The World’s Finest presents the latest in a series of studio-conducted interviews, provided by Warner Home Video, this one for the Jonah Hex DC Showcase animated short included on the home video release of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Continue reading below for the latest installment featuring actor Thomas Jane.
HUNG STAR THOMAS JANE
FINALLY GETS HIS MAN AS JONAH HEX
IN ALL-NEW DC SHOWCASE ORIGINAL SHORTIf at first you dont succeed, take the animated role.
Therein lies the lesson of Thomas Janes quest to play the role of comic book anti-hero Jonah Hex. The star of HBOs popular series Hung once lobbied to play the theatrical role of Jonah Hex and, though he fell short in that attempt, Jane has found another path to the character as the disfigured cowboys voice in the DC Showcase Original Short, Jonah Hex.
The all-new, animated Jonah Hex appears as a companion piece on the upcoming Special Edition Blu-Ray and 2-Disc Special Edition DVD release of Batman: Under the Red Hood, the latest entry in the ongoing series of DC Universe Animated Original PG-13 Movies coming from Warner Home Video on July 27, 2010.
In the short, the tough-as-nails bounty hunter always gets his man – until someone else gets to him first. In this case its a murderous madam who wants to steal more than just bounty from Jonah Hex. The animated short Jonah Hex is based on a story from the award-winning comic series, and scripted by renowned author Joe Lansdale. Jane leads a voice cast that includes Linda Hamilton (The Terminator), Michelle Trachtenberg (Mercy, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Michael Rooker (Days of Thunder) and Jason Marsden (Spirited Away).
A lover of both comic books and westerns, Jane felt a certain kinship to the character and the result is clearly evident in his vocal depiction of Hex and the emotional range of the performance. Jane was the ultimate perfectionist throughout the recording process, never settling for good takes when great was attainable. From the original recording session through follow-up ADR, the give-and-take between Jane and the filmmakers including executive producer Bruce Timm was quite collaborative in achieving the final presentation.
Jane currently headlines HBOs Hung, though hes active in numerous other projects, including films being developed by his own production company, Raw Studios. Coincidentally, Jane founded Raw Studios with Timothy Bradstreet and Steve Niles, the screenwriter of the first DC Showcase short, The Spectre. Janes directorial debut, Raw Studios Dark Country, continues to play to rave reviews and enthusiastic crowds at conventions and festivals around the world.
No stranger to the fanboy/comics realm, Jane co-wrote his own comic book miniseries, Bad Planet. He played the title character in the 2004 version of The Punisher, starred in Mutant Chronicles, and had roles in both The Crow: City of Angels and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. He has drawn widespread acclaim for many of his non-fanboy roles, especially his turn as Mickey Mantle in the HBO film, 61*. His numerous credits run the gamut from Magnolia, Deep Blue Sea and The Thin Red Line to Boogie Nights and Face/Off.
After shooting all morning on the set of Hung, Jane came into the recording studio to put some final touches on his Jonah Hex performance and to chat about his attraction to anti-heroes, his adoration of comics, and how he came to (literally) rub elbows with Ringo Starr. This is what Thomas Jane says
QUESTION: This isnt your first run at the role of Jonah Hex, is it?
THOMAS JANE: Ive been a fan of the comic and the character and that whole western world. Im glad to be voicing the role, and I actually wanted to do the live-action film. When they were casting the movie, I had a guy come and do my makeup, we took some photos and sent them off to Akiva Goldman. I know some of those photos have leaked out online. They had a different director at the time, and Josh Brolin had just hit with the Coen brothers movie, so he had pick of the litter. And that spelled outski for me.
QUESTION: Did you do any research to voice the role?
THOMAS JANE: Well, I lived with a pack of wolves for a week up in the ponderosa foothills to perfect my growl (he laughs). No, mostly I just tried not to love my voice. I tried my best.
QUESTION: Any thoughts on the look of Jonah Hex?
THOMAS JANE: The animators did a great job in capturing the ugliness of the character. Hes not a pretty boy. He looks like hes been butchered by a blind barber. Hes mean as hell, and I cant imagine anybody wanting to make love to the dude. He must be awful lonely. And that just makes him meaner. Hes a true anti-hero, and I really love that kind of character. Hollywood doesnt do the anti-hero justice very often its a tough character type for the studios to understand. The closest you get these days is like (Michael) Chiklis on The Shield. Taxi Driver may have been the last great anti-hero film. Theres always good ones in video games, especially games like Grand Theft Auto. Actors and directors lover anti-heroes. Unfortunately, it doesnt seem to be the case with the rest of America right now.
QUESTION: Now that youre directing, has that perspective effected your performances?
THOMAS JANE: Im a lot nicer to the guy directing than I used to be. Im also a little more pragmatic. I understand the needs of the story on the whole, and Im less myopic in my view of the role as an actor. Im serving a machine, the story as a whole, so the mechanics of me trying to strike an emotional truth are counter-balanced by not gurgling into the microphone or throat clicking. Theres a balance between the technical and the emotional that you have to strike.
QUESTION: Did that directors perspective lead you to your asking to re-record so many lines after seeing/hearing your original performance?
THOMAS JANE: Im really interested in a great performance. Im interested in the texture of a performance and I understand that, especially in the animated projects, the human voice is really all youve got to connect with on a visceral, emotional level. Youve got the writing, the words, and the human voice. And thats what gives it life. So even more so than live action acting, I pay particular attention to the vocal performances.
QUESTION: Youve had the chance to perform the dialogue wild, and also to picture. Was it easier or more difficult to record the lines while seeing the actual animation?
THOMAS JANE: Its both. Without the animation, you have more freedom to make up the rhythm of the scene, and you can take more chances in your delivery because hopefully the director will choose an interesting performance, and the animators will animate to that performance. Once youre locked in and I come back to redo the lines, Im stuck with the rhythms that have been predetermined by the animators. But that also gives me structure, which affords me some other freedom in the delivery of the dialogue because then I have a set rhythm and I can play with the intensity of the performance.
QUESTION: How would you describe your relationship with comic books?
THOMAS JANE: I discovered comic books when I was about 8 years old and Ive been in love with them ever since. I thought Id outgrow it, and I sort of did in my 20s, but then came back full force in the my early 30s. Its because the medium is so powerful. As a kid, I thought of it as kid stuff, and then I grew up and found more adult material.
