Author: Ghost Face

  • The Doomsday Project

    The Doomsday Project

     – Doomsday is coming-

    In exactly one year from now – 365 days – 8760 hours – 525600 minutes – The MCU will come to some sort of grand conclusion. Wrapping up the last quarter century of cinematic superhero films into an extravaganza blockbuster. Yet there have been many bumps in the road on this long journey that the MCU has taken us on. It’s safe to say that, after many cinematic duds – both financial and critical – and television shows that failed to gather audiences in a substantial way, the MCU isn’t standing on as-solid-a-foundation as it did when they had their previous big event with Infinity War and Endgame. I’ll be the first to say that I am the opposite of excited for Doomsday, both because of the lackluster build up to it as well as everything else we know about the film, yet I feel there are parts of this grand tapestry that work very well. Some of the pieces that are and have been in play for the last 7 years are incredibly fun and exciting and could lead to some very satisfying world-building – yet it’s just not working, is it!?

    That’s what “Project Doomsday” is. A series of articles in which I try to remold “The Sacred Timeline” into something more palpable, something more exciting and engaging then what we have now. How? Well it’s simple really: just rewrite half a decade of film-making in a year’s time. 

    Okay not really, I won’t be delivering like 12 whole screenplays about a bunch of movies I don’t really care about: this is more an exercise in improving. In using the knowledge I have off this universe, the comics, the entire Marvel world and smashing it together to hopefully deliver a version of this story that makes people more excited to see it all culminate in Doomsday and Secret Wars. That’s also where the limitations of this challenge come into play. I’m not doing a fanfiction thing. Don’t expect me to be like: “I hate She Hulk! What if She-Hulk was actually Iron Man 4 and in Iron Man 4 no one is WOKE and all the ladies are sexy!” – if you want that then go write your own stuff, I’m sure it’ll be wonderful buddy! No, I’m really trying to keep Phase 4-through-6 intact, I won’t take out any movies or shows from the already existing line-up and I’ll try not to add a billion-trillion extra shows and films (I might add one or two but that’s an idea for later). I will use what is there and just shift it into something else. 

    I will change a lot about those movies though. Yes, I’ll try to keep most of them intact, I don’t really want to completely overhaul these stories but I’ll definitely change them in substantial ways. Most of the casts of these films will remain the same, A lot of the story beats will remain the same and endings are mostly already set in stone given what I need to work towards, but things will be different. To give you a little hint as to my first project: My version of “The Marvels” will NOT feature any body-swapping quantum-band hijinks – nor will it feature Nick Fury in a substantial role, but it will of course feature all the titular Marvels (I won’t give away too much else though).

    I also won’t be changing ALL of the projects released in the last 7 years. Realistically speaking I’ll only be overhauling like 20 percent of what’s there (especially since phase 4-6 features something around 35 projects, which is quite frankly ridiculous) but I will be overhauling some of the major films released. If you’re expecting me to really dig into “Echo” or “Moon Knight” you can set those expectations a little lower. These projects are largely inconsequential to the already predetermined roadmap leading to Doomsday and will not be any more important in my version. That does not mean that I’ll be tackling every major hit the MCU has had either – Thunderbolts fans can rest soundly knowing I don’t see any reason to change what is already there. 

    This brings me to my final point: Don’t read too much into this, please. I am doing this for fun, I’m doing this because it’s simple and low-stakes and if I mess up I won’t accidentally flush 200 million of Mickey Mouse’s hard earned dollars down the drain. Filmmaking is hard and hindsight is 2020. Of course my job is a million times easier than what Feige and his compatriots have had to do post Endgame – I don’t envy them at all (Maybe I envy them a little bit). I just think I can do something fun with what is there and I wanna show people that work.

    Establishing the Timeline:

    I wanna make sure everyone knows our jumping off point, You’ll need to know what is and isn’t canon as we go into the project. First off, the most obvious point to make: Everything released pre-Endgame is canon, that includes Endgame. The Infinity Saga is off-limits. The first few Phase 4 releases are also largely off-limits. Wandavision, Falcon and Winter Soldier, Black Widow as well as the first season of Loki will need to be almost completely intact for this to work. The set-up in those shows are too important for the future of this Saga to fuck with- if I did we’d be getting a completely different story and that is not what I’m trying to do. 

