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73
General Joe Talk / Wrong Joes in new RoC Packaging
« on: April 16, 2010, 08:44:52 AM »
I was at the TRU at Markville Mall and noticed that one of the Arctic Threat Shipwreck packages had a Nano Viper in it instead and a Arctic Threat Doc with Charbroil instead.  There was only one of these and double check the package to see if it was resealed but they were not, it was a factory mistake.  See for yourselves:



74
I found this while I while browing the Interent for news and fun facts, Please enjoy!
 
The cover of G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero No. 155 ½, which will be available at comics shops on Free Comic Book Day May 1.
By Brian Truitt, USA TODAY
Larry Hama, the man whose creative force turned the G.I. Joe toy line into a multimedia juggernaut in the 1980s, is being called back for another tour of duty.
Hama is teaming with IDW to publish G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero No. 155 ½ for Free Comic Book Day on May 1, and the issue will pick up where Hama's original 155-issue Marvel Comics series left off. But there's even better news for longtime Joe fanatics: IDW is relaunching Hama's series in July and making it an ongoing title starting with issue 156.

"It's like coming home again," Hama says in an exclusive interview. "It's comfortable and it's like, hey, I know these guys. I don't have to do tons of research and read tons of back issues."

Drawn by Spanish artist Agustin Padilla, the Real American Hero series adds another title to IDW's strong group of Joe books, including Chuck Dixon's flagship G.I. Joe, Origins and Cobra. The company found that older readers were enjoying the titles and they were picking up new fans, too, but saw a definite interest in the 1982-94 original series from both generations. (IDW is in the process of collecting the old comics in trade paperback form with its Classic G.I. Joe books.)

"It just made good sense to go back to the original continuity for the older fans and to give us an opportunity to show the newer fans how we got here in the first place," says Andy Schmidt, editor on all IDW's G.I. Joe titles. "Larry built that continuity up for years. It's a shame for it to be shelved permanently."

Issues 155 ½ and on take place mere months after the events of No. 155: G.I. Joe headquarters has been mothballed, and the team's been dispersed to different places all over the world. The Cobra organization is still alive and slithering, though — Cobra Commander is literally dreaming of rolling H.I.S.S. tanks into Washington, D.C. — and it takes full advantage of having no real American heroes running around.

"They have to somehow get back together, and all the Cobras are trying to track them down and do them in," Hama says. "It's everybody against the Joes."

Hama's run on a few of the initial Origins issues sparked his interest to do more. "It was the first time someone had said, 'Hey, do what you want to do,' " he says. "Other times, they'd be like, 'We want it like old school.' My comment on that was, 'Well, I don't do it that way anymore.' Doing Origins, they said, 'Just do it the way you do it now.' So I had a bit more leeway."

With this comic in particular, Schmidt says, "I think it's best to let Larry guide me. I don't force anything on him. He wrote this book for 15 years. I've been here five minutes. Larry leads, I follow."

While Hama has proven adept with military heroes over the years — he was brought on as a consultant for the G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra movie — that wasn't what he dreamed of doing initially. He was more interested in "the funny stuff," he says, like working for National Lampoon and wanting to do comedic takes on animals ("I'm sort of a duck guy," he quips), but back in the early 1980s, it was superheroes or bust.

He came to Marvel in 1980 and was hired as an editor for Crazy Magazine, but a couple years later, Hama needed a job pretty badly when he was approached to take on G.I. Joe.

"Nobody in their right mind wanted to work on a toy book," he admits. "It was considered sort of like death. They asked everybody else first, and I was the last person they asked. I wasn't getting any other freelance work. If they were offering me Barbie, I would have taken Barbie! It's not like I'd been waiting all my life to do it, but at the same time, I gave it my best shot."

Nobody thought the comic would last more than a year or two, he says. But with good guys such as Snake Eyes, Stalker, Duke and Scarlett — and Cobra Commander, Zartan, Destro, Storm Shadow and the Baroness on the other side of the moral coin — as well as great stories and a definite sense of military realism, the comic took off, and the Hasbro toy line and the animated series followed suit. "Ever year it kept on going, I thought, 'Oh, it's another miracle!' I'd breathe a sigh of relief and keep on going."

Hama did 155 issues — and wrote all the file cards for the characters' action figures, based mainly on people he knew and celebrities — but acknowledges he never knew how any one of those books was going to end until he got to the end. "Getting the story out of myself is like pulling teeth," says the writer, adding with a laugh that fear was his biggest inspiration for more than a decade.

"I remember very vividly finishing the first issue, and saying to myself, 'Well, what the heck am I going to do now?' I had no idea. Every month for years, I would have the same panic attack. My only formula was to try and get them all into a really impossible situation, and then try to get them out of it by the last page."

While Hama said he was too paranoid to ever quit a book and figured "they would have to pry it off my dead fingers," he admits that by 1994, the series had run its course, and Hama went on to write other books, such as Wolverine and The Punisher: War Zone. Other than a few visits back, like with the Devil's Due series G.I. Joe Declassified and Storm Shadow, he didn't read many Joe comics and never watched any of the animated shows. "I tried to keep my own universe as consistent as possible," he says.

That's why he's sticking pretty close to the "ensemble" of characters he left with. He's revisited the old file cards to figure out who he wants to use, and while many beloved characters such as Quick Kick, Breaker and Doc died during his run — thanks to one talked-about incident involving a Cobra Maggot tank and a murderous S.A.W.-Viper — the only one he's really resurrecting is Cobra Commander. Back in the day, he was told to kill him off so it could jibe with the appearance of Cobra-La, an unpopular group of characters from the animated G.I. Joe: The Movie in 1987.

