The Weekly Planet - Batman: The Killing Joke - Caravan Of Garbage
Episode Date: November 24, 2022We have come to an end of our Alan Moore-athon with one of the most misguided attempts at adaptation, Batman: The Killing Joke from 2016. Despite having the likes of Paul Dini, Kevin Conroy and Mark H...amill lending their skills it falls flat in almost all ways. Animation, interpretation, additions, it's bizarre. But luckily at the end we also look at a good thing in the Justice League Unlimited episode For The Man Who Has Everything to wrap everything up. Thanks for listening to our Caravan Of Garbage review!SUBSCRIBE HERE ►► http://goo.gl/pQ39jNVideo Edition ► https://youtu.be/lnZgmBqsZ7MHelp support the show and get early episodes ► https://bigsandwich.co/Patreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesJames' Twitter ► http://twitter.com/mrsundaymoviesMaso's Twitter ► http://twitter.com/wikipediabrownPatreon ► https://patreon.com/mrsundaymoviesT-Shirts/Merch ► https://www.teepublic.com/stores/mr-sunday-movies The Weekly Planet iTunes ► https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-weekly-planet/id718158767?mt=2&ign-mpt=uo%3D4 The Weekly Planet Direct Download ► https://play.acast.com/s/theweeklyplanetAmazon Affiliate Link ► https://amzn.to/2nc12P4 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
FX's The Veil explores the surprising and fraught relationship between two women who play a deadly game of truth and lies on the road from Istanbul to Paris and London.
One woman has a secret.
The other, a mission to reveal it before thousands of lives are lost.
FX's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss, is now streaming on Disney+.
Will you rise with the sun to help change mental health care forever?
Join the Sunrise Challenge to raise funds for CAMH,
the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health,
to support life-saving progress in mental health care.
From May 27th to 31st,
people across Canada will rise together
and show those living with mental illness and addiction
that they're not alone.
Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind.
So, who will you rise for?
Register today at sunrisechallenge.ca.
That's sunrisechallenge.ca.
You know what's interesting, Mason?
According to the Academy of...
You didn't let me guess.
Do you know what's interesting?
According to the Academy of...
Do you want me to finish this off?
Academy of? Motion Picture Arts and to finish this off? Academy of?
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Music.
No, Motion Picture...
Academy of Music.
Bruce Springsteen sold a lot of albums.
That is true, actually, yeah.
Yeah, that's interesting, right?
But also, on a related note...
That's my most current reference, by the way, Bruce Springsteen.
According to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,
the American Film Institute and the British Film Institute,
a feature film runs for more than 40 minutes,
while the Screen Actors Guild asserts that a feature's running time
is 60 minutes or longer.
Why do you think I bring that up, Mason?
You brought that up because we have recently watched
the DC animated movie Batman The Killing Joke,
which runs a brisk an hour and ten maybe, something like that.
So it runs an hour 26.
Go on.
Some would argue that's the perfect length for a movie.
What, 86 minutes?
Actually, that's too short.
I feel like you need to hit a certain requirement for a film, right,
in terms of length.
And the Killing Joke.
Otherwise it's just a novella
exactly and the killing joke in itself it's a pretty tight story so i guess their options were
to tack a story onto the front of it extend the whole killing joke to make it like an hour and a
half or do you make it 15 to 20 minutes or do you not do it at all yeah i hope you were going to
provide that to me otherwise i would have had to insert it therefore what's i look i'll give credit to this thing in that hour
and 27 minutes there's a lot of stuff like they they there's a they put a lot of plot into this
but the fascinating part about it as as you've alluded to there is because the killing joke the
comic book storyline is quite brief they just had to add their own fanfic at the start.
There's like 20 plus minutes of fanfic
where Batgirl just goes after this rando guy,
just this rando criminal.
And I spent most of it going,
because this is the first time I've seen this,
I spent most of this going, have they changed?
This guy has a sort of a smirk to him.
He has a widow's peak and a smirk.
And I'm like, are they going to make this guy the Joker?
Is that what's going to happen here?
