Archive for: Rip Current

1 Jul. 2008

The Beast Within

Posted by alex under Hero High, Mind Crimes, Rip Current | 6 Comments »

If you were an animal, what would you be?
The answer to this question, a staple of all kinds of ‘gettin’ ta know ya’ questionaires, speed-dating topics, even job applications might be one of the oldest, and most visceral methods of human evaluation and judgement ever devised.

From the middle ages, and probably before, men have studied animal characteristics and behavior to help them understand their fellow man. The zoomorphic method of physiognomy was one of the first and most popular methods which people used in order to discern the motivations and personalities of the people around them. Until Freud came along (and no doubt, after) people used “animal resemblance” as a way of quickly sizing up and categorizing their fellow men.

Using a simplified kind of logic this method would note the physical features of people, and compare them with those of animals which share those features. For example, a man with a thick nose and large eyes was said to be slow and lazy like a cow. Someone with a narrow, pointy face was said to be sneaky and treacherous as a rat. This philosophy crossed many cultures, and examples of this way of thinking about human character traits being reflected in physical features, and the relation that they bore to certain animals can be found in ancient Greek and Roman literature as well as that of Persia, Africa, China and Japan.

In one of my previous blogs, I talked about the link between superhero comics and
ancient myths and allegories which were often told in order to illustrate a moral lesson. Peoples from all parts of the world claim stories featuring creatures which were half man and half beast, and many of these were also passed down from generation to generation. But the perceived connection between man’s animal character was much more than mere fiction to many people.

Rulers chose advisors and successors based on whether the person wore a horse-like or lion-like face, and empires no doubt rose and fell on decisions based on nothing more substantial than the shape of an upper lip. The “bestial” facial features, of enemies were used by leaders to justify all kinds of atrocities from genocide to colonization. Take a look at the nastier war propaganda in any era (including the modern one), and the link between the enemy being ‘animal-like’ or showing ‘bestial characteristics’ is the most dominant theme. Of course it is easier to get people to harm other people if they, the enemy aren’t fully human. But I digress.

This primitive system of human prejudice, (as it is meant by most people: judgement based on appearance) related to animal resemblance, is a common thread in almost all of western literature. Stories ranging from the Medieval myths to Kafka, Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, and especially the modern comic (yes as wide a literary survey as that!) feature characters whose personality is perfectly complemented by their ‘mousy’ or ‘bear-like’ appearance. It is in fact, so common for a villain to be serpentine or rat-like that it is almost a foregone conclusion that someone described as having a a darting tongue ar a twitching nose, would later display behavior similar to one of those animals. Sometimes in literature, a character bears a name that evokes a particular animal which causes the reader to have an almost subconscious prejudice towards them.

I think it is interesting that for many popular super hero comics this would seem to be reversed. Some of the most popular: Wolverine, Batman, and Spiderman, to name a few, are half-breeds of human with, animals which are traditionally linked with unpleasant or frightening characteristics. But would Spiderman be as popular if he were actually a guy who paralyzed his enemies and drained their bodily fluids through his retractable fangs? Or would the kids like Wolverine as much if he actually sprayed his ememy’s carcass with foul-smelling musk from his anal glands before burying them for later snacking? Actually I guess the kids would probably enjoy that , but then, it probably wouldn’t make the Hollywood movie version.

Something to think about….

I was going to talk about the Zeros2Heroes comics that Im working on.
I have only this to say. This has been a very long month. But it is almost over. Hero High has come together most triumphantly on time, on schedule, and most definitely on point. Farley aka. Moondog is set to become the next great superhero on the scene and this book just keeps looking better every day. Production on Hero High is a short hair from completion, with just the final lettering being added at this stage. The artwork just pops off the page and the dialog is nice and snappy.
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Rip Current, is shaping up to be a real stand out comic, with beautifully coloured and rendered panels. It reminds me of some of the best Heavy Metal stories that I grew up reading. Production on Rip Current is also down to the final tweaks and fine tuning and will be finished this week.
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On Mind Crimes, Sidney finished the last page of the inks just today, and the artwork is looking great. Sidney’s ability to draw a realistic Star Wars era Mark Hamill mask amazed and surprised everyone, and Marc has truly disturbed us with his penchant for painting blood, and lots of it. The final artwork is being assembled as I write this and Ed is burning the midnite compact fluorescent to finish the lettering for this and almost all of the other books.

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Happy Canada Day you comic hosers


Well I have some good news and some bad news. The bad news isn’t really that bad, but for those of you who just skim the text on these production blogs and just want to see the art coming together, it’s bad enough. You see I have been so keen to share the artwork coming in from our talented teams with you, the Zeros to Heroes community,that I have been posting new pages with each blog entry. But unfortunately, you will have to wait to see the rest of Hero High and Rip Current when they are scheduled to be released in completed form on the world wide web in a month or so. You see we must allow the anticipation to build, and build until you can no longer stand it, and then finally, at last releive it with a comic which by all indications will surpass your greatest hopes and expectations.

