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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Interviews, Archie, Controversy, Matt Fraction, jughead, Top News, Harvey Awards, sex criminals, chip zdarsky, erica henderson, Add a tag
Calling all miscreants! All slackers and gamers! All those who would banish terrible cafeteria food to the secret tenth circle of hell (located in a specific unmentionable location on Satan’s person). Archie’s Jughead is back with a new ongoing series written by none other than Sex Criminals’ Chip Zdarsky and illustrated by The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl‘s artist Erica Henderson. […]
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So there’s good news and there’s bad news. Sex Criminals #12 has been delayed, now releasing on September 16th. Happily, however, the delay isn’t due to writer Matt Fraction ending up in a MPreg fantasy become reality or artist Chip Zdarsky deciding he’s more of a Hemingway than a Singer Sargent, but rather because of “high […]
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Matt Fraction made his big late night debut in the wee hours yesterday evening/this morning on “Late Night with Seth Meyers” and got a chance to not only talk a bit about Sex Criminals, but also read a few choice entries from the hardback edition “Big Hard Sex Criminals”.
Take a look below for the full interview, he did great!
Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Late Night, Casanova, David Letterman, Harvey Pekar, Matt Fraction, Top News, Kelly Sue DeConnick, sex criminals, Seth Meyers, Late Night with Seth Meyers, Add a tag
Here’s the part where you support your favorite comic book creators almost as much you endorse the films they help make possible.
Kelly Sue DeConnick’s husband, Matt Fraction, will be making his first appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers this Thursday, May 21.
The other guests on the show include America’s Got Talent’s Heidi Klum, and funny man Richard Lewis. If that’s not the strangest and perfect line-up to offset the slowly dying Late Show With David Letterman, then I don’t know what is.
We are confident that Fraction will be the next Harvey Pekar of late night talk show. Hopefully, he shows Meyers first hand how to be a sex criminal, the origin of Pizza Dog, and discusses the glorious and frustrating process of creating Casanova with Brazilian twins.
Don’t miss Fraction on Thursday at 12:35 a.m. on NBC.
Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Artist: Kagan McLeod
Color Assist: Becka Kinzie
Editing: Thomas K
Production: Drew Gill
Kaptara is a wild card for Image Comics right now. Chip Zdarsky is a proven creator in the field of comics, but I’m not sure that anyone in the audience of the 2015 San Francisco Image Expo convention quite knew what the author was going to say. A book that he was writing to be set in space with an up-and-coming artist would have certainly ranked pretty low among anything the audience had in mind. Yet here we are at the first issue of Kaptara from Image.
What happens when a newspaper illustrator and a Sex Criminal go to space together?
The philosophy between two space travelers being a meathead a video game obsessed scientist is the perfect way to introduce readers to the fun of Kaptara. The irony nestled within this pages seems perfectly at home with Zdarsky and company, as with the other characters first introduced in the issue. The mission gets hectic pretty fast, and the language is laid down with thick discretion introducing readers about space. The protagonist Keith seems as if he sort of serves as the mouthpiece for the rest of the cast and the creators telling the story. His warm disposition and sarcastic attitude perfectly encapsulate the audience that will likely be engrossed in this story. Which is why it’s great that Keith is also the person that has the biggest problems with this tale via his interactions with other teammates. While he seems ready to see to the challenge, the unlikely hero is still flawed.
One of the best parts about this issue is how it almost immediately addresses some of the quiet moments between these people stuck on a space expedition. After all is said done, most of these quiet moments are present in the best instances of all your favorite sci-fi shows like Battlestar Galactica and Star Trek, it’s just a matter of making these characters interesting enough to land the quieter moments.
Still Kaptara is a genre tale. It’s not something incredibly concrete and immediately simple to the reader. In other words, it’s not just a bland run of the mill sci-fi military drama either. Speaking to that a little further, Kaptara almost immediately starts with fantastic pacing. By giving us a peek at the end of the story, stakes are being added to the quiet moments that happen later on. We’re already invested in these characters — making what happens at the end of this issue actually elicit some sort of genuine emotional response from the reader.
Speaking of craziness in artwork, that’s the catalyst that sturts to push this issue into crazytown. This comic embraces the weirdness of comics in general headfirst, descending full on into madness. This issue is a whopping 30+ pages, which is excellent for comics readers really looking to stretch their dollars as far as it can go for floppies. The comic also manages to shift up their supporting cast in ways that will affect subsequent installments. In fact, the Zdarsky humor starts to fade out towards bleak and dangerous subtext. Thankfully, the comic swerves back into the wonderful absurd brand of comedy that makes stories by this author great.
McLeod’s kinetic action-heavy cartoonist style with a bevvy of curved lines suit this title incredibly well. The artists’ work is described well as being ‘kinetic.’ The lines seamlessly flow off the page, and the monsters and characters are never staying still. In creator-owned titles, we’ve seen countless instances of not being able to tell characters apart because they are drawn too similarly. Thankfully, McLeod’s previous experience in the art world has allowed him to avoid the pesky instances denying clarity amongst a story. Wow…is all that should be said about the coloring in this story. McLeod and coloring assistant Becka Kinzie are going to amaze readers with the amount of sheer detail nestled into the coloring here. There is a lot of information being tossed at the reader very quickly in this first comic, but the first splash page really shows off something commendable in the not only the drawing by McLeod, but with the coloring as well.
For any comic book fan that has had enough of spandex clad gentlemen spending time in New York, I would like to propose something with a little space grit smeared all over it: Kaptara. This a book taking a familiar element of space travel that smothers in some dirty weirdness in the form of floating eyeballs, kings, princess, dance parties, skulls, lizards, space travel, and dreams. If you have a sickness Image Comics, Kagan McLeod, and Chip Zdarsky can you write you a prescription for a new drug called Kaptara.
Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Interviews, Marvel, Rico Renzi, sex criminals, chip zdarsky, Howard the Duck, Joe Quinones, Wil Moss, Add a tag
[The most unlikely comeback of 2014 may just have been Howard the Duck’s cameo at the end of Guardians of the Galaxy. A cult character who first appeared in a 1973 issue of Man Thing, he went on to become one of Steve Gerber’s most memorable creations, fricasséeing the Marvel Universe and contemporary culture. A 1986 film produced by George Lucas became a legendary bomb however, and a successful lawsuit by Disney over copyright infringement led to Howard permanently donning pants and getting a facial makeover. (Howard was also the center of various ownership battles over the years between Gerber and Marvel.) Since then he’s popped up here and there in the Marvel U, sort of a migrating duck of offbeat humor. After his surprise Guardians appearance, and given the more wide ranging of Marvel’s universe both on pwper and on the screen, a new ongoing series seemed right. And Marvel found just the man for the job. Torontonian humorist Chip Zdarsky, the pen name of Steve Murray, is a local legend for various stunts including running for mayor, befriending Applebee’s making hilarious infographics for the National Post. But it’s as collaborator with writer Matt Fraction on Sex Criminals, Time’s 2013 Comic of the Year, and one of Image’s best selling books, that he’s become a true social media phenom. With his finely honed, self-deprecating humor and discerning eye for a social trope, Zdarsky seems the perfect person to give the oft-misunderstood mallard another go round.
Howard the Duck #1, drawn by Joe Quinones and colored by Rico Renzi, is on sale today.]
MacDonald: So, Howard the Duck. Were you a fan, were you daunted? What was your first thought when, I assume, some Marvel editor called you up and said “Chip do you want to write Howard the Duck?”
Zdarsky: It happened quickly yet slowly. I started doing cover work for Marvel after Sex Criminals started doing well. I’ve been dealing with exclusively with Wil [Moss, editor of the project] and I did a 2 page story for him for Original Sins, a gag strip. He emailed me and said “Hey I have a feeling Howard is on the up and up, do you have any ideas for a Howard series?” and so I pitched my ideas and he liked them and we talked about it and batted around these artists and then got Joe [Quinones]. And during the whole process I didn’t even I think I had the job because I hate myself and I don’t believe anything good can happen [laughter]. I even did covers and wrote a script and I didn’t even think I had the job. I think mostly because I heard stories mostly, DC things where people were going all out on projects and then finding out somebody is doing the same project.
MacDonald: That guy in the building across the way also working on this series!
Zdarsky: Yeah exactly! Until the day that they announced it…I didn’t actually let it sink in that I would be working with Howard The Duck. I was a fan as a kid…a fan of the movie—because I was a child! But then I had this weird Uncle Fred who collected Howard and old Vampirella magazines, Robert Crumb stuff. He was kind of an underground comics guy. Howard was my favorite of those and whenever I would go over, I devoured them. It was funny, two years ago when I was working on the Vampirella project, he bequeathed me his Vampirella magazines and also his Howard the Duck black and white magazines as well, which I loved. So as soon as I got email from Wil… I cycled through the old issues, the old magazine and it was amazing. I love Howard.
MacDonald: Right, well its funny because I think I tweeted about [you having the right mind set for Howard], but what you’ve said in this interview makes you the perfect writer for it! “I hate myself and I don’t believe anything good can happen.” [laughs] Do you think being a ‘pessimist about success’, is a good attitude to have for writing Howard the Duck?
Zdarsky: I think it’s a good attitude to have for writing corporate comics because it is a job that you can be fired off pretty quickly. Whenever I explain how comics work to people who are not familiar with the comics industry, they’re like, so wait you have a job? But they can like firing you at any moment? And they do routinely? Yeah, that’s how it works in comics and then you try and get another job and it lasts for a year and you get fired and have to find another job. It’s all freelance no matter what unless you’re Brian Michael Bendis I guess or Geoff Johns. So with Howard specifically you’ve got to be a bit of a pessimist I think. Steve Gerber would go on some pretty good tears in the original run. I don’t think I have necessarily quite that world view but yeah, I predict things never going well for me, so that probably helps. So I won’t be disappointed if they fire me after 4 issues, like okay that’s 4 more than I thought I’d ever do.
MacDonald: I’m old so I read the Howard comics as a kid and they blew my mind because I was the perfect age for these comics, let’s put it that way. I haven’t really tried to read them since, so I don’t know how they hold up but this bits I’ve revisited show that Gerber is a very good writer, his technique was incredible. The character started as an absurd thing but was surprisingly well rounded. The original Howard run was about was very much the post Vietnam malaise in America, Howard ran for president in a post Watergate world. I think it was pretty universal but it was also very much the time. Do you change your thinking about the character? What is it… I saw on one of the covers instead of saying ‘Trapped in a World He Never Made’, it says something different.
Zdarsky: “Trapped In a World He’s Grown Accustomed To”.
MacDonald: Right. I loved that. Is that what’s propelling that forward now, is he complacent, what are his demons now?