I never liked super heroes I was always drawn more to a great story. I even loved the illustrated classics like Moby Dick adaptations of a classic novel, or some of the original autobiographical stuff. And then theres all the independents Robert Crumb or Charles Burns or Daniel Clowes. The medium is so broad, much more so than film. Theres so much more room in comics for genres, styles, flavors, different auteurs. Thats what makes comics a great and timeless medium a medium that will always be a compelling way to tell a story.
QUESTION: Do you have a favorite western?
THOMAS JANE: I love westerns. One of my all-time favorites is High Noon and Stagecoach. Then theres Red River, and The Unforgiven. Even The Treasure of the Sierra Madre has the western themes. Thats what counts. I think you could make a western in a city so long as it has that western theme of an individual against the group. Man against nature. The outsider. Those themes are common to all westerns, but you can branch that out into other genres.
QUESTION: Which actors do you most like watching perform?
THOMAS JANE: My favorite actors are the still actors guys like Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood and Steve McQueen, combined with Montgomery Clift, John Garfield, William Holden and Sterling Hayden. They were all guys who had something interesting going on underneath. That combination of stillness on the surface and a boiling underneath is pretty much my favorite way to go.
QUESTION: Whats the hardest part about being a celebrity?
THOMAS JANE: I think its the misconceptions that people have about you. When I met Ringo Starr, I went to shake his hand and he said, How about an elbow? So we rubbed elbows, laughed, and I thought, What the hell he doesnt want to shake my hand? But it was about germs he was going on tour and he didnt want to get sick. When I was on tour for Punisher, there were about 500 people in line for an autograph and wanting to shake hands, and I finally stopped. I got inventive. It was funny to be on that side of it. I figured that I had to shake several peoples hands over the next few weeks and chances were pretty high that I was going to catch something that would be bothersome. The point is that youre going to upset some folks when you dont act the way they think you should. But its got nothing to do with who you are. Its about taking care of yourself.
Suggested captions for attached images:
Thomas Jane-Jonah Hex.jpg
Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short which will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video. (Photo courtesy of Gary Miereanu)
JH_01.jpg
Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short which will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
JH_Smoke.jpg
Sometimes the only way out of a bad situation is with gunfire and such is the case in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short. Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character. The DC Showcase Original Short will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
Town.jpg
Trouble rides into town, and his name is Jonah Hex. The title character of the next DC Showcase Original Short is voiced by Thomas Jane (Hung). Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
JONAH HEX and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and DC Comics. (s09)
For more information, images and updates, please visit the films official website at www.BatmanRedHood.com.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
In related news, the live-action Warner Bros. Entertainment feature film Jonah Hex, based on the popular DC Comics character, is expected to gross slightly over $10 million before the end of this current week according to box office analysts.
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“DC Showcase: Jonah Hex,” Upcoming DC Showcase Animated Shorts Updates
Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Showcase Animated Short, DC Universe Animated Original Movie
According to San Diego Comic-Con 2010 panel details, the fourth DC Showcase animated short is DC Showcase: Superman/Shazam! – Return of Black Adam, which will anchor a special DC Showcase Blu-ray/DVD compilation home video release scheduled for later this year. The animated short will run 22 minutes in length, nearly double the length of a regular DC Showcase animated short.
Continuing, officials for the annual San Diego Comic-Con have released a schedule of planned events slated for the 2010 convention, including details on the convention’s world premiere of the latest animated short DC Showcase: Jonah Hex. The official details pertaining to the panel dedicated to the aforementioned animated short, and details on both future shorts and a compilation home video release, scheduled for Saturday, July 24th, 2010 at 3:00pm local time, are as follows below.
3:00-4:00 DC Showcase Original Shorts Collection: Jonah Hex, Green Arrow, and Beyond!
Warner Home Video, Warner Premiere, DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation roll out the next wave of DC Showcase animated shorts with the world premiere of Jonah Hex, an advance look at Green Arrow, and details regarding the upcoming compilation Blu-ray/DVD release anchored by Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam. Executive producer Bruce Timm (DC Universe Animated Original Movies), Jonah Hex voice Thomas Jane (Hung), producer Alan Burnett (The Batman), acclaimed comics writer and fiction author Joe Lansdale, and writer/producer Greg Weisman (Young Justice) present a peek at three never-before-seen shorts. Room 7AB
The 41st annual Comic-Con International San Diego will be held July 22-25, 2010, with Preview Night on July 21st, 2010, at the San Diego Convention Center. The convention is held every year, focusing on host of different genres and pop culture events. The complete convention schedule can be found at the official San Diego Comic-Con website. Warner Home Video is expected to released further details and official press information next week concerning the panel.
The World’s Finest was the first to report on a DC Showcase DVD and Blu-ray compilation home video release back in 2009. DC Showcase: Superman/Shazam! – The Return of Black Adam is scheduled for release later this year alongside a host of other DC Comics 75th Anniversary-related home video releases, including a box-set collection of DC Comics-based animated features and a special documentary home video release covering the first 75 years of DC Comics publications.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
In related news, the live-action Warner Bros. Entertainment feature film Jonah Hex, based on the popular DC Comics character, has grossed slightly over $10 million as of this weekend according to box office receipts information.
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San Diego Comic-Con “Batman: Under The Red Hood” World Premiere Details
Batman: Under the Red Hood, Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Showcase Animated Short
Officials for the annual San Diego Comic-Con have released a schedule of planned events slated for the 2010 convention, including details on the convention’s world premiere of the upcoming direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature. The official details pertaining to the panel dedicated to the aforementioned animated feature and the DC Universe Animated Original Movie line, scheduled for Friday, July 23rd, 2010 at 8:00pm local time, are as follows below.