    As my articles go on over the next few months I’ll be updating what is and isn’t canon as these projects go on. To streamline this I’ll be updating this handy little timeline in every article as well:

    You’ll find similar timelines in each article to kind of give you a sense of what has and hasn’t happened. Some shows and films won’t get complete overhauls but I will change aspects of them so things mesh better with my new canon, if that happens you’ll see a little “CANON NOTE” where I’ll explain the details of what changes. 

    I think those are all the rules. I hope so at least. If more rules pop up i’m sure everyone will figure it out. You can expect part 1 of this project to be released before the end of this year. With that said: 

    In exactly 364 days from now – 8759 hours – 525594 minutes –  Doomsday will arrive.

    (I thought of this ticking clock idea two weeks ago and then Marvel Studios decided to copy me actually!)

  • There Is Nothing Good About “Wicked: For Good”

    There Is Nothing Good About “Wicked: For Good”

    I have a tough relationship with the first Wicked film. It’s certainly not the worst movie I’ve ever seen, and I’d hesitate to even call it bad but it’s also woefully unimpressive to me. Some good performances wrapped up in an unmoving film that sets up a much more intriguing second act on which I had to wait another year. Admittedly I’ve grown more fondly of Wicked over the last 12 months, having seen it twice again because of my lovely girlfriend, but I could never shake the feeling that “Part Two” – Or “For Good” as it has been dubbed – might just be more my thing. It sets up this thrilling confrontation between Elphaba and Glinda, an emotional clash between sisters wrapped around the classic tale we’ve all seen so many times before. Though now, 24 hours after seeing the hotly-anticipated follow-up I can confidently say that I was wrong in getting my hopes up. “Wicked: For Good” is pretty terrible.

    Wicked Part One ends in an incredibly memorable way. Even I have to admit that its defying gravity routine is an effective tour-de-force that has left a genuine mark on audiences, a feat that is becoming increasingly rare these days. So you’d imagine that this sequel starts off with a similar bravado, yet “For Good” ends up doing the opposite. The opening scene is a culmination of all the elements I disliked in “Part One”, a drab-looking faux-spectacle that is unintelligible to the eye. For a musical film with grand spectacle and dance-numbers, Jon M Chu is astoundingly terrible at framing what the audience needs to see. Dance numbers don’t actually look impressive (a problem more applicable to the first one since there are zero dance-numbers in “For Good”) as most of the choreography gets lost in a series of close-ups of actors faces and action scenes often leave your optical nerves in a twisted knot as you try to follow along with what is happening through odd angles and one-too-many cuts. The opening minutes of “For Good” feature a mixture of all those faults as Elphaba saves some weird looking rhinos from slave labor in a scene that is as boring as it is ugly. In a sense it’s a perfect opener to this film, as it tells you exactly what you can expect to see in the next 2 and a half hours. The scene is indicative of all the film’s more technical faults. As the hairy-rhino’s dig their hooves into the mud, so does the film; Getting stuck in the mud, Stuck in the nonsense, stuck in pointless scene after pointless scene, never truly reaching any heights or delivering any memorable moments beyond some scenes I’m sure will make the rounds on “stan Twitter”. The movie never truly starts, it has no real arcs or acts and has a baffling ending. It is a total filmmaking failure from beginning to the end. 

    Yet, while I could get stuck on the technical faults of the film for many more paragraphs, analyzing the shoddy flying CGI or the weird prosthetic work on one particular actor – I won’t even pick-apart one of the worst face-replacement/DeAge effects I’ve ever had the displeasure of witnessing – because it is not those parts of the final film that irked me so bad that I had to write this. These parts of the filmmaking process become inconsequential when you compare them to the film’s story – which is inconsequential and thoughtless at its best and down-right harmful at its worst.

    I wasn’t aware of the story of Wicked before seeing this. I knew about some of the twists and turns and I was aware of its connection to the original book and film but I had never really delved into it any deeper. So I cannot rate this movie on how well it manages to capture the spirit of the original. But, what I can say is that, if this is exactly how the original plays out, I cannot fathom why this became the cultural juggernaut that it did. I came out stunned at just how nonsensical this whole thing is. An unengaging and unchallenging piece of work that tricks its audience into thinking they saw something by throwing forgettable ballads at them while in reality nothing really happened at all. 