Zdarsky: Well, a lot of people were asking me if I was going to bring Beverly [Switzler, Howard’s girlfriend] back because she wasn’t in any of the preview stuff. I’ve removed her and kind of made that a bit of mystery because my idea is that Howard has actually been here for a while. So once you’ve accepted that you’re part of this world, you have to find your place in it. He always had a loneliness even when he was with Beverly throughout the original run, but I feel like at this point he wouldn’t necessarily have that. I removed Beverly because it recreates the loneliness aspect of it. It’s so weird to think about Howard the Duck and talk about Howard the Duck! I’m still not quite used to it. [MacDonald laughs.] I’m overseeing a duck! Even the comic themselves have changed a lot and but it was always satirizing popular culture Kung fu movies of the time or ‘Star Wars’…
MacDonald: The Blanderizer, that was one of my favorites.
Zdarsky: [Laughs] Exactly!
MacDonald: Doctor Bong, the Kidney Lady.
Zdarsky: Yeah… and so popular culture now is Marvel, they’re the dominant force. I’ve got this opportunity to have him within the Marvel universe playing around with that world in which he’s no longer the odd duck, so to speak. I put him in New York and I’ve got all these super heroes and stuff flying around. In New York he’s not so much of an anomaly anymore. People aren’t whispering or yelling “Oh my god there’s a duck who talks!” as much as they used to. That’s also why I gave him a job as a private investigator. I felt like I needed him to try and figure out what he wants to do here at least at the beginning. We want to go weird and strange places because of the Howard tradition.
MacDonald: Right, I did see a couple of preview pages that came up and I see you do have Spider-Man in here and it’s pretty heavy on the MCU stuff…
Zdarsky: Especially at the beginning. There are a couple of reasons for that, one is that I want to show him in that universe, I want to firmly plant him in there because the cases he’s going to work on are going to involve a lot of these characters. It’s also because I still have that thing where I still think I’ll be fired [MacDonald laughs] and this is my one chance to write Spider-Man’s dialogue, so I’ll totally shoe horn that into issue one. And in every issue it’s, hey, can I use this character? And Marvel has to check with different offices—they must hate me by now because I’m trying to use everyone, because it could end at any moment.
MacDonald: Is there Woodgod? That’s the one everybody is going to want to know. [General laughter]
Zdarsky: So far I haven’t put in that request. I have a feeling that if I put in that request there would be no issue.
MacDonald: I don’t know, I’m telling you, listen Wood God, man. Or maybe The Vulture, you know, a lonely old man…Anyway enough from me. Who is Howard? What kind of guy is he?
Zdarsky: Obviously by appearance, he’s the anomaly, he’s trapped in the world he never made, but he’s actually the most relatable character that Marvel has. He doesn’t have any powers or anything, he’s just like an average guy who cuts through bullshit… and especially now throwing him in with all these other Marvel characters, you can have that personality shine through by calling people on their weird shit. One of the preview pages that they put out was with Spider-Man, a nod to [the original] issue #1, just to get it started off. But its also Spider-Man, you’re a weird fetish spider and you’ve got this weird fetish cat, like go kiss some criminals! People should probably call Spider-Man on that stuff. It’s great to have Howard be that character.
MacDonald: Let’s talk about writing a little bit. This is the first comic that you’ve just written?
Zdarsky: I was writing it simultaneously with my new series for Image, Kaptara with Kagan McLeod, but otherwise, yeah its the first time I’ve written something where someone else has drawn it.
MacDonald: And also your first sustained work for the Big Two?
Zdarsky: Yeah. I did that two pager for Marvel but that’s it and it’s unbelievable. Working with Matt [Fraction] on Sex Criminals was also my first time working with a writer. I was always a little jealous of Matt having the ability to write a sentence and then I would spend like a day trying to bring a sentence to life, Working with Joe on Howard, I said it before and it sounds really cheesy but it’s like an honor, in a way, to have somebody draw your words. Whenever I get the pencils and inks and colors back I’m just wow, people are doing things because I wrote a few words. It’s a strange responsibility. I’ve never had that feeling before and I’m also apologizing in the script…
MacDonald: For making them draw things?
Zdarsky: Yeah, if I said something like a giant outer space theme park, you know there’s a note to Joe apologizing, because I know what that means because I’m doing it on Sex Criminals.
MacDonald: But you’re lucky, Joe is such an amazing artist, he’s great.
Zdarsky: He’s unbelievable. But the only downside is that when they get the pages back, they’re different from what I envisioned but they’re better and then it makes me realize I’m not that good of an artist. [MacDonald laughs] I’m like, oh wow! When I got the job doing Howard, Wil Moss asked me to do some Howard redesign sketches. I sent them to Wil and he liked them. But then he brought Joe onboard and got Joe to do the same thing. Mine just look like hot garbage compared to Joe’s, so I’m glad he’s on the book.
MacDonald: Right, he’s a very inspired choice. You have a monkey in these preview pages. Is this an all animal book?
Zdarsky: It was like one of the only notes I got from higher up at Marvel, let’s not make this the anthropomorphized book. That’s Hei Hei, She Hulk’s monkey from Charles Soule’s She Hulk run. That’s such a good book and that’s part of the fun. I’ve set this book in She Hulk’s building—Charles approved all of that and he put Howard in a cameo in the last issue of She Hulk. It adds a weird little thrill to see creators pick up on things you’re doing and kind of going back and forth. You don’t really get that with Sex Criminals aside from making fun of The Wicked and The Divine.
MacDonald: Well let’s talk a little bit about that. Are there any adjustments you have to make? You’re also doing an Image book with Kagan, are there mental adjustments you have to make for working in somebody else’s sandbox here, the Marvel Universe home of the world’s most recognized book characters?