8:00-10:00 World Premiere: Batman: Under the Red Hood
Warner Home Video, Warner Premiere, DC Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Animation proudly present the World Premiere of Batman: Under the Red Hood, the eighth entry in the ongoing series of DC Universe Animated Original PG-13 movies. In the film, Batman faces his ultimate challenge as the mysterious Red Hood takes Gotham City by firestorm. One part vigilante, one part criminal kingpin, Red Hood begins cleaning up Gotham with the efficiency of Batman, but without following the same ethical code. Killing is an option. And when The Joker falls in the balance between the two, hard truths are revealed and old wounds are reopened. The stellar voice cast is led by Bruce Greenwood (Star Trek), Jensen Ackles (Supernatural), Neil Patrick Harris (How I Met Your Mother), John DiMaggio (Futurama), Jason Issacs (the Harry Potter films), and Vincent Martella (Phineas & Ferb). Executive producer Bruce Timm (DCU films), director Brandon Vietti (Superman: Doomsday), award-winning comics writer Judd Winick, casting/dialogue director Andrea Romano (DCU films) and members of the voice cast will be around for a postscreening panel that will reveal details behind the making of the film, a glimpse of the 2011 DC Universe Animated Original Movies slate, and a first look at the next DCU film, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse. Warner Home Video will distribute Batman: Under the Red Hood on Blu-Ray and DVD, OnDemand and For Download on July 27, 2010. Note: a second encore screening will take place in the same room beginning at 10:15. Ballroom 20
Warner Home Video is expected to released further details and official press information next week concerning the panel. The 41st annual Comic-Con International San Diego will be held July 22-25, 2010, with Preview Night on July 21st, 2010, at the San Diego Convention Center. The convention is held every year, focusing on host of different genres and pop culture events. The complete convention schedule can be found at the official San Diego Comic-Con website.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. DC Showcase: Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Stay tuned for further updates, including exclusive content, here soon at The Worlds Finest.
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Complete Cast And Crew, Features Details For “Batman: Under The Red Hood”
Batman: Under the Red Hood, Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Universe Animated Original Movie
The complete cast and crew rundown for the Batman: Under the Red Hood direct-to-video animated feature, as listed in the official credits for the new DC Universe Animated Original Movie animated feature, are as follows below. Also included below are further details on bonus content included on the Blu-ray release of the Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature.
Jensen Ackles as Red Hood/Jason Todd
John DiMaggio as Joker
Neil Patrick Harris as Nightwing
Jason Isaacs as Ra’s al Ghul
Wade Williams as Black Mask
Carlos Alazraqui as Chi Chi
Robert Clotworthy as Leon
Gary Cole as Bobo
Brian George as Ra’s Assistant
Kelly Hu as Ms. Li
Phil LaMarr as Rick
Alexander Martella as Young Robin/Jason Todd
Vincent Martella as Robin/Jason Todd
Jim Piddock as Alfred
Kevin Michael Richardson as Tyler
Andrea Romano as Reporter #1
Dwight Schultz as Freddie
Fred Tatasciore as Mercenary #1
Keri Tombazian as Reporter #2
Bruce Timm as The Riddler
Michael Villani as Reporter #3
Casting and Voice Direction by: Andrea Romano
Editor: Margaret Hou
Music by: Christopher Drake
Executive Producer: Sam Register, Benjamin Melniker, Michael Uslan
Producer: Bruce Timm, Bobbie Page
Co-Producer: Alan Burnett
Written by: Judd Winick
Directed by: Brandon Vietti
Main Title Animation by: Peter Girardi Sarofsky Corp.
Animation by: Answer Studio
DC Showcase: Jonah Hex (11:53, 1080p)
First Look: Superman/Batman: Apocalypse Featurette (12:12, SD)
Robin: The Story of Dick Grayson Featurette (24:13, SD)
Robin’s Requiem: The Tale of Jason Todd Featurette (20:58, SD)
Bruce Timm’s Top Picks (Robin’s Reckoning, Pt. 1 and 2, Mad Love, The Laughing Fish) (1:28:07, SD)
Trailers – Jonah Hex Motion Comic , The Lord of the Rings (Animated), Legend of the Guardians, Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, Batman: Gotham Knight, Superman: Doomsday
Additionally, the complete cast and crew rundown and primary crew details for the DC Showcase: Jonah Hex animated short, as listed in the official credits for the short feature, are as follows below. Jonah Hex is included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Edition DVD home video releases of Batman: Under the Red Hood.
Thomas Jane as Jonah Hex
Linda Hamilton as Madame Lorraine
Jason Marsden as Young Man, Bartender
Michael Rooker as Red Doc
Michelle Trachtenberg as Bar Girl
Screenplay by: Joe R. Lansdale
Based on a story by: Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti, Phil Noto
Produced and Directed by: Joaquim dos Santos
Executive Producers: Sam Register, Bruce Timm
Producer: Bobbie Page
Co-Producer: Alan Burnett
Editor: Margaret Hou
Music by: The Track Team, Jeremy Zuckerman, and Benjamin Wynn
Casting and Voice Direction by: Jamie Thomason
Animation by: JM Animation
Additionally, The Worlds Finest has published a review of the Batman: Under the Red Hood Blu-ray release, available here to view. Click here to view the trailer for the upcoming Batman: Under the Red Hood direct-to-video animated feature.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. DC Showcase: Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Stay tuned for further updates, including exclusive content, here soon at The Worlds Finest.
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“Batman: The Brave And The Bold” Musical Episode Garners Emmy Nomination
Awards, Batman: The Brave and The Bold, DC Animated Series, Music & Soundtracks
Nominations for the 2010 62nd Primetime Emmys were announced this morning by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, and Batman: The Brave and The Bold received a sole nomination.
Outstanding Music Composition For A Series (Original Dramatic Score)
Batman: The Brave And The Bold Mayhem Of The Music Meister Cartoon Network Warner Bros. Animation
Michael McCuistion, Music By
Lolita Ritmanis, Music By
Kristopher Carter, Music By
Michael Jelenic, Lyrics By
James Tucker, Lyrics By
Complete episode details are available here at The World’s Finest. A complete list of nominations can be found at official 2010 Prime-Time Emmy Awards website. The awards will be presented on August 29th, 2010 on NBC. Stay tuned for further Batman: The Brave and The Bold updates here soon at The World’s Finest.
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Actor Thomas Jane Discusses Playing Title Role For “DC Showcase: Jonah Hex”
Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Showcase Animated Short, DC Universe Animated Original Movie
The World’s Finest presents the latest in a series of studio-conducted interviews, provided by Warner Home Video, this one for the Jonah Hex DC Showcase animated short included on the home video release of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Continue reading below for the latest installment featuring actor Thomas Jane.
FINALLY GETS HIS MAN AS JONAH HEX
IN ALL-NEW DC SHOWCASE ORIGINAL SHORT
If at first you dont succeed, take the animated role.
The all-new, animated Jonah Hex appears as a companion piece on the upcoming Special Edition Blu-Ray and 2-Disc Special Edition DVD release of Batman: Under the Red Hood, the latest entry in the ongoing series of DC Universe Animated Original PG-13 Movies coming from Warner Home Video on July 27, 2010.
