Author Archives: AFDStudios

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 15

Post apocalyptic Space Marine bad-ass in motocross armor blah blah blah.

Day15

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 14: Kiss the Cook

Nobody interrupts dinner prep and gets away with it!

Day14

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 13: The Purple Broccoli

He had a sidekick, "The Purple Celery", but then kicked him out when he realized he was actually just a rhubarb in disguise.

Day13

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 12: Lord Haught

Day12

Face It!

While rummaging around the hard drive on my old home computer (since I lost my laptop when I got laid off) I found the old FaceMaker files. I figured it might as well have a home so you can now use it at http://www.heromachine.com/facemaker. I'd forgotten how much fun the "Randomize" feature can be!

I want to say that all of the items from this test app were ported over to HeroMachine 3, and that other than randomizing there isn't anything here you can't do there. In fact if you put HM3 into "portrait" mode it duplicates all of this and more. Still, for folks who want something a little simpler to use I figured it couldn't hurt to make it available. Enjoy!

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 11: Bob from Accounting

"Hey, run this down to Bob in Accounting. Just don't ask about ..."
"Ask about what?"
"Um. Anything, really. You'll know."

Day11

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 10: Seeing the light

That first moment when your power awakens is ... well. It's better than the best sex you've ever had, better than winning the lottery, better than that time you were right in the argument with your wife. Of course that last one literally will never happen, so it's not a high hurdle but still, it's pretty awesome. They call it "Seeing the Light" and in Revis' case it was literally true.

Day10

Thor: The Dark World and the Modern Movie Serial

thor_poster
I have seen "Thor: The Dark World" and I pronounce it to be Good. Very entertaining, with enough good character moments to balance out the Hitting of Large Things. The copious CGI served its purpose well. Thumbs up from this geek!

Plus, they threw in a nice bit for their female fans (or, more likely, the girlfriends of their male fans) involving Chris Hemsworth, a sponge, and the conspicuous absence of a shirt.

After thinking about it a bit this evening, I suspect what Marvel has sneakily done is to re-create the old-time serial in the modern world. In the age before televisions (and television shows) were ubiquitous, studios regularly put out installments of popular franchises as chapters to keep the movie-going public entertained. You'd get your periodic installment of the adventures of Superman or The Green Hornet, each of which advanced an overarching plot line. They were very much comic book story arcs put on the silver screen.

I would argue that this, updated for the modern palette, is what Marvel is doing with these interstitial super-hero movies since they undertook their production. Each installment advances the over-arching character development of the protagonist, bringing back some of your favorite supporting cast from episode to episode. Each one uses bits from the previous film to inform your enjoyment of the current one (for instance, in "Thor: The Dark World" not having to re-establish the characters' backstories is a huge help in terms of building the plot and keeping momentum), and each ends with a tease that whets your appetite for the next.

The production values are much higher now than they were in the 1940s of course, and each chapter, if you will, has a more satisfyingly complete internal story arc. But they all feed into a larger narrative, continued not just in further movies in the same franchise but across other properties as well -- "Iron Man 3" strongly references the events of "The Avengers", as will, I'm sure, the upcoming "Captain America" sequel. You aren't obligated to watch each one, but they feed off of and enhance each other, building a whole interlocking network of fiction that greatly improves the individual installments and the impact of the gestalt.

What do you think, am I on to something here or whistling in the dark? Also, WARNING! Spoiler discussions about "Thor: The Dark World" will surely be in the comments for those of you who have seen it.

30 Characters in 30 Days Challenge, Day 9: Little Red Riding Hood

Day9

Survey: The Future (and Present) of HeroMachine

Hi folks, this is Ye Olde HeroMachine Creator Jeff, and I’d like to get your help. Now that the first rush of panic over losing my job has passed and HeroMachine seems to be well on its way to supporting us financially, the time has come to take stock of where we are and what we ought to be doing next. I’ve put together a survey to get some idea of who uses the site for what now, and what you want it to be in the future. If you’d take a few moments to answer these five short questions, I’d really appreciate it.