    I understand that many of the people that seek out a film like Wicked For Good are not interested in politicizing it. I don’t agree with it, far from it, but I understand that there are those that are unwilling to be challenged by a film like this in any way shape or form. You want to be entertained, you want to laugh and cry at your favorite pop-girly singing about bubbles and not think about what a story like this means or represents – but when a film is this obvious in it’s messaging and then so hopelessly fails at delivering on that it becomes hard to ignore.

    We live in a day and age where fascism rises- where racism, sexism, homophobia and all other forms of prejudice run rampant in the streets. Wicked is the story we absolutely do not need in a time like that. At face value Wicked is a story about oppression, persecution and propaganda, about false prophets and dictatorship but mainly about fighting against injustice. That’s what is presented to us from the opening frames of both films, but once the 5 hour long story has washed over you you realize that Wicked is actually the opposite. That Wicked tells you the store of complicity, about shutting up and playing along. Wicked is a story where the oppressors learn no lessons and face no real consequences, where the oppressed happily rejoice back into society while those that had rather seen them perish happily cheer them on. Where the propaganda is never challenged and where those that benefitted from the misery of others are happily left in their do-gooder fantasy. 

    The Land of Oz (as we see it at the start of the film) is a dark place, yet it’s a direct reflection of the times we live in. A society that is blinded by its “ruler”, with followers that cannot see him do anything wrong or take any missteps whatsoever as they are blinded by his faux-leadership, happily rejoicing in witch-hunts, even if the hunted are innocent. They cheer on as anyone who looks and acts even slightly different to them is rounded off in gestapo like fashion, either annexed from society or thrown in literal cages. And a land that is so spellbound by propaganda that it has become their truth. But where-as most films would slowly make way for a beacon of light to come through that Darkness, Wicked for Good decides it’s not concerned with any of that. Instead of taking a stance against this hateful regime and letting those who have been wronged get the justice they deserve, they are instead quietly disposed of – barely punished and never held accountable, and the totalitarianism is never questioned, leaving behind a legacy of oppression and pain that will never be acknowledged again. The people of Oz never have to face their prejudice or their misguided sense of hate and fear, they all get to live in the fantasy that their racism was good actually, and that those that fought to protect others were in fact evil to their core, they never learn the truth. The Victims of that hatred, the displaced populations just have to reintegrate with those that wanted them dead, because apparently hatred should stand unopposed, and instead those that actively took part in keeping that empire of pain and lies strong and resilient should be able to waltz into a higher seat of power even if they didn’t do a single thing to stop the hurt. 

    Glinda is the most obvious offender of this phenomenon. She is for all intents and purposes a “cog in the machine”. She is the right-hand woman to Michelle Yeoh’s Madame Morrible, A Goebbels-like propagandist for The Wizard. The movie portrays Glinda as this ill-guided woman blinded by the adoration she is getting by being this mascot for the Wizard. But what the movie doesn’t ever address is that, though she might be blinded, she is very much aware of the evil that is being committed. She witnessed the unlawful prosecution of the animals first hand and is one of only a handful of people who know the Wizard is behind said prosecution. She had a front-row seat to the many attempts on Elphaba’s life and she is intimately aware that everything said about her is a lie. And she just kind of rolls with it. She’s really not that fussed that an entire species is being enslaved, displaced and destroyed – all of which is largely happening because of the propaganda she is pushing out there. But the movie never portrays that as a flaw, they never have her take accountability for her complacency – the movie actively rewards her for doing nothing. 

    I would be more forgiving of such an oversight by the filmmakers if it wasn’t for the fact that it’s not an oversight at all, it’s an unwillingness to actually delve into this story in any meaningful way. It’s not just Glinda who seems totally unfazed by the Wizard’s horrible plot – Elphaba herself only really gives a damn after her boyfriend gets mutilated. Before that she’s mad, sure, but she’s also fine with forgiving and forgetting everything the Wizard had done to her and the animals. Elphaba knows what is happening to them, she’s seen the abuse first hand – but she also just forgets about it when needed. One of the bigger turns in the story happens around the 50 minute mark when Elphaba decides to have her “big” confrontation with the Wizard by just walking into his room and talking to him in a sequence that really exemplifies the horrible writing we are dealing with here. Glinda follows her into the room and it only takes two parlor tricks and a nice little song about friendship for Elphaba to forgive and forget all the animal torture and slavery she’s witnessed. As long as The Wizard stops being such a meanie, he can continue to rule this world by her side – a completely baffling decision that is way out-of-character. The whole thing truly exists for the sole purpose of rediscovering a “twist” that we already revealed at the end of the first movie, ostensibly rebooting her arc in such a way that it renders the first hour of the film as obsolete. 

