Sunday, December 28, 2008

"The Spirit" inspires us to talk femme fatales (AfterEllen.com)

Christmas day is just around the corner, and you know what that means: ribbons, tags, packages, boxes, bags — and the release of half a dozen much-hyped, mega-budget films. Among them is the movie adaptation of Will Eisner's The Spirit. It doesn't have any Nazis, puppies or backward-aging babies, but it promises killer performances from a bevy of women who want nothing more than seduction and destruction.

Scarlett Johansson plays Silken Floss, a frigid vixen; Eva Mendes plays Sand Saref, a conniving jewel thief; and Jaime King plays Lorelei, a phantom siren.

Of course, no superhero's tale would be complete without the quick-witted girl next door. To balance out Spirit's femme fatales is the police commissioner's daughter, Ellen Dolan, played by out actress Sarah Paulson.

Click HERE to Keep Reading!








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Saturday, December 27, 2008

Book Review: The Spirit: The Movie Visual Companion (Parka Blogs)

The Spirit: The Movie Visual Companion

This is a hardcover book with no dust jacket. It's thick and the paperstock is good.

Included are many stories on the production process, Will Eisner's comic panels, behind the scenes photography on set, film stills and movie storyboards. The pages are well laid out and literally soaked with high resolution photos.

Mark Cotta Vaz has provided an in-depth writeup into the production process. The book starts all with a little history of Will Eisner and The Spirit, and goes on to talk about the process of making the movie. There are many interesting things to read, like how the studios negotiated the contract with Will Eisner, the casting of characters, shooting in front of the green screen, shooting different parts of the movies, death and rebirth of The Spirit on the movie and more.

Click HERE to Keep Reading!













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INDEX to MR. MEDIA INTERVIEWS

TV Stars * TV Producers * Movie Stars * Movie Directors, Producers, documentary Filmmakers and Screenwriters * Politicians and Political Writers * Stand-Up Comedians * Health Experts * Magazine Editors * Radio Stars * Bloggers, Podcasters and Web Producers * Novelists * Musicians and Music Journalists * Sexuality Experts * Culture and Society Experts * Food Experts * Biographers, Historians and A.J. Jacobs * Athletes and Sports Experts * Photographers * Journalists * Crime Experts * CEOs and Business Experts * Comic Book Creators * Cartoonists * Will Eisner Co-Workers, Friends and Experts



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Friday, December 19, 2008

So Just How Bad Is “The Spirit”? (Paste Magazine)

The SpiritImage by Strandell via FlickrDec. 11, 2008

I’ve been saying for quite a while that I think the new Frank Miller film “The Spirit” looks just ass awful. Well… in the last two days I’ve had a chance to talk to 2 people who saw it recently. What did they both think?

Well, I think the phrase “disgustingly awful” came up a couple of times with the one person I talked too.

But the other person I talked to didn’t say much about it. They just said 4 words… it wasn’t even a complete sentence. All they said was this:

JOHN: “So how was it?”
FRIEND: “NOT SINCE BATTLEFIELD EARTH…”
JOHN: “Wow”

That is a powerful, non complete sentence phrase right there. Not since Battlefield Earth…

That right there is a phrase you never want associated with your movie.

Click HERE to Keep Reading!










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TV Stars * TV Producers * Movie Stars * Movie Directors, Producers, documentary Filmmakers and Screenwriters * Politicians and Political Writers * Stand-Up Comedians * Health Experts * Magazine Editors * Radio Stars * Bloggers, Podcasters and Web Producers * Novelists * Musicians and Music Journalists * Sexuality Experts * Culture and Society Experts * Food Experts * Biographers, Historians and A.J. Jacobs * Athletes and Sports Experts * Photographers * Journalists * Crime Experts * CEOs and Business Experts * Comic Book Creators * Cartoonists * Will Eisner Co-Workers, Friends and Experts

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Thursday, December 04, 2008

Christmas-oriented TV ad for The Spirit movie















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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

The Spirit is Awesome. Frank Miller's Movie will not be. (Adventures of Comic Book Girl)

Cartoonist Will Eisnerat the Inkpt Awards cere...Will Eisner via WikipediaNov. 2nd, 2008 at 5:30 PM

Whew! Been doing a lot of comic related stuffs lately. Let's see, in order:

I read "The Spirit: Femme Fatales" and some of Darwyn Cooke's The Spirit (they only had the second volume) at books a million, and LOVED IT. Everyone's all "Will Eisner is a genius!" and I'm all "Well, I'll have to check it out" and I did, and he IS.

The stories are just fun. And not the cotton candy type of fun of Superman and Batman stories, but fun like a toffee chocolate bar, light and tasty, yet with crunchy delicious nougats of substance.

Mmm, chocolate...

Anyway, I was saying. I totally loved the trade and bought it. The first thing I noticed about the stories were the art- since I am constantly aspiring to be a half way decent artist- it's so expressive. You can't help but love Denny, because he's always got these wonderful goofy expressions on his face so you can see he's not taking himself seriously at ALL.

Also, the female characters- it was written in the 1940's, so there's some stereotypes and questionable stuff (the scariest one was when Comissioner Dolan was positively gleeful his old battleax of an aunt was in the hands of a convicted wife beater. DudeNotFunny. Though the same story had said aunt drugging innocent men and forcing them into marriage...so ickiness on both sides there) but Will's "femme fatales" are competent, both physically and mentally often the Spirit's equals. You know how in the old stories Catwoman always got completely owned and tricked by Batman (and even in some today?) Well, that never happens to Silk Satin. She's one step ahead of him, and every inch his equal. She doesn't throw herself at him either, like most of the other girls (well, at least not after the first story) Also, her first appearance? She walked in with a bullet in her arm, saying she got in a bit of a scuffle and knifed a guy, and then fishes the bullet out of her arm using a clean razor and some iodine. "There's the little beggar!" If that's not badass, I don't know what is. Satin rocks.

Click HERE to Keep Reading!






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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

New Documentary DVD: Will Eisner, Profession: Cartoonist by Marisa Furtado de Oliveira


Marisa Furtado de Oliveira, a Brazilian documentarian, finally has U.S. distributed for her extremely cool film about the master artist, Will Eisner, Profession: Cartoonist. Here is an exclusive peek at the DVD and box art!

(You can learn more about this film in my 2005 biography, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life, available at Amazon.com!)





