This gets us right in the feels. Marvel Entertainment has recruited some of its biggest heroes to STOMP out bullying and is releasing some awesome variant covers for this new campaign. October is National Bullying Prevention Month and the likes of Captain America, Hulk and some of the cool cats (and raccoons) from "Guardians of the Galaxy" are on board. After the press release, check out the covers, compliments of Marvel. Let us know what you think and please spread the word.
Marvel Entertainment is enlisting its biggest super heroes to bring added awareness of the problems of bullying. This October, Marvel will join forces with STOMP Out Bullying™, the leading national bullying and cyberbullying prevention organization for kids and teens in the U.S., to launch a special variant cover program to commemorate National Bullying Prevention Month and support STOMP's relentless efforts to stop this growing epidemic. Throughout the month of October, the world's most popular super heroes – Captain America, the Avengers, the Guardians of the Galaxy and more – will be featured on all-new variant covers to spotlight both National Bullying Prevention Month and STOMP's Blue Shirt Day® World Day of Bullying Prevention. The variant issues will be available exclusively at comic shops.
Showing posts with label Captain America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Captain America. Show all posts
Marvel San Diego Comic-Con Recap

BY DAVID BERCK
A lot of things went down at San Diego Comic Con this year. Some people on the floor said it seemed more low key, but there was still plenty of buzz happening. As one of the "big two" in comics, Marvel certainly had a good amount of announcements going on and here's a somewhat brief recap of some of what went on.
For Marvel's cinematic universe, it was announced that Evangeline Lilly will portray Hope Pym, the daughter of Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), in Ant-Man. The movie is starting production this month, which is a little nerve wracking for some of the fandom, but Empire sat down with Marvel movie boss, Kevin Feige, and he reports that everything is fine, pointing to the time table for Iron Man 3 which was much more visually demanding. Corey Stoll was introduced as the villain, Yellowjacket. Interestingly enough, this character had a whole two-issue life span in the comics but is using a hero name that was a popular iteration for Hank Pym as an Avenger.
Williams-Sonoma supes up kitchens with Marvel heroes
Luxury cookware retailer Williams-Sonoma announced last week the launch of a collection of Super Hero kitchen products featuring Marvel Universe characters.Sold exclusively through the retailer, the products include retro character art and graphics of renowned Marvel heroes Spider-Man, Hulk, Captain America and Iron Man. According to the press release by Williams-Sonoma, "the program launches with an array of bakeware and kitchen essentials including Cookie Cutters, Pancake Molds, Adult and Child Aprons, Spatulas and Iced Cookies."

"Building upon our incredibly successful relationship with Williams-Sonoma Inc., we are excited to launch a great new line of merchandise at Williams-Sonoma stores, bringing the Marvel brand to another audience and product segment," said Paul Gitter, President of Consumer Products for North America, Marvel Entertainment. "We are working with Williams-Sonoma on helping kids and adults spend time together in the kitchen."
The products will be available at Williams-Sonoma stores in the U.S. and Canada, and also via catalog and online at www.williams-sonoma.com.
Paranormal Pop Column: I'm mad as hell about movie tickets
BY AARON SAGERS
I love movies, and I also see movies as part of my job. But I’m mad as hell and I won’t take it anymore.
Let me explain: Each week I’ll attend a few press screenings of big studio movies. I get into these screenings for free because it’s part of the symbiotic relationship between filmmakers and film writers; they want us to talk about the movies so people will see them, and we need to see the movies to have something to talk about.
And yet, because I love movies, I still attend regular showings of other films throughout the week that I haven’t screened in advance. Or I will go back and watch movies I’d already seen with friends excited about the new blockbuster or Oscar bait.
That means paying for a ticket.
That, in turn, means taking out a mortgage on my house, accepting bids on a kidney or selling my firstborn child. If I want a soda and snack, it may be necessary to auction off my mortal soul. And now that we’re knee deep in the summer movie season - a time when the public takes to the theaters the most for a couple hours of air conditioning and escapism into massively marketed 3D super hero/sequel vehicles – it means I may have to pull off a massive art gallery or casino heist just to afford the trips to the multiplex.
According to National Association of Theatre Owners, the average U.S. ticket price in 2010 was $7.89, up 5% from $7.50 in 2009. The Los Angeles Times reported in January 2011 that the fourth quarter ticket costs in 2010 were around $8.01, a 5% increase from the same quarter in the previous year. Meanwhile, the cost of tickets where I live in New York City: $13 for an evening ticket or about $18 for 3D movie, but you’ll need to tack on another $1.50 for a “convenience fee” if you want to buy online through Fandango.
And this is during a time of serious economic hardship. So, can we call it? Can we now pronounce “dinner and movie” as a cheap date idea officially dead? A family trip with the kids to the cinema is DOA, right?
This is madness.
I understand how ticket prices work. A majority of the astronomical ticket cost goes, not to the theater, but the studio. Aside from expensive talent, to create a movie means enlisting a crew of hundreds from high profile gigs on down to the gaffers, caterers and animal wranglers. But when the budgets for the latest adventure of a hero with a power ring ($200-plus million for Warner Bros.’ Green Lantern) or robots in disguise ($400-plus million for Paramount Pictures’ Transformers: Dark of the Moon”) keep rising, ticket costs will also continue to increase so studios can turn a profit – or at least break even – from their bigger productions.
New 'Captain America' TV spot has icy beginning
Captain America has done a nice job of slowly rolling out its juicy bits in trailer form without throwing everything out there and leaving no plot twist unturned weeks before its opening (ahem, Green Lantern).
For instance, for some time now we've heard that the 1940s adventure flick is bookended by modern-day scenes. Plus, anyone who knows an inkling of Cap's story knows how the movie ends. Still, this new TV spot opens with an as-yet unseen peek at what is likely the movie's beginning where the super soldier's frozen body is found in the arctic.
And boy does it look geektastic.
For instance, for some time now we've heard that the 1940s adventure flick is bookended by modern-day scenes. Plus, anyone who knows an inkling of Cap's story knows how the movie ends. Still, this new TV spot opens with an as-yet unseen peek at what is likely the movie's beginning where the super soldier's frozen body is found in the arctic.
And boy does it look geektastic.
Marvel's 'Fear Itself' event gets Red Skull teaser
I'm afraid to admit it, but I have no idea what Marvel Comics' new seven-issue crossover event "Fear Itself" has to do with. The Daily News reported back in December the series has something to do with the "villainous God of Fear" terrorizing our spandex-clad heroes and stoking panic.
Supposedly this was meant to suggest the comics company was ripping from the headlines to reflect our current unsteady culture of fear exacerbated by pundits and such.But the slew of teaser images asking "Do You Fear...?" and "Who are the Worthy?" don't give much away - aside from suggesting Captain America and Thor (or at least variations of Thor's hammer) will figure heavily into the titles. Not coincidentally, those two characters have movies coming out this summer.
Whatever the plotline is, it looks pretty epic and supernatural, especially considering this striking teaser image above from the series prequel, Fear Itself: Book of the Skull #1. For a little context, that's the Red Skull swallowing up Cap and Namor. And the tagline that follows tells readers:
Fear Itself ... will crack the very foundation of the Marvel Universe! How is a wicked alliance forged by the Red Skull at the heart of this conquest from beyond time and space? And could a secret mission led by Captain America and Namor have tipped the hand of fate in fear’s favor? Sin, the Skull’s daughter, knows the truth and, this March, she gambles with all the world’s soulsSin! Lost Souls! Cracked Foundations! Sounds either really spooky or just like another day in comics.