Zdarsky: In a lot of ways its easier because the characters are defined for you, they have the voice of Howard or the voice of Spider-man. If you’ve read those comics over the years and you’re observant enough, you can kind of pick up those voices. With Sex Criminals and Kaptara, you’re generating it and so you have to maintain a consistency with something you’ve just created, which is sometimes a little tricky. The process is so different with Image. Matt and I basically work on that book together, and its just us and so when we have a friend proofread it and we upload it to Image and then they upload it to the printer the next day, they don’t see the script, they don’t see the pencils, there’s no stages for that book, its just us back and forth. With Marvel, even the two page strip I did, there are four editors cc’d on the emails and everybody is safeguarding the characters and making sure tone and characters are consistent. Which only make sense, but you always have to have that in your mind when you’re writing these things now.
MacDonald: On the other hand I guess its like you have more of a safety net in a way too, like you have more people checking to make sure you didn’t screw up.
Zdarsky: I receive pretty much uniformly fantastic notes and that’s not kissing ass at editors, there are things that slipping through the cracks at my end partly because I’m not that familiar with the continuity of the characters, partly because maybe I’m overworked, but yeah the editors have been fantastic. Wil spotting plot issues and [Marvel executive editor] Tom Brevoort is like an encyclopedia of Marvel, you know, they’re good people to have in your corner.
MacDonald: Well, we’re big fans of Wil Moss at Stately Beat Manor. I don’t want to stray too far into your Image work, perhaps that would be another interview at some point but I mean, Sex Criminals—good lord, this book has become a phenomenon, is that safe to say?
Zdarsky: Yeah… I don’t like labeling it, but it’s made convention experiences a totally new thing.
MacDonald: Chip, I think we first met 15 years ago, 14 years ago back in the Warren Ellis Forum which is scary. You’re one of a number of creators coming out of that scene so to speak, Kelly Sue [DeConnick] was there…
Zdarsky: Kieron [Gillen].
MacDonald: Matt Fraction, Jamie McKelvie, Andy Khouri, now an editor at DC, Bryan Lee O’Malley was on there, Alex DeCampi, Brian Wood…
Zdarsky: That guy, what’s his name Warren Ellis?
MacDonald: It’s just pretty insane how many people were on there. You’ve always been known as this incredibly funny guy or the guy with the great gimmick like running for mayor or something. And now you’ve put all that to use on social media to [promote your creator-owned comics.] I think you said at New York Comic Con you guys had a meet up and people couldn’t get into the bar, there were so many people standing outside…
Zdarsky: Yeah. It’s nuts. I was giving a talk to a book festival exclusively for publishers and a lot of people were asking about social media. Like, should they get their authors to all do social media and I said “NO!” You do it because you like it. If you like telling jokes and talking to people, great. But people can smell someone selling something a mile away. Authors with a Twitter account where there’s no activity and all of a sudden it’s [Author voice] “oh what a great day to sit down and “#write.” The next tweet is an Amazon link! I just have fun. There’s no point where I’m just promoting something. It’s how I had my career at the newspaper and its how the comics thing is turning out; just doing things that I want to do.
MacDonald: Did you sense a change? You have always been very active on social media but was there a change in how people interact with you after Sex Criminals became such a hit?
Zdarsky: Twitter is kind of the same because you follow the same people. People will respond to you. With the Howard thing I’m getting a lot of people saying “Hey I’m an old Howard fan, don’t fuck this up!” Everyone has their ideas of how a character should be and I know that’s going to change a lot after next week for me. Facebook is funny because my parents are on there and they’re lovable and they like to interact with me… and so its kind of strange now to have my mom making some sort of comment about my work and then two comments later someone trying to make a cum joke to me. My parents are fantastic and all my friends are fantastic and they all kind of roll with it but at some point… I actually had a nightmare last night. I just talked to Matt on the phone [about] this nightmare where I was at home and my girlfriend was coming in through the front door and she smiled at me and I said a joke and then somebody, a guy in a hooded sweatshirt came up behind her and started to attack her. My instinct was to run and save her no matter what. And then something clicked, oh no this person is not malicious, he’s just slow or stupid and I had to get him off her without really harming him. And so I did. I grabbed him and then woke up and then I just lay there and was like, oh my God I just had a dream about the internet! [laughter] Really I just had a nightmare of people on Facebook, interacting with people that I love and maybe inadvertently harming them but they don’t know any better.
MacDonald: I think you should put that dream in Howard the Duck.
Zdarsky: [laughs] I think maybe I am turning into Steve Gerber! There was that issue where it was almost all text and he just kind of talked about everything. Maybe I’ll hit that stage. I had therapy this morning, so perfect timing.
MacDonald: This is a question though I’m sure you’ve been asked a lot. Chip, do you wish that Howard didn’t wear any pants?
Zdarsky: [laughs] I don’t care at all! Originally he was clearly a parody of Donald Duck but he’s moved so far past that, you could put him in a gorilla suit and its fine. Its especially funny now that Disney owns Marvel. All the legal injunctions—that’s the first thing that happened after I said yes to this, I got all the original documents where they lay out how Howard has to look to be differentiated from Donald. It’s a fascinating glimpse into comics history. But…honestly I don’t spend a lot of time thinking about pants or no pants on ducks.
MacDonald: Oh Chip, you’ve really changed.
Zdarsky: I know, I really have! I’m so busy now, I can’t think about these ducks and their pants!
MacDonald: Okay on twitter this morning Kelly Sue inspired me to start asking some new questions [in a multi tweet comment, De Connick listed all the questions that men never get asked but women are asked over and over and over], and you’re the first person I’ve interviewed since then, so you’re going to be the guinea pig. What is it like to be a man in comics?