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Thursday, October 02, 2008

"That's The Spirit" (David Lemon)

Image by Steve Rhodes via Flickr
"My favourite comic of all time- or at least a tie with Chris Ware's Acme Novelty Library series- is Will Eisner's 'The Spirit'. He may have started off as a slightly generic Dick Tracy-ish character with a hint of Batman, but he soon became a lot more than that. Eisner's beautiful worldless sequences, surreal 'splash' pages and sheer willingness to experiment have influenced everyone from Alan Moore to Frank Miller, so it should be no surprise that the latter is bringing it to the big screen."
— David Lemon writing in his blog post, "That's the Spirit."
Click HERE to Keep Reading!


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Friday, June 20, 2008

Now Hear This! (Reality Break)

Dave Slusher is producing a podcast called "Reality Break" with classic genre interviews he did over the years and launched it this week with a classic: Will Eisner. The telephone interview was recorded in 1998 and is of excellent quality. (I wish my interviews with Will were of this quality, frankly.) The conversation takes place during the release of Kitchen Sink's series of The Spirit: The New Adventures and publication of A Family Matter. It was also the 20th anniversary of A Contract With God.

Interestingly, Slusher asks Will if he coined the term "graphic novel," to wish Will replies, emphatically, "Yes!"



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Friday, June 13, 2008

Will Eisner Program @ Storyopolis, L.A. (The Beat/PW Comics)

Heidi MacDonald's great blog, "The Beat," at PW Comics features coverage of a Will Eisner art display and program held on May 28 at Storyopolis in Los Angeles. Read the report, written by James A. Owen, here.

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Sunday, May 04, 2008

Will Eisner Event Coming to Los Angeles This Month (Editor and Publisher)

By Editor & Publisher Staff

Published: May 02, 2008 1:25 PM ET

NEW YORK "An Evening With the Works of Will Eisner" will be held May 28 at the Storyopolis gallery/store in Los Angeles.

The exhibit marks the 30th anniversary of Eisner's "A Contract With God," which many consider the first "graphic novel."

Eisner (1917-2005) also created the "The Spirit" character, who starred in a popular 16-page comic insert distributed in newspapers from 1940 to 1952. A movie version of "The Spirit" is scheduled for 2009 release.

He was also a legend in the world of comic books, and taught for many years at the School of Visual Arts in New York.

The May 28 event is co-sponsored by Storyopolis, the Association of Booksellers for Children, and the Denis Kitchen Art Agency.

Storyopolis is offering some of Eisner's art for sale.











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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Eisnershpritz, Anyone?

We try to keep as up to date as anyone on the World of Will Eisner here at Will Eisner: A Spirited Life, but even we miss something now and again.

That's why we recommend the "Eisnershpritz" page at the Official Will Eisner Web Site, http://www.willeisner.com. Gary Chaloner does an excellent job as the webmaster. If you've never been, check it out!

Click here to keep reading io9's excellent coverage; don't miss the great comments from readers at the end of the post!











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Sunday, March 30, 2008

THE SPIRIT’s Frank Miller and Eva Mendes in Conversation with MTV News’ Kurt Loder at New York Comic Con



Lionsgate Reveals Poster and Teaser Trailer for Film Adaptation of “THE SPIRIT,” to Be Released on January 16th, 2009



March 28, 2008 01:38 PM

NORWALK, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--New York Comic Con (NYCC) today announced Lionsgate will be at its 2008 event promoting THE SPIRIT, based on the classic comic book series created by Will Eisner and written for the screen and directed by Frank Miller.

At NYCC, production partners Lionsgate and Odd Lot Entertainment will present an exclusive first look at THE SPIRIT on Saturday, April 19 in New York Comic Con's IGN Theater, featuring the world premiere of the film’s teaser trailer. Mr. Miller and Ms. Mendes will be on hand to speak about their respective roles in the upcoming film, which is produced by Deborah Del Prete, Gigi Pritzker and Michael Uslan. Co-CEO of Odd Lot Entertainment Deborah Del Prete and Michael Uslan, President of Comic Book Movies, will also be speaking. MTV News Correspondent Kurt Loder will moderate the panel and the teaser trailer will debut to a global audience on MTV.com later that night in high definition, and on MTV the week of April 21. NYCC will also feature the debut of the film’s first teaser poster, which Mr. Miller and Ms. Mendes will sign in a formal autograph session scheduled for 5:00pm.

New York Comic Con is the second largest popular culture event in the United States and features guests including Neil Gaiman, Mike Mignola, Grant Morrison, and T.M.Revolution.

Frank Miller is an American writer, artist, and director best known for his film noir-style comic book stories. He is one of today’s most widely-recognized and influential graphic novelists. His works include The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City, and 300. Eva Mendes can be seen in films including Training Day, Once Upon A Time in Mexico, Hitch, We Own The Night, Ghost Rider, and this fall’s The Women. She plays Sand Saref in the new film. THE SPIRIT, which debuted in 1940, chronicles the adventures of a masked vigilante working on behalf of the police and is still regarded today for its deep and diverse narratives spanning film noir and crime drama as well as adventure, mystery, horror, comedy and romance.

"New York Comic Con welcomes the legendary Frank Miller with open arms, and we're delighted to have an actress of Ms. Mendes's caliber join us," Show Manager Lance Fensterman said. "It is a true honor to have them with us, and we earnestly thank all our friends at Lionsgate and Odd Lot Entertainment who are making this spectacular event possible."



ABOUT THE SPIRIT:

Adapted from the legendary comic book series created by Will Eisner, THE SPIRIT is a classic action-adventure-romance written for the screen and directed by genre-twister Frank Miller (creator of 300 and Sin City). It is the story of a former rookie cop who returns mysteriously from the dead as the SPIRIT (Gabriel Macht) to fight crime from the shadows of Central City. His arch-enemy, the OCTOPUS (Samuel L. Jackson) has a different mission: he’s going to wipe out Spirit's beloved city as he pursues his own version of immortality. The Spirit tracks this cold-hearted killer from Central City’s rundown warehouses, to the damp catacombs, to the windswept waterfront ... all the while facing a bevy of beautiful women who either want to seduce, love or kill our masked crusader. Surrounding him at every turn are ELLEN DOLAN (Sarah Paulson), the whip-smart girl-next-door; SILKEN FLOSS (Scarlett Johansson), a punk secretary and frigid vixen; PLASTER OF PARIS (Paz Vega), a murderous French nightclub dancer; LORELEI (Jaime King), a phantom siren; and MORGENSTERN (Stana Katic), a sexy young cop. Then of course, there’s SAND SAREF (Eva Mendes), the jewel thief with dangerous curves. She’s the love of his life turned bad. Will he save her or will she kill him? In the vein of Batman Begins and Sin City, THE SPIRIT takes us on a sinister, gut-wrenching ride with a hero who is born, murdered and born again.

