Posts Tagged ‘murderdrome’

BICS - Birmingham International Comic Show (Oct 4-5)

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

I’ll be one of the guests at BICS this year. I’m sure I’ll be wearing one of the patented Murderome T-Shirts (though maybe not the same one for the entire con…)

I’ll be getting in at 9:00pm on the Friday (not ideal, but the bloody airline decided to change my time to this later time) so you’ll all be getting drunk by then. But don’t be afraid to say hello and ask if you can see ‘Murderdrome’…

See you there…

Protest? What Protest?

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

In answer to this and this

The handing out of t-shirts were NOT a protest (silent or otherwise) - we just thought it’d be kinda neat to hang out with everyone queuing at the opening of the new Apple Store in Belfast and to give out some free t-shirts (and, heck, we’re Apple nerds too - we wanted to see the new place). A jolly time was had by all, we passed out t-shirts, we showed off EyeCandy and we had, generally, a good laugh. 

Now back to your regularly scheduled stuff.

Oh: re the t-shirts, we have no more, but we’re looking at getting some new ones printed up, we’ll get them up asap…

Apple Store Belfast

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

Great little video from the BBC about the people waiting in line.

But what’s this?

And… this? 

And… uhm? 

And… more? seriously?

Is that the last one? Oh thank god. I’ve promised ALL of those people artwork.

Designing Some M.O.M.

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

That’s Murderdrome Official Merchandise, you maggots!

These are works in progress, but, if you’re in the Belfast apple store queue on Friday night/early Saturday morning, you could well be getting a freebie…

 

UPDATE

I’ll be at the Apple Store either late Friday night (around 11ish) or early Saturday morning (around 6ish) (or maybe even both times). Take a FREE T-Shirt (limited numbers!), get your photo in the local press (if they’re there!) and let me know about it (at our usual address) upon verification, I’ll send you some of my 2000AD artwork - ORIGINAL, PUBLISHED 2000AD comic art. Bargain.

(*One entry per person!)

Spiky-Haired with Excitement!!! ZOMG!!!!

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

We’ve gone from one ‘banned‘ comic, to a heap of content. Project Number Two is almost complete and we’ve got three more really impressive projects being built as we speak. As soon as they appear on the App Store, we’ll post the URLs here so keep an eye or even better, subscribe!

We’ve spent the last few days accosting strangers in cafés and showing them the MURDERDROME comic and watching their jaws drop when we reveal some of the features that didn’t even appear on the YouTube video. We’ve also had the opportunity to show it off at the last local Mobile Monday event.

As well as some really cool stuff we can’t talk about, we’ve been invited to demo the application at a local business networking event. The MURDERDROME comic #0, even without half the features, was described as:

“one of the most promising pieces of technology from the province this year”.

That Youtube video

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Hi gang, you can read an interview with me (PJ) here.

Our little youtube video seems to be the featured video for youtube in a number of areas:

This seems to be something of a double edged sword - our hits have gone through the roof but we’re drawing in a lot of people wondering what exactly is so exciting about a silent video of someone’s fingers swiping across an iPod touch screen. (To settle any heated arguments: it’s an iPod touch, I used the phrase ‘iPhone’ because it was shorter - the comics will work on either…)
So, right now, we’re looking at over 25k of hits. S’not bad. Imagine if I’d thought to include sound in that sucker!

More Coverage

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

John Paczkowski writes for All Things Digital on the Wall Street Journal:

Apple is being accused of censorship after banning the Murderdrome comic from the App Store for violating the terms of its SDK, which prohibits “content or materials that in Apple’s reasonable judgment may be found objectionable by iPhone or iPod touch users.”

Philip Elmer-DeWitt writes for FORTUNE magazine on CNN Money.

Murderdrome is not Ulysses, Lolita or Lady Chatterley’s Lover. It’s a dark, bloody comic strip marked by the type of over-the-top violence that has made its genre so popular among young readers with a lot of pent-up rage.

But Murderdrome has now joined the pantheon of suppressed fiction as the first digital book banished from Apple’s App Store by censors in Cupertino.

Stephen Withers writes for ITWire

Apple already tags tracks in the iTunes Store that are unsuitable for children and it sells R rated movies, so why isn’t there something similar for content such as books and comics in the App Store?

The call to add age categorisation comes after Apple ruled Belfast-based Infurious Comics’ Murderdrome did not comply with the App Store’s content guidelines.

Infurious officials described the free comic as “darkly humorous.”