Is Batgirl going to have this animosity with this villain
and he's going to end up swimming through the Axis or Ace chemical plant
and turn into the Joker and he'll be her arch nemesis?
But no, he's just some guy.
That's what I find really bizarre about it
because it sort of sets it up like he's her joker
because he knows how to push her buttons and all of that.
Also, her characterization, way fucking awful.
Oh, it's awful.
All terrible stuff, and we'll come around to that.
Oh, yeah, this is Caravan of Garbage.
Please leave a like.
But I think also he's not interesting visually or tactically.
His personality is really standard mobster stuff. He's basic. He's not interesting visually or tactically. His personality is really standard mobster stuff.
He's basic.
He's just nobody.
He's not a costumed villain.
He doesn't have any powers.
And he doesn't have to be any of those things if his personality is interesting.
Oh, he's got hacking skills.
Everybody's got a hacking skill, Mason.
Everybody.
Even Hawkeye has an arrow that does a hacking skill.
Now, James, you're thinking of hacky sack skills. We've all got those. We don't all have hacking skills. No, you're right. You're absolutely Mason. Everybody. Even Hawkeye has an arrow that does a hacking skill. No, James, you're thinking of hacky sack skills.
We've all got those.
We don't all have hacking skills.
No, you're right.
You're absolutely right, yeah.
But I don't hate the idea
of doing a lead-up
to the killing joke.
Well, it needs something, I guess.
If this is intended
to be a standalone movie,
I guess we need some context.
Or do we?
Because Batman and Batgirl, you know,
they're iconic characters.
We get it.
We don't need to be like, well, actually,
he fights crime at Gotham and he's pretty good at it.
Sometimes he's got a sidekick and they're a new sidekick.
So I guess you don't.
What are we doing?
I don't know.
And I think also the idea to expand her role from what she does in the killing joke,
which is basically just get shot and have photos taken of her in horrible, lewd positions.
Like the idea to expand that character and make her more compelling and give her more agency
and more personality and more anything, that makes sense to me.
But this is the opposite of that yeah it would
make more sense if her her initial sort of action outing in this was her putting the joker in prison
that would that would be better instead of a rando and instead of having sex with batman yeah that's
i mean if we're gonna talk you know that the comic book version, whichever version you pick, you know,
that's not part of the characterization at all.
But what they've done here is they've gone, you know,
what if we made her very intensely obsessed with Batman?
Yeah.
And she has a best friend that she goes to and he's like,
ooh, you're Pilates instructor.
Ooh, you're going to kiss him.
Ooh.
Right.
She's like, well, it's not like that because it's actually Batman,
but I can't tell you anything about that.
Yuck. It's gross, Mason kiss him? Ooh. Right. He's like, well, it's not like that because it's actually Batman, but I can't tell you anything about that. Yuck.
It's gross, Mason.
It is gross, yeah.
And also that dynamic is all wrong because there's obviously a power dynamic.
They wouldn't have Batman have sex with Dick Grayson, for example, right?
Correct.
Despite what everybody on the internet and in pop culture has been saying
for multiple decades, they wouldn't actually have that happen.
Because it just shows that he's a terrible person
and she's a terrible judge of character
and then she's crying to him over the radio.
I'm just like, why can't we go back to the way it was?
He's like, I'm bad, man.
I'm not going to do that.
I'm not going to do anything.
I'm just going to have my wife fight and cry.
It's on a roof as well.
I mean, he does all this stuff on a roof, doesn't he?
That's true, yes.
Well, producer Bruce Tim, who's one of the producers on this,
he defended the idea of adding in a Batgirl subplot,
which, again, I don't have a problem with,
but specifically of her being intimate with Batman
because of how he always saw them as having a sexual chemistry,
especially from watching the Adam West Batman television show.
Oh, no, there was no sexual chemistry on the Batman television show.
I mean, everybody knows where the chemistry was at that show,
but it absolutely was not there.
It was Alfred and Aunt Harriet.
Yeah, exactly.
And Commissioner Gordon and Chief O'Hara.
Yes.
And Bruce Wayne and Batman when he was pretending to have a phone
conversation with himself.