THE SPIRIT will be released theatrically on January 16, 2009. More information about THE SPIRIT is available at: http://www.lionsgate.com/thespirit/.

ABOUT NEW YORK COMIC CON:

New York Comic Con is the East Coast's biggest and most exciting popular culture convention. Our show floor plays host to the latest and greatest in comics, graphic novels, anime, manga, video games, toys, movies, and television. Our panels and autograph sessions give fans a chance to interact with their favorite creators. Our screening rooms feature sneak peeks at films and television shows months before they hit either big or small screens. And with dedicated professional hours, New York Comic Con is a market place, bringing together the major players in the entertainment industry. New York Comic Con is the second largest pop culture convention in America and the only one that takes place in the comic book, publishing, media, and licensing capital of the world -- Gotham City. Further information can be found at newyorkcomiccon.com.

ABOUT REED EXHIBITIONS:

The New York Comic Con operated by Reed Exhibitions, the world's leading events organizer. In 2006, Reed brought together over six million industry professionals from around the world generating billions of dollars in business. Today, Reed events are held in 34 countries throughout the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, and organized by 37 fully staffed offices.

Reed organizes a wide range of events, including exhibitions, conferences, congresses, and meetings. Its portfolio of over 460 events serves 52 industry sectors, including aerospace and defense, building and construction, design, electronics, energy, oil and gas, entertainment, food and hospitality, gifts, healthcare, IT/telecoms, jewelry, manufacturing, marketing and business services, pharmaceuticals, property, publishing, security, sport and recreation, transport and logistics, and travel.

Working closely with professional bodies, trade associations, and government departments, Reed ensures that each and every event is targeted and relevant to industry needs. As a result, many Reed events are market leaders in their field.

Reed Exhibitions is part of Reed Elsevier Group plc, a FTSE-100 company and world-leading publisher and information provider. In 2005, Reed Elsevier made adjusted profit before taxation of £1,002 million on turnover of £5,166 million.
Contacts

New York Comic Con
Roger Bilheimer, 203-966-0792
or
Lionsgate
Stacey Mooradian, 310-255-4921
smooradian@lionsgate.com


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Wednesday, February 13, 2008

New Eisner Book: "Will Eisner and PS Magazine" by Paul Fitzgerald


Will Eisner and PS Magazine
By Paul E. Fitzgerald

Paperback: $29.99
Ages, 16 and up
ISBN #1-932563-01-6
320 pages, color, 9" x 12"
Available May/2008

Here's the first penetrating, full look at Will Eisner's main body of work—strips, covers, illustrations and design for PS Magazine—produced in a 21-year period between his memorable and historic run of The Spirit and publication of his acclaimed first graphic novel, A Contract With God, in 1978. Fitzgerald was the magazine's first managing editor, and weaves together parallel stories—Eisner as an artist in expansive change, and the U.S. Army's daringly innovative publication that moved from early perilous survival and bureaucratic brinkmanship to 57 years (and still going) of recognition as a sweepingly successful communications pacesetter.

The author's knowledge of PS operations and challenges, production techniques, and personalities, coupled with his ongoing personal and professional friendship with Eisner from 1953 until the artist's death in 2005, provides a unique and close-up look at the "middle period" of Eisner's creative life. The Eisner shop reflected here included Chuck Kramer, Dan Zolnerowich, Mike Ploog, Murphy Anderson, Dan Spiegle, Alfredo Alcala, and Joe Kubert (who is the current PS contract artist.)

This large format volume is lavishly illustrated and the crisp, knowledgeable commentary is garnished by interviews with artists and editors who have served (or are serving) PS during its lively, continuing life.























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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Will Eisner: A Spirited Life by Bob Andelman Now Available in Spanish Language Edition!


WILL EISNER: EL ESPÍRITU DE UNA VIDA, de Bob Andelman
Número único
Formato: Rústica con solapas. 15 x 22,4 cm. 376 págs. B/N. 18,00 €
El espíritu de una vida es la biografía oficial de Will Eisner: el maestro de maestros del cómic norteamericano, creador de personajes tan importantes como Spirit y precursor de un concepto que hoy en día marca tendencias en el mundo del cómic: la novela gráfica para adultos.


WILL EISNER: EL ESPÍRITU DE UNA VIDA, by Bob Andelman
Number one
Format: Paperback( jacketed).
15 x 22.4 cm.
376 pages.
Black and White.
18.00 euros
By Norma Editorial (Spain)
Due to be shipped in February 2008

WILL EISNER: EL ESPÍRITU DE UNA VIDA is the official biography of Will Eisner: the master of the masters of American comics, the creator of characters such as Spirit and precursor of the concept that today is the main trend in the world of comics: graphic novel for adults .

Norma is a wonderful publisher and I'm delighted to be associated with it! - Bob Andelman




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Monday, October 22, 2007

AFF Review: Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist

by Jette Kernion
Oct 21st 2007 11:05AM



I'm not a comic-book reader, so I didn't know much about the subject of Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist before seeing the documentary at Austin Film Festival. I knew he was the creator of The Spirit, a comic-book series that Frank Miller is adapting into a feature film ... and that's about all I knew. Fortunately, the documentary filled in many of the blanks for me about Eisner and provided some interesting details about the artist's life.

Eisner is credited for being one of the pioneers in the comic-book form -- as the film's title indicates, he believed in making the comics sequential, giving them an ongoing storyline, which was not standard back in the 1930s when he started work as an artist. His character The Spirit was not a traditional superhero with crazy superpowers, but an ordinary guy in the smallest of masks, who happened to fight crime. During WWII and afterwards, Eisner created military instructional manuals that were drawn in a comic-book style to make them interesting and easy to understand. Later in life, he created more dramatic, personal comic books (A Contract with God) that he dubbed "graphic novels," and paved the way for this type of work to be taken seriously.