    The complete lack of any real thought that went into the script’s sub-themes becomes even more bizarre when you factor in the film’s decision to add two new songs into the story – one for Glinda and one for Elphaba, with the latter adding an entire new layer of idiocy to this already idiotic script. “No Place Like Home” is a song about the American Dream. No matter how you spin it, that’s what it’s about. With lyrics like; Oz is more than just a place – It’s a promise, an idea – I want to help make it come true”, subtext turns into straight-up text, slapping you in the face with its meaning. When you have a woman of color singing what is ostensibly a protest song in the middle of your movie, how can you still end up with such a tone deaf final picture.

    That’s truly what I find most strange about this whole thing. This is a blockbuster film led by two women – one of which is a queer black woman I might add – directed by an asian man and featuring a widely diverse cast including queer people and disabled people in major roles. You would think that a group like this – in a time like this – would want to be just a little bit more angry? Would want to be a little bit more interested in using their giant platform to say something – anything at all?? I think they try to do so at times, they’re building towards this like revolt – opposition – against Oz, but the movie pivots right before the finish line into this bizarre third act that leaves you with a confused final message: Runaway and hide – hopefully someone better will eventually step up to the plate and fix the mess you’re leaving behind.

    I struggle to completely write the film off as wilfully ignorant – as actually harmful – because I think most of its flaws stem from stupidity. From thoughtless writing and an expectancy that most of the film’s audience will not want to engage with it beyond the surface level (Though I feel that even if you don’t engage with the movie’s themes, you’ll still end up with a baffling story that does nothing and goes nowhere). But maybe, just maybe that’s even worse. Maybe a film of this scale could’ve done just a little bit better, and maybe the audiences that watch it should demand just a bit more – especially when you want to tout “Wicked” as anything more than a shoddily produced musical.

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 16: Phobia

    Amalgam-Tober Day 16: Phobia

    Phobia is another obvious one, but that doesn’t make him any less fun. Mysterio and Scarecrow both teeter on being silly or incredibly menacing depending on the story, both characters who play with their enemies’ fear and cast visages to haunt them. 

    Quentin Crane is a washed up Horror movie director who has been relegated to making terrible B-Movies. Fed up with his life and career, Quentin decides it’s time for a change – not to himself, but to the horror movie industry. Using his love for special effects and a knack for chemistry (he’s been making smoke bombs ever since high school for his student films), Quentin makes a strange substance that, when inhaled, would create horrific hallucinations, instill a deathly sense of dread and send chills down the spine of everyone who as much as sniffed it. 

    One night, during the premiere of his latest schlocky slasher, Quentin pumps the substance through the cinema vents, hoping to create a new sort of horror experience. And horrific it is, perhaps the dosis was too high, perhaps the substance was faulty to begin with, but as the movie goes on the audience slowly loses their minds. Most of the moviegoers ended up not surviving the experience, clawing their eyes out of their heads or jumping from the balcony during the second act. 

    Quentin, now one of the biggest mass murderers of all time, goes on the run, and with half of the superhero community after him decides to don a killer outfit and become a real super villain: Phobia!

    Obviously a Mysterio amalgamation needs the fishbowl, don’t do Mysterio if you don’t do the fishbowl I say! But I changed the usual smoke pattern inside into something more sinister and gave it those cool respirators that Scarecrow usually has attached to his mask. The costume is straight forward; taking inspiration from that raggedy old look usually associated with Scarecrow and kind of melding that with the Mysterio cape and gauntlets. 

    Thanks for checking out today’s post!

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 15: Eclipse

    Amalgam-Tober Day 15: Eclipse

    As I stated on day 2, the idea for this project started when I got to drawing The Polka-Spot Man and more ideas came flooding in soon thereafter – yet the idea to draw the Polka-Spot Man came from a different place; Comicpop. The youtube channel run by Sal has discussed the amalgam Universe many times but his episode of the Elseworlds exchange where they created their own Amalgam Characters was so much fun that I started doing it too. All of these have been original ideas from me so far, but to honor that original episode that started it all I bring you: Eclipse – an Amalgam of Moon Knight and Jason Todd’s Red Hood. Now before I get into everything I do need to explain that while the idea stems from Sal, the rest of this is solely my own doing, including design and backstory.