Zdarsky: [laughs] Oh my god! It’s fantastic! Its just fantastic. I loved her rant, it was amazing. But yeah, I wake up every morning and I’m just I feel blessed, I’m a white man living in a Canadian city, I’ve got a beard…
MacDonald: Chip, how do you balance work and family?
Zdarsky: [laughs] I’m very lucky in the sense that my girlfriend is also busy with her job, so we have the same hours. I wake up from anxiety every day and I start working at 8 and then I work until 11 o’clock at night and that’s usually when my girlfriend stops working and so we meet up at 11 o’clock when midnight strikes and we talk about our days and we go to sleep and have our nightmares about the internet. It’s great!
MacDonald: Wow, you know what, you’re living the dream. Literally you’re living a dream.
Zdarsky: When I quit my newspaper job—I did Sex Criminals for almost a year while doing my newspaper job full time which was crazy and dumb.
MacDonald: Just so anyone reading this knows, you did regular comics for the National Post, the big daily paper in Toronto?
Zdarsky: My job title there was graphic columnist, which I made up because I needed one and I wrote articles, I did reporting, I did columns, I drew, I did cartoons, videos. I was kind of a jack of all trades. It was the best job I could’ve hoped for but I just hit this point where I had to focus on something, so I had to quit that job. But I forgot what a freelancer brain is like, where you’re terrified of turning anything down because it will never be offered again. So I had this weird bit for a month or two where I was saying yes to everything and then thought, oh my god. I physically can’t do it. So I know I’m leaving that phase now. I’ve got all these regular jobs, but I’m not accepting too many cover gigs anymore.
MacDonald: You know many of the top writers, a lot of them used to be cartoonists, like Brian Bendis and Brubaker and…
Zdarsky: Seth, isn’t he at Marvel now?
MacDonald: Do you like writing now? You’re just getting into it, but writing, drawing or both, what’s…?
Zdarsky: I’ll always draw something but I can only draw one book a month. I can write two at least, I recognize at some point during the course of Sex Criminals, that Matt doesn’t necessarily have the easier job but he definitely has the job where the time restrictions are easier and I want to give it a shot. With the Kaptara book I want to get Kagan drawing comics again. He’s an insanely successful illustrator here but Infinite Kung Fu came out years ago and I just wanted to show people his work, he’s so good.
MacDonald: He is, he’s amazing. I didn’t realize that Infinite Kung Fu came out that long ago. I think we made it one of our books for the year [at Publishers weekly] actually. They say the way to success is surround yourself with the best, so good move! Just to wrap this up on a Howard note, in the first issue, we set up “Howard the Private Eye” and meeting Spidey and so on but anything else you can say about ongoing storylines that you can tantalize us with?
Zdarsky: All I can say is I feel like I’m luring people into a conventional comic book story and then I’m going to hit them with the weird stuff. I keep sending these emails to my editor saying you know, this is coming up and this is what this means and then I go ohhhhhhhhh boy. I figure if I make it past issue 5 and people stop paying attention, I can do very weird stuff.
Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Television, Image, Breaking News, Casanova, Image Comics, Matt Fraction, Top News, Kelly Sue DeConnick, sex criminals, Ody-C, Bitch Planet, Milkfed Criminal Masterminds, Pretty Deadly, Satellite Sam, Universal Television, Add a tag
Huge news for fans of the Fraction-DeConnick household; Deadline reports that Matt Fraction and Kelly Sue DeConnick, whose creator-owned works include Sex Criminals, Bitch Planet, Pretty Deadly, Ody-C, Casanova and more, have signed a two-year pact with Universal Television to develop their properties into television series.
Additionally, the deal includes the potential for original content as well as series based on other comic creators’ IP, all of which will fall under their Milkfed Criminal Masterminds production banner.
First up on their development docket is a television adaptation of Fraction and Chip Zdarsky‘s Eisner Award winning Sex Criminals. The duo has hired former Marvel editor Lauren Sankovitch as MCM’s Managing Editor as they make the move into the world of the small screen. They’re represented by Rothman Brecher Agency and attorney Shep Rosenman.
I was just thinking about how diverse their creator-owned set of titles are, covering a wide range of genres like exploitation, 50’s era who-dunnits?, sex comedies, westerns, euro-style sci-fi, etc. It’s a tremendous base to work from in terms of a well-rounded television line-up. Excuse me while I go silent jump around for joy in our condo.
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JacketFlap tags: Image, dating tips, Matt Fraction, Top News, sex criminals, Add a tag
We’ve finally reached the place where cartoonists are giving dating advice in short videos. That it is the SEX CRIMINALS team of Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky should come as no surprise, as they were seemingly genetically bred for this task. The duo appear in a video on EW to talk about their new “advice” book Just the Tips and tell some dating stories. Zdarsky definitely wins this one, and it’s true if there’s no one to talk to, breaking up is hard.
Sex Criminals is one of Image’s most successful ongoigns (in October it charted at #119) because a) it’s a good book and b) Fraction and Zdarsky have concocted one of the greatest marketing campaigns for a comic book in recent years. And yeah, having the word “Sex” in the title helps, but come on, did anyone see “brimping” coming?
EW won’t let me embed the video but hit the link and you will see all.
Blog: Perpetually Adolescent (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Graphic Novels, Comics, Chris Ware, Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi, The Reading Life, Art Spiegelman, Maus, Ghost World, Scott Pilgrim, Bryan Lee O'Malley, Daniel Clowes, Matt Fraction, Seconds, Building Stories, sex Criminals, Chip Zdarsky, Michael Kitto, Hawkeye: My Life as a Weapon, Jimmy Corrigan, Add a tag
I consider myself a big nerd and comics seem to go hand in hand with the social status. I never really got into comics (or graphic novels) and when I did attempt I never knew where to start. There are millions of reboots and story arcs for the thousands of different superheroes out there but which ones are good and where do I start? It was Scott Pilgrim that started my journey into graphic novels and with Bryan Lee O’Malley’s Seconds recent release, I thought now would be a perfect time to talk about the graphic novels I love.
