Jason Franks's Blog, page 35
January 17, 2012
Shadowcutting
Mel's World reviews BAF2, with a special note on the story "Shadowcutting" by me and Steve Mangold (among several others).
http://melissa-melsworld.blogspot.com/2012/01/book-review-bad-ass-faeries.html
I'm still proud of this one; I it to be the record holder for the largest number of dead leprechauns in the history of literature.
http://melissa-melsworld.blogspot.com/2012/01/book-review-bad-ass-faeries.html
I'm still proud of this one; I it to be the record holder for the largest number of dead leprechauns in the history of literature.
Published on January 17, 2012 16:55
January 11, 2012
Allo, allo, allo. What's All This, Then?
Could it be an anthology of crime stories, coming out very very soon now? Could it be a volume featuring the creative talents of Beranrd Caleo, Dino Caruso, Alexis Fischler, Jason Copland, Jason Franks, Dave Gutierrez, Brendan Halyday, Leigh Kilboer, Jae Korim, Vic Malhotra, mpMann, Russell Lissau, Bruce Mutard, Jason Paulos and Jan Scherpenhuizen?Jury's still out.
-- JF
PS Is it possible that one of the stories might also feature McBlack? Perhaps if the gumshoe hadn't been murdered before he could complete his investigations we'd be able to tell...
Published on January 11, 2012 00:37
January 6, 2012
Róisín Dubh
I reviewed the excellent Róisín Dubh, by Maura McHugh and Stephen Byrne, over at TLC. Set at the turn of the 19th century, Róisín Dubh is a really interesting look at Celtic myth and the modern woman.
Read the review:
http://www.tasteslikecomics.com/2012/01/roisin-dubh/
Buy the comic:
Published on January 06, 2012 03:05
Best of 2010
Well folks,
Blatantly inspired by
def_fr0g_42
, I'm gonna list my favourite media stuff of 2010. I will try to only list things that came out during that year, although pleasue bear in mind that I live in Australia and we are often behind the times in some respects.
BEST COMICS
This was a great year for comics, and not5 only that... it was a year where many of my favourite books were produced by my friends. So I'm not going to talk about STARGAZER, WITCH DOCTOR, LUTHER STRODE, DIGESTED, A MIND OF LOVE, THE DEEP, THE LIST, SOLDIER LEGACY or DAKR DETECTIVE. But you should go out and buy all of that stuff. I wrote the introductions for two of those books, if you want to know how effing good they are.
INCOGNITO vol.02, by Brubaker and Phillips. Also, the newest volumes of CRIMINAL by the same guys. What can I say? They do killer work.
METAMAUS is not technically a comic; it's a massive book about how art spiegelman created the Pullitzer Prize winning MAUS--but it'[s brilliant.
SPACE MAN by Azarello and Risso. Excellent, warped new SF series that doesn't need to explain itself to you.
LOCKE AND KEY by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez. Okay, this has been going for a couple years now, but I only just got into it and... holy shit. Great characters, great pacing, and a great concept that Hill is milking for everything its worth. It sounds like a fairly pedestrian horror adventure, but... jeez. You see tons of 'concept' books and movies these days, but very few that really dig in and explore the crazy ideas fully. This book is just great--frightening, compassionate, hugely inventive and faultlessly executed. My only caveat is that I'm not a big fan of Rodriguez', but I can't figure out why. He's a brilliant artist but there's something about his work that I don't get. Damned if I can figure out what it is, though. It certainly doesn't hurt the book.
Better yet; there's still some new stuff from this year that I've heard wonderful things about, which I still haven't gotten across. Can't wait!
BEST BOOKS
I read a lot of things this year., but not all of it was recent. Let me see...
I guess George RR Martin's DANCE WITH DRAGONS has to come first. The book was, frankly, a bit of a mess, especially the first half... it went slow on stuff I wasn't especially interested in and then bounded through material I wanted to savour... but fuck me, I was captivated by it, anyway, and I felt bereft once it was over. The last two books in the series have been a bit unfocused, I thought, but I believe... I hope... that Martin now has this monster back on track and he's lining us up for a killer finale.
DJIBOUTI, by Elmore Leonard, was exactly as you'd expect: pure gold by the master of crime fiction.
BEST MUSIC
This was the year I gave up my eMusic subscription, so... I didn't buy as much stuff as usual, but I did get a fair bit. Still, I am mainly listening to albums I bought in 2010 at the moment, so I guess that shows my input has fallen. Also, some much-anticipated stuff disappointed, so I won't go into that here.
BAD AS ME: by Tom Waits. Look, it's not my favourite album of his, but it's as good as the majority of them, and as much as I liked the last two records--a compilation of rareties and a live CD--it's great to have some new material. The song "Hell Broke Luce" is up there with Waits' best.
GRINDERMAN 2: Not as raw or as funny as the the first album by Nick Cave and rock-band kit (a cut down version of the Bad Seeds), but it is darker and crazier and every bit as enjoyable. The original Grinderman seems like a prototype the eponymous album that Cave followed it up with and I wonder if that will be true for the next one.