    Naming these guys can either be the biggest pain in the ass or an absolute joy, and Eclipse turned out to be the latter. My brain literally just went: “Red Hood + Moon Knight= Red Moon? Red Moon = Lunar Eclipse, that’s too long so shorten it to Eclipse!”. It really is that simple. From there on the design followed, starting with the small logo on his chest. I inverted the usual crescent moon that Moon Knight usually sports and added an additional moon resembling the process of an eclipse.

    Moon Knight has had a lot of different costumes over the years and I toyed with the idea of making this a look inspired by the Mr.Knight suit or a more mystical suit that would tie into his origins but decided that keeping that tactical aspect from the Red Hood costume would be the best way to go. That’s why I chose to go with that more tactical black and white Moon Knight suit often attributed to Jake Lockley, but replacing the pants with something more military looking and obviously recoloring that cape. He needed a Red Hood… Duh! 

    All of this ties back to his origin: Back in the day, Jason Spector was a young criminal often on the run from the law, yet it’s when he steals a certain someone’s tires his story really begins. The skills he puts on display during his criminal acts impresses the Caped Crusader so much that he takes him under his wing. Getting the training he needs to become a superhero sidekick, Jason manages to overcome some of his troubled upbringing and reshape the skills he learned on the streets into something more heroic. But being a hero comes with a lot of downsides, and suffering traumatic event after traumatic event his volatile side kicks back up again, culminating in a violent confrontation with his father’s biggest enemy – one he does not survive. 

    It’s then that his father’s oldest enemy, The Moon Demon Khon-Al-Ghul, retrieves Jason’s body for his most nefarious plan yet. Submerging Jason in the healing Lunar waters of Arabia, Khon-Al-Ghul thinks he’s reviving Jason to turn him into a soldier for his own League of Assassins. But out from the bubbling crystal blue water comes a man forever changed, not just Jason anymore. The emotional trauma of his past mixed with the physical trauma of his violent death and subsequent resurrection has split Jason’s psyche into bits and pieces, creating three distinct personalities inside his system, all fighting for control. His youthful spirit remains within the Alter I dub “The Boy”, always steering Jason into more problems and mischief – from causing random property damage in the streets of Gotham to purposely killing low-life thugs to teach them a lesson, this Alter doesn’t understand the gravity of his actions and is not concerned with consequences. The Sidekick, Jason’s second Alter, is the exact opposite. He’s trained to be better and serves as Jason’s moral compass for good. The sidekick makes sure to cause no damage to the innocent, always makes sure that apprehended drug money ends up in places where it’s needed and desperately resists whenever murder is on Jason’s mind. Usually though: it’s the Eclipse that takes the wheel, an Alter completely engulfed with rage and revenge. He’s the one that came out of the water, he’s the one who’s set off on this journey for revenge and he’s the one who’s going to kill whoever stands in his way. 

    For a while I wanted to design all three of the Alters for this post, but I quickly realized that would be too much work for one day. That said, the final piece does feature Khon-Al-Ghul, a mix of Khonshu and Ra’s-Al-Ghul, making day 15 a double Amalgam day!

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 14: The Great Catch-Up

    Amalgam-Tober Day 14: The Great Catch-Up

    Today is slightly different, since network issues prohibited me from posting two days in the past week, I hereby put the articles for those days here. Including today’s post of course.

    Day 11: Spider-Man 2099

    Some of these have been, with the risk of sounding cocky, very clever. Putting together unlikely pair-ups and coming up with clever names. Some of these are downright obvious though, this being one of those. Putting Spider-Man 2099 and Batman Beyond together is a no-brainer. Quite truthfully it’s a shame they’ve never done it before. The similarities don’t just boil down to being future versions of the biggest character of their respective publisher, it’s also about aesthetics, about that Blade Runner infused world building and about that similar standoffishness that both characters share. Terry and Miguel are both cool guys, hotheaded and maybe don’t start off as morally righteous as their counterparts did, but their stories are about them morphing into something better. 

    The big difference between Miguel and Terry is their training, more specifically a lack of a trainer. Terry has Bruce by his side on every adventure, Terry knows about Batman and his past while Miguel barely acknowledges Peter’s existence. He’s not doing this to step into Peter’s footsteps and live up to his legacy, he doesn’t even really have a legacy to live up to. That’s where my new origin for this version comes in: I want a Batman who has to basically figure out a completely new way of being Batman, no training from an old Bruce, he can only take from the myth of the Batman.