One difficulty I had with Portrait of a Sequential Artist was that I didn't always understand the importance and relevance of various interviewers. For example, I had no idea why Michael Chabon was onscreen, having never read The Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. I also wasn't sure why Kurt Vonnegut was interviewed, although he did have good insights and was obviously knowledgeable on the subject. The movie seemed to assume that audience members knew more about the comic-book world than I do; however, that may be a fair assumption, since biopics about comic-book artists may not appeal to a wide demographic. Interestingly, one of the other interview subjects was Frank Miller, who did not mention anything about his desire to make a movie out of The Spirit, but who is obviously a huge fan of Eisner's work.

Click HERE to Keep Reading!






















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Will Eisner: Portrait Of A Sequential Artist - Documentary

From promotional materials for the
Leeds International Film Festival
Nov. 7-18, 2007


Will Eisner: Portrait Of A Sequential Artist
“Before Crumb…Before American Splendor…” In his remarkable 60-year career Eisner arguably did more than any to advance the medium. His egalitarian approach drove comics forward, from weekly strip (The Spirit, 1940) to the development of the graphic novel (A Contract With God, 1978). Made in collaboration with Eisner and his wife Ann, commentary on the great man comes from luminaries such as Art Spiegelman, Jack Kirby, Stan Lee, Neil Gaiman, Frank Miller, and novelists Michael Chabon and Kurt Vonnegut.

Carriageworks Main Auditorium
4.45pm

Sunday 11th November


Box Office: 0113 224 3801

City Centre Box Office
The Carriageworks Theatre
3 Millennium Square
Leeds LS2 3AD
Mon - Sat 10am-8pm

For more information click HERE:






















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Sunday, October 21, 2007

Will Eisner Book Giveaway!


www.WillEisner.com, the official website of comics legend Will Eisner, is giving away 20 copies of the Will Eisner Retrospective catalogue produced by the Museum Of Comic and Cartoon Art (MOCCA), New York City in 2005. The Will Eisner Estate recently uncovered copies of this unique Eisner publication and have kindly made the books available.

Profusely illustrated and containing articles by Peter Livingston Meyer, N.C. Christopher Couch ( The Will Eisner Companion ) and with an introduction by DC Comics' Paul Levitz (publisher of The Spirit comic), the 74-page Will Eisner Retrospective catalogue is a must-have for Eisner enthusiasts.

To be included in the lottery for one of these collector's items, simply register for the Eisner Forums here:

http://willeisner.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=148#148

... (and post a message to confirm) -- it's that easy. Current forum members will automatically be included. The winners will be announced on the forum, December 1, 2007 and contacted via email for their mailing addresses to have their Will Eisner Retrospective sent to them.

About www.WillEisner.com:
www.WillEisner.com is the official web site of Will Eisner and Will Eisner Studios, Inc. The site features an RSS-enabled news feed with all the latest Eisner-related news and information on projects such as Will Eisner's The Spirit feature film currently in production (written & directed by Frank Miller) and the multiple award-winning comic series The Spirit written and illustrated by Darwyn Cooke and published by DC Comics. The site features biographical information and in-depth areas on his creations The Spirit and John Law as well as Eisner's classic library of graphic novels currently being published by W.W. Norton, including A Contract with God, The Dreamer, Last Day in Vietnam and The Plot.

Will Eisner's latest hardcover collection Life, in Pictures is out now.






















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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

The Story Behind DC's New "The Spirit Comic Logo


Todd Klein - who apparently specializes in this - does a fascinating dissection of both the new "Spirit" logo on the DC comic book and a look back at some of Will Eisner's classics from way back.


For a fun read, click here!





















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Friday, September 14, 2007

Sergio Aragones is New Writer on DC's "The Spirit" Comic

"What amazed me was the fact (Will Eisner) could tell a complete story in seven pages. I would skip school to read the magazine before, and then run back to class."

-- Sergio Aragones at Baltimore Comic Con '07, where it was announced that he will replace Darwyn Cooke as the new writer of DC's "Will Eisner's The Spirit" monthly comic book. (A new artist has not yet been announced.) Read the rest of the story at Newsarama!
























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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

WHOA! Eva Mendes & Scarlett Johansson Join The Spirit Movie!

Posted: Tue., Aug. 21, 2007, 4:55pm PT

Mendes gets in Frank Miller's 'Spirit'
Actress joins Johansson, Jackson in cast

By DAVE MCNARY

Eva Mendes will round out the cast for Frank Miller's "The Spirit," joining Scarlett Johansson, Samuel L. Jackson and Gabriel Macht.

Pic, produced by Lionsgate and Odd Lot, will begin lensing in October at New Mexico's Albuquerque Studios.

Miller wrote the script and will direct the movie, which marks the start of a multipic pact under which Lionsgate and Odd Lot Entertainment will co-finance and co-produce together. Story centers on a rookie cop who fakes his own death so he can fight crime from the shadows.

Lionsgate has domestic and U.K. rights and is scheduled to release the film in 2009.

Odd Lot's Deborah Del Prete and Gigi Pritzker will produce along with Michael Uslan of Batfilm Prods; Batfilm co-founder Benjamin Melniker and Steve Maier are exec producers. Odd Lot's Linda McDonough and Batfilm's F.J. DeSanto co-produce.

Mendes was most recently in Columbia's "Ghost Rider" and will be seen next in Columbia's "We Own the Night." She's currently filming Picturehouse's "The Women."

Read the full article at:
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117970627.html

© 2007 Reed Business Information





















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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Rare Find: Australian edition of The Spirit comic



The blogger at "20th Century Danny Boy" came upon this unexpected gem, an Australian edition of The Spirit comic book.





















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Wednesday, June 13, 2007

MTV: Stupid "Spirit" Headline of the Year

'300' Scribe Frank Miller And Samuel L. Jackson Together: Smells Like Team 'Spirit'

Actor confirms exclusively to MTV News that he'll play villain in comics demigod's flick based on newspaper strip.

UNIVERSAL CITY, California — He reinvented Daredevil, breathed new life into the Dark Knight, took audiences down the mean streets of Sin City and, with "300," even managed to make historical fiction seem badass. But the biggest reinvention of Frank Miller's career may wind up being his own, when the comics demigod transforms himself into a big-budget director with "The Spirit," an adaptation of Will Eisner's eponymous newspaper strip.

