Tag Archives: History Channel

Comic Con Quick Start 2014

Yes, you read the headline right, and yes, we are aware this is now 2015.  As occasionally happens, Comic-Con just suddenly appeared before us, with preview night happening tonight and no time to record an updated Quick Start a very brief debate took place, along the lines of is there any harm in reminding people last year’s quick start podcast is still available? followed by a lot of the advice in it is timeless after all, that was our intent and goal when we sat down to record last year.

When John and I (Kay) recorded last year, we were thinking along the lines of useful tips 20+ years of attendance have taught us about San Diego Comic Con.  Things like, tell your friends you will meet them on the street side, or the water/bay side.  Avoid saying “Harbord Dr.” vs. “Harbor” side.  You are in a loud environment where it can be hard to hear every syllable, and cell phone signals are not perfect, despite the convention center having repeaters, and if you miss that precious word Drive… it can be so easy to miss connecting with someone you want to see, or feel as though time you could have spent enjoying the awesomeness that is Comic-Con was instead spent wondering where the heck your friends were wandering around thinking you were standing.

You will find that the 2014 Quick Start did include us discussing things that had caught our attention for that year, this year for instance, History Channel’s Vikings are back, but are doing Long Boat tours, and are at a different location.  In fact, their location varies depending on what time and which day you want to go out on the Long Boat and try and get a drinking horn.

Fans can conquer San Diego aboard the VIKINGS Long Ships July 10 & July 11 as follows:

Morning Route (near Convention Center) – 9:00am – 12:30pm
Pick-up at Manchester Grand Hyatt
Drop-off at 5th Avenue Landing (behind the Convention Center)

Afternoon Route (Gaslamp Quarter) – 1:00pm – 5:00pm
Pick-up & Drop-off at 7th Avenue and Market Street Lot

Join the VIKINGS conversation at Comic-Con with @HistoryVikings using #VikingsSDCC.

Nerd HQ has moved, it was at PetCo Park last year, and in 2015 is at the Children’s Museum, at Union and Island by Front Street just across from the Marriott.

John Mayo, of ComicBookPage, and Kay Kellam, of PopArtsPlace, give some useful advice to get your Comic-Con international experience off to a quick start.

 

Links:
Comic-Con International: http://www.comic-con.org/cci
Discount Comic Book Service: http://www.DCBService.com
Comics Podcast Network: http://www.comicspodcast.com
League of Comic Book Podcasts: http://www.comicbooknoise.com/league/

Email us at TheGuys@ComicBookPage.com

Join the discussion on our forum at: http://forum.comicbookpage.com

This podcast episode originated on the Comic Book Page feed and website: http://www.ComicBookPage.com

Reign – CW – More Than Meets The Eye

Ashford Castle, County Mayo Ireland - used for Castle exteriors in the pilot of Reign

Ashford Castle, County Mayo Ireland – used for Castle exteriors in the pilot of Reign

CW’s Reign is an easy show to dismiss or overlook, if viewed from a certain perspective.  This is not a history channel documdrama, or a PBS presentation of the life and times of Mary, Queen of Scots.  The first trailers for Reign were so whimsical and fantastical that I was actually drawn to the show thinking it was fantasy as opposed to based on a specific historical figure.

(C) The CW Network, Adelaide Kane as Mary Queen of Scots

(C) The CW Network, Adelaide Kane as Mary Queen of Scots

Season 1 follows several of the key benchmark moments from Mary, Queen of Scots, life, with facts adjusted slightly to make them more palatable to a modern audience (forgive me, I would not care to watch a show in which fourteen year-old children were pressed into marriage by political minded monarchs) and the intrigue and politics of court feel less true to one specific court, but more like the writers have drawn from all the courts of Europe, probably over a period of time, and brought the most interesting rumors, truths, sensations, and possibilities all to bear in one show.

(C) CW Network, Toby Regbo as Prince Francis

(C) CW Network, Toby Regbo as Prince Francis

I did not go into Reign expecting a historically accurate or factual accounting of Mary, Queen of Scots, life, and perhaps that is why I have enjoyed the show more than some other reviewers I’ve run across.  In the 16th century life was considerably different from the world we now live in, and I do not merely mean they lacked the technology we now take for granted.  One character has younger sisters who are relying on her to make a “good match” and “marry well,” the family’s future, their hopes and aspirations, rest on the shoulders of the daughter they have sent to court.