PHOSPHENE DREAM is a bit of a return to form from drone-rockers the Black Angels after the draggy DIRECTIONS TO SEE A GHOST. IT doesn't have the same Creedence stompiness as their first album, PASSOVER, but it's still a treat to wrap your ears around.
BEST MOVIES
THE GUARD. Easily the best movie I saw this year. An Irish cop-drama-comedy that is actually as clever as Guy Ritchie thinks his movies are. Just feckin' brilliant.
DRIVE. An old school crime movie, beautifully written, well acted, occasionally surreal, and directed with an implausible combination of style and restraint. If PRETTY IN PINK was an adaptation of a Richard Stark novel with a screenplay by Elmore Leonard it might be something like this.
THIRTEEN ASSASSINS. Miike Takashi turns his hand to a chambara samurai epic and it's glorious. The characters are great, the missions is straightforward, the main villain is a classic of the carpet-chewing variety, the writing is sharp and the bodycount is enormous. Even so, it's not as bloody as you might expect, given Miike's back catalogue. The fight choreography isn't particularly special, but this movie is just so much wall-to-wall fun I don't even care.
SOURCE CODE: Hey, a Hollywood movie actually made the list! Good script, nicely written (although of it's clear that nobody involved in the picture actually knows what "Source Code" really is) and it moves along with a maximum of pathos and a minimum of bullshit. Shame about the cop-out ending, but.
TRUE GRIT: Do the Coen Brothers really count as Hollywood? Why the hell not. This is the Coens, doing a Western with Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon, and Josh Brolin. You don't need me to tell you it was good.
Blatantly inspired by
def_fr0g_42
, I'm gonna list my favourite media stuff of 2010. I will try to only list things that came out during that year, although pleasue bear in mind that I live in Australia and we are often behind the times in some respects.BEST COMICS
This was a great year for comics, and not5 only that... it was a year where many of my favourite books were produced by my friends. So I'm not going to talk about STARGAZER, WITCH DOCTOR, LUTHER STRODE, DIGESTED, A MIND OF LOVE, THE DEEP, THE LIST, SOLDIER LEGACY or DAKR DETECTIVE. But you should go out and buy all of that stuff. I wrote the introductions for two of those books, if you want to know how effing good they are.
INCOGNITO vol.02, by Brubaker and Phillips. Also, the newest volumes of CRIMINAL by the same guys. What can I say? They do killer work.
METAMAUS is not technically a comic; it's a massive book about how art spiegelman created the Pullitzer Prize winning MAUS--but it'[s brilliant.
SPACE MAN by Azarello and Risso. Excellent, warped new SF series that doesn't need to explain itself to you.
LOCKE AND KEY by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez. Okay, this has been going for a couple years now, but I only just got into it and... holy shit. Great characters, great pacing, and a great concept that Hill is milking for everything its worth. It sounds like a fairly pedestrian horror adventure, but... jeez. You see tons of 'concept' books and movies these days, but very few that really dig in and explore the crazy ideas fully. This book is just great--frightening, compassionate, hugely inventive and faultlessly executed. My only caveat is that I'm not a big fan of Rodriguez', but I can't figure out why. He's a brilliant artist but there's something about his work that I don't get. Damned if I can figure out what it is, though. It certainly doesn't hurt the book.
Better yet; there's still some new stuff from this year that I've heard wonderful things about, which I still haven't gotten across. Can't wait!
BEST BOOKS
I read a lot of things this year., but not all of it was recent. Let me see...
I guess George RR Martin's DANCE WITH DRAGONS has to come first. The book was, frankly, a bit of a mess, especially the first half... it went slow on stuff I wasn't especially interested in and then bounded through material I wanted to savour... but fuck me, I was captivated by it, anyway, and I felt bereft once it was over. The last two books in the series have been a bit unfocused, I thought, but I believe... I hope... that Martin now has this monster back on track and he's lining us up for a killer finale.
DJIBOUTI, by Elmore Leonard, was exactly as you'd expect: pure gold by the master of crime fiction.
BEST MUSIC
This was the year I gave up my eMusic subscription, so... I didn't buy as much stuff as usual, but I did get a fair bit. Still, I am mainly listening to albums I bought in 2010 at the moment, so I guess that shows my input has fallen. Also, some much-anticipated stuff disappointed, so I won't go into that here.
BAD AS ME: by Tom Waits. Look, it's not my favourite album of his, but it's as good as the majority of them, and as much as I liked the last two records--a compilation of rareties and a live CD--it's great to have some new material. The song "Hell Broke Luce" is up there with Waits' best.
GRINDERMAN 2: Not as raw or as funny as the the first album by Nick Cave and rock-band kit (a cut down version of the Bad Seeds), but it is darker and crazier and every bit as enjoyable. The original Grinderman seems like a prototype the eponymous album that Cave followed it up with and I wonder if that will be true for the next one.
