Comic Book: The Movie Movie Review
Comic Book: The Movie Review
"Comic Book: The Movie" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark HamillProducer : Scott Zakarin,Mark Hamill,Roger Rose,Jess Harnell,Billy West,Eric Mittleman
Screenwiter :
Starring : Mark Hamill,Bruce Campbell,Donna D'Errico,Paul Dini,Matt Groening,Jess Harnell,Ray Harryhausen,Hugh M. Hefner,Tom Kenny,Scott LaRose,Stan Lee,Chase Masterson,Laura Nativo,Roger Rose,Kevin Smith,James Arnold Taylor,Billy West
27 years after his appearance in Star Wars, Mark Hamill makes his directorial
debut in a movie about... comic books? In this mockumentary, Hamill is just
about the only actor who isn't playing himself. Instead, he's Don Swan, a comic
book collector and store owner who is asked to consult on a Hollywood film
about his favorite comic book character: Commander Courage. Hamill rounds up
the usual comic book crowd (folks like Stan Lee and Kevin Smith, who wouldn't
dream of missing an appearance in a film about comic books), plus manages to
work in appearances from Hugh Hefner, Ray Harryhausen, Jonathan Winters, and
Donna D'Errico, among others.
Swan gets a camera crew to tail him to Hollywood -- where Commander Courage, a
supposed WWII era patriotic hero -- has been reinvented as Codename Courage, a
ninja-like fighter of terrorism everywhere. But quickly he's on to the San
Diego Comic-Con convention, where the bulk of the film takes place. It's hard
to tell where the staged stuff for the movie ends and the fanboy ga-ga stuff
begins: Among the countless shots of scantily clad fanbabes, costumed kids, and
hugs with random convention exhibitors and fans there's a semblance of a story.
Basically that involves Swan trying to convince everyone he meets that the old
Commander Courage is better than the new Codename Courage (including a scene
with Hamill and Stan Lee on a panel at the convention. Just don't think about
it too much or you'll start to ask yourself just why Swan would be sent to this
convention in the first place. It works only in the sense of putting the
characters into oddball situations, but it's got little to do with anythig in
the plot.
Shot on video (and in less than a week, it seems), Comic Book is a quickie and
low-budget affair. The sound is rough and the pacing is erratic, but real comic
book fans won't mind. I'd wager most of them will be busy watching to see if
they were caught on camera at some point during the filming. There's some
insidery humor sprinkled throughout the film as well. My wife even laughed a
couple of times.
Straight to DVD, the film comprises two discs, with tons of extras on offer.
Hamill and others chime in for an audio commentary, and outtakes and
featurettes expand on Smith, Bruce Campbell, and Hefner's appearances in the
film.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