It was a time when a great many men viewed their wives as property, and women could bring land and wealth to a marriage, but once they spoke their vows (whether that was done by their choice or not) what they brought with them was no longer theirs.  It is these aspects of the 16th century, among others, that Reign is presenting in a compelling and dazzling manner.  Highlighting the glitz and glamour of the time, as well as the perils, dangers, and some of the realities (as well as some creative twists that hopefully will play out well.)

The Season 1 DVD includes two wonderful behind the scenes features.  In Reign: The Making of a Queen there is discussion not only about how the show was made, but also about a hope that the viewers will investigate the life of Mary, Queen of Scots, for themselves, discovering where the line between fact and fiction has been crossed.  That is a hope I share.

(C) CW Network, Torrance Coombs as Sebastian

(C) CW Network, Torrance Coombs as Sebastian

To that end, I think Reign could be used quite compellingly by some creative teachers to intrigue students about the life of Royals and policy makers of the 16th century, and then get these students investigating where the show stuck to the facts, and where they took creative license.

King Henri’s mistress, Diane de Poitiers, is an intriguing woman, who had two daughters with a husband who died in 1531, probably after she had been involved with King Henri’s father for several years… yes, in real life she was quite a bit older than Henri, and she was a distant relation of Catherine de Medici, Henri’s wife.  A sentence that lies somewhere between fact is stranger than fiction, and that is why the lives of Royals of the 16th century make such excellent fodder for a show like Reign.

Diane did not have a son with Henri, but some believe she might have had a daughter with him.  And she made certain the King and Catherine de Medici produced 10 legitimate heirs, including three Kings of France – Francis II, Charles IX, and Henry III.  Henri’s daughter Elisabeth married the King of Spain, and his daughter Margaret married the King of Navarre who later became King Henry IV of France.

As I said, the Royal Courts, and families, were ripe with material for a show such as Reign, I simply feel the writers have not limited themselves to the life and times of Mary, Queen of Scots, and her peers / playmates, but rather the show has done an excellent job of portraying the concept of what such a life was like, and would be equally fascinating and compelling if it were placed in a mythological place where things happened to bear this same strong resemblance to real life events and times.

(C) CW Network, Adelaide Kane as Mary Queen of Scots

(C) CW Network, Adelaide Kane as Mary, Queen of Scots

The Authenticity of Reign: Recreating the 16th Century talks about the amazing sets, the castles used in the pilot vs. the sets that were constructed for the first season, and the fantastic wardrobe worn week after week.  There have been a few gowns that have left me wondering if that could really have been made in the 16th century, and yet they were so strikingly beautiful, and so decadently upper-class and beyond the realm of possibility to a mere peasant, that in that part of me that still views the show more as fantasy and less as derived from the life of true people, I forgive them for the abundant use of modern fabrics, embellishments, and sewing machines — perhaps also in part because they have maintained the styles, the necklines and hems, and the sense of the 16th century even while adding that modern flair.

The music during the episodes is an interesting contradiction, similar to the clothing.  When the characters are dancing in the ballroom it sounds very 16th century, and yet the background music often has a very 21st century sound to it… and somehow this shift between styles works for the show.  Someone is carefully balancing the two, not blasting headbanging music, but giving modern zip and swing to action scenes in a manner that is undoubtedly keeping the CW audience in tune.

I remain convinced Reign is predominantly fantasy, and happens to share the names of historical figures I recall from my school days.  I hope there are some clever teachers out there using this show to capture their students imagination and teach them about a harsher time in our past, both in terms of the plague, the dark ages that led into the Renaissance, and the politics and intrigues of Royal courts.   Reign does a beautiful job of alluding to real historical events, such as the death of King William II, aka William Rufus of England.  (I believe the link is along the lines of, It wouldn’t be the first time a King died in a hunting accident.)

On 2 August 1100, King William II organized a hunting trip in the New Forest. William was presented with six arrows, on the eve of the hunt; taking four for himself, he handed the other two to Walter Tirel, saying, “Bon archer, bonnes fleches” (“[To the] good archer, the good arrows.”)

On the subsequent hunt, the party spread out as they chased their prey, and William, in the company of Tirel, became separated from the others. It was the last time that William was seen alive.

In their search for prey, according to chroniclers, Tirel let loose a wild shot at a passing stag. However, instead of striking the stag as intended, the arrow pierced William in the chest, puncturing his lungs.  King William Rufus died instantly.