"I'm flying solo," he said at Sunday's MTV Movie Awards (see "MTV Movie Awards Get Dirty: Baron Cohen, Ferrell Mash; Rihanna Sizzles; Silverman Says 'Bleep!' "). "It's a different kind of material [for me]."

It is and it isn't. The Spirit, a.k.a. Denny Colt, is a masked vigilante who, like Batman, fights crime with the blessing of the city's police. Unlike, say, "Sin City," however, "The Spirit" is known not just for its take on crime drama and film noir, but for genre-twisting forays into mystery, horror and romance.

While the end result may look unfamiliar, the process will be the same, Miller revealed, telling MTV News that he plans to shoot with the same green-screen technology he learned from Robert Rodriguez on "Sin City" (for which he was credited as a co-director) and from Zack Snyder on "300" (see " '300' Trivia: Albino Giants, Sequel Chances — And Sienna Miller")

"It will be similar [to 'Sin City' and '300'] in terms of using the expanding technology that was used in those movies [to visualize the comic world]," Miller said. "But I hope to take things a step further, of course."

And Samuel L. Jackson will be there to help Miller take that next step, the actor confirmed exclusively to MTV News on Friday (June 8).

When asked if his involvement as the flick's villain, Octopus, was a done deal, he said, "As far as I'm concerned it is. I'm looking forward to it. Yeah, I'm anxious to find out what [Miller] wants me to look like, how we want to do it and when we want to start."

Miller told MTV News at the Movie Awards that the badass actor was his top choice to play the bad guy. "I would love for Jackson to be the Octopus in the movie, the chief villain," he said.

Miller will begin lensing the flick sometime later this year.

"It's coming together really well — the script's all written, and we're going to get working on storyboarding and all the preproduction," he said, indicating that many of the shots in the movie will be taken directly from Eisner's comic panels. "I'm going to be doing a lot of [supplemental] drawing in the next few months."

[This story was originally published at 6:00 a.m. ET on 6.8.2007]






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Tuesday, June 05, 2007

GREG BURGAS: Not a Fan of Cooke's Spirit


Why I’m not the biggest fan of
Darwyn Cooke’s version of The Spirit


Posted by Greg Burgas, Tuesday, June 5th, 2007 12:05 PM

Of course, the latest issue was very good, so maybe this will be a moot point soon, but still.

I have not been the biggest fan of DC’s latest incarnation of Will Eisner’s seminal creation, despite the fact that it’s being written and drawn by Darwyn Cooke, who is an immense talent. This has led people to comment that I am an idiot, have no taste, prefer having sex with goats rather than humans, worship at the altar of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin, and vote Republican. Who knew one little comic book could engender such passion? However, despite my dissatisfaction with the comic, I could never really pinpoint why I didn’t take it home, slip under the covers of my bed, and do to it what I apparently do to goats, which is what fans of the book seemingly do. It just seemed like the first five issues were lacking the verve that Cooke has brought to other books he’s done and what I heard the original stories were like. So I went out and bought The Best of The Spirit trade paperback, which is now available at fine bookstores everywhere. And lo, I was not unlike Paul on the road to Damascus - mine eyes were opened, and I understood all the mysteries of the universe. Well, maybe not the mysteries of the universe, but certainly the mysteries of the Spirit. You’ll forgive me if many of you already knew these mysteries, but I’m going to inspect them to show why I have not been as jazzed with Cooke’s version as, apparently, I ought to be if I want to call myself a comics nerd and an American.

CLICK HERE TO KEEP READING!!!


























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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

ComicBookResources.com: Cooke's Spirit Reviewed


COOKE BRINGS "THE SPIRIT"

BACK TO LIFE


by Jeffrey Renaud

Contributing Writer

Posted: May 9, 2007


"The Spirit" #6, in stores May 19


Re-imaging a Will Eisner comic book hero is the equivalent of telling Zeus you may want to take another stab at Perseus and yet Darwyn Cooke stood up and took the challenge.


Now five issues into his run on “The Spirit,” CBR News spoke with Cooke about what it is that drew the critically acclaimed creator to the title and why he loves both writing and drawing Denny Colt in a monthly series.


“It is fun working on 'The Spirit' because Denny Colt is human,” explained Cooke. “His world is very real to me, in a romantic sort of way. Without the burden of a universe of continuity, and without superpowers, characterization becomes king. It is fun to develop the new characters like Ginger Coffee and Hussein Hussein, and it has been fun to see how easily the strip translates to today's world. I believe it's a testament to the timeless quality of the world Will created.”


KEEP READING!







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Thursday, May 03, 2007

IGN: Eisner Doc Review

Tribeca 07: Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist

First Look Review: A sequential biographical film.


by Scott Collura


May 2, 2007 - Spider-Man has been a big presence at the Tribeca Film Festival this year, but he's not the only comics legend who is getting the spotlight (bat-light?) aimed at him at the 2007 fest. The late, great Will Eisner -- writer, artist and trendsetter of the comic book industry -- is also in evidence in a documentary about the man's life and his influence on the art form.


The film, directed by Andrew D. Cooke, utilizes a variety of older interview footage with the man himself (Eisner died in 2005), audiotapes recorded by Eisner of his chats with other comics professionals (many from his era), home movie footage, artwork from Eisner's comic strips and elsewhere, and plenty of talking head interviews with well-known comic artists, writers, and historians. In fact, Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist has all the ingredients of a great documentary. So why does it fall flat?


Portrait takes a more or less linear approach to detailing Eisner's life, beginning with the tale of how his father was an apprentice painter in Europe who eventually wound up in New York. The old man would impart his talent on to his son, of course, though Eisner's mother wanted her boy to go into a trade where he could make money. As the film points out, Eisner would manage to balance those two impulses quite handily during the course of his career.



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VARIETY: Frank Miller's "300" Brings "The Spirit" to Life

"The best example of the '300' effect comes from Odd Lot Entertainment. The shingle has been deluged with calls from distribs interested in a project it's been developing with the creator of "300": 'The Spirit,' to be directed by Miller, who adapts from Will Eisner's graphic novel about a detective fighting to prevent the release of a substance that will leave people in suspended animation.


"Odd Lot Intl. will be selling the title at Cannes. 'Because of "300," we think we've got a great shot with "The Spirit,"' says Brian O'Shea, Odd Lot's exec VP of worldwide distribution. 'As we get ready for Cannes, we're really pitching it as being in the same vein as "300." There's nothing out there like this.'"