As an easy way to distinguish between comics and graphic novels, I call single issues (30-40 pages) a comic and a graphic novel is the anthology that contains a full story arc (normally 4-5 single issues). What I find really interesting about a graphic novel is that it is simply a new way to tell a story. It is not always about the superhero, graphic novels can explore high concepts in a whole new way.
Take the only graphic novel to win a Pulitzer Prize, Maus by Art Spiegelman. In this story we read about Vladek Spiegelman and his wife, it is biography of living and surviving Hitler’s Europe. The graphic novel not only addresses the holocaust and life in a war torn country it does it in a unique way. Exploring the reality and fears of surviving in a visual way, the Jews are depicted as mice and the Nazi’s hunting them as cats.
There is also the autobiographic story of Marjane Satrapi in Persepolis, a coming of age story of a girl living in Tehran during the Islamic Revolution. The whole concept of cultural change works really well in this graphical depiction. There is even an animated adaptation which is worth checking out (even if it is exactly the same). If you prefer a more quasi-autobiographical story maybe try Ghost World by Daniel Clowes or even something by Chris Ware like Jimmy Corrigan or Building Stories.
Finally, if you prefer your graphic novels to be about superheros or people coming to terms with their new found powers, I have some suggestions for you as well. Hawkeye: My Life as a Weapon by Matt Fraction is the first story arc in this new Hawkeye series and explores a life of a superhero outside fighting crime and saving the world. Also by Matt Fraction, with the help of Chip Zdarsky is the weird and wonderfully dirty Sex Criminals. This is a story of a woman that discovers that time freezes after an orgasm and the shenanigans she can get up to with so much quiet time. This graphic novel will not be for everyone; if you want something very different that is full of dirty visual puns then I would recommend it.
I would love to recommend more comics but some of my suggestions are not yet released as a complete story arc yet. If you are interested in more graphic novel suggests let me know in the comments below. I hope this will give you some suggestions if you have never tried a graphic novel before. I’m also happy to take more recommendations in the comments below. Happy reading.
Add a CommentBlog: Biblio File (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Matt Fraction, Sex Criminals, Chip Zdarsky, Fiction, Graphic Novel, Adult, Add a tag
Sex Criminals Volume 1: One Weird Trick Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky
Suzie works at a library that’s about to be foreclosed on. While at a fundraising party to try to save it, she meets a guy she likes and they sleep together. It’s only in the afterglow that Suzie discovers that Jon shares her secret--after orgasms, time stops until she’s ready to go again. When she sleeps with Jon, they’re in trapped time together (she calls it The Quiet. He calls it Cumworld.) Jon works at the bank that’s foreclosing on Suzie’s library and hates it. So… why not make the best of their talents in order to rob the bank so they can give the money back in the form of the library’s mortgage payment?
My brother-in-law has a comic book store and last time I was visiting them, my sister was SO EXCITED about this series, so I was excited when the omnibus showed up.
I love the premise and it’s executed so well. Suzie narrates and it goes between the present and the past, and how she figured out about The Quiet. It’s really funny and a great introduction to a world that I want to know more about (Jon and Suzie aren’t the only ones with this talent, and they will get caught breaking the rules, even if time is standing still.) I also love the artwork when time’s standing still, so you know what’s going on. But most of all, I love Suzie. I love that she robs banks to save her library. I love her voice. I love the idea of her as a librarian. She isn't mousey and quiet, isn't too in-your-face cool. She is very cool, and very committed to books and research and helping people who came in to find their information--reminds me of a lot of the librarians I know and love. It was nice to see in pop culture.
I also like the back matter for this one. In addition to the regular offerings of page/cover sketches and rejects that we usually get in omnibus back matter, this had some great stuff on process, and the complete brain-storm list of made up positions.
Obviously, with this premise, it’s an adult title. But while the gimmick is lewd, the execution is beautiful and the actual story is worth digging into--there’s definitely some there there.
Cannot wait to read more.
Book Provided by... my local library
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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: april sales, sex criminals, Sales Charts, Top News, Amazing Spider-Man, Add a tag
Marvel led the month of April in comics sales behind the 500,000+ sales of Amazing Spider-Man #1, which DIamond confirmed as being “the best-selling comic book in both units and dollars in over a decade,” and sales were up quite a bit from the previous month; however April was a five week month making direct comparisons hard to make. Still. sales are beginning to catch up year to year, and GN sales are up from 2013.
Marvel beat DC by more than 10 percentage points in both dollars and units behind Spider-Man, however DC had more books in the Top Ten due to Batman Eternal. IMage had an uncontested win in the GN category taking seven of the top ten led by the Sex Criminals collection, which shows signs of being the next graphic novel sensation.