In the short, the tough-as-nails bounty hunter always gets his man – until someone else gets to him first. In this case its a murderous madam who wants to steal more than just bounty from Jonah Hex. The animated short Jonah Hex is based on a story from the award-winning comic series, and scripted by renowned author Joe Lansdale. Jane leads a voice cast that includes Linda Hamilton (The Terminator), Michelle Trachtenberg (Mercy, Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Michael Rooker (Days of Thunder) and Jason Marsden (Spirited Away).
A lover of both comic books and westerns, Jane felt a certain kinship to the character and the result is clearly evident in his vocal depiction of Hex and the emotional range of the performance. Jane was the ultimate perfectionist throughout the recording process, never settling for good takes when great was attainable. From the original recording session through follow-up ADR, the give-and-take between Jane and the filmmakers including executive producer Bruce Timm was quite collaborative in achieving the final presentation.
Jane currently headlines HBOs Hung, though hes active in numerous other projects, including films being developed by his own production company, Raw Studios. Coincidentally, Jane founded Raw Studios with Timothy Bradstreet and Steve Niles, the screenwriter of the first DC Showcase short, The Spectre. Janes directorial debut, Raw Studios Dark Country, continues to play to rave reviews and enthusiastic crowds at conventions and festivals around the world.
No stranger to the fanboy/comics realm, Jane co-wrote his own comic book miniseries, Bad Planet. He played the title character in the 2004 version of The Punisher, starred in Mutant Chronicles, and had roles in both The Crow: City of Angels and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. He has drawn widespread acclaim for many of his non-fanboy roles, especially his turn as Mickey Mantle in the HBO film, 61*. His numerous credits run the gamut from Magnolia, Deep Blue Sea and The Thin Red Line to Boogie Nights and Face/Off.
After shooting all morning on the set of Hung, Jane came into the recording studio to put some final touches on his Jonah Hex performance and to chat about his attraction to anti-heroes, his adoration of comics, and how he came to (literally) rub elbows with Ringo Starr. This is what Thomas Jane says
THOMAS JANE: Ive been a fan of the comic and the character and that whole western world. Im glad to be voicing the role, and I actually wanted to do the live-action film. When they were casting the movie, I had a guy come and do my makeup, we took some photos and sent them off to Akiva Goldman. I know some of those photos have leaked out online. They had a different director at the time, and Josh Brolin had just hit with the Coen brothers movie, so he had pick of the litter. And that spelled outski for me.
QUESTION: Did you do any research to voice the role?
THOMAS JANE: Well, I lived with a pack of wolves for a week up in the ponderosa foothills to perfect my growl (he laughs). No, mostly I just tried not to love my voice. I tried my best.
QUESTION: Any thoughts on the look of Jonah Hex?
THOMAS JANE: The animators did a great job in capturing the ugliness of the character. Hes not a pretty boy. He looks like hes been butchered by a blind barber. Hes mean as hell, and I cant imagine anybody wanting to make love to the dude. He must be awful lonely. And that just makes him meaner. Hes a true anti-hero, and I really love that kind of character. Hollywood doesnt do the anti-hero justice very often its a tough character type for the studios to understand. The closest you get these days is like (Michael) Chiklis on The Shield. Taxi Driver may have been the last great anti-hero film. Theres always good ones in video games, especially games like Grand Theft Auto. Actors and directors lover anti-heroes. Unfortunately, it doesnt seem to be the case with the rest of America right now.
QUESTION: Now that youre directing, has that perspective effected your performances?
THOMAS JANE: Im a lot nicer to the guy directing than I used to be. Im also a little more pragmatic. I understand the needs of the story on the whole, and Im less myopic in my view of the role as an actor. Im serving a machine, the story as a whole, so the mechanics of me trying to strike an emotional truth are counter-balanced by not gurgling into the microphone or throat clicking. Theres a balance between the technical and the emotional that you have to strike.
QUESTION: Did that directors perspective lead you to your asking to re-record so many lines after seeing/hearing your original performance?
THOMAS JANE: Im really interested in a great performance. Im interested in the texture of a performance and I understand that, especially in the animated projects, the human voice is really all youve got to connect with on a visceral, emotional level. Youve got the writing, the words, and the human voice. And thats what gives it life. So even more so than live action acting, I pay particular attention to the vocal performances.
THOMAS JANE: Its both. Without the animation, you have more freedom to make up the rhythm of the scene, and you can take more chances in your delivery because hopefully the director will choose an interesting performance, and the animators will animate to that performance. Once youre locked in and I come back to redo the lines, Im stuck with the rhythms that have been predetermined by the animators. But that also gives me structure, which affords me some other freedom in the delivery of the dialogue because then I have a set rhythm and I can play with the intensity of the performance.
QUESTION: How would you describe your relationship with comic books?
THOMAS JANE: I discovered comic books when I was about 8 years old and Ive been in love with them ever since. I thought Id outgrow it, and I sort of did in my 20s, but then came back full force in the my early 30s. Its because the medium is so powerful. As a kid, I thought of it as kid stuff, and then I grew up and found more adult material.
I never liked super heroes I was always drawn more to a great story. I even loved the illustrated classics like Moby Dick adaptations of a classic novel, or some of the original autobiographical stuff. And then theres all the independents Robert Crumb or Charles Burns or Daniel Clowes. The medium is so broad, much more so than film. Theres so much more room in comics for genres, styles, flavors, different auteurs. Thats what makes comics a great and timeless medium a medium that will always be a compelling way to tell a story.
QUESTION: Do you have a favorite western?
THOMAS JANE: I love westerns. One of my all-time favorites is High Noon and Stagecoach. Then theres Red River, and The Unforgiven. Even The Treasure of the Sierra Madre has the western themes. Thats what counts. I think you could make a western in a city so long as it has that western theme of an individual against the group. Man against nature. The outsider. Those themes are common to all westerns, but you can branch that out into other genres.
QUESTION: Which actors do you most like watching perform?
THOMAS JANE: My favorite actors are the still actors guys like Lee Marvin, Clint Eastwood and Steve McQueen, combined with Montgomery Clift, John Garfield, William Holden and Sterling Hayden. They were all guys who had something interesting going on underneath. That combination of stillness on the surface and a boiling underneath is pretty much my favorite way to go.
QUESTION: Whats the hardest part about being a celebrity?