PHOSPHENE DREAM is a bit of a return to form from drone-rockers the Black Angels after the draggy DIRECTIONS TO SEE A GHOST. IT doesn't have the same Creedence stompiness as their first album, PASSOVER, but it's still a treat to wrap your ears around.
BEST MOVIES
THE GUARD. Easily the best movie I saw this year. An Irish cop-drama-comedy that is actually as clever as Guy Ritchie thinks his movies are. Just feckin' brilliant.
DRIVE. An old school crime movie, beautifully written, well acted, occasionally surreal, and directed with an implausible combination of style and restraint. If PRETTY IN PINK was an adaptation of a Richard Stark novel with a screenplay by Elmore Leonard it might be something like this.
THIRTEEN ASSASSINS. Miike Takashi turns his hand to a chambara samurai epic and it's glorious. The characters are great, the missions is straightforward, the main villain is a classic of the carpet-chewing variety, the writing is sharp and the bodycount is enormous. Even so, it's not as bloody as you might expect, given Miike's back catalogue. The fight choreography isn't particularly special, but this movie is just so much wall-to-wall fun I don't even care.
SOURCE CODE: Hey, a Hollywood movie actually made the list! Good script, nicely written (although of it's clear that nobody involved in the picture actually knows what "Source Code" really is) and it moves along with a maximum of pathos and a minimum of bullshit. Shame about the cop-out ending, but.
TRUE GRIT: Do the Coen Brothers really count as Hollywood? Why the hell not. This is the Coens, doing a Western with Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon, and Josh Brolin. You don't need me to tell you it was good.
Published on January 06, 2012 01:25
January 3, 2012
Sélection Noël
Mathieu Doublet has put The Sixsmiths in his Sélection Noël 2011 list in the 'Rigoler' category (that's 'comedy' or 'fun', I believe).
Mathieu's site is in French, but google will translate it for you nicely: http://onirique.free.fr/spip/spip.php?article892
Cheers!
Mathieu's site is in French, but google will translate it for you nicely: http://onirique.free.fr/spip/spip.php?article892
Cheers!
Published on January 03, 2012 21:48
December 30, 2011
A nice way to end the year
Fred Van Lente, author of the magnificent ACTION PHILOSOPHERS, as well as some other stuff you might not have heard of (like, oh, COWBOYS AND ALIENS, AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, IRON MAN ADVENTURES and COMIC BOOK COMICS), gave SIXSMITHS a shoutout on twitter as one of his top five graphic novels of 2011, alongsideATOMIC ROBO VOL 3, WHO IS JAKE ELLIS?, ASTRONAUT DAD and Dan Sabine's THE HUNTER.
What a lovely way to close out 2011.
2012 is gonna be wall-to-wall action--I can't wait! See you guys then!
-- JF
What a lovely way to close out 2011.
2012 is gonna be wall-to-wall action--I can't wait! See you guys then!
-- JF
Published on December 30, 2011 17:12
December 18, 2011
Nerd Culture Podcast
I did a guest appearance for the fine feathered Nerd Culture Podcast, episode 14. Click on over if you want to hear my horrible nerdly voice talking about Aussie comics and the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
http://nerdculturepodcast.com/2011/12/podcast-episode-14/
Also available on iTunes!
-- JF
http://nerdculturepodcast.com/2011/12/podcast-episode-14/
Also available on iTunes!
-- JF
Published on December 18, 2011 16:14
November 23, 2011
Under the Sycamore
My story "Under the sycamore", beautifully illustrated by Luke Andrew, has just been published in DECAY #10.
Lovely cover by Simon Wright, with some interior work from Daniel Watts, Greg Chapman and John Stewart. Back cover by the legendary John Higgins!

Git yourself a copy now.
-- JF
Lovely cover by Simon Wright, with some interior work from Daniel Watts, Greg Chapman and John Stewart. Back cover by the legendary John Higgins!

Git yourself a copy now.
-- JF
Published on November 23, 2011 14:09
November 14, 2011
McBlack One Shot reviewed
Reviewed once again at Scaryminds. Ten stars means he liked it, right?
http://scaryminds.com/reviews/2011/comic064.php
-- JF
http://scaryminds.com/reviews/2011/comic064.php
-- JF
Published on November 14, 2011 14:57
November 13, 2011
Good Review, Bad Review
Mixed bag of reviews this weekend:
Scaryminds minds really liked "Pack Rules" in the new, repackaged After The World:
http://www.scaryminds.com/reviews/2011/comic064.php
Comics Forge, on the other hand, did not like The Sixsmiths One Shot:
http://comicsforge.com/2011/11/the-sixsmiths-1/
Me, I liked 'em both. I don't think you should find that surprising.
-- JF
Scaryminds minds really liked "Pack Rules" in the new, repackaged After The World:
http://www.scaryminds.com/reviews/2011/comic064.php
Comics Forge, on the other hand, did not like The Sixsmiths One Shot:
http://comicsforge.com/2011/11/the-sixsmiths-1/
Me, I liked 'em both. I don't think you should find that surprising.
-- JF
Published on November 13, 2011 03:35