What are you wearing?
Oh, a Batman costume.
Intriguing.
Also, in response to the criticism of this prologue,
Brian Azzarello, who wrote this, he stated,
the thing about this is that it's controversial,
so he added more controversy.
And I just, I don't think it being controversial
is what makes the killing joke good.
I'm not like, oh, he shot Batgirl through the spine.
That's what I love about this story, how controversial.
Like, I think the elements of the story that works is more the dynamic
between the Batman and the Joker.
And I think when we finally get to that final showdown
and it's just Kevin Conroy and just Mark Hamill
just spitting the dialogue at each other, that's...
Well, it's interesting.
It's interesting.
Everything about this has great elements to it and interesting like it's interesting we everything about this has great
elements to it and in theory it could be good i like brian azzarello and i like bruce tim yeah
bruce tim of course being one of the kind of authors of the batman animated universe not this
one specifically although this one specifically but more famously the the batman the animated
series and the dc au yeah oh you know overall and we get we get the classic batman and
voice actors in kevin conroy and mark hamill yep that's great yeah absolutely but yeah the pieces
did not did not fit together there i don't think no and also like even visually the original
killing joke illustrated by brian boland yeah like they've gotten the broad strokes of it correct in this,
but what they seem to have done is they put that weird grey sheen
over everything.
Yes.
Like as was trendy for, like they sort of attempted to kind of make it
mesh with whatever DCAU animated art style they were working with
at the time.
So it's not the Batman the Animated Series or the Justice League cartoon.
It's that whatever they were up to, New 52 or Rebirth or whatever it was,
they were like, okay, let's give everything,
let's make everything grey and put seams on all the costumes.
The flashbacks where we see the man who is to become the Joker,
it just has that weird sepia tone to it,
but it's like that's not how it looked in the comic books.
And also the flashbacks make it look like that was happening in like the 50s.
It's bizarre, yeah.
But it happened like a week ago or whatever.
Yeah, there's a YouTube channel called Plan...
A couple of years ago, but it's always a joke, but you know what I'm saying, right?
You know what you mean, yeah.
But there's a YouTube channel called Plan Making Mammals, and it's just like a few clips,
but this channel has basically recoloured it to look more like the comic book.
And it's not perfect because you're using also the art style
that was in the animated version,
but just the idea of having the colour palette
closer to what it is in the comic,
like it's a bit more garish
and there's upsetting clashing colours happening.
The Joker's outfit, in contrast to his skin and all of that.
It works much better.
And I just wish maybe one of the things they could have done
is just do it more like the comic.
They also outsourced this to...
I guess we could read the comic.
Sure, well, yeah.
But they also outsourced it to Japan,
to a Japanese animation company to do this.
So I guess they were just like,
just do something like this, I guess.
Okay, right.
And this is what we ended up with.
Do you notice a bit when Batman throws one of those little guys
down into a spike pit?
You know, he's fighting all those circus freaks and whatever,
and he's just like, whoop, just straight into the pit, mate.
But again, that bit at the end where it's just Kevin Conroy and Mark Hamill,
and it just, they're obviously, they've been doing it for so long,
they've absolutely nailed the voices, the mannerisms,
and all of that at this point.
They're not doing the mannerisms.
You get the idea.
I think they probably are.
I think they probably are in the booth.
They probably are, yeah.
I reckon Kevin Conroy's probably pulling his cowl up.
He's flipping the cape like it's a set of bat wings.
Yeah, maybe you're right.
That being said, though, I feel like,
and we watched something subsequent to this.
We watched something directly after this we watched we watched something
directly after this bonus stuff and uh i think they seem a little bit flat in this i'm not i i
gotta say maybe i'm bringing my own biases into this but it kind of felt to me like uh they were
not super into this yeah i don't like i don't i'm not feeling this like you know you ever hear um
you ever hear peter cullenullen do the voice of Optimus Prime
in any of those Michael Bay Transformers movies?
I know you do.
But there's a lot of like, I'll murder you.
And it feels like he's like, I'm reading this, am I?
I'm out of breath.
I'm Optimus Prime.
