Awards season is coming to a close with the grand finale of the Oscars this Sunday.  But not to be outdone, we present last, but certainly not least, the esteemed nominees for the 2010 Meltdown Comic Awards!

It’s been an amazing year for our favorite genre and choosing the best of the best was no easy task.  This year’s Golden Melty list was comprised from multiple “Best of” lists, sell-through numbers, reviews, Publisher’s Weekly lists and combing through dozens of message boards to hear what true comic fans are saying.  So, without further ado, the nominees are:

 

Best Indie Comic Series

  • Green Hornet (Dynamite)
  • The Walking Dead (Image)
  • Scarlet (Icon)
  • Chew (Image)
  • Stumptown (Oni)

 

Best Superhero Comic Series
  • Invincible Iron Man (Marvel)
  • Batman and Robin (DC)
  • Thor: The Mighty Avenger (Marvel)
  • Irredeemable (Boom!)

 

Best Non-Superhero Comic Series
  • Daytripper (Vertigo)
  • American Vampire (Vertigo)
  • Kill Shakespeare (IDW)
  • The Unwritten (Vertigo)

 

Hero of the Year
  • Captain America/Steve Rogers (Marvel)
  • Scott Pilgrim (Oni)
  • Kick Ass (Icon)
  • Zack Overkill – “Incognito” (Icon)

 

Villain of the Year
  • Nemesis (Icon)
  • Skinner Sweet – American Vampire (Vertigo)
  • Red Skull –  Captain America (Marvel)
  • Norman Osborn (Marvel)

 

Most Horrific Death
  • Ares – “Seige #2″
  • Nightcrawler – “X-Force #26″
  • Bras – “Daytripper” (all issues)
  • Cable – “X-Force #28″
  • Multiple robots – “Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers”

 

Best Return from the Dead
  • Aquaman, Hawkman, Firestorm, Martian Manhunter, etc. –  ”Blackest Night #8″
  • Batman –  ”Batman and Robin #8″
  • Dracula – “X-Men #3″

 

Best New Series
  • Northlanders: Plague Widow (Vertigo)
  • Black Widow (Marvel)
  • Green Hornet (Kevin Smith, Dynamite)
  • Secret Avengers (Marvel)

 

Best Graphic Novel
  • Dark Tower: Fall of Gilead
  • Absolute Justice
  • Batwoman: Elegy
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8

 

Best Writer
  • Ed Brubaker – Captain America (Marvel)
  • Mark Millar – Nemesis (Icon)
  • Jason Aaron – Scalped (Vertigo)
  • Geoff Johns – Brightest Day (DC)
  • Mark Waid – Irredeemable (Boom!)
  • Grant Morrison – Batman and Robin (DC)
Best Artist
  • J.H. Williams – Detective Comics (DC)
  • Steve McNiven – Nemesis (Icon)
  • Fiona Staples – North 40 (Wildstorm)
  • Naoki Urasawa – Pluto : Urasawa X
Best Celebrity-Written Title
  • Green Hornet – Kevin Smith
  • The Guild – Felicia Day
  • Frenemy of the State – Rashida Jones
  • Pantheon – Michael Chiklis

 

Best Event of the Year
  • Artifacts (Top Cow)
  • Heroic Age (Marvel)
  • Brightest Day (DC)
  • Second Coming (Marvel)

 

Best WTF Moment
  • DC issues go back to 2.99
  • Nick Simmons accused of plagiarizing “Bleach”
  • Lady Gaga gets her own comic
  • The ending of Greek Street
  • Sony Pictures making “Green Hornet” with that script instead of Kevin Smith’s
  • Tron – ’nuff said
Best Cover of the Year
  • Spiderman #641 ”One Moment in Time”
  • Batwoman #0
  • The Avengers #1 – Variant 7
  • I Zombie #1
  • Superman #702
  • We Will Bury You #1

 

Were your favorites nominated?  Who gets your vote this year for the best of the best in comics?  To find out who will take home the Golden Melty, check back here next week for the winners of the 2010 Meltdown Comic Awards!

Follow us on twitter @TVStaceyLevin and @GoTodash!

 
by: Jason Vaughn

If you’re not already a fan of what the Guinness World Records has deemed the most successful and longest running sci-fi series of all time, allow me to introduce you to the “Doctor.”  I think the 10th Doctor, David Tenant, said it best:

“I’m the Doctor. I’m a Time Lord. I’m from the planet Gallifrey in the Constellation of Kasterborous. I’m 903 years old and I’m the man who is gonna save your lives and all 6 billion people on the planet below. You got a problem with that?”

Unless you’re slow, you’ve already caught on to the fact the Doctor is an alien, and the last of one of the most powerful races in the galaxy, the Time Lords. The Doctor travels through time and space armed with only his wit, a sonic screw driver, a time traveling spacecraft in the shape of a 1950’s style London police call box, and the occasional traveling companion (a.k.a. the obligatory damsel in distress.) As you’d expect, an entity as old and as powerful as the Doctor amasses a vast collection of enemies as he travels the universe fighting for the little people (which more often than not is the planet Earth.) Oh, and his being burdened with constant guardianship over the time stream is kind of a pain in the ass, too.