THOMAS JANE: I think its the misconceptions that people have about you. When I met Ringo Starr, I went to shake his hand and he said, How about an elbow? So we rubbed elbows, laughed, and I thought, What the hell he doesnt want to shake my hand? But it was about germs he was going on tour and he didnt want to get sick. When I was on tour for Punisher, there were about 500 people in line for an autograph and wanting to shake hands, and I finally stopped. I got inventive. It was funny to be on that side of it. I figured that I had to shake several peoples hands over the next few weeks and chances were pretty high that I was going to catch something that would be bothersome. The point is that youre going to upset some folks when you dont act the way they think you should. But its got nothing to do with who you are. Its about taking care of yourself.
Suggested captions for attached images:
Thomas Jane-Jonah Hex.jpg
Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short which will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video. (Photo courtesy of Gary Miereanu)
JH_01.jpg
Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short which will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
JH_Smoke.jpg
Sometimes the only way out of a bad situation is with gunfire and such is the case in Jonah Hex, the next DC Showcase Original Short. Thomas Jane (Hung) voices the title character. The DC Showcase Original Short will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
Town.jpg
Trouble rides into town, and his name is Jonah Hex. The title character of the next DC Showcase Original Short is voiced by Thomas Jane (Hung). Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-disk special editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood when it is distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
JONAH HEX and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and DC Comics. (s09)
For more information, images and updates, please visit the films official website at www.BatmanRedHood.com.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Jonah Hex will be included on the Blu-ray and Two-Disc Special Editions of Batman: Under the Red Hood. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
In related news, the live-action Warner Bros. Entertainment feature film Jonah Hex, based on the popular DC Comics character, is expected to gross slightly over $10 million before the end of this current week according to box office analysts.
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Breakdown Of Multiple “Superman/Batman: Apocalypse” Home Video Releases
Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Universe Animated Original Movie, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse
Official details on each home video release for the upcoming direct-to-video Superman/Batman: Apocalypse have been released by Warner Home Video. Details, provided by the studio, include a disc-by-disc breakdown of content for each release.
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse – Special Edition Blu-ray
Special Features:
-A first look at the next installment of the DC Universe movie
–DC Showcase Short Film: Green Arrow
–The New Gods Featurette – chronicles the tale of Darkseid and why he reigns supreme as one of the most brilliant, and toughest challengers the Super Heroes must face, and what his threat for tomorrow could bring.
–New Gods: Mr. Miracle pod
–New Gods: Orion pod
–Supergirl: The Last Daughter of Krypton Vintage Featurette
-Bonus Episodes Handpicked by Bruce Timm
Superman: The Animated Series -“Little Girl Lost, Part 1”
Superman The Animated Series -“Little Girl Lost, Part 2”
Superman The Animated Series -“Apokalips Now!, Part 1”
Superman The Animated Series -“Apokalips Now!, Part 2”
–Synopsis: When a spaceship splashes down in Gotham Harbor, Batman and Superman encounter a mysterious Kryptonian with powers as great as Supermans. When Darkseid gets wind of this, he has the Kryptonian abducted and brought under his control on Apokolips. Its up to Batman and Superman to retrieve the Kryptonian, forcing them to infiltrate Darkseids hostile world where superpowerful threats lurk around every corner. This story is based on Jeff Loebs popular mini-series from the Superman/Batman comic books.
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse – Two-Disc Special Edition DVD
Studio: Warner Bros.
Special Features:
*Disc 1:
-A first look at the next installment of the DC Universe movie
–DC Showcase Short Film: Green Arrow
*Disc 2:
–Supergirl: The Last Daughter of Krypton Vintage Featurette
-Bonus Episodes Handpicked by Bruce Timm
Superman: The Animated Series -“Little Girl Lost, Part 1”
Superman The Animated Series -“Little Girl Lost, Part 2”
–Synopsis: When a spaceship splashes down in Gotham Harbor, Batman and Superman encounter a mysterious Kryptonian with powers as great as Supermans. When Darkseid gets wind of this, he has the Kryptonian abducted and brought under his control on Apokolips. Its up to Batman and Superman to retrieve the Kryptonian, forcing them to infiltrate Darkseids hostile world where superpowerful threats lurk around every corner. This story is based on Jeff Loebs popular mini-series from the Superman/Batman comic books.
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse DVD
Studio: Warner Bros.
Special Features:
-A first look at the next installment of the DC Universe movie (10 minutes)
–Synopsis: When a spaceship splashes down in Gotham Harbor, Batman and Superman encounter a mysterious Kryptonian with powers as great as Supermans. When Darkseid gets wind of this, he has the Kryptonian abducted and brought under his control on Apokolips. Its up to Batman and Superman to retrieve the Kryptonian, forcing them to infiltrate Darkseids hostile world where superpowerful threats lurk around every corner. This story is based on Jeff Loebs popular mini-series from the Superman/Batman comic books.
2009 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. SUPERMAN, BATMAN and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and DC Comics. SUPER HEROES is a trademark co-owned by DC Comics.
Click here to view the official press release and Blu-ray artwork for the upcoming Superman/Batman: Apocalyps direct-to-video animated feature.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Superman/Batman: Apocalypse animated feature debuts September 28th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
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New Images For Upcoming “Batman: The Brave And The Bold – The Videogame”
Batman: The Brave and The Bold, DC Animated Series, Video Games
New images from the upcoming Batman: The Brave and The Bold – The Videogame title have been made available by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. The images show off different aspects of the title’s gameplay. The new Batman: The Brave and The Bold videogame debuts Fall 2010 on the Nintendo Wii and Nintendo DS. Click on the thumbnail images below for a closer look.
Click here to view the trailer. Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment released an official press release for Batman: The Brave and The Bold – The Videogame in February 2010, which is available to view here, along with further details available here.
WB Games presents, in association with DC Comics, a Wayforward game, Batman: The Brave and The Bold – The Videogame, hitting shelves September 2010. Stay tuned for further updates on this release here soon at The World’s Finest.
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“Justice League,” “Batman: The Brave And The Bold” July 2010 Teletoon Schedule
Batman: The Brave and The Bold, DC Animated Series, DC Animated Universe, Justice League, Schedule, Teletoon
Below are official descriptions and airdates for episodes of the Batman: The Brave and The Bold animated series slated to air this month, July 2010, on the Canadian network Teletoon. Please note the episode details listed below are provided by Teletoon.
Batman’s biggest fan, Bat-Mite, is also his biggest nightmare when the 5th dimensional imp pops up and, in an effort to make Batman a better hero, causes chaos in the city.
Sunday, July 4th, 2010 – “Return of the Fearsome Fangs!”
Batman and a reluctant Bronze Tiger fight to prevent Fox, Vulture and Shark from invading an ancient Chinese temple and stealing the sacred animal totem from within.