I'm out of breath.
I'll kill you, Frasier Crane.
I'll kill you.
I'll kill you as easy as breathing.
Bang.
That's my favourite bit of all those movies.
But I guess also one of the things it does do well
is leaves the ambiguity at the end of whether or not
Batman actually kills the Joker.
Okay, sure.
I know a lot of people, including comic creators like Grant Morrison,
have said, no, that's actually what happens.
But if you go back to Alan Moore himself, and I've got a quote here,
that's not what happens at the end of this.
And I also, of course, want to get into what he thinks of.
We'll talk about it.
All right, great.
The killing joke in general.
But also what's interesting about this is they couldn't even leave this.
The idea that this was meant to be controversial and, you know,
it's a real downer ultimately.
If I were to describe the killing joke,
I'd call it a real downer.
Okay, sure.
I've never been a huge fan of it
despite the talent involved.
But they couldn't even leave that and go,
well, look, we're just looking at a grim, dark,
horrible insight of the human psyche.
They had to add a post-credits sequence
where Barbara Gordon's just like,
yeah, I'm Oracle now.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm back. I'm back.
I'm back in the saddle.
Everything's fine.
Don't worry about it.
You guys know me.
Yeah.
Anyways, this is what he said about Batman killing in this.
My intention at the end of the book was to have the two characters
simply experiencing a brief moment of lucidity in the ongoing very weird
and probably fatal relationship with each other,
reaching a moment where they both perceive the hell that they are in
and can only laugh at their preposterous situation.
Definitively solved, Mason, but maybe also art grows beyond the artist, etc.
Just like the way that this interpretation has grown well beyond what, say, Alan Moore
wanted at the time.
Sure, absolutely.
That's right, yes.
Should we do some green trivia then?
We should do some green trivia.
Here's a little bit of green trivia for you.
Is it the Rodney Supercut?
Yes.
But here's a second piece of green trivia.
When Batman looks up at the Joker's various misdeeds on his bat computer,
we see a little picture of Robin, presumably the Jason Todd Robin that he killed,
except that's out of order because in the comic books,
a death in the family takes place canonically after the killing joke.
Correct.
I mean maybe not canonically
because you know
that would suggest
that Batman killed
the Joker
and then he wouldn't be around
to kill Jason Todd
in the death in the family.
Different continuities?
Just forget I said anything.
Don't worry about it.
I'm saying they were published
in a different order.
I get what you're saying.
Publishing dates Mason.
And did you know
that this was the first
Batman movie to carry an r as women our life stages come with unique
risk factors like high blood pressure developed during pregnancy which can put us two times more
at risk of heart disease or stroke know your risks visit heartandstroke.ca Fx's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss, is now streaming on Disney+. will rise together and show those living with mental illness and addiction that they're not alone. Help CAMH build a future where no one is left behind. So who will you rise for? Register
today at sunrisechallenge.ca. That's sunrisechallenge.ca. Ooh! Yeah, you can tell. But the R rating in Australia is different from the R rating in America. Well, that is true. Are you saying that there's as weak as piss, as we'd say here in Australia?
I would say it's weak as piss, yeah.
Lift your game R rating in the US.
Yeah, even though sometimes we don't get video games
because of our terrible rating systems here.
Yeah, because a character takes a vitamin or something
and they're like, mm, can't have that.
No.
After the release of Batman Arkham Knight 2015,
Mark Hamill stated that due to the strain it put on his vocal cords,
he would never voice the Joker again unless Batman the Killing Joke was adapted
into film.
Mark Hamill even said at one point that he'd continue to voice the Joker for as long as
Kevin Conroy voiced the Batman.
But obviously all that is up in the air as of right now because of the recent passing
of Kevin Conroy, which that sucks.
Yeah, 66 years of age, too young, absolute legend.
For most people, I would say the
voice of Batman. Agreed. Mark
Hamill's involvement in this actually also led to
the working title of this film being Blue Harvest
due to his involvement in the original
Star Wars from 1977, which Mason
was also called Blue Harvest.
Working title, obviously. That's wonderful.