"I told them, 'You can't kill off Cobra Commander. He's one of your most popular characters!' " Hama recalls. "Management didn't get it, and it finally dawned on them when we got hundreds and hundreds of letters from kids saying they would never buy the comic again. And sales dropped precipitously."

Hama says it's gratifying to see characters like Snake Eyes and Storm Shadow enjoy pop-culture lives beyond his comics, and he does feel protective of his characters. His storyline for the entire 155-issue run was "mostly retcon," and he came up with a lot of things on the fly. For example, the Arashikage clan tattoo that ties both of his famous ninjas together and first appeared in G.I. Joe No. 21 in 1984 — the memorable "silent issue" — was "the only thing that I had," he says.

"I didn't have any of the other stuff – all I had was they have the same tattoo. That was the big reveal at the end of the story: They both get their sleeves torn, and they understand that these implacable enemies for some reason have the same hexagram tattooed on their forearms. And so subsequently, I had to figure out why that was, and how it came to be."

Will there be anything huge that early on in the new Real American Hero? "There's a few big reveals and a few little shocks," Hama teases. "But it's more shocks about, 'Is that what was really going in with those characters?' or 'He's doing what to who?!' I try to come up with stuff like that, and then work back from it."

75
Ontario / Loblaws has RoC figures for $5.00 some at $7.00
« on: April 07, 2010, 08:54:50 PM »
I was at a Loblaws and found they had GI Joes in stock for $7.00.  They only had Wave 1 and 2 of the RoC figures.  So it was great for troop building.  I also checked Loblaws' SuperStore and they had GI joes as well for $7.00.  

76
U.S. & International / Big Sale at BBTS
« on: April 06, 2010, 10:41:22 AM »
I'm not trying to push bigbadtoystore.com but they have a sale going on now and with the CAD$ at par with the USD, it may be worth going online for some deals!

RoC line has a sale of 40% dicount on most figures and vehicles:
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/menu ... &company=0

25th anviversarry line only has a 20% discount on some figures and vehicles:
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/menu ... &company=0

For example:
RoC Rockslide for $7.13
RoC Deep Six for $1.50

Check it out.

77
Ontario / TRU Clearance on single card 25th aniversarry GI Joe figures
« on: March 31, 2010, 01:24:36 PM »
I was at the TRU on Markham Rd. and Lawrence Ave today and I noticed they placed the 25th aniversarry single carded  figures at $4.91 from $10.99 to clear them out.  This TRU only had 3 Wild Bills so if you need him or want to get more of him go soon. I'm going to hit another TRU to see if this is not just this store only special.

78
I love the tread: “GIJoe The Rise Of Cobra sequel tidbits”.  But I thought we could expand this to a new thread that uses the great actors from the past.  Whether they are dead or alive, who would use to play the roles of our favorite  characters? 
This is my list to start:
GI Joe
General Hawk:  John Wayne
Duke: Charlton Heston
Flint: Charles Bronson
Snake Eyes:  Chuck Norris
Scarlett: Julianne Moore
Lady Jaye: Jennifer Garner 
Cobra
Cobra Commander:  John Malkovich
Destro:  Sean Connery
Baroness:  Catherine Zeta Jones
Zartan: Yul Brynner
Major Bludd: Lee Van Cleef
Storm Shadow:  Bruce Lee
Please remember these actors in their prime not how they are now.

79
I have always wanted to go the Comic Con in San Diego (Wife will not let me)  :(  But at least I have the Toronto version to go to for now!
http://www.wizardworld.com/home-toronto.html

Has any one been to this one? With a cover charge of $35 to get in I wanted to make sure I will not be wasting my time.  I bought my tickets online so I saved on the cover charge.

80
British Columbia / New TRU Exclusives found in Vancouver
« on: March 22, 2010, 09:16:57 AM »
The TRU at METROPOLIS by the Metrotown station has the new figures of Arctic Threat DOC and Shipwreck.  it was reported that they had 5 of each.  I was in Vancouver for 7 weeks working for the Olympics and I hit this TRU a couple of times and found nothing.  The moment I leave back for Toronto, they bring the new stuff in.

81
ActionFigureNews has reported that the G.I. Joe Rise Of Cobra Arctic Threat Doc and Arctic Threat Shipwreck have been found in Canada!  This particular sighting was made at a TRU in British Columbia.   I will be keeping my eyes on the look out for them in T.O.

82
This has been posted on GI Joe site south of the boarder and I was wondering if anyone here is disappointed about the news?  Of the four vehicles 3 were repaints of already released from wave 1.  The only new vehicle would have been the Polar Sharc, which would have been nice to have so it could battle the Cobra Mantis Attack vehicle.

83
Off Topic / Canadian Dollar is almost at parity with US
« on: March 18, 2010, 01:23:47 PM »
Today the Canadian dollar reached 99.11 cents US and looks to go over within the next few days.  Will any of you guys be rushing to the States to buy those figures we can not get here or do some online shopping? 

I just put a order through online for those figures you want to have but will not pay high prices for.  Now the CAD dollar is almost even with US, I will not be getting the sick feeling when I see my credit card bill.

84
Off Topic / Happy St. Patrick's Day to Everyone
« on: March 17, 2010, 09:17:50 PM »
Today everyone is Irish, and my the luck of the Emerald Isle be with you all in your GI Joe searching!

While drinking my beer, I lift it up and salute you all!

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