Terms like “it’s bigger on the inside” and “behind the sofa” entered into my childhood lexicon at an early age as I fell in love with the classic series played on Saturday mornings after my cartoon faves “Dragon’s Lair” and “The Real Ghostbusters.” So needless to say, I was completely stoked when I heard in 2005 that a new season of the hit BBC series was going to be airing on the Sci-Fi Channel. I was equally as thrilled to learn there would be an accompanying comic series as well.

IDW continues their current series based on the show with the first issue of “Doctor Who” arriving on the shelves this Wednesday. But hold on a sec, I bet you’re saying to yourself, “Wait a minute, how can this be the first issue of a series that’s been ongoing for years?”  Ah, now see, that’s because the Doctor has changed over the years and the creators of the show had the forethought to instill a little bit of mythology into the Doctor’s physiology to cover their own rear-ends in case their lead ever left the show, or started to develop an ego the size of the Tardis’ interior. It’s fairly ingenious because if the Doctor is ever gravely injured, he can regenerate, but it results in his appearance and personality changing. It’s one of these types of regenerations that has lead us from IDW’s previous book starring the much beloved 10th Doctor, exuberantly performed by the talented thespian David Tenant, to our current 11th Doctor played by newcomer Matt Smith.

In this inaugural issue, we catch up with the Doctor and his two current companions from the show Amy Pond and her fiancé Rory Williams (who we all know is just an obstacle the writers put in between the attractive “damsel” Amy and the newly young Doctor) as they’re forced to land on an alien planet after the Tardis is infected with spam like holographic images and phisher like emails personified. But as is par for the course when traveling with the Doctor, the trio find themselves in the midst of an invasion by intergalactic mercenaries. Scribe Tony Lee’s story feels like it was lifted straight from the show, as if somehow the idea was pitched and the powers that be turned it down for budget issues but said, “That’d make a good graphic novel though.” And I’m digging how artist Andrew Currie has managed to capture the likeness of the leads so accurately, the panels feel as if he had the cast stand in as models while he was working. Currie seems to have duplicated Matt Smith’s wide gamut of emotions from that of an exasperated baby sitter, to contemplative scholar, to mischievous alien, with what appears to be great ease.

My only problem with the issue, and the series before it as well, is there are certain elements in the show which are naturally lost in print translation, and their loss lessen my enjoyment of the book as a “Dr. Who” property. To me, one of the reasons “Dr. Who” is such a time honored property is due, in large part, to the “cheese factor” of the show. You just don’t get the same effect in print as you do on film when it comes to low budget effects. Nothing can replicate watching a grown man walk around in a tin can screaming “Exxteerrrminaaate!” (I don’t know. How would you make special effects in a comic book seem cheesy? Put glitter on the paper?) Another small issue is the absence of the Doctor’s delivery. We can all agree that 90% of the time we have no idea what the hell the Doctor is talking about. It’s not so much the incomprehensible techno babble which tickles our inner nerd as it is the delivery of those lines from Tenant and now Smith. They both have their own unrestrained way of piping us like the Piper himself into the Doctor’s outlandish adventures keeping us coming back for more.

But with my completely unreasonable complaints aside, I’m sure long time fans of both the book and the show will describe this first issue in one word, “brilliant!”

Follow me on Twitter: @GoTodash.


 

by: Stacey Levin

(WARNING! SPOILERS BELOW!)

Where is Tron?  And before you look at me like I’m from another planet, I know “Tron: Legacy” is in the theaters.  Actually, I saw it and… Yawn (oh, I’m sorry, yawningmid-sentence is rude.)  Well, what I should say is that I saw whatever parts of it I managed to stay awake through.   Wow, what a snooze fest.  And it also leads me back to my original question – where is Tron?  Considering the movie is named after him, he was barely in the flick I saw.  In fact, if you’re new to the franchise, you might even be asking “who is Tron?”  That’s not a good sign, folks.

Jason and I don’t cover movies often in this column, but Tron is one of those magical properties from our youth that most comic book readers loved and cherished.  And like any good geek, we were beyond excited to see “Legacy.”  Have you guys seen it yet?  ‘Cause I have questions, people.

Here’s the rub: “Tron: Legacy” is a flashy, visually cool film with no story.  Well, most of the visuals were cool.  I mean, who doesn’t like to look at the pretty neon suits and flying disks?  But, of course.  And sure, the light cycles still look fun to ride.  But all of the hype about “Clu” and how they aged Jeff Bridges backwards?  Um, he looked like a character straight out of “Final Fantasy.”  Not impressed.

Now let’s discuss the story… or lack thereof.  Such wasted opportunities at almost every act break.  “Tron: Legacy” has one beat that repeats over and over again.  We get it, Sam wants to get his father home.  Is there anything else to it?  Uh, nope.  That’s it.  Gotta get him home.  And logic?  Right out the cyber window.  From the biggest points like:  How did Clu turn into a Hitler-like dictator from a program that was originally designed to be utopian?  Ok, the program wasn’t perfect because its creator Kevin Flynn (old Jeff Bridges) wasn’t perfect, but he wasn’t inherently evil.  Where did Clu’s evil Caeser-like reign come from?  Here’s another one:  What the hell happened to Tron all this time?  How about this:  how the heck would Quorra be able to manifest herself in the real world and live like a human?  Seriously?