The company has “already secured another script and art and will be submitting another comic written and drawn specifically for the iPhone/iPod touch to the App Store in the next few days and has commitments from established creators for exclusive content

Jack Schofield from The Guardian writes:

Apple may be worried that iPhone users don’t have quite enough braincells to figure out that if they buy something called Murderdrome, they are not going to get a Disneyfied version of Peter Rabbit and the Flopsy Bunnies. Or maybe they are just being protective of the huge number of iPhone buyers who are under the age of 14….. Either way, couldn’t the problem be solved by having a ratings system, as InfuriousComics suggests?

TechRadar UK: ‘Digital comic’ iPhone app banned

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

TechRadar UK have a short interview with PJ where they examine the ratings system on the Apple iTunes App Store that we’re keen on having implemented for content other than games.

TR: Were you shocked that it was banned?

PJH: After we’d seen the other apps that were banned it wasn’t a massive surprise, no. Unfortunately, we were too far ahead in development to stop and start with something new.

TR: Do you think Apple were right to take this decision, given that the comic is, obviously, centred round comic-book violence?

PJH: I think Apple is right to do everything in it’s power to make the iPhone / iPod touch a mass market item, I think they’re wrong in allowing games in the App store to have ratings and not books or comics.

Click through to read the whole text.

Some more links…some more talk of MURDERDROME

Sunday, August 24th, 2008

As I said in the last post, we’re getting some serious interest - we’ve been emailed by creators and publishers alike with the intent of becoming a distribution source for their material. This is because the digital format we’re pioneering (codenamed Kirby while it was in development) will open up comics to a whole new set of readers as well as ushering in new models for distribution.

  • Metafilter.

    Q. Why not scan a whole page and use the pinch-zoom feature?
    A. Pinch-zoom-scroll-scroll-scroll down and back and left-scroll-scroll-scroll-repeat ad nauseum. 

  • Down the Tubes

    Top British comic creators Al Ewing and PJ Holden have developed an iphone version of their new comics project Murderdrome.

  • Forbidden Planet Blog

    Quietly, these guys are leading a revolution in the distribution of anglophone comics. This may not seem like such big news now, but in a few years time, when we all get our comics from iTunes, it might be “hey, remember that little comic by those two 2000AD guys that started all this?”

  • iphonecomicbookreader.com

    With the possibilties on display in the video, this could be a great app for reading comic books on your iPhone, as well as for creating rich and unique comic book content especially for the iPhone. As a cartoonist and a comic book lover (and a rabid iPhone user), I’m pretty excited about this one!

  • Mike Cane’s Blog

    Take a look at this video. It is staggering. It is Apple Insanely-Great staggering. It is an absolute breakthrough in the field of electronic comic books. I can’t say enough about how radical and breakthrough this is. Look!!!

    They’ve gone beyond anything I could have imagined. I salute you! You have taken my breath away! You will change the world!

    It is a work of genius, seriously. It is revolutionary. And like I said in a msg to Blue Pilot, I wish this had been around in the 1970s and Jack Kirby’s Fourth World was on it. I would have been able to peel away Frank Giacoia’s terrible inks from Kirby’s wonderful pencils (thank God Mike Royer came in!).
     

    Bad Librarianship

    Gotta admit, I’m really proud of homeboy P.J. Holden: he may just have created a revolutionary way for comics to be distributed. All these years writing about how we need an iTunes for comics, and it turns out to be iTunes itself (basically).

    Everyone’s talking about us…

    Sunday, August 24th, 2008

    One of the early demos was this insert on Warren Ellis’ forum, whitechapel.

    This then led to Ed Kaye’s Hypergeek.ca which gave a pretty accurate description of the business model and comparison with the traditional print model as well as the sort of numbers seen on other digital distribution formats.

    They look to have this just right for an iPod screen, as it it isn’t overly heavy on the text, so it is easily readable, and they’ve gone nice and clean and bright on he art i.e. there isn’t a tonne of background detail etc, which might make things look cluttered on the iPod screen.

    Well, I love the art, love the story, and very much dig the concept. I’m always pleased to see people doing new things with comics. Any new format that will get new readers into the medium has got to be a good thing. I love the idea of being able to go down to the inks, then the pencils, what a cool idea! It really takes advantage of the format, something you definitely couldn’t do with PDF distribution, or some other such.

    We’re breaking new ground with material specifically designed not just for the screen, but for a digital comic that you actually thumb your way through.