Friday, July 9th, 2010 – “Deep Cover For Batman!”
Batman swaps places with Owlman, his criminal counterpart in an alternate Universe, to stop the Crime Syndicate from taking over the world.
Sunday, July 11th, 2010 – “Game Over for Owlman!”
On Earth, Owlman has been perpetrating crimes disguised as Batman and assembled all the villains to join him. Batman returns and teams with Joker to take Owlman down while avoiding all the heroes who are after him.
Sunday, July 18th, 2010 – “Mystery In Space!”
On his birthday, a melancholy Aquaman joins Batman for a space adventure on Adam Strange’s home planet of Rann where the aquatic hero washes away his birthday blues with an epic battle against the Gordanians.
Sunday, July 25th, 2010 – “Trial of the Demon!”
In 19th century London, Jason Blood has been framed for supernatural attacks perpetrated by Gentleman Ghost . Batman travels back in time and teams with Sherlock Holmes to stop Gentleman Ghost before he brings a demon from the underworld to Earth.
Batman: The Brave and The Bold airs every Sunday at 9am (ET) on the Teletoon “Action Force” programming block, with Sunday-premiering episodes re-airing Fridays at 7pm (ET) as part of the “Superfan Fridays” programming block, though please note the exceptions in the July 2010 schedule. A representative for the network states the alterations to the July 2010 Batman: The Brave and The Bold schedule is to align the series for Fall 2010 episode premieres. Further Batman: The Brave and The Bold details are available here.
Continuing the episode schedule update, below are official descriptions and airdates for the episodes of the classic Justice League animated series slated for July 2010 on the Canadian network Teletoon. Once again, the episode details listed below are provided by Teletoon.
A squad of indestructible androids called the Manhunters arrives on Earth and arrests Green Lantern for interstellar atrocities and abuses of power.
Friday, July 9th, 2009 – “The Enemy Below, Part One”
When Superman convinces Aquaman, the king of Atlantis, to come to the surface world to negotiate a peace treaty on behalf of his people, Aquaman’s evil half-brother, Orm, takes advantage of his king’s absence to seize control of Atlantis. First of a two-part episode.
Friday, July 16th, 2010 – “The Enemy Below, Part Two”
When Superman convinces Aquaman, the king of Atlantis, to come to the surface world to negotiate a peace treaty on behalf of his people, Aquaman’s evil half-brother, Orm, takes advantage of his king’s absence to seize control of Atlantis. Second of a two-part episode.
Friday, July 23rd, 2010 – “Injustice For All, Part One”
When Lex Luthor discovers that he has contracted an incurable case of Kryptonite poisoning, he blames Superman. Using his vast personal fortune, Luthor hires a team of the world’s most powerful supervillains to destroy Superman and the Justice League.
Friday, July 30th, 2010 – “Injustice For All, Part Two”
When Lex Luthor discovers that he has contracted an incurable case of Kryptonite poisoning, he blames Superman. Using his vast personal fortune, Luthor hires a team of the world’s most powerful supervillains to destroy Superman and the Justice League.
Justice League regularly airs every Friday at 8:00pm (ET) on the Teletoon “Superfan Fridays” programming block. Click here for further details on Justice League.
Lastly, Teletoon Retro has provided schedule details for classic Batman: The Animated Series episodes scheduled to air on the specialty Canadian network this month, in July 2010. Please note the schedule information listed below is provided by Teletoon.
High-tech secrets are stolen from Wayne Enterprises by a robot and Barbara Gordon suspects that her father is not herself. Both instances lead to a plan by HARDAC, an Artificial Intelligence computer created by Karl Rossum, to supplant humanity with machines. Batman soon investigates, only to put his identity on the line.
Friday, July 9th, 2010 – “Tyger, Tyger”
Selina Kyle is kidnapped by genetic engineer Dr. Emile Dorian and becomes his latest experiment to provide his man-cat hybrid named Tygrus with a mate. Batman learns of this and comes to the island to rescue Selina. He is captured and forced into a deadly game of cat-and-flying mouse as Tygrus hunts Batman through the island’s jungles.
Friday, July 16th, 2010 – “Moon of the Wolf”
Batman investigates the appearance of a wolf creature in Gotham, not realizing that the monster happens to be one of Bruce Wayne’s associates – Anthony Romulus, ex-Olympic champion and media spokesman.
Friday, July 23rd, 2010 – “Heart of Steel, Part Two”
Batman, upon escaping from being turned into a duplicate by HARDAC, is summoned by Barbara Gordon. She wants Batman’s help to discover what is going on with her Father. Upon arriving at HARDAC’s location separately, both Batman and Barbara discover the truth behind the recent behavior of the Commissioner and other city officials.
Friday, July 30th, 2010 – “Terror in the Sky”
When a man-sized bat ransacks Gotham harbor, Batman suspects that Dr. Kirk Langstrom is up to his old tricks, taking the Man-Bat formula again. Batman isn’t the only one. Kirk’s wife, Francine, is so distrustful of her husband that she decides to leave him. After further investigation, Batman discovers that the Man-Bat is no longer Kirk, but someone else.
Schedule details are subject to change without notice. Batman: The Animated Series airs Fridays at 7am (ET), 6pm (ET), and 12am (ET) on Teletoon Retro. Click here to view the Batman: The Animated Series subsite here at The World’s Finest.
Stay tuned for further schedule updates here soon at The World’s Finest.
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Actor Jason Isaacs Discusses Role In Animated “Batman: Under The Red Hood”
Batman: Under the Red Hood, Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Universe Animated Original Movie
The World’s Finest presents the latest in a series of studio-conducted interviews, provided by Warner Home Video, for the Batman: Under the Red Hood direct-to-video animated feature. Continue reading below for the latest installment featuring actor Jason Isaacs, voice of Ra’s Al Ghul.
VOICES DARK KNIGHT NEMESIS RAS AL GHUL IN BATMAN: UNDER THE RED HOOD
Isaacs, who portrays Malfoy in five Harry Potter films, is well known for his lead role on the Showtime series Brotherhood, as well as starring opposite Mel Gibson in the revolutionary war adventure, The Patriot. The British actor has also racked up credits in films like Armageddon, Black Hawk Down, Peter Pan, Grindhouse, DragonHeart and Green Zone; TV series including The West Wing, Entourage and The State Within (for which he received a Golden Globe nomination); and in the voiceover realm in everything from documentary narration and commercial advertisements to video games and the popular animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender.
