Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Dark Matter: Danab Cycle

One of the pesky side-effects of suspending comments is that I can’t at least see people cheering (or pretending to!) a new release. I guess the book that is the reason for my newest release, Danab Cycle, is itself getting released next week. Danab Cycle is a tour of the short fiction I’ve been carving out of the Space Corps saga for the past decade, so it’s more important than the impetus that spurred it to publication. If you’re curious about what I’ve talked so much about over the years, it’s a great place to start.

...Technically if you do, there’s somewhat of a lie in it. Two stories in it, not one, have not been seen elsewhere or appeared in Sigild, unless you count those folks who thought one was possibly eleventh best. At the time I meant to distinguish that it had at least been seen by readers in some capacity, but I’m not sure I nailed the wording. Well.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Dead Butlers, In the Leviathan, Collider

A relative few minutes ago I finished up another comic script project, Dead Butlers, over at Sigild, an interlocking twenty-two page Batman pastiche that expanded past its original parameters (by ten script pages!). It was just one of those things that struck as an interesting idea and just sort of continued to blossom, and anyway was great fun to write along the way.

Yesterday I had a thunderbolt concerning In the Leviathan, a work in progress that suddenly came into vivid shape. Part of that is because I sent Nazi Crimes to one of my favorite cousins, and she almost immediately texted back incredibly enthusiastic initial thoughts, and we talked a little about the Montague story, and where I saw it heading, so somewhere in the back of my mind it must have been rattling waiting for that moment.

Concerning Collider, the project I really thought I was writing, finally, I had paused on after actually getting started on it, but it wasn’t feeling right and eventually I realized it was because I wasn’t telling it right. And so I hit the pause button and almost immediately knew what needed changing, and so that was pretty great.

I sent some poems to a literary journal tangentially related to my alma mater last weekend, so that was pretty interesting. No idea if they have a shot at acceptance, but it’s the first time in a long time I’ve submitted poetry anywhere. 

Sunday, April 4, 2021

2020 Box Office Top Ten

The strangest year yet at the box office thanks to the pandemic, obviously the results will always look weird, so let’s have a look, via Box Office Mojo as of today, for the top ten movies released during 2020:

  1. Bad Boys for Life - $206 million - For a year that also ended up known for the second wave of Black Lives Matter protests, it’s surely an irony that the third Will Smith/Martin Lawrence buddy cop flick ended up the highest grossing film at the US box office.
  2. Sonic the Hedgehog - $148 million - I prefer to think of this as a Jim Carrey movie, his big mainstream comeback, and by far his biggest box office success in years.
  3. Birds of Prey and the Fabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn - $84 million - Here’s where the skewed box office really sets in. You’d have to go back decades to find a year where a film made the top ten without having reached at least a hundred million (1995, Die Hard with a Vengeance at seventh place with $92 million). And this is the highest grossing superhero movie! 
  4. Dolittle - $77 million - Stop me if you would’ve predicted this: Robert Downey Jr. starring in a movie that is quickly forgotten that somehow still ranks as one of the top box office draws of the year. Only in 2020, folks.
  5. The Invisible Man - $70 million - One of the modern horror hits that I couldn’t care less about.
  6. The Call of the Wild - $62 million - A movie released just before the pandemic hit that probably would’ve made about as much after theaters reopened.
  7. Onward - $61 million - Likewise. A minor Pixar effort later eclipsed by Soul.
  8. Tenet - $57 million - Christopher Nolan drew criticism insisting that it be released in theaters. Managed to be the biggest hit post-shutdown anyway.
  9. The Croods: A New Age - $56 million - Family movies were an obvious boon in the pandemic era.
  10. Wonder Woman 1984 - $46 million - Closing out the list is the biggest superhero release post-shutdown.

Friday, April 2, 2021

I guess I’m not even unofficially doing A to Z this year...

Across my network of blogs, some of which probably owe their existence to the challenge, I am apparently not doing the A to Z this year. This is possibly the first time since 2012 that this will be true. Which is kind of sad.

This wasn’t a deliberate choice. It just kind of happened. I did the challenge as an official participant many times, and unofficially (not linked into the sign-up) several times, too. I even did the challenge simultaneously on several blogs a few times. Once I got a novella out of it. 

The challenge has been good to me. At the moment, I am committed to working on a new manuscript, which cancelled out an ambition to tackle another serialized story in official/unofficial participation.

There’s always next year.

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