrupted by a sneak attack by  a small band of frost giants — Asgard’s ancient enemies.

The intruders are quickly dispatched by Odin’s all-powerful protector, a metallic creature called The Destroyer. Outraged, Thor demands to go to the giants’ homeland and confront their ruler. Odin doesn’t want to upset the truce and tells his favored son to go chill.

Subtly manipulated by his brother Loki (Tom Hiddleston), Thor gathers his fighting buddies — Sif (Jaimie Alexander), Fandral (Josh Dallas), Hogun (Tadanobu Asano) and Volstagg (Ray Stevenson) — to storm the  frost giants lair. To get there, they must go through Heimdall (Idris Elba), guardian of the rainbow bridge and the gods’ teleportation chamber.

When Odin learns of this misadventure it’s his turn to be outraged — and you wouldn’t like Odin when he’s outraged. Thor is stripped of his power and exiled from Asgard to Earth. His hammer is also cast down.

Thor is befriended by a trio of mortals — Jane Foster (Natalie Portman), Erik Selvig (Stellan Skarsgård) and Darcy Lewis (Kat Dennings) — while his hammer is taken into custody by Agent Coulson (Clark Gregg) of the spy agency SHIELD. Meanwhile, Odin has taken ill, which leaves Loki free to engage in all kinds of mischief.

“Thor” features a near-perfect balance of action, humor, special effects and a dash of romance. An early fight scene with the frost giants was at times a chaotic mess, but that seems to be the style these days. Otherwise there’s little to find fault with.

The sets are impressive — Asgard looks like it was taken straight from a Jack Kirby drawing. The costumes are majestic — even Loki looks godlike despite those ridiculous horns on his head. And the actors — from the Godlike Hopkins to comic relief Dennings — manage to bring these larger-than-life characters to life. Despite his Shakespearean background, Branagh wisely leaves the flowery dialogue out.

While the movie ties into the other films in the Marvel Studios lineup, it doesn’t let that linkage become too much a part of the story, as was the case with “Iron Man 2.” You can see this film with no knowledge of the previous movies, although you might be confused by what SHIELD is since they don’t bother to explain it here.

Also, as is the tradition with Marvel movies, expect a brief, fun cameo — this time from a new player in the series — and an important scene following the closing credits.

Did it work for me? I say thee yea.

Before You Go: Thor

Welcome to “Before You Go,” a new segment here at the Report in which I tell you everything you need to know — and then some — about whatever nerd film is opening the next day. And what better film to launch this new segment with than Marvel Studios’ latest release, “Thor.”

In the Beginning

The Mighty  Thor was one of the few early Marvel superheroes not created by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby or Steve Ditko. He was created by vikings several hundred years earlier as they sat by their campfires after a hard day of pillaging and tried to make sense of the world.

They came up with a complex and convoluted cosmology — especially for vikings — and I’m not about to go into all of it. Here’s all you need to know for now: The Norse Gods lived on a rock in space called Asgard which is connected to Earth — called Midgard — by Bifrost, the rainbow bridge. The bridge is watched over by all-seeing Heimdall, bouncer to the gods.

The King of the Gods was Odin, aka The All Father. Odin’s favorite son was Thor, the god of thunder and lightning. Thor’s wife is the golden-haired goddess Sif. The only other Norse God you need to concern yourself with now is Loki, the god of mischief and lies. Loki’s back story is a confusing mess from what I’ve read, so we’ll go with the origin that Marvel gave him — which is that Odin found him as a baby, the abandoned son of a Frost Giant (abandoned because of his puny human size), and adopted him. Thor and Loki grew up as brothers with Loki forever jealous because Everybody Loves Thor.

Make Mine Marvel

After launching The Fantastic Four, HULK and Spider-Man, Stan Lee was looking for something new. He settled for something old, instead. The Mighty Thor made his comic book debut in 1962 in the 83rd issue of “Journey Into Mystery.”

Written by Stan’s brother, Larry Lieber, and drawn by Jack Kirby, the story opens with American physician Dr. Donald Blake on vacation in Norway. He winds up trapped in a cave where he finds a stick. He strikes the stick on a rock and is transformed into a Fabio look-alike while the stick changes into a hammer. An inscription on the hammer explains everything:

 Whosoever holds this hammer, if he be worthy, shall possess the power of THOR

Blake quickly figures out his new abilities and makes quick work of an alien invasion from Saturn. He then discovers that by striking the hammer on the ground he can return to his human, frail self and the hammer goes back to being a walking stick.

By the next issue Blake has returned to his medical practice in the states, where we meet his nurse and love interest — Jane Foster. In typical Silver Age fashion, Blake loves Jane but won’t tell her because he doesn’t think she could ever love a man with a limp. Jane, of course, secretly loves Blake but is waiting for him to make the first move.

Stan and company played pretty fast and loose with the rules in the early days of Marvel. While Blake was initially just using Thor’s powers, in short order — and without explanation — Thor became an entirely different persona. This lead to the introduction of Loki, Odin and the rest of Norse myth. Loki would become Thor’s arch-enemy, leading to the world’s longest case of sibling rivalry.

Another key addition to the Thor mythos created by Lee and Kirby are Fandral, Hogun and Volstagg, aka The Warriors Three.

Fandral is the dashing Errol Flynn type, Hogun the surly Charles Bronson type, and Volstagg was the fat, jolly comedy relief.

Apparently inspired by the King James version of the Bible, Thor and all the other gods introduced in the Marvel Universe started speaking with thees and thous and verilys and whatnot. Thor couldn’t just say “no.” It was always “I Say Thee Nay!” It made Thor simultaneously the coolest and corniest of superheroes.

When it finally came time to put together an all-star team of Marvel heroes, Thor was right there — teaming up with Iron Man, HULK, Ant Man and The Wasp to form The Avengers. In fact, the Avengers were formed as a result of one of Loki’s schemes. And it was Thor who first uttered the team’s battle cry — Avengers Assemble!

Needless to say, a lot has happened to Thor in almost a half-century of comics. He split off from Blake, he merged with a different human for a while, now he’s back with Blake. Jane is now a doctor. Loki is currently a small boy. Gods don’t speak in Olde English much anymore. Asgard was hovering over Oklahoma for a while, but I think that’s changing as you read this. Volstagg is fat. OK, some things don’t change.

 Gone Hollywood

“Thor” is the fourth movie in Marvel Studios’ grand plan that started with “Iron Man” and continued through “The Incredible Hulk” and “Iron Man 2.” If you sat through the end credits of “Iron Man 2” you know it ended with Thor’s hammer Mjolnir crash landing in New Mexico.

This all leads into next year’s release of “The Avengers,” which will unite Thor with all the other Marvel movie heroes that Marvel Studios has control over — namely Iron Man, HULK, Captain America (who makes his movie debut in July), Nick Fury, Black Widow and Hawkeye (who makes his movie debut in, well, I probably shouldn’t give out any spoilers).

If you haven’t seen any of the previous movies — and really, what’s wrong with you? — Nick Fury is the head of SHIELD,  a government agency  tasked with protecting the planet. His current project is gathering together all the super humans that have suddenly sprung up and enlist them in “The Avengers Project.” Agent Coulson, Fury’s right-hand man, has been sent to New Mexico to investigate the fallen hammer.

And that’s all you need to know — before you go.