But maybe I’m thinking too hard about this, right?  Let’s take a look at some smaller points instead.  What do Programs do all day aside from trying to score tickets to the gladiator games being held in the giant glass Rubik’s cube?  Do they have apartments?  Jobs?  What was Kevin surviving on all of these years?   Where did that huge dinner he served Sam come from?  Wait a minute, while we’re on the topic of ingesting – why do Programs drink or eat at all?  Aren’t they cyber beings living in a cyber world??   And quite possibly the biggest conundrum of them all: Clu designs a world he believes to be Utopia, but it doesn’t have anything comforting or nice about it at all, and the one thing he does create is a dance club complete with electronica music?  All of that time and energy spent on making a perfect world and he re-created the same stupid club scene we have here on earth?  I don’t know about you guys, but in my version of Utopia, maybe there’s a lounge or two, but definitely no clubs.

All of these questions and more can be found in “Tron: Legacy.”  Instead of the writers taking this amazing opportunity to write a layered and emotional story to explain what’s been happening in Cyber Land for the last 25 years, they chose to go the lazy Hollywood route and flash a shiny object at us so we’ll forget it doesn’t make any sense.

I hate to rain on Disney’s Christmas parade (and believe me, I’m the hugest Disney fan there is), but “Tron: Legacy” was a total disappointment.  You know what?  The more I think about it, this movie sucked.  Final analysis:  fatal error.

Peace, love and all that jazz.

Follow me on twitter: @TVStaceyLevin

 

For those of you mere mortals that don’t know your Heimdall from your Fandral, or the fact that “The Bard’s” bff Kenneth Branagh has been playing in an Asgardian sandbox lately, shame on you.  If you don’t know the Thunder God as the powerhouse Avenger, have no fear, for here’s a little peak of Thor’s origin story headed into theaters next year.   (Yes, the silly 80′s rocker hair aside, the guy was always pitted against Superman in all of those DC/Marvel crossover events.) Click on the link below to check out Marvel’s teaser site for the upcoming film along with the trailer.

Thor Movie Site!

Follow on twitter: Jason -@GoTodash


 

by: Jason Vaughn

It’s that time of year again where the bravest of us venture to malls filled to the brim with over-caffeinated parents trying to get that last talking Elmo plush.  Or maybe you’re trying your best not to drink too much eggnog (what’s really in that stuff anyway) while suppressing an overwhelming desire to snicker at your girlfriend’s mother’s overly festive sweater.  I don’t know about you guys, but I would rather spend my holiday season knocking back a few cold ones and picking the brains of some of the most talented people working in the industry.   Wait a minute, what did I just hear?  Was that a jolly fat man and eight tiny reindeer ?  Not quite, but it’s a holy Christmas miracle, Batman.  The fine peeps at Boom! Studios are giving me exactly what I wanted for the holidays!  Check out their latest announcement.

COME ONE, COME ALL TO THE BOOM! STUDIOS 2010 HOLIDAY PARTY @ MELTDOWN COMICS DECEMBER 13, 2010!

IT’S A PARTY AND EVERYONE’S INVITED!

December 1, 2010 – Los Angeles, CA – Can you believe it’s been a year since our last celebration? Neither can we! But it’s true. It’s time again for the BOOM! Studios holiday party at Meltdown comics, happening Monday, December 13 at 8pm! So won’t you join us? No guests lists, no velvet rope, if you’ve got the gas or the bus fare to make it to Meltdown Comics, you’re invited!

Who: Mix and Mingle with the BOOM! Crew!

When: Monday, December 13th, 8:00pm – till they kick us out!

Where: Meltdown Comics & Collectibles
7522 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA, 90046

Why: FREE BEER while supplies last!
About BOOM! Studios
BOOM! Studios (www.boom-studios.com) 2009 “Best Publisher” of the year, generates a wide-ranging catalog of multiple Eisner and Harvey Award-nominated comic books and graphic novels featuring some of the industry’s top talent, including Philip K. Dick’s DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?, 20th Century Fox’s 28 DAYS LATER and DIE HARD, The Henson Company’s FARSCAPE, and the original Mark Waid series IRREDEEMABLE. This fall sees BOOM! teaming up with the legendary Stan Lee, creator of Marvel Comics’ characters Spider-Man, The Hulk, and The X-Men for a line of original superhero series, the legend’s first new superhero creations in nearly 20 years. BOOM!’s youth imprint, BOOM Kids!, is an undisputed industry leader publishing Disney/Pixar’s THE INCREDIBLES, CARS, and TOY STORY, as well as Disney’s THE MUPPETS, DONALD DUCK, UNCLE SCROOGE and WALT DISNEY’S COMICS AND STORIES. This year, BOOM! Studios celebrates its fifth anniversary.

Follow on twitter: Jason -@GoTodash

©2012 Meltdown, Inc. WP retouched by the hand of FD for Meltdown, Inc.