Author Archives: alexfitch

About alexfitch

Co-presenter / producer of "Panel Borders", Thursdays 5pm Resonance 104.4 FM. Film reviewer for www.electricsheepmagazine.com Podcaster for www.sci-fi-london.com

Panel Borders: Daniel Merlin Goodbrey’s Hypercomics

Originally broadcast 06/03/08 as part of Strip! on Resonance 104.4 FM

In the first of this month’s 40 min specials, Alex Fitch talks to webcomics pioneer Daniel Merlin Goodbrey whose comics work includes everything from Far Side style gag strips, to semi-photographic science-fiction and interactive ‘hypercomics’ and ‘hyperfiction’ on his website which mix elements of computer games, animation and comic strips to beguiling effect. Continue reading

Reality Check: Manufacturing Cloverfield

Reality Check: Manufacturing Cloverfield – Originally podcast at Sci-Fi London

Alex Fitch presents an edited version of the Cloverfield press conference – director Matt Reeves talks about bringing the giant monster movie genre up to date, the challenges of shooting an entire movie on ‘handycam’ and the pressures of living up to the hype generated by the ambiguous teaser trailer. Continue reading

I’m ready for my close-up: Looking for Sweeney Todd

I’m ready for my close-up: Looking for Sweeney Todd, Originally broadcast 21/02/08

Recently brought to the attention of a new generation of media consumers through Tim Burton’s adaptation of the musical “Sweeney Todd: The demon barber of Fleet Street“, Todd has been terrifying Londoners for over 160 years. In a monologue written by Alex Fitch, comedienne Jessica Fostekew takes us on a tour of Sweeney’s haunts both actual and real from his birth in folklore and “penny dreadfuls” to his reincarnation as the star of biographies reprinted in the Daily Mail and a grand guignol avatar in the form of Johnny Depp. Jess and Alex try to sort out the facts of Sweeney’s “life” from the fiction through a literary landscape littered with comic strips, tabloid preoccupations and rivers running red with blood…
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Panel Borders: Looking for Lost Girls part 2

Originally broadcast 14/02/08 as part of Strip! on Resonance 104.4 FM

The second half of Alex Fitch’s 2008 interview with Alan Moore – originally broadcast on Valentine’s day. Alex and Alan discuss Alan’s epic graphic novels Lost Girls and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier and look at Alan’s depictions of procreation in Swamp Thing and Miracleman

Excerpt from Lost Girls by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie

Excerpt from Lost Girls by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie

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Panel Borders: Looking for Lost Girls part 1

Originally broadcast 14/02/08 as part of Strip! on Resonance 104.4 FM

The first half of Alex Fitch’s 2008 interview with Alan Moore – originally broadcast on Valentine’s day. Alex and Alan discuss Alan’s epic graphic novel Lost Girls, from its beginnings – serialised in the horror anthology Taboo – to its final printing 16 years later as a beautiful three volume slipcased hardback published by Top Shelf.

Excerpt from Lost Girls by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie

Excerpt from Lost Girls by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie

Visit the home of this episode at archive.org

Links: Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies – an article on the portrayal of women in comics by Alan Moore (circa 1983)
Paul Gravett interviews Alan Moore
Alex’s previous interview with Alan part one, part two, part three
Extracts (and a very cool photo) from Alan’s recent interview with Word magazine
Index of Alan Moore interviews available on the webWikipedia page on Lost Girls
Top Shelf productions (publishers of Lost Girls) website …
Gosh! Comics website

Comics news…

The nominations for this year’s Eagle Awards have started www.eagleawards.co.uk

If I might use this blog to make some suggestions… You can get a full list of all the comic book creators I’ve interviewed over the last year and a half at podcasts.resonancefm.com and I’d like to show my appreciation for their contibutions to this show – so if you’d like to vote for say Simon Spurrier or any of the Manga Jiman creators for favourite newcomer writer or artist respectively, that might be cool, or the likes of Alan Moore, Leah Moore, John Reppion, Ian Edgington, Rich Johnston, Paul Cornell etc. for favourite comics writer, they deserve it. Favourite combined writer / artist – I think Bryan Talbot is without peers in this category* – , favourite artist (spreadable between inkers, pencillers, colourists etc.) – John McCrea, Mark Buckingham, Charlie Adlard, Sean Phillips, Duncan Fegredo, D’Israeli, Frazer Irving, Melinda Gebbie**,(Resonance’s very own) Mark Stafford all seem like good candidates to me…
I’ve not interviewed any letterers as yet – I’m happy to recommend Todd Klein** on Alan Moore’s behalf – but will try and do so in the next few months. The only editor I’ve interviewed is Matt Smith, a year ago, but he continues to do good work on 2000AD…

Publisher: Self Made Hero (Nevermore) and Rebellion (200AD) are up there already, but Modern Monstrosity (Tales from the flat) deserve a nomination…
Nominating comics and graphic novels (particularly American) is very much down to personal taste – all the above creators and everyone else I’ve interviewed has done very good work over the last year – though it would be remiss of me not to suggest Tales from the Flat for best British Black and White comic, The Mark of Aeacus for favourite new comic book, Alice in Sunderland for favourite new Graphic Novel and Pat Mills’ Nemesis the Warlock book 3 for favourite reprint.
In terms of related media – the Forbidden Planet International blog has supported this show throughout the last year, so gets my recommendation for best favourite website, though Bugpowder, London Underground Comics and Journalista!*** are all very deserving too. If we can get Oli Smith’s London Underground Comics video podcasts listed under favourite TV / film (going for the loosest definition of the words), that would be great too.
Finally the roll of honour – at the risk of being terribly egotistical, may I suggest me, Alex Fitch in the category of “entrepreneur whose achievements have… increased public awareness (of comics)”? (I know it says “in print”, but then I do publicise the show in [electronic] print)

That said, I noticed Paul Gravett and Ed Hillyer haven’t won in the past and are far more deserving than me! (Shameless self-publicist Oli Smith is after nomination as well and as I guess he’s the Barack to my Clinton, he doesn’t need any extra help from me!)

*as the Eagle awards are the comics equivilent of the BAFTAs, I’m going to only recommend British creators except for those with **two asterixes as Melinda and Todd get honorary British status for working on Lost Girls

Also *** Journalista! regularly promotes Panel Borders (though weirdly, not Strip!) as well, so we like them!

Reality Check: Producing genre shows on the radio

Reality Check: Producing genre shows on the radio

Originally podcast at www.sci-fi-london.com

Alex Fitch talks to Dirk Maggs about his various genre and science fiction programmes on BBC radio from the recent revival of Hitchhikers guide to the Galaxy to Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective agency, An American Werewolf in London & Independence Day UK

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Reality Check: Nostalgia & Cult TV (Ashes to Ashes & Thunderbirds)

Reality Check: Nostalgia and Cult TV - 
originally podcast at www.sci-fi-london.com/audio

Philip Glenister in 'Ashes to ashes'Coinciding with the launch of the new TV series Ashes to Ashes which looks a lot like this…

 … we have two interviews recorded at last summer’s Cult TV Weekender: Alex Fitch talks to actor Philip Glenister (DCI Gene Hunt) and writer Matthew Graham about Life on Mars / Ashes to ashes and to Alan Shubrook, writer of the coffee table book 21 Century FX about his time working on Thunderbirds in the 1960s.

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