In Batman: Under the Red Hood, Isaacs gives Batmans nemesis Ras al Ghul a sympathetic twist as the villain attempts to right his own wrongs and help Batman in his efforts against both Red Hood and the Joker. Isaacs is an integral part of an all-star cast that includes Bruce Greenwood (Star Trek), Jensen Ackles (Supernatural), Neil Patrick Harris (How I Met Your Mother) and John DiMaggio (Futurama).
Produced by Warner Premiere, DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Animation, Batman: Under the Red Hood will be distributed by Warner Home Video as a Special Edition version on Blu-Ray and 2-disc DVD, as well as being available on single disc DVD, On Demand and for Download.
Isaacs splits his time between the UK and the US, but still found a few moments to chat about his latest animation voiceover role, his yearning for an actual super power, and his childhood addiction to comic books. Read on
QUESTION: This isnt really the Ras al Ghul were accustomed to seeing whats the nutshell synopsis of his part in Batman: Under the Red Hood?
JASON ISAACS: This role is a bit unusual for Ra’s al Ghul as hes been Batman’s nemesis a lot in the past. But this time he is actually full of regret for a mistake that he has made, and his inability to control the Joker. A lot of what happens for Ras in this story is him explaining to Batman how things went so badly awry, and how Robin ended up quite so dead.
JASON ISAACS: Well, I didnt think there was much point to doing an impression of Liam, mostly because he does it far better than me (he laughs). So I read the script and I looked at the pictures. He looked like a man with a lot of dignity and authority there’s a kind of stateliness about him. He’s been alive for six centuries, which would give him a certain classiness, I thought. Obviously he’s been powerful all that time, and certainly possessed tons of wealth and influence. So I tried to put all of that into the tone to his voice.
QUESTION: You were very participatory in crafting some of the dialogue as you recorded the film. How important is it for the actor to be able to contribute to the character?
JASON ISAACS: This is one of the things that happens when a script has been written and rewritten and rewritten again, and considered by so many people so often, and they all have different agendas. They all know what story blocks they’re putting together, and what the visual sequences look like. And then the actor comes in. Sometimes just the very last set of eyes laid on the script, by the person who’s meant to bring it to life, can point out an inconsistency or a logical flaw where the meaning isn’t clear. It’s happened a few times in my life that you see a room full of people surprised because they thought the meaning was crystal clear. But if I don’t really understand what I’m saying or why, I’m not sure the audience will, either. So I offer up my thoughts to the director or whoever and, if they agree with me, then we change it. And if they don’t, then I do whatever I’m asked because, in the end, I’m just a hired larynx.
QUESTION: Do you believe there is a certain elegant villainy to a British accent? Or is that a purely American concept?
JASON ISAACS: I think one of the reasons British people play so many villains in Hollywood stories is that there’s a tradition of theatre acting and a kind of chameleon-like change that comes from Europe. Well, that and all the good leading parts are already snapped up by the Americans over here (he laughs). I think we have a theatre tradition, and are slightly more prepared to chew the scenery and relish things a bit more. It has more to do with reaching the back row. Besides, very often the juiciest role is the villain. The hero is difficult to play anyway. They’re mostly homegrown and very good at it.
QUESTION: Is villainy fun to play?
JASON ISAACS: The thing thats fun to play are well written parts. It’s absolutely torturous to play something that is written purely for its effect on the audience, and doesn’t seem believable to you. Or, even worse, somebody that just has no reason to be or speak. Very often there are chunks of exposition that just would not be said between people. So evil is fun to play when it’s written sensibly and well. There’s nothing worse than playing a villain who is outsmarted by the hero from the beginning, and doing things that are purely sadistic in a way that nobody will ever do. I think the most monstrous things an audience reacts to are when they understand that that character has to do it, needs to do it, must do it and if the audience was in the same situation, they would do it, also. Nobody ever thinks they’re doing the wrong thing. So when the part is well enough written, the actor responds to the character, because he thinks that hes doing the right thing. That’s much more disturbing to watch because you recognize the inevitability of it. You cant escape that. The best written villain roles are the ones that feel real and understandable because those are the ones that haunt your nightmares.
QUESTION: Whats it like to be the ultimate nice guy, and yet most recognized for the villains youve portrayed?
JASON ISAACS: I’ve played priests and I’ve played transvestites, wizards and pirates, and everything in between. But there are certain roles people remember best. I think that if I spend a day going around town and everybody opens doors for me and says hi and have a nice day, but one guy pokes me in the eye with a toothpick, he’s the guy I remember at the end of the day. So, if people remember me as playing villains and I’ve played two or three of them that’s because those parts have kind of hit a consciousness. I’ve been lucky enough to have a couple of very juicy, very well written parts in stories where the people telling the story were smart enough to give the villain power. That’s very often not the case in Hollywood movies.
Maybe one of the reasons I’ve done well when I have played villains is because I spend most of my life like most people trying to make sure that I do the right thing, and make sure that the people like me, and I’m not behaving (badly). So when I do play a villain once in awhile, it’s nice to be let off the leash and allowed to be deeply unpleasant with no consequences.
QUESTION: Was your childhood affected at all by comic books, or is the omnipresence of the super hero in Hollywood just making its mark on you?
JASON ISAACS: I was slightly suspicious of the whole comic and graphic novel rebirth, because I wasn’t any part of it and hadn’t read any comics in so long. But I remember when I was a kid how addicted I had been to all the DC and Marvel comics. I had mountains of them in my room you couldn’t open the door. I wondered why everyone was suddenly (making comics into films). Then when my friend Paul Greengrass was getting involved in preparing the Watchman a few years ago to direct, which then fell apart and it was directed by someone else, I had a look at it. I wondered why somebody I respected and like so much would be involved, and I picked it up and suddenly realized the things I had been missing for all these years.
I mean, as a kid, I was addicted to comics. I couldn’t wait for every Sunday when my family and I would go and get fish and chips thats an English kind of junk food tradition (he laughs). There was a little shop next door that sold candy and had boxes of used comics. My dad would give me money, and all week I would look forward to rummaging through the boxes and seeing if I could find something that I loved. All those wonderful characters I was addicted to it all. I would be dismissive of some new character anybody relatively new I would dimiss as some pretender, but then I would get one of their comics and then I would have to go get the rest of the series. My bed was propped with them by the end.
QUESTION: Do you understand what was at the core of that love affair with comics?