Isn't it? A wonderful piece of trivia. One more
bit of trivia here, Mason. Green trivia.
Mark Hamill admitted at a Q&A
at Star Wars Celebration. Oh he admitted it! He admitted it!
We got him on record! Yeah
what is it though? At a
Star Wars Celebration in 2016 that
while he wasn't disappointed with the final
outcome of the film, he wasn't completely
satisfied as he'd hoped he'd be.
He stated he had originally intended
and would have preferred to have completed the story
as an audio book, not a full animated feature.
I think there you still come up against, like, do you make it a 20 minute story?
But I think, yeah, maybe that you let your mind take the seams off the clothings and
whatever and do the color palette.
Anyway, the budget for this, a poultry, a poultry mason, 3.5 million.
And it made, in its very limited theatrical release, 12.3 million worldwide.
And also the total US home video earnings for this as of 2018 was 8.6 million.
So considering the budget and, you know, it's still available and, you know, you can still purchase it and whatever.
Runaway success.
Yeah.
Let's make another one.
Killing Joke 2.
That's why they do these.
But what does Alan Moore think?
Killing Joke 2, just Batman dragging the Joker's corpse around
because he killed him at the end of this.
I killed him already.
That's right.
Let this be a lesson to the rest of you criminals.
I accidentally glued my hand to him though.
That's why I carried him around.
My bat glue went off.
That's right damn it
sucks now some people say you should just take the glove off but i glued the glove to my hand
earlier an earlier incident the joker was always like you'll never get rid of me batman even if
you killed me and he was right because i glued myself to him i'm an idiot uh but what does ellen
more think i love this new guy.
Our new character. Batman is gluing himself
to things.
But what does Alan Moore think,
Mason? I think he probably loves this one.
Well, he's never seen it as far as we know.
But he does have thoughts of the original
Killy joke. There should be a sticker
you can just put on new DC releases
that just says, it's just a quote from Alan Moore
that says, I didn't see it, but I hate it.
I never really liked my story of the killing joke.
I think it put far too much melodramatic weight upon a character
that was never designed to carry it.
It was too nasty.
It was too physically violent.
There were some good things about it,
but in terms of my writing, it's not one of my favorite pieces.
If, as I said, God forbid,
I was ever to write a character like Batman again,
I'd probably be setting it squarely
in the kind of smiley uncle period
where Dick Sprang was drawing it
and where you had Ace the Bat-Hound and Bat-Mite
and the Zebra Batman when it was sillier.
Because then it was brimming with imagination and playful ideas.
I don't think the world needs
that many brooding, psychopathic Avengers.
That's very interesting.
And Alan Moore, if you are watching this, and you are not,
I'd just like to think we have provided the perfect opportunity.
If you would like to, again, take a shot at Batman,
may we suggest Batman who glues himself to things.
Just a bit of light-hearted fun, you know?
Oh, no, it's both hands now.
Well, I can't swing from the rooftops.
What was I thinking?
Anyways, do you want to do a mini bonus Caravan of Garbage right now, Mason?
Yeah, I do.
We've got a lot of comments about this, and of course we were never going to miss it.
That's right, but we thought we'd do a bit of a palate cleanser after this, whatever this was.
This whole thing.
It's actually an adaptation animated, a Superman story called For the Man Who Has Everything.
Adaptation animated.
A Superman story called For the Man Who Has Everything.
Now, this, of course, was an Alan Moore comic from the 80s, which was adapted in 2004 in Justice League Unlimited Season 1, Episode 2.
Opening with the big guns.
That's right, yeah.
So Alan Moore actually somewhat sort of worked on this,
had some suggestions which made it into this.
So author's permission stuff. He allowed Bruce Timm, who also worked on this, had some suggestions which made it into this. So author's permission stuff.
He allowed Bruce Timm, who also worked on this,
and his team to actually use his name, like credit his name in this,
which he'd stopped doing by around this time.
And there's a number of changes, but seemingly he was happy
with all of them, including that Jason Todd is in the original comic.
That's right.
And he's the one to save Superman at the end for the rest of the comic going,
I don't know, what am I doing?
