LESLIE IWERKS-SUPERPOWERED-THE DC STORY - podcast episode cover

LESLIE IWERKS-SUPERPOWERED-THE DC STORY

Aug 08, 20239 min
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This is Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast. More of what you here weekday afternoons on the Drive. She's an Academy Award and Emmy nominated filmmaker. Leslie I Works has put together a new original Max DC commentary series called Superpowers The DC Story, and she's here to tell us all about it. Good morning and welcome Leslie, Good morning, Thank you for having me. Let's start with the beginning of DC Comics. How did it all start?

So this is a three hour series where this can be debuting on Max Thursday, July twentieth, And this was a project from Warner Brothers. They came to me after seeing my series called The Imagineering Story on Disney Plus and they would they wanted me to tell the story of DC in a similar way. And I brought in my co director Mark Camelina, who unbeknownst to me at the time, had told me that he had grown up and collected comics

books and now has about six thousand comics books and his parents attic. I said, Okay, you're the perfect partner. So we embarked on what was probably about a year and a half of research and telling the story interviewing a lot of the artists and producers and directors and executives related to DC through the years, as the entire story since the origins of DC and through pretty much today about as of about six months ago or a year ago, and that's

that's kind of the beginning of it. Were you a comic book fan? You know? I grew up, you know, reading comics. I wasn't like a collector or anything, and I enjoyed the characters very much. I just wasn't like a diehard, you know, collector or anything like Mark was. So but I, you know, I grew up on the other side of the track. So it's speak. My family is a Disney side.

My grandfather was a co creator and designer of Mickey Mouse. I grew up in the Disney world and he was the original animator or in uh, you know, artists for the Disney comic books or the Disney comics that were in the newspapers. So so that that sort of informed my interest in animation and

cartoons and and things like that. I used to like read the Mad magazines like crazy, and I grew up as an artist myself, so I've always appreciated the storytelling in these cartoons and these animated comics, and and then how they grew over over time. So I grew up watching Wonder Woman and you know, just the early, the early TV shows that were based on these characters. So uh, and of course the animated films over the years, so animated TV shows. So yeah, that's so it was a really fun

project to dive into. In all fairness, I was not, at least not in the sense of the superheroes. When I was a child, I found a big box of and I don't know if you remember these. They were called classic comics. Basically they told ancient stories and they were my uncles. And my uncle wasn't allowed to read superhero comics by my grandparents, but they did allow him to collect and read those, so that was my first

exposure to them. I guess the idea was, as long as you're learning something, we're cool with it. Later, I guess my superhero was James Bond. I discovered the James Bond novels and maybe seventh grade, and he kind of became my superhero. But I kept up with what was going on in comic lore because I needed I wanted to be in touch with what's going on in pop culture. Uh huh sure among my peers. Well, that makes a lot of sense. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense.

I mean what, I don't know if people realize that these comics were a reflection of what was going on in the time through time, so you know, starting way back in thirty seven, all the way through you know today, DC has really you know, created characters that that reflect what's going on in our society culturally, racially, politically, economically, et cetera. Meanwhile, what goes what goes on out there, these characters not only do they

do they reflect that, but they also inspire it. So you'll have these through lines or or you know, uh, comic book lines that actually are about something you know, or that are that is going on in the in the world. And we also get into the story of DC versus Marvel and how Marvel really came out, you know, in second to DC. But excuse me, but you know, we're really much more greedy and much more

grounded in realism, and the DC characters are much more fantastical. But then DC started to kind of change as well, you know, and it's just an interesting ride through time of creators of artists, of characters, and impact of what these comic books and these characters had in the public. Superpowered The DC Story, a three part Max Original DC documentary produced by Academy Award and Emmy nominated filmmaker Leslie iworks, Who's joining us? What role did World War

Two play in the development of DC comics and the DC characters? Well, so, you know, that was an important time. I think the comic books really surged during World War Two when people kids certainly were reading them. They were reflecting what was going on in the war. There was an artist named Joe Hubert who was actually anti war war no more, who during kind of Vietnam actually started to to really you know, focus on anti war themes.

But during the World War Two it was so popular and they became almost a respite for soldiers in the war reading these comics. And and this was not only DC but Disney Comics and you know, comics everywhere really started to really started to proliferate and became an important part. Uh. And it was sort of the surge of the comic book era. And I've often thought that

people needed something they were feeling kind of hopeless and helpless. Uh, they needed someone who they needed someone to make them feel like, Okay, it's it's not all bad, correct, and and and so you had you had ways to tell stories from the front line, you know, are superheroes and other other storylines that people could relate to from far away right. And they really did help the war effort in the four years. I mean, twenty

five million comics per month were sold during this time. I mean that's insane. And then you had like, you know, the Justice Society of America came out of that. And then after the war, you had these sort of postwar blues that hit as TV hit and that's when Superman, you know, became a kind of a live action character in nineteen fifty two and so six seasons later, you know, with George Reeves, he became the face of Superman for a generation. And and that you know, he was very

inspirational. I think after the War of just to be able to watch the watch this hero that we all sort of needed, you know, during some dark times. Leslie I Works has produced The Superpowered The DC Story, a three part Max Original DC commentary documentary that is out this week. If you're a comic book fan, I think you'll enjoy it. If you weren't a comic book fan, you'll learn something. And I guess that's the idea,

isn't it, Leslie. It is. It's really met for comic book fans and non comic book fans, and we're really trying to blur the line there for those. And it's a it's a narrative telling of this story of creativity, business and innovation, and who doesn't like any of that? Yeah, So I think it'll be interesting to a lot of people. Superpowered the DC

story. See it on Max And we thank you for joining us, Leslie, I Works, thank you, thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven. And Ihearts Media Presentation

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