Reign CompleteSeason1When it comes to Entertainment, Reign fits the bill with high marks!  While I would enjoy learning the true story and details of the life of Mary, Queen of Scots, with access to the internet a part of most people’s daily lives, Reign is a show that can easily inspire those of us who have forgotten the ins and outs of her turn as a Monarch to spend an afternoon on-line, refreshing our memories, and exploring a century gone-by.  As for the show, it’s a once a week guilty pleasure, a chance to set the modern world aside, forget our troubles and electronic leashes, and be reminded just how easy we have it in so many ways.

Reign returns for a second season Oct 2 at 9 PM / 8 Central on the CW.

Season 1 of Reign is available on DVD now, 22 episodes running 916 minutes

Vikings at San Diego Comic Con International

Vikings Cast at San Diego Comic Con International 2014

During the panel for the History Channel’s Vikings there was a lot of talk about the strength of the female characters, the intensity of the battle scenes, and the fact that a period of history rarely seen on TV, and cultures and places rarely portrayed are being brought to life.

Ragnar Lothbrok was a real person, written about in poetry, with a variety of legends having risen up around him.  It may be hard, in the case of Ragnar, to know the precise truth of his life, but knowing what we do about the time in which he lived, the History Channel’s show Vikings offers compelling entertainment, and an exciting glimpse into this period from the past.

Cast of the History Channel's Vikings at CCI in SD

The cast, which is working on Season 3 in Ireland, flew to San Diego for Comic-Con International, and talked about the experience of recreating both Norway and England from Centuries ago.  In season 3 more characters and, by the sounds of it, cultures and regions will be explored by our adventuring characters.

And as an added bonus for attending the Vikings panel, we received a Vikings Comic Book (published by Zenoscope) that I am looking forward to reading!

VIKINGS! On History

History Channel‘s Vikings panel was great fun, not only because it was vastly entertaining but because everyone on the panel was very informative and interesting.

For those who are not familiar with the show, as it enters it’s third season here is how the press release describes the show:

VIKINGS, Season 3 is currently in production and is slated to premiere in 2015. VIKINGS tells the extraordinary tales of the lives and epic adventures of these warriors. The drama portrays the world of these Dark Age raiders, traders, explorers – not from an outsider’s view, but, through the eyes of Viking society. VIKINGS centers on Ragnar (Travis Fimmel), a restless young warrior and family man who longs to find and conquer new lands across the sea and claim the spoils as his own.

Travis Fimmel (Warcraft) continues to lead the stellar cast as Ragnar, along with Katheryn Winnick as Lagertha, an Earl and fierce shield maiden; Clive Standen as Rollo, Ragnar’s impulsive brother; Alexander Ludwig as Bjorn, the intelligent and bold warrior son of Ragnar; George Blagden as Athelstan, a young and not-so-innocent monk; Jessalyn Gilsig as Siggy, beautiful wife of the late Earl Haraldson; Linus Roache as Ecbert, King of Wessex, a man of strength, knowledge and undisguised ambition; Gustaf Skarsgard as Floki, a ship builder who designs the new generation of Vikings ships and Alyssa Sutherland as Princess Aslaug, Ragnar’s new wife.

Joining the cast for season three are Lothaire Bluteau (The Tudors) as Emperor Charles of France, a powerful man who views battling the Vikings as spiritual and earthly; Kevin Durand (The Strain) as The Wanderer, a mysterious man who is not what he seems; and Morgane Polanski (The Ghost) as Princess Gisla, the elegant, self-possessed daughter of Emperor Charles and his most trusted advisor and Ben Robson (Dracula: The Dark Prince) as Kalf, Lagertha’s trusted second in command

As was mentioned on the panel, Lagertha is a powerful woman, living in a complex and violent world.  A time that has not often been shown on television particularly is being explored and they are bringing to life locations and cultures in such vivid culture and with such beautiful effects that as you watch the show you do  not feel a though you are watching a show that uses visual effects.

Ragnar Lothbrok was a real Viking, around whom legends evolved and swirled.  A man with multiple relationships and children it is easy to understand how he captured the imagination of these storytellers and how this fantastic television show has come from the myths, stories, rumors and legends that grew out of his life.  We may never know the truth and details of the real Ragnar Lothbrok, but it is fun to imagine History Channel’s Vikings is giving us a glimpse into the time in which he lived, into the struggles of his era, the complexities and politics of his age, and all the while they are showing us the beautiful, seemingly pristine world in which they lived so long ago.

If you are looking for a show that is equal parts fight and drama, consider flipping over to History Channel and giving Vikings a try, this is an engrossing tale that keeps you coming back from one week to the next, forever curious to know who will react how, and what twist awaits you around the next bend in the plot.