The good news is that I can however, show you some of the awesome pages from Mind Crimes yet, and we are seriously on target to complete all books on time!
It’s going to be a photo finish, as Sidney and Marc on Mind Crimes had far less time than the teams working on the other comics, and yet are quickly catching up to Diego on Hero High and the team on Rip Current. Here is the coloured artwork from page 1 of Mind Crimes.
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       Well the push is on to finish all books by the July Deadline, so carpal tunnel is setting in for all artists working on Z2H books right now. Unfortunately the weather outside is (mostly) beautiful here on the West Coast so sometimes it is hard to be inside at the computer. I know it is for me. I  did manage to get an amazing sailing session off the beach at Davis Bay last Thursday with Westerly winds coming in at 15 knots and steady as a stone. The split Jet stream is making wind predictions unpredictable, but hopefully the wind will be firing hard this weekend. Wait, I’m supposed to be talking about comics. Damn. Don’t think about kitesurfing. Don’t think about kitesurfing.

Okay, this week on Hero High, Diego has begun the colouring process and already has 4 finished pages done and approved. The shading is fairly simplified and bright in keeping with the “animated ” look we are shooting for with this book. This page shows Farley’s first day at school, and our first encounter with that creepy school janitor guy. What is up with school janitors anyways, is it that they just can’t find anyone else to mop up puke than ex-carneys??

 No, I’m just kidding, but the guy at my school had some pretty rough looking tatoos…

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Patricio is still finishing up the pencils on Rip Current, this week some of the panels had to be revised to make sure that the artwork reflected Carmen Wright’s vision. The action scenes proved a little difficult to get right due to specific scenes having fluid motion, inertia, and mechanical physics involved, all in the same panel (who said artists don’t need science and math)

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I am also including the page from last weeks blog as some of you said it wouldnt load the large version when you clicked on it. Lots of detail in this one.

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On to Mind Crimes: Sidney Lima has really begun to find his stride on this book this week. A double threat, Sidney is pulling off the pencils and inks on this book and coming up with some really fine pages. Sidney prefers to come up with his own layouts on the pages, and begins with pencils that are generally fairly rough. Most of the details are added in the inking stages, and you can see from the page X here the finished pages are very different in appearance from the pencils. Marc Lewis is the colourist on Mind Crimes, and has found a palette that has a futuristic vibe, perfect for this story.

For all you process junkies here’s  the artwork for page X and the steps leading to it. 

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The end is nigh for Hero High. Diego has finished all 22 pages of pencils and inks now, (well one more page of inks to go) and just has to fill in the colours now. It’s exciting to see all of the blacks down and finalized, and it is easy to imagine how great it is going to look when it is finished. There really aren’t many titles out there that are this tight, in terms of both story content and artwork, that are marketed to a younger audience so I have to say I’m quite psyched to be part of this project.

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Rip Current also is looking very promising, with some very nice inks by Christian this week. Patricio has close to 20 pages pencilled and the inks and colours are close behind. This book has some really richly detailed artwork reminiscent of some of the best European comics and Anime.

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Zeros 2 Hero’s latest title Mind Crimes got off to aslightly delayed start, due to the writer, Nick Andreychuk’s new baby’s birth coinciding with Mind Crime’s win the final round of Comic Creation Nation (Congratulations Nick!), but it beginning to come together as the art team begins to tackle this story with style. A sci -fi/ noir thriller, Mind Crimes also takes place in a dystopian, not so distant future. Pencils and inks will be provided by Sidney G. Lima, Here’s the pinup.

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8 May. 2008

Rip Current - pt.5

Posted by alex under Rip Current | No Comments »

Some of the earliest representations of myth and legend included creatures which were half man half beast. Centaurs, sea-horses, and mermen/mermaids are found in ancient Greek and Roman frescoes and writings. Incidentally, the term for such creatures in art :grotesque, comes from the Latin grotte or grotto, as many of the best examples of these were to be found in remnants of ancient mural decorations in rediscovered underground vaults in Rome.
Historians argue over whether these creatures were actually beleived in as real, or were useful as metaphors for the spirits which animated the natural world, the plants, skies and waters of ancient man. Sprites, wood nymphs, mermaids and gorgons are archetypal dream-creatures which are part man, part god and bridge the gap between man and nature. Free from the constraints of being human and the laws of men, these fantastic creatures, cavorted, danced and indulged their every urge, enjoying a freedom which society did not allow to men. They often were used as characters in myths and parables to show the dangerous consequences of indulging our more savage or “natural” tendencies.
It is not simply due to the much reviled Comics Code of the 1950’s that comics so often act as this century’s “morality play”. Half-men, which include many of our popular super heroes (batman, spiderman, aquaman) half man, half-whatever simply serve this function best. Ernst Kris, a contemporary or Freud wrote in 1952, that “the pleasure we take in comics largely is a triumph over anxiety, the acheivement of dominance over psychological forces which threaten our precious control.” He insisted that the artist must have “a strong ego, mastering and ordering the instinctual urges through giving them the outlet of an acceptable shape.”
In comics it is normally the super-villains (even more often half-man, half-animal) who play the role of the unfettered ego, destroying the universe or taking over the world, and who can only be stopped by one who is similarly split between human and supernatural forces, our super hero. In the latter half of the 20th century, global warming, nuclear science, and other noxious aspects of human society have been shown to be far more destructive to our lives than natural forces in the ancient world, and so the role of the mythic hero is often to remind us of our connection to nature, and the precarious balance we must maintain on the planet in order to survive.