TOP COMIC BOOK PUBLISHERS
PUBLISHER |
DOLLAR SHARE |
UNIT SHARE |
MARVEL COMICS |
39.27% |
41.15% |
DC COMICS |
23.65% |
27.24% |
IMAGE COMICS |
9.34% |
10.31% |
DARK HORSE COMICS |
5.54% |
5.18% |
IDW PUBLISHING |
5.10% |
4.24% |
DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT |
2.49% |
2.47% |
EAGLEMOSS PUBLICATIONS LTD |
2.14% |
0.54% |
BOOM! STUDIOS |
2.07% |
1.97% |
AVATAR PRESS INC |
1.15% |
1.03% |
VALIANT ENTERTAINMENT LLC |
1.04% |
1.18% |
OTHER NON-TOP 10 |
8.21% |
4.69% |
NEW TITLES SHIPPED
PUBLISHER |
COMICS SHIPPED |
GRAPHIC NOVELS SHIPPED |
MAGAZINES SHIPPED |
TOTAL SHIPPED |
MARVEL COMICS |
80 |
35 |
0 |
115 |
DC COMICS |
79 |
26 |
1 |
106 |
IMAGE COMICS |
71 |
13 |
0 |
84 |
IDW PUBLISHING |
45 |
24 |
0 |
69 |
DARK HORSE COMICS |
38 |
27 |
0 |
65 |
DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT |
43 |
6 |
0 |
49 |
BOOM ENTERTAINMENT |
25 |
7 |
0 |
32 |
EAGLEMOSS |
0 |
0 |
26 |
26 |
AVATAR PRESS INC |
11 |
2 |
2 |
15 |
VALIANT ENTERTAINMENT LLC |
13 |
2 |
0 |
15 |
OTHER |
77 |
157 |
35 |
269 |
COMPARATIVE SALES STATISTICS
|
DOLLARS |
UNITS |
APRIL 2014 VS. MARCH 2014 |
||
COMICS |
23.22% |
14.36% |
GRAPHIC NOVELS |
8.90% |
-0.33% |
TOTAL COMICS/GN |
18.27% |
12.90% |
APRIL 2014 VS. APRIL 2013 |
||
COMICS |
17.37% |
6.96% |
GRAPHIC NOVELS |
16.78% |
11.20% |
TOTAL COMICS/GN |
17.18% |
7.32% |
YEAR-TO-DATE 2014 VS. YEAR-TO-DATE 2013 |
||
COMICS |
-0.89% |
-6.91% |
GRAPHIC NOVELS |
5.44% |
10.38% |
TOTAL COMICS/GN |
1.04% |
-5.61% |
TOP 10 COMIC BOOKS
RANK |
DESCRIPTION |
PRICE |
ITEM CODE |
VENDOR |
1 |
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #1 |
$5.99 |
FEB140664-M | MAR |
2 |
SUPERIOR SPIDER-MAN #31 |
$5.99 |
FEB140659-M | MAR |
3 |
BATMAN #30 |
$3.99 |
FEB140198-M | DC |
4 |
BATMAN ETERNAL #1 [*] |
$2.99 |
FEB140140-M | DC |
5 |
JUSTICE LEAGUE #29 |
$3.99 |
JAN140243-M | DC |
6 |
BATMAN ETERNAL #2 [*] |
$2.99 |
FEB140142 | DC |
7 |
HULK #1 |
$3.99 |
FEB140684-M | MAR |
8 |
ORIGINAL SIN #0 |
$4.99 |
FEB140657 | MAR |
9 |
BATMAN ETERNAL #3 [*] |
$2.99 |
FEB140143 | DC |
10 |
BATMAN ETERNAL #4 [*] |
$2.99 |
FEB140144 | DC |
TOP 10 GRAPHIC NOVELS & TRADE PAPERBACKS
RANK |
DESCRIPTION |
PRICE |
ITEM CODE |
VENDOR |
1 |
SEX CRIMINALS VOLUME 1 TP (MR) |
$9.99 |
JAN140558 | IMA |
2 |
SAGA VOLUME 3 TP (MR) |
$14.99 |
JAN140556 | IMA |
3 |
EAST OF WEST VOLUME 2: WE ARE ALL ONE TP |
$14.99 |
DEC130494 | IMA |
4 |
SAGA VOLUME 1 TP (MR) |
$9.99 |
AUG120491 | IMA |
5 |
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: FAMILY BUSINESS HC |
$24.99 |
DEC130759 | MAR |
6 |
GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 1: COSMIC AVENGERS TP |
$19.99 |
JAN140800 | MAR |
7 |
THE JOKER: DEATH OF THE FAMILY TP (N52) |
$24.99 |
JAN140340 | DC |
8 |
SAGA VOLUME 2 TP (MR) |
$14.99 |
APR130443 | IMA |
9 |
PRETTY DEADLY VOLUME 1 TP (MR) |
$9.99 |
FEB140533 | IMA |
10 |
THE WALKING DEAD VOLUME 1: DAYS GONE BYE TP |
$14.99 |
NOV128157 | IMA |
TOP 10 BOOKS
RANK |
DESCRIPTION |
PRICE |
ITEM CODE |
VENDOR |
1 |
JIM HENSON’S LABYRINTH HC |
$19.99 |
FEB141067 | BOO |
2 |
THE WALKING DEAD VOL. 4: FALL OF THE GOVERNOR PART 2 |
$25.99 |
DEC138366 | STM |
3 |
LEGEND OF ZELDA: HYRULE HISTORIA HC |
$34.99 |
SEP120055 | DAR |
4 |
MY LITTLE PONY: FIREFLY WITH BOOK |
$9.95 |
FEB141598 | RUN |
5 |
THE SHADOW DOUBLE NOVEL VOLUME 83 SC |
$14.95 |
FEB141625 | SAN |
6 |
MARVEL ENCYCLOPEDIA 75TH-ANNIVERSARY EDITION HC |
$40.00 |
DEC131413 | DK |
7 |
SPIDER-MAN CHARACTER ENCYCLOPEDIA HC |
$16.99 |
JAN141481 | DK |
8 |
GODZILLA LIGHT & SOUND MINIATURE BOOK KIT |
$12.95 |
JAN141512 | RUN |
9 |
SWORD ART ONLINE VOLUME 1: AINCRAD SC |
$13.00 |
FEB141540 | HAC |
10 |
DARKSTALKERS: OFFICIAL COMPANION WORKS SC |
$39.99 |
JAN141345 | UDO |
TOP 10 TOYS
RANK |
DESCRIPTION |
ITEM CODE |
VENDOR |
1 |
SCRIBBLENAUTS UNMASKED MINI FIGURES SERIES 2 | OCT130312 | DC |
2 |
THE WALKING DEAD: DIXON WITH CHOPPER BOX SET | AUG138265 | TMP |
3 |
MARVEL COMICS: AVENGERS NOW: THE HULK ARTFX+ STATUE | OCT132006 | KOT |
4 |
MARVEL SELECT: CAPTAIN AMERICA 2 ACTION FIGURE | DEC131822 | DST |
5 |
BATMAN HUSH: BATMAN & CATWOMAN: THE KISS STATUE | SEP130322 | DC |
6 |