I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm being Robin.
I'm badly outclassed.
I'm wearing little underpants.
It's in the snow as well.
I've glued myself to snow.
I saw Batman glue himself to the joke.
I just thought I'd do it.
Anyway, what did you think of this?
I thought it's a lot of fun.
Yeah, it is.
I mean, you know, again, it's...
It's 22 minutes, which it should be.
That's exactly right.
It's got all the classic elements,
and we've got all the classic DCAU voice actors there,
obviously, including Eric Roberts' Mongol,
who I thought was great.
Really good, yeah.
Tremendous, right?
And great fight between him and Wonder Woman.
Wonder Woman's just severely outclassed,
but just buying Batman time,
and just gets into Superman's armoury,
and is just like,
I'm just going to use a bunch of his weapons,
and see what happens.
Why does Superman have all these?
What's he doing with them?
What is he doing with them?
Yes, I mean, obviously, as you mentioned,
some changes were made.
I think in the original comic book,
it is Batman who presents Superman with his birthday gift
which is a beautiful
new strain of rose
that he's created
whereas in this
he's just like
I get him cash
I don't know
I'm rich
I get him cash
I get it
but yeah
so for people
who haven't seen it
Batman and Wonder Woman
arrive at
Superman's
Fortress of Solitude
to give him
some gifts
for his birthday
only to find
that he has been he's that he's opened a present from an alien,
and it's glued itself to him in the style of a certain other superhero
we might know, and is worthy of an adaptation, I think.
And it's a plant that attaches itself to a victim
and it enters their brain
and it provides them their deepest fantasy,
meaning they will no longer want to exist in the real world.
So they have to snap him out of it.
It initially is on Superman,
but then it later ends up on Batman.
And Superman's fantasy is that he is on the world of Krypton.
He's actually grown up there.
It wasn't destroyed.
Yeah.
And he now has a family.
He has a wife who seems to be some sort of combination
of Lana Lang and Lois Lane.
And he's got a son and his father's still alive.
And he's got Krypto the dog.
And it's a perfect life, but really is it?
And then Batman's fantasy, which i enjoyed quite a bit is that it's it rather than look but it's it's it's the the
the retelling of the classic batman origin story he's he's a child and he and his mother and father
are leaving yep uh the the movie theater and they're confronted by joe chill the uh the the
mugger voiced by kevin conroy by the way
you go and also if i'm if i'm remembering correctly joe chill's only appearance in the dcau
rather than joe chill killing his parents thomas wayne uh actually forces the gun out of uh joe
chill's hand and then beats him up for a really really long time that's batman's i love that we
just keep going back to it it's just
like that's just rather than a beautiful family and a and a world he's never known just just his
dad just beating this guy for eternity perhaps and batman's not glued to a single thing is he
well his eyes are glued to this wonderful spectacle you're right absolutely i also love
the idea that a mong, he thinks that Superman,
well, you can't see what anybody else is experiencing,
but he just assumes that Superman is just ruling the world.
Yeah, right.
Because that's obviously what he wants.
And one of the changes that also makes from the comic is Superman's dad,
because he was wrong about Krypton exploding,
becomes some kind of fascist leader,
which is very on brand for Alan Moore.
And they removed that element entirely.
Yeah, there's more of a civil war kind of aspect to it.
But in this, he's just an old crank.
Yeah.
He's like, oh, I'm so sad.
I got that thing wrong.
Dwight B.
And I've Kryptonian glued myself to this end table.
Son, help.
We don't have super strength here.
We're just regular.
And I also think that in Superman coming out of that,
he'd just never get over it.
I just think it would do such psychological damage to you
that he's so mad that he experienced this wonderful thing,
something that he always wanted,
and he had to literally pry himself out of it.
See, I like to think that Superman would be like, well, you know, that was nice.
But here I've got, you know, I've got...
I've got mates.
I've got mates.
I've got Lois Lane.
I've got cash.
That's right, I've got cash, baby.
Hell yeah.
You know?
Yeah, maybe, yeah.
But maybe, of course, on Krypton, he doesn't have to pretend he's a nerd.