28 Apr. 2008

Rip Current - Part 4

Posted by alex under Rip Current | 6 Comments »

Rip Current is a story about a world covered in water (mostly) and as such the characters move about in vehicles which are amphibious.  They can hover in the air as well as move about under water. Unfortunately for me, (you’ll know what I mean if you read my last post about being stranded with a seized outboard last week) these vehicles don’t exist yet. As such they had to be designed and drawn in such a way as to be both realistic and beleivable. These vehicles are crucial to the telling of the story, so Page X, the first page of the comic that the art team produces, had to contain the main characters in the story, and these vehicles. Patricio Plaza, who is the penciller for Rip Current designed the vehicles or “pods” to show their function, making them streamlined and futuristic, and I think they are quite beleivable. They also had to stand out from the mostly blue, water and sky in the background  and since they are used to patrol the waters around the island fortress, they are given a bit of “coastguard ” orange as well as siver chrome. We got alot of great feedback from people on the pinup art and for those who requested more here is page X in it’s finished state plus for you process junkies, Patricio’s pencils, Christian’s inks and Aya’s colours without Ed’ s lettering.

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15 Apr. 2008

Rip Current Pt. 3

Posted by alex under Rip Current | 3 Comments »

I’d like to let everyone know about a great website and current project that I’m really excited about, and that is the thirty days project over at thirtydaysproject.com. Artists, writers and musicians from around the world post a drawing, or a painting, a song, or whatever once a day for the whole month of April. This is the third year that this project has been running and about 15 - 20 artists are participating inclding myself and the colorist on Rip Current, Aya Ikeda-Barry. Go check it out!

This week, Rip current  is about 10% done, pinup and page x fully coloured and rendered, 3 pages of pencils and another page of inks completed and approved, so things are moving quickly on this book.  Also please check out the Rip Current fan art posted in the z2H galleries by Sturstein.


8 Apr. 2008

Rip Current -pt.2

Posted by alex under Rip Current | 12 Comments »

According to A Sense of Order, by E.H. Gombrich, “-happiness is found between Boredom and Confusion. ” That is to say, too much of the familiar and our minds cease to perceive the world around us, and if we are surrounded by too much novelty, we lose our bearings and become overwhelmed. The ideal balance is struck when the framework is familiar to us and there is enough variation or assymetrical elements that our minds are stimulated. In this book he is talking specifically about decorative patterns, but I think that this concept, can be applied to comics, or just about any visual medium. Perhaps it is obvious, and is similar to that old cliche “variety is the spice of life”, but like eating a  really spicy burrito, if there is too much variety or unfamiliarity, the mind recoils. Sometimes comics try too hard to be different, sacrificing ease of reading and understanding for a bold, innovative style. Im sure we’ve all seen comics which are confusing to read because the panels are all over the place or the font used in printing the text is too hard to read. This can be frustrating for the reader who is trying to follow the story, and they might just give up.

It is important that we as creators try and innovate, and come up with stories that are original, and ways of telling those stories that keep the reader interested and entertained. We strive to find that balance between boredom and confusion.

Well, enough philosophizing. Rip Current, the new comic by Carmen Wright has been busy growing this week again. The pinup page, showing the main characters and setting of the story has been fully rendered and coloured. Page X is a hair away from completion and is looking great. We also have another fully pencilled page, ready for the inks and four others roughed out, so this has been a very encouraging week of production. Everyone on the team is excited to be working on this story, and have been bringing their A game to this project. Here is the pinup for feasting your eyes.

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1 Apr. 2008

Rip Current Part 1

Posted by alex under Rip Current, Uncategorized | 5 Comments »

Water, water everywhere and not a drop to drink…. well maybe just a drop. Well, the team is assembled, the vision has been established and things are starting to get rolling on our latest effort Rip Current. Written by Carmen Wright, Rip Current tells the story of a dystopian future in which most of the land masses on the planet have become submerged under water. In this episode, Lucia Ribeiro’s predictable routine, flying patrol around her island fortress, Cascadia, is forever changed when she comes face-to-face with a mysteriously exotic man swimming deep under the ocean. With ever-increasing raids from neighbouring fortress, Cordova, her mother’s political manoeuvrings and the arrival of new guy in her all-female patrol squad crushing in from all directions, Lucia must decide how far she’s willing to go in order to find this mystery man and what she’ll do when she does.
Here’s some of the character sketches provided by Patricio Plaza, who will be pencilling the story.

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The black lines will be inked by Christian Major, AKA Fetternity. The colours will be provided by Aya Ikeda-Barry, Ed Brisson will be lettering Rip Current and I, Alex Cieslik will be editing. Stay tooned for more updates as things progress