    That’s how we start this out. Terry O’Hara, running from a group of crazed Mayhem crooks (who’ve dedicated their life to causing as much chaos as possible in honor of Mayhem, the leader of their old clown gang), tries to find a hiding spot among the old abandoned remnants of the Gotham Manor. But when he steps on a wrong wooden plank invested by Woodrot his entire body comes crashing down through the floor, tumbling all the way into a secret cave filled with old technology. That’s when he finds the last Batman suit made by his predecessor, waiting for him in a bright blue storage room. In an effort to protect himself from the goons still after him, Terry puts on the suit and becomes the Batman of 2099.

    Terry knows of Batman, but it’s been so long since he’s last donned the suit (I imagine Batman retiring in the early 2000s to stay truthful to that original time gap from the 2099 comics) that there just isn’t that much record of him left. Barely any videos or images left and definitely no living heirs to tell the tale. Terry is forced to base his fighting style and overall demeanor as Batman on that off old tales from stuffy books and on real bats instead. 

    This version of Batman would be meaner and scarier, he’d live in the shadows and combined with his stealth suit and claws, people would think he’s a genuine monster for his first years as The Bat. But that’s what he has to overcome to become the greatest hero the Amalgam Universe has ever seen.

    Day 12: The Bat Without Fear

    A few days ago, when I first showed off my design for the Knight Without Fear, I talked about how much I wanted to amalgamate Daredevil and Batman in some form. The two just fit so well together that making 31 of these and ignoring such a solid idea would just be a waste. I finally found my angle when I did my version of Old Man Matt and Old Man Bruce together as one but that was not my first attempt… this is.

    The Bat Without Fear is a combination of Batwoman and The Woman Without Fear, aka Elektra from Chip Zdarsky’s Daredevil run. The latter is one of my favorite recent additions to the Marvel Universe so I’m always contemplating putting her in projects like these and now I finally have a reason to do so. 

    Like Batman and Daredevil, Batwoman and this version of Elektra are two sides of the same coin. They are astoundingly similar in so many ways; from the simple fact that they’re both legacy characters to the fact that they’re both sporting a red and black color scheme with a big bush of hair sticking out of their masks, the more you think about the better these two fit. 

    The design ended up being pretty tough to nail but I feel I managed okay. Elements that I felt had to be incorporated were the Bat-Logo obviously as well as Elektra’s beautiful curls that seem to almost be alive if they’re drawn by Checchetto. The weaponry was also very fun to develop, with the Batsai being one of my favorite things I’ve thought of since starting this challenge. I’ve really been trying to differentiate each drawing and try new ways of getting my final look across and this one shows that off to a tee. Here I ditched the usual look of these posts with something more concept-Art like. Separating costume and head is a good shot for a design like this.

    Day 14: Soldier Of Tomorrow

    Drifting through the cosmos, surrounded by the rubble of a dead planet, Kara Zor-El breathes her last breaths. Her lungs filling with blood, her skin on fire and her ripped apart left arm aching as memories of her time on Krypton try to push away the pain and anguish, keeping her eyes from gazing at the dead floating relatives surrounding her. She closes her eyes knowing the inevitable is finally here… Brainiac.

    Making an Amalgam oftentimes means finding characters that share similar aesthetics or gimmicks or powers or whatever, but a really good Amalgam looks past all that and finds characters that would never fit together but are still intrinsically the same: Supergirl and Winter Soldier are such characters. Most people would assume a character like Red Hood would pair well with Winter Soldier, rightfully so: they are very similar. And Supergirl might fit well with powerhouse characters like Captain Marvel and such. But when you think about it, their origin is so similar. They are old – familiar faces, returning from the past with a heap of emotional baggage. But where Kara’s story usually ends in her escaping from the Kryptonian wreckage and landing on Earth, mine goes into a different direction.

    When Kara wakes up she doesn’t even remember her own name. She’s a husk of what’s been, overcome by Brainiac’s programming and turned into his personal attack dog. Her design is a mix of Winter Soldier’s tactical gear and samples of the super-aesthetic. The torn cape still has the mark of El scorched into the back while the one on her chest is replaced by Brainiac Particles (though still in that familiar Crest-Shape). The particles also help generate the necessary energy to sustain her cybernetically enhanced arm, One that has more blood on it then some small planets have culminated over their entire existence. She sports a domino mask to hide her red laser eyes and a face-guard to conceal her kryptonian heritage, especially now that Brainiac has sent her on her most dangerous mission. Go to Earth and kill the last remaining family she has…

    I really think these two fit well together and I hope I’ve convinced you of the same. Thanks for reading and see you tomorrow.