JASON ISAACS: I just know that I did. In some ways, it’s like asking why somebody likes chocolate and somebody else likes strawberry. There’s something that works about it there. It’s a combination of the art and the amount that your imagination fills in between the gaps. And the fact that the restraints and controls are taken off. When you make a movie, it’s a very literal medium — you watch the story, and it’s as if you’re looking through a keyhole. It’s very hard to take people on a fantastical journey, but in these beautiful and bright frames you can take them to any universe you create. And 90 percent of it the reader does by himself. It’s amazing in this generation that somebody has married all that stuff to actually very adult themes.
Maybe one of the reasons that I loved them so much is that, at that age, when you’re a kid, you’re not quite sure what the physical realities of the world are. It wasn’t inconceivable to me that I might get one of these super powers soon. I might be bitten by a radioactive spider, or that I could someday fly, or be bulletproof, or whatever. I fancied that those powers were somehow accessible and within my reach. And sadly, as you get older, it seems less and less likely.
JASON ISAACS: Well, this is probably the closest I’m going to get to work with Chris Nolan (he laughs). Batman is such an iconic figure hes rather dark, mysterious, and a disturbed damaged guy. But there was always something very, very attractive about Batman that kind of pulls you in. He didn’t have any super powers, and I think that was one of the things that makes him very accessible and relatable. It always made it seem that if you really worked hard, you might just get to be Batman in the same way that, when I played tennis as a kid, I used to think that if I hit a ball against the wall all day every day, I could eventually be beat Bjorn Borg. For me, that’s always a remarkable thing. I remember thinking as a kid that if I just practiced martial arts all day, and I got really good at the science stuff, and maybe made a few billion dollars, I could be Batman. So here I am the closest I’m gonna get.
Suggested captions for attached images:
Jason Isaacs.jpg
Jason Isaacs provides the voice of Ra’s al Ghul in Batman: Under the Red Hood, the next DC Universe animated original movie. The film will be distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video. (Photo courtesy of Gary Miereanu)
Ras_03.jpg
Ra’s al Ghul has a reflective moment during Batman: Under the Red Hood, the next DC Universe animated original movie. The film will be distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video. Jason Isaacs provides the voice of Ra’s al Ghul.
Ras_04.jpg
Jason Isaacs provides the voice of Ra’s al Ghul in Batman: Under the Red Hood, the next DC Universe animated original movie. The film will be distributed July 27, 2010 by Warner Home Video.
For more information, images and updates, please visit the films official website at www.BatmanRedHood.com.
Click here to view the trailer for the upcoming Batman: Under the Red Hood direct-to-video animated feature.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Batman: Under the Red Hood animated feature debuts July 27th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
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Trade Ad For Upcoming “Superman/Batman: Apocalypse” Animated Feature Title
Blu-ray/DVD/Digital, DC Universe Animated Original Movie, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse
Featuring more images from the upcoming animated feature, Warner Home Video has released a trade ad for the Superman/Batman: Apocalypse, the ninth installment in the popular direct-to-video DC Universe Animated Original Movie line scheduled to hit shelves in September 2010. To view the trade ad, click on the thumbnail image below.
Click here to view the official press release and Blu-ray artwork for the upcoming Superman/Batman: Apocalypse direct-to-video animated feature.
A co-production of Warner Premiere, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, DC Comics and Warner Bros. Animation, the direct-to-video Superman/Batman: Apocalypse animated feature debuts September 28th, 2010 on DVD and Blu-ray disc from Warner Home Video. Stay tuned for further updates here soon at The Worlds Finest.
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World’s Finest Online: A Comprehensive Guide to the DCAU
Origins and Evolution of World’s Finest Online
Dcanimated.com began as a fan-driven project dedicated to documenting the DCAU. The site has grown significantly, offering comprehensive coverage of all aspects of the DC Animated Universe. It features detailed episode guides, character biographies, and behind-the-scenes insights, making it an invaluable resource for fans.
Extensive Coverage of DCAU Series and Movies
World’s Finest Online provides in-depth information on all major DCAU series, including classics like Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series, and Justice League. Each series is explored thoroughly, with episode summaries, reviews, and notable quotes. The site also covers DCAU movies, such as Batman: Mask of the Phantasm and Justice League: The New Frontier, offering detailed analyses and production notes.
Staying current with the latest developments in the DCAU is easy with World’s Finest Online. The site regularly updates its news section with announcements about new releases, upcoming projects, and special events. Fans can stay informed about voice cast reunions, special edition releases, and convention appearances related to the DCAU.
Exclusive Interviews and Insights
World’s Finest Online features exclusive interviews with key figures behind the DCAU. Creators like Bruce Timm, Paul Dini, and Alan Burnett share their insights and experiences, offering fans a behind-the-scenes look at the making of these iconic shows and movies. These interviews provide valuable context and deepen the appreciation for the creative efforts that brought the DCAU to life.
World’s Finest Online Community Engagement and Fan Contributions
The site fosters a vibrant community of DCAU fans. Visitors can participate in forums, share fan art, and contribute to discussions about their favorite shows and characters. World’s Finest Online also highlights fan projects and provides a platform for fans to showcase their creativity and passion for the DCAU.
Comprehensive Episode Guides and Character Biographies
One of the standout features of dcanimated.com is its extensive episode guides. Each episode of the DCAU series is meticulously cataloged, with summaries, key moments, and notable quotes. Additionally, the site offers detailed biographies of major and minor characters, providing background information and character development insights.
World’s Finest Online boasts a rich collection of archival content, including video clips, image galleries, and soundtracks from various DCAU series and movies. The site also features special sections dedicated to unique aspects of the DCAU, such as iconic moments, crossover episodes, and thematic explorations.
Where to Watch the DCAU
World’s Finest Online provides information on where fans can watch their favorite DCAU series and movies. The site includes links to streaming platforms like HBO Max and details about physical media releases. This makes it easy for fans to enjoy the DCAU’s extensive content library.
World’s Finest Online is an essential resource for any fan of the DC Animated Universe. With its comprehensive coverage, exclusive content, and active community, the site continues to celebrate and preserve the legacy of the DCAU. Fans can rely on World’s Finest Online for accurate information, engaging content, and the latest updates in DC animated storytelling.
About the World’s Finest Online Creators
World’s Finest Online was created by dedicated fans of the DCAU. Their passion and commitment have made the site a trusted source of news and information. By providing detailed and engaging content, they have ensured that the DCAU’s legacy continues to thrive.