-- Excerpt from story in Variety, "Ripple effect of '300' hits Cannes: Film's overseas B.O. bulks up genre's prospects" by Dave McNary.


























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Monday, April 30, 2007

DC Comics You Should Be Reading: The Spirit

"The occasional dreamy look of The Spirit has been replaced with a more conventional comic book feel, and Cooke's action-oriented plots haven't yet suggested anything as curious as "The Story of Gerhard Shnobble" or "The Story of Rat-Tat the Machine Gun". That said, as Frank Miller peddles a rated-R, Sin City style "Spirit" to movie producers, Cooke is modernizing The Spirit with an eye on how this might work on the big screen..."

-- Read the rest of Ryan's review at FilmFodder.com!

















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Sunday, April 29, 2007

Huffington Post Reviews Eisner Documentary: Thumbs Up!


Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist Paints an Interesting Story

By Joel Keller
The Huffington Post

(Excerpt) Director Andrew D. Cooke does a good job of mixing talking-head interviews -- with the likes of Jules Feiffer, who worked on "The Spirit," Spiegelman, Miller, Michael Chabon, and even the late Kurt Vonnegut, among other notables of multiple generations -- with audio tape interviews Eisner did in the eighties with the big comic artists of the early 20th century, including Milton Caniff and Harvey Kurtzman.
He also gives non-comic viewers a good indication of what Eisner's work was like, from the brightly-colored, cinematic drawings of "The Spirit," to black-and-white biographical drawings that show how Eisner was able to draw characters that were cartoonish and realistic all at once.

The movie drags in a spot or two, mostly when Eisner and others are exploring why many comic artists from that time period were of Jewish heritage, but a fascinating exploration of Eisner's use of Ebony, a very stereotypical African-American character in "The Spirit," makes up for it. In this day and age of ultra-PC sensitivity, seeing a minstrelized character like Ebony in a mainstream comic is shocking. But Cooke effectively explores the from both sides; Eisner felt he was just going along with the times, while slightly younger and more liberal artists like Feiffer expressed discomfort with having to draw such a character.

The sign of any good documentary is if it makes a person who wasn't a die-hard fan of the subject or genre it's exploring want to learn more. And Portrait does just that. I definitely plan on seeing the movie version of "The Spirit" that Miller is set to direct. And, because of this, I may even read the comic first. That's saying a lot.

READ THE REVIEW IN ITS ENTIRETY HERE

















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Thursday, April 26, 2007

Will Eisner Interview from 2006




Here's a transcript of an interview that Mike Jozic did with Will Eisner on March 7, 2000 for Meanwhile...


Just to whet your appetite, here's Eisner on making movies based on "The Spirit":


JOZIC: The Spirit has been around for a very long time and he seems to be one of the few costume characters that hasn't succumbed to various, and sundry, film adaptations.


EISNER: Not yet, anyway. He's at the threshold of succumbing. [laughs]


JOZIC: Oh, really?


EISNER: Yeah, the people who produced Batman purchased the rights from me about two or three years ago to do a Spirit film. And very candidly, I couldn't care less about film. I'm totally uninterested in film. If they do a good Spirit movie, I won't get the credit for it. If they do a bad one, my status as a writer and a cartoonist, will not be diminished. You will not think any less of me if they put a lousy film out. It's like Shakespeare. There are lousy productions of Shakespeare and there are good ones. It doesn't mitigate the essential character of the man's work.


JOZIC: How do you feel about the few productions that have already been done, like the television movie and ...


EISNER: The television movie left me feeling very sorry for Warner Bros., I felt sad for them. I sent them a condolence note because they spent all this money and came up with a mouse. And I don't mean M-A-U-S. [laughs]


Filmmakers very often don't really, I think, understand the fact that a cartoon strip, cartoon story, or even a book, has a characteristic of its own that, to adapt it into film, requires a great deal of creative application. There are some comics that lend themselves easily...Batman [and] Superman lend themselves easily because they're both circus characters, and circus is very easy to film. But when you try to take something like The Shadow, or even Dick Tracy, both were failures at the box-office.


Warner Bros. made a very honest attempt to be faithful to the character of The Spirit, and that was a mistake. [laughs] But, I must again emphasise that, personally, I couldn't care less about film. I'm not interested in film. I wouldn't be worried about whatever they did with the character because it doesn't really matter.


JOZIC: At the time the TV movie came out, I had never heard of The Spirit before, and that was actually my first exposure to the character.


EISNER: What was your reaction to it?


JOZIC: I don't remember the show, but I remember really enjoying it. And about ten minutes after it was finished, I was on the phone to one of my local comic stores asking if they had any Spirit comics in.


EISNER: Well, that was one of the reasons why I agreed to license that film of The Spirit. At the time, The Spirit was being published by Kitchen Sink and they were in need of anything that would help the circulation of the book. So, I thought that would help them sell a lot of The Spirit. They were doing the book on a regular, continuing, basis.







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Friday, April 06, 2007

Will Eisner Movie: Tribeca Film Festival Schedule

Saturday, March 24, 2007

The Gary Chaloner Interview: Will Eisner's John Law





Gary Chaloner, artist and writer of Will Eisner's John Law



Gary Chaloner is an award-winning artist and writer who is currently creating and publishing the new adventures of Will Eisner’s John Law.


I interviewed Chaloner via email the first time around, for my biography of Will Eisner, A Spirited Life. But that was when John Law had yet to be published. Now that it’s out and building an audience for one of Eisner’s lesser known characters, I thought it would be fun to talk to him again.


He suggested we do it via Skype, the free Internet phone service; being a new technology junkie, I had to say yes. So Gary has the dubious honor of being the first person interviewed in this series via podcast. The audio quality isn't perfect; the hum/buzz you'll hear in the background is from my computer. Sorry about that, audiophiles.


This interview combines the stories behind Chaloner's Eisner-related work as well as a sneak peek (below) at his upcoming work. Eisner fans will also be excited to learn how many more characters from Eisner's early work are returning to action in Chaloner's John Law series.


First, let me tell you a little more about Chaloner:


He’s an Australian-born creator who began his career as a publisher of his own work and the work of other Australian creators through his own imprint Cyclone Comics. Cyclone published a range of popular comic books in the 1980s and 1990s with titles as diverse as The Jackaroo, The Southern Squadron, Dark Nebula, GI Joe Australia, Flash Damingo and CCQ (Cyclone Comics Quarterly).