DC COMICS SUPER VILLAINS: SUPERWOMAN ACTION FIGURE | SEP130323 | DC |
7 |
BATMAN ARKHAM CITY: ARMORED BATMAN STATUE | NOV130291 | DC |
8 |
THE WALKING DEAD: DARYL DIXON MINI-BUST | MAY131926 | GEN |
9 |
DC COMICS SUPER VILLAINS: ULTRAMAN ACTION FIGURE | SEP130325 | DC |
10 |
DC COMICS VARIANT PLAY ARTS KAI: THE FLASH ACTION FIGURE | JUL138154 | SQU |
TOP 10 GAMES
RANK |
DESCRIPTION |
ITEM CODE |
VENDOR |
1 |
MONOPOLY: THE WALKING DEAD SURVIVAL EDITION | OCT128266 | USA |
2 |
MARVEL HEROCLIX: DEADPOOL | FEB142556 | NEC |
3 |
YU-GI-OH! HEROCLIX | MAY132348 | NEC |
4 |
RISK: THE WALKING DEAD SURVIVAL EDITION | OCT128267 | USA |
5 |
RISK LEGACY | JUN118204 | HAS |
6 |
MARVEL DICE MASTERS: AVENGERS VS. X-MEN | NOV132536 | NEC |
7 |
DC HEROCLIX: LEGION OF SUPERHEROES BOOSTER BRICK | OCT132418 | NEC |
8 |
WONDER WOMAN: COLLAGE 1000-PIECE JIGSAW PUZZLE | FEB142427 | AQU |
9 |
SUPERMAN: COLLAGE 1000-PIECE JIGSAW PUZZLE | FEB142426 | AQU |
10 |
RISK: MASS EFFECT: GALAXY AT WAR COLLECTOR’S EDITION | DEC132333 | USA |
Aloha Hawaiian Dick looks great and deserves to sell more copies; I am very impressed by both story and art, I also buy every issue of Low and Outcast. This company is doing things right: every title is its own universe and independent concept.
I hope that comic readers will support Image titles, they are fresh and interesting. (and I don’t work for them, ha ha) Bravo.
Look at how many creators fled Marvel and DC to do their own thing at Image. Are fanboys really just interested in capes and tights, or quality work by creators who love what they do?
Considering that good chunk of them are selling below DC/Marvel cancellation levels I’d think that people are reading DC/Marvel for creators AND characters,
Skottie, most of these numbers are even worse than DC and Marvel. It’s admirable you’re always on these every month championing creator owned books but you’ve never said anything more than “Buy creator books!” Which ones in particular do you think everyone should be buying?
Seems to be mostly about charcater than creators; Recently Ted McKeever (who hasn’t done work for the Big 2 in years) announced he was levaing comics, becuase his heart is not into it. How many will follow suit?
http://www.bleedingcool.com/2016/06/08/the-current-state-of-the-comic-book-industry-is-the-lowest-ted-mckeever-talks-to-bleeding-cool-about-quitting/
Since I cannot edit or remove, here goes, fixed typos:
Seems to be mostly about characters than creators; Recently Ted McKeever (who hasn’t done work for the Big 2 in years) announced he was leaving comics, because his heart was not into it anymore. How many will follow suit?
“Skottie, most of these numbers are even worse than DC and Marvel.”
Which means . . . what? The creators are actually making more money from these numbers at Image than the page rate at Marvel or DC. Scott Snyder famously said he makes multiples on Wytches than what he earns from writing Batman.
If you’re so concerned about lower Image numbers, then fucking buy their books and help out.
We have to remember that mine gold for creator-owned books are in the trades,a lot of books that are performing poorly on this chart are doing very fine on Amazon e etc.
I read quite a bunch of Image Waking Dead, Invincilbe, Nailbitter, Citizen Jack, Huck + tons others.. Not all people pick up a comic based on who did it. I dont think I have ever picked up a comic based solely on creative team. I will though not pick up a series based on writer or artist when they have a track record of not releasing books before moving onto other projects. Tony Harris how many projects got abandoned by him. Anything Bryan Hitch Image title Real Heroes. Any non Marvel Rob Liefeld title if you get 2 issues it is a shock. If the book grabs me will read it but honestly could care less about creative team
Gra^hic Inida (kind of a revival of the late Virgin Comics) is also an editor with very nice products, at an amazing price (everything is $3 with often more than 20p per story). Grant Morrisson’s 18 Days is amazing and Chakra and Devi aslo look interesting. But I don’t think any of their title ever make it to the Top300 :(sc