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 13: Age Of Flashpoint DarkClaw

    Amalgam-Tober Day 13: Age Of Flashpoint DarkClaw

    For today’s entry we look into the multiverse for a change and combine the alternate universe versions of Batman and Wolverine into the Age Of Flashpoint DarkClaw. Set in a dark future timeline where evil reigns, this version of Darkclaw is meaner and more deadly than any version you’ve seen before. 

    I really liked that I was able to find an Amalgam character who’s original inspirations both have darker and grittier versions of themselves out there in the Multiverse. While I don’t think this version of Darkclaw would be the father of the original Darkclaw, I did take a lot of the design element from Thomas Wayne’s Batman from the Flashpoint comics. I contemplated giving this version guns as well since Flashpoint Batman is so well known for his firearm use but I felt that adding guns to Wolverine doesn’t do anything to add to his character. 

    Age of Apocalypse Wolverine is very iconic to me, maybe the most iconic Wolverine suit after the Blue and Brown suit, so keeping a lot of those elements in the final design was important. The main takeaways from the AoA suit are the colors and the red stripes everywhere but none is so iconic as that chopped off arm. I just had to include it. 

    Thanks for checking out today’s post and I hope I see you back tomorrow for a new entry!

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 10: Mayhem: The Clown Prince of Carnage

    Amalgam-Tober Day 10: Mayhem: The Clown Prince of Carnage

    This one is a pretty self-explanatory entry… putting together Marvel’s most crazed serial killer with DC’s most crazed serial killer really isn’t as clever as some of these other entries have been but Joker and Carnage is just to good a match-up to ignore.

    The design for this one is deceptively simple looking while it really took a while to nail the final result. One of my biggest hurdles was the color scheme, I think I tried out a dozen shades of green and purple and white and red until I genuinely couldn’t tell the difference anymore – and then after endless tries I realized I also couldn’t settle on an order for the colors to be in. Was the face gonna be green or the mouth? What about the tendrils? Should they be red instead to accentuate his smile? I tried out another few dozen designs before settling on this one. I really love how this guy ended up looking. It’s immediately clear which characters got smashed together and nothing ends up illegible, which tends to happy with goopy characters like this.

    The problem with putting the Joker into a prompt that demands a written element like this challenge does is that there just isn’t a whole lot to take from. He’s a mystery man and I want to stay faithful to that element of the character but I also want to write about him and make sure these mash-ups are more than just fun designs. I kind of ended up going with the most obvious route:

    Being the leader of a clan of murderers terrorizing the Gotham streets, Mr. C (as this character is known without his symbiote) quickly finds himself facing off against the Caped Crusader. During one of their more violent match-ups the two enemies find themselves trapped in a secret underground laboratory run by Hugo Strange’s Life Foundation which has been used to morph the dangerous Venom toxin into something even more sinister. In a more tactless moment from the Caped Crusader, Mr. C is pushed into the containment chambers the foundation has been using – all of which are promptly broken. The separate pieces of Symbiote start to bond with Mr. C and thus Mayhem is born!

    It’s a big entry today given that we’ve hit double digits as we enter day 10! I’m very excited to show everyone what’s next. I’m far from finished and my best pieces are still yet to come!

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 9: Jimmy Barnes

    Amalgam-Tober Day 9: Jimmy Barnes

    Following up on yesterday’s Super Soldier design, I could not leave out his sidekick Jimmy Barnes; an Amalgam of Jimmy Olson and Bucky Barnes. These two are completely different characters while also being inherently similar, they’re both from that golden Age of comics, both helpers to the big heroes of their time and they both ended up becoming heroes in their own right (though Jimmy always will be Superman’s Pal). 

    When I started this piece I wanted it to pair very well next to my Super Soldier piece from yesterday but as I kept going I realized how much I loved this design and pair-up so I went overboard and created this classic feeling comic book cover heavily inspired by Issue 109 of Captain America’s original run. The front text alludes to the origin I imagined for this character.