Gary's overseas work includes US editions of The Jackaroo and The Southern Squadron; a very odd issue of The Badger with Mike Baron; the award-winning Planet of the Apes: Urchak's Folly; The Olympians, a two-issue prestige series for Marvel/Epic Comics; editorial and creative duties on Dark Horse Down Under for Dark Horse Comics — this series featured the first US appearance of Gary's creation "Morton Stone, Undertaker."


His current creator-owned projects include the black comedy of Morton Stone: Undertaker; Red Kelso, a pulp-inspired adventure series; and new adventures of The Jackaroo.


Chaloner worked closely with Will Eisner in the development and relaunch of Will Eisner's John Law both online and in print through IDW Publishing.


The online series recently left ModernTales.com and set up home at http://johnlaw.us.com. You can browse through the archives for free there and read more about Law and his new adventures. As a bonus, Chaloner is uploading original golden age stories featuring Lady Luck and Mr. Mystic. These stories first ran as backups in The Spirit Section and will be remastered and colored for online viewing. Hopefully, these classic stories will be collected for print at a later stage.


In the 2005 Ledger Awards (Australian Comic Industry Awards), Will Eisner's John Law received several awards including "International Title of the Year" and "Single Issue or Story of the Year." Chaloner was also awarded the "Ledger of Honour" (a Hall of Fame award) and received industry awards for "Achievement of the Year," "Cover Artist of the Year" and "Inker of the Year."


Chaloner is also redesigning and moderning the official Will Eisner web site.


Click here to listen in on my conversation with Gary Chaloner.


Or read the transcript below.




A future John Law cover, featuring Mr. Mystic at the top and Melba,
"Private Eye-ful" another unpublished Eisner creation.



BOB ANDELMAN: Gary, let’s jump in here. Tell us a little bit about John Law and how and when Will Eisner created it.


GARY CHALONER: Well, hello to everyone. Hi, Bob.


John Law was devised and created by Will back in the mid to late ‘40s. The Spirit was going very well, and Will wanted to expand his range of publications on the newsstand. He developed several titles, one of them being the John Law character, but the first one that he released I think was Baseball Comics, and it didn’t go as well as he would have liked, so the other ideas that he had were put on the shelf for a while.


Will, being the frugal person that he was, utilized (inaudible) more artwork and converted it into Spirit stories. So all those stories didn’t see print as Spirit stories until about 1950. So the John Law material was a fully formed concept that he had been thinking about quite a while, for several years, and so that whole idea was a bit stillborn, so when the opportunity came along when I talked to Will and Denis Kitchen about developing the series wasn’t just a dead concept, it was a fully developed, ready-to-go set of characters in the universe that Will had already worked on and established, so that was irresistible.












ANDELMAN: Was John Law ever published in the ‘50s or not?


CHALONER: No, it was not. All of the work was adapted and absorbed into the Spirit universe. John Law in his own environment wasn’t published until the ‘80s in the Eclipse Comics edition.


ANDELMAN: That was Dean Mullaney and Cat Yronwode.


CHALONER: That’s correct. Yes. What I did there was, they stripped back a lot of the paste overs and art changes that Will had made to the original art to reveal the original John Law art underneath.


ANDELMAN: How did you first hear of John Law?


CHALONER: Well, being an Eisner reader for many years and bumping into a lot of the publications that Kitchen Sink first released and that other publications had written about Will Eisner, if you learn a bit about The Spirit, you also learn about these aborted characters that Will tried to publish back in the ‘40s. The name “John Law” keeps on popping up as this parallel Spirit character, so it was only through reading about Will’s past and the different things that he tried in the ‘40s that this recurring name “John Law” and the characters surround him, like Nubbin, The Shoeshine Boy, and Melba, Girl Detective, and a few other characters, had always stuck in the back of my mind as something that, why doesn’t someone do something with these things.





A future John Law cover featuring Law and Melba, in a situation inspired by an earlier Eisner piece.


ANDELMAN: Whose idea was it that you do this? Was it yours, or was it Denis’? Was it Will?


CHALONER: It was pretty much my idea. I approached Denis about it. This is after The Spirit: The New Adventures was cancelled, and I had to produce a story for that, and this was also at a time when Kitchen Sink Press had gone belly up. Denis was going through a few hard times himself, and I had gotten in touch with him, and the relationship developed from there. Well, if The New Adventures had gone beyond issue No. 8, I had to do something else, and the John Law character was always at the back of my mind for me to develop.


ANDELMAN: When you did work for The Spirit: The New Adventures, you completed a story that didn’t see print.


CHALONER: That’s right. That was going to be in issue nine, and the series ended with issue No. 8.


ANDELMAN: And, of course, one of the great ironies here is that, and you have kind of hinted at it, is that Will had done John Law in the late ‘40s or early ‘50s, I guess late ‘40s, and when that did not take off, he adapted the John Law story into The Spirit, because he never wasted anything, and then you, following that same thing many years later, you did a Spirit story, and you adapted it to John Law.


CHALONER: I thought it was perfect. The planets were in alignment, really.


ANDELMAN: How hard did you have to convince Will to let this happen?


CHALONER: Not hard at all, really, not from the creative side. Interestingly, as a John Law project, it wasn’t always intended to initially be presented on the web, and that side of the project interested Will a lot. He was used to emailing and things like that, but he wasn’t really the full expert on web comics and how to deliver something on the Net, so it was all new technology to him. There was a steep learning curve for him as far as being part and parcel of the present Law stories.





Another future John Law cover, this time featuring another Eisner creation, Lady Luck. Luck and Mystic feature in the new Law adventures.


ANDELMAN: Will was not savvy as far as the Internet went. How did you explain to him the business model behind this?


CHALONER: I did the best I could based on the business models that were around at the time, and at the time, Modern Tales was just starting and had been around for several months. It had the business model of the subscription base, where people paid “X” amount of dollars a month or a year to get access to the comics behind the subscriber wall. That kind of logic Will could understand quite easily, the whole idea of magazines having subscriber lists and things like that. It was quite easy for him to understand the logic behind the business of the Internet. The actual technical side of how to, of scanning artwork, color, you had to upload it to the site, that kind of stuff was initially probably a bit of a struggle for him, but he wasn’t a stupid man, so he caught on real quick.


ANDELMAN: That’s interesting you mention that. So you are drawing by hand on paper as opposed to using, you are not drawing right into the computer?