He can just straight up be a nerd?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
No, you're not wrong, yeah.
But what does Alan Moore think, Mason?
Which has been the question we've been asking this entire run.
That's right.
We've got matching bracelets made.
W-W-A-M-T.
Very good.
Now, according to Bruce Timm and Dwayne McDuffie,
Alan Moore confided that he was, in fact,
pretty pleased with the results of this episode.
So second and now third-hand information.
Oh, my God.
Alan Moore maybe.
He thought it was all right.
Put that sticker on the DVD.
That's as good as you're going to get as well.
So this is an absolute win.
It might also be the best adaptation of all of his work.
Yeah.
Yes, certainly possible.
Yeah.
I'd be interested to know what other people
think though like what do they think is the best thing that's been adapted i know a lot of people
have said watchman or beef and anteta but i think this is definitely up there do you think uh anyone
should attempt to adapt any more of his work what about uh top 10 which is a a police procedural
set in a world in a set in a city where everybody has superpowers. Yep. That's pretty exciting. Would they ruin it?
Absolutely they would ruin it.
Could they adapt that run of Rob Liefeld's Supreme?
Oh.
Where Rob Liefeld said, hey, can you, Alan Moore,
can you do a run on my weird Superman pastiche Supreme?
And Alan Moore said, yeah, but I'm going to throw out everything.
I'm going to throw out everything you've done and start again
completely and Rob Liefeld was like alright
cool I guess
yeah that's a great question I mean because this
is obviously not going to be the end of Alan Moore
adaptation there's always a Watchmen
something brewing isn't there should they adapt his million
word novel or whatever it was yeah sure
yeah why not see if you can
compress that oh why not yeah why not compress
it into 22 minutes see what you can do.
Anyways, thank you so much for coming along on our Alan Moore-a-thon, Mason.
It's been quite a ride.
You're very welcome.
I mean, I had to, didn't I?
Yeah, you did, yeah.
Much like Alan Moore was forcefully involved in all of this, you had to come along here.
But if you would like to see any of these early, including what's happening next week at Caravan of Garbage, and here's
a hint, you can now see that at
bigsandwich.co a day early.
Can't you, Mason? Yes. I'm very excited
to come around to whatever that thing is that was
shown up on the screen. If you do have any suggestions
for anything for us to watch, read, listen to,
please leave it below. Also,
oh, I didn't mention, if you do want to
see that early, and if you... Fuck, I'll fuck
this up. Where am I in this? You've already said the big sandwich thing. Did I say it? Yeah. Okay, fuck. Alright, alright, I didn't mention, if you don't want to say that early, and if you, fuck, I'll fuck this up. Where am I in this?
You've already said the big sandwich thing.
Did I say it?
Yeah.
Okay, fuck.
All right.
All right, Mason.
All right.
Here we go.
Here we fucking go.
Oh, yeah.
Also at Big Sandwich, there's bonus podcasts, movie commentaries.
There's a bunch of exclusive behind paywall stuff, Mason.
Hell yeah.
That we will never let you see unless you give us money.
That's right.
Videos of us gluing ourselves to things.
That's right.
Or you can just stick around on our channel here
or check out our podcast, The Weekly Planet,
where we talk movies and comics and TV shows.
It's all free.
Enjoy.
It's all free.
All right, thank you so much to Lawrence and Ben for the edit.
Thanks, guys.
And we'll see you on the next time.
I'm Dad Jam.
You guys, we'll see you next time.
Goodbye.
James, I've glued myself to this YouTube video.
Oh, no, Mason.
I'm flapping my hand wildly.
It's not coming off.
It's not coming off.
As women, our life stages come with unique risk factors,
like when our estrogen levels drop during menopause,
causing the risk of heart disease to go up.
Know your risks.
Visit heartandstroke.ca.
FX's The Veil explores the surprising and fraught relationship
between two women who play a deadly game of truth and lies
on the road from Istanbul to Paris and London.
One woman has a secret.
The other, a mission to reveal it
before thousands of lives are lost.
FX's The Veil, starring Elizabeth Moss, is now streaming on Disney+.