    Barely 18 when the second world war starts, Jimmy Barnes heads off to Europe to become a War-time photographer, capturing the brutal nature of war like no one else can. He quickly makes a name for himself as his pictures grace the front page of American newspapers everywhere. During one mission he meets Super Soldier, a young soldier with incredible powers who has singlehandedly caused the destruction of entire nazi platoons. The two are sent off on the same mission, where Jimmy captures the most breathtaking pictures of the American Super Soldier and only makes his legend grow. Their friendship grows as the two do more and more missions together and eventually, Jimmy even helps out The Super Soldier on the battlefield, turning into a bonafide super-sidekick.

    Thanks for reading today’s post and check back tomorrow for more.

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 8: Super Soldier

    Amalgam-Tober Day 8: Super Soldier

    A little shorter article today featuring a pre-existing Amalgam for once; The Super Soldier, sporting a slightly tweaked design. Super Soldier is like a perfect Amalgam character to me. An equal match-up of characters, with a slick design and a really good name – that’s all you can really ask for with characters like this. I added a few elements to the suit and removed some key parts to make something a lot sleeker compared to the original. My first way of doing that was removing the white and red stripes from the original suit’s abdomen. I understand and appreciate that it was there but it also sort of draws too much attention to itself and becomes kind of distracting. What I added were the red gloves which I’ve always loved on Cap as well as the big brown belt.

    The biggest additions to the overall look though are the cape and the chest-shield. I understand why the original design goes for a star, but the shield is just more iconic to me – especially after I redesigned it to give it a bit more of that 40’s shield look. The original shield is just a big version of Superman’s logo and I feel this newer design is more of an amalgam of the two elements coming together. 

    Finally I added wings to the sides of the mask, no Captain America suit is finished without wings. Let’s be honest.

    Today was a little bit of a shorter entry but that’s because tomorrow’s entry is gonna be much bigger so get excited and make sure you’re back here tomorrow to see it.

  • Amalgam-Tober Day 7: Harley “The Clown” Wilson

    Amalgam-Tober Day 7: Harley “The Clown” Wilson

    It took me a weird amount of time to come up with this one, seeing as the idea seems so obvious now that I have. Both crazy, both lethal, a shared love for black and red color schemes with a knack for clownery and a complete dominance over 2016’s pop culture landscape (seriously how many Harley Quinn and Deadpool costumes were sold in 2016? One billion? Two?) – Deadpool and Harley are a perfect amalgamation. Both of them also never really had a fair shot during the original Amalgam Universe, yeah they do have amalgam versions of themselves, but neither had yet to be as immensely popular as they are now. 

    The design for this one was maybe the easiest time I’ve had with one of these while also coming out the cleanest. The two costumes already compliment each other so well it felt hard to mess up. I tried out some more action poses, especially trying to incorporate a big mallet into the final piece but it quickly became clear to me that I wanted this to be precise, clear and clean. 

    For a character biography I don’t have anything super clever. Harley Wilson, a young woman who wants to follow her fathers footsteps and join the army, is forced to become a government psychiatrist, treating soldiers and POWs alike when she doesn’t get accepted into the army for being “too weak”. Jealous and envious of her clients, she becomes enamored with two of the most brutal soldiers who’ve ever lived; Logan Wayne and Creed Quinn. She slowly loses herself in this obsession and, with inside knowledge of the government’s now-disbanded Weapon X program, obtains a vial of both their blood and injects it into herself – giving her great healing abilities. 

    Now, with her obsession of the two men at an all time high and her powers finally giving her the power to do anything she’s ever wanted. She tracks the two men down and tries to befriend them, knowing full well they’re now mortal enemies. This is where I want to mirror some of their main-line-continuity counterparts; Darkclaw is completely irked by her, in the same vein that Logan is irked by Wade – But The Hyena is smitten by the attention and kind of takes her under his wing like Joker does Harley. This also creates a fun dynamic where Hyena has this sidekick with him that – while sharing his obsession for Darkclaw – does not share his bloodlust, and will always avoid killing Darkclaw if Hyena gets too close (I also imagine that sort of ends in a similar way that the mainline Harley and Joker ends with her becoming more of her own character and splitting from Hyena).

    This is one of my favorites I’ve done just because it’s so perfectly simple. The design and the backstory just came out in one go and I really enjoy that. Thanks for reading and hope you come back for tomorrow’s entry.