CHALONER: No. I color or graytone on the computer, but everything else is traditionally done.


ANDELMAN: How interesting. I have wondered about that when I have seen the work.


CHALONER: Yes, yes.


ANDELMAN: Did Will give you any particular input as you were getting started on what he liked, what he didn’t like?


CHALONER: Oh, yes, he did, actually. He was very hands-off as far as allowing me to do what I wanted, how I wanted it, but my ideas very much fitted with what he wanted, anyway, so we were running parallel with our thinking. There were several times where he did suggest storytelling changes as far as the structure of the story, panel layouts, visual storytelling, things like that, but the overall direction of the strip, the way the setting for the series, what the characters were all about, he basically left that up to me. I was always using his guidelines from the original 1940s stories.


ANDELMAN: I remember Alan Moore telling me that when he did the story that he did for The Spirit: The New Adventures, that Will told Alan not to make The Spirit a drug addict, among other things. And Alan, of course, was like, “What, me? I wouldn’t do that!” What rules did he lay down for John Law with you?


CHALONER: The one that stands out above all else was that he said Law is human. That’s about the only thing that he said that was really the spirit of Law, excuse the pun. He didn’t want the stories to go off into any kind of ridiculous directions, and he just said, “Keep the stories human.”





Sketch by Chaloner of Harry Carey, another early Eisner creation
that will feature in the new John Law adventures.



ANDELMAN: For someone who hasn’t seen John Law, first of all, how would you describe the difference between John Law and the Spirit?


CHALONER: Well, I would say that the John Law character as a man is a lot more serious than Denny Colt in the Spirit character, so the stories tend to reflect that. There is still humor in there with characters like Nubbin The Shoeshine Boy and several of the other supporting cast members, but the character of John Law himself is a little more serious and less flippant than Denny Colt in The Spirit. This isn’t something that I necessarily planned, actually, because most of my other work I consider to have a certain amount of likeness about it and a sense of humor about it. It’s just when the stories have been produced with the John Law that the stories are draped with a sense of drama instead of humor, or that’s the way I see it, anyway.


ANDELMAN: Both characters have sidekicks, however.


CHALONER: Yes. A favorite of Will’s.


ANDELMAN: Yes. Now, I gather that Nubbin is less controversial than Ebony?


CHALONER: Well, Nubbin’s a drug addict and male prostitute.
No, he’s not. He’s not! He walks the street at night. Nubbin’s your dyed-in-the-wool sidekick, comedy relief, a very resourceful street kid and orphan who attaches himself to John Law and also being a boy hanging around a large metropolitan police station, there’s plenty of shoes to shine for his business. So he’s very smart and resourceful as well.












ANDELMAN: And how does John Law do with the ladies?


CHALONER: Well, he’s had a rough history with the ladies, which is all reflected in stories that are being told, so he has had several loves of his life, and he is still trying to find “miss right,” which I actually do have planned out. A great love of his life is coming into his life very shortly, actually. So he has had a rough past, but he is going to have a fairly sweet future.





Sketch by Chaloner of "Hammer" Donovan, star of an early 1938 Eisner
story. Donovan will feature in the new John Law adventures.



ANDELMAN: The series began on Modern Tales online, but it has kind of evolved since then, has it not?


CHALONER: Yes, it has. Yeah. The core of the delivery system for the stories will always be the web, and a new part of that is going to be that I am redesigning the John Law website together with the new Will Eisner.com website, as well, so it will be a functioning part of the new Will Eisner site. These stories online will always be the basis of any stories I develop in the future.


ANDELMAN: The John Law stories have also appeared in print since then, too.


CHALONER: Yes, that’s right. Yes. There has been a nice beautiful edition by IDW in December 2004, and it was received very well by critics and fans, and there is a new series that is in development now. The first issue has been released. The rest of the series will be coming along shortly.


ANDELMAN: So it will be a regularly scheduled series in print?


CHALONER: These will be a limited series, so they will be like self-contained stories.


ANDELMAN: Will these be collections from the online, or will these be specially done for print?


CHALONER: Originally, I had planned the materials to be in print exclusive, but with my scheduling at the moment with the Will Eisner site and the workload, I decided to run the material online, and then once that is done, collected in print.


ANDELMAN: I have to ask, because this is something I am always curious about, is the John Law character and the online and the print editions, is it profitable for you to work on?


CHALONER: The online material -- there has always been a huge question on that stuff: how do you make money from the Internet? This is part and parcel of my challenge in developing the Law project online in the way so it will generate a solid income for myself and for the Will Eisner estate. I haven’t found the answers to it yet, but this next phase of the development of the strip will hopefully provide some answers as far as new merchandising, advertising support, and things like that that will help raise more money via the internet.


ANDELMAN: Have you officially licensed the character from the estate, or do you pay them a royalty, or….


CHALONER: I am basically work-for-hire for all intents and purposes. Any monies that are generated, a percentage goes to the estate, and the rest comes to me. I work very closely with different facets of the license for the project with Denis and with Carl Gropper, who is now running the estate. So if there is any facet of the business side of the Law project, it always goes past him first so that I don’t get myself into trouble. We don’t want that.


ANDELMAN: No, we would not want that. Now, you mentioned in the conversation that you are involved with the WillEisner.com site. Tell us a little bit about that. When did you get involved, and what will you be doing there, what are you doing there?


CHALONER: Well, it’s a total overhaul of the site. The web site had been lying dormant for quite a while, and it was, from what I can assume, the first part of a larger project from the people that had first established the site for Will. Will, of course, is one of the hugest names in comics. Therefore, my approach to his site was something that reflects his stature and also the amount and body of work that he produced over the years. Now, the Will Eisner Studio as a business entity also has work surrounding or evolving Will Eisner projects going off into the future, so the site will also reflect future projects like the new Spirit title coming from DC, trade paperbacks and book collections of Will’s work coming out from other publishers. So not only will the site reflect Will’s past legacy of work but also the things that are happening in the future, like John Law, a set of instructional books that Will produced or will have published since his death, and future editions of his old material. So it is a totally expanded site. It will feature forums, it will feature a very expanded library area, it will feature the John Law area, as well, so it will be a highly expanded and a lot more interactive site to reflect Will’s legacy.


ANDELMAN: Gary, before we kind of wrap up, what else are you working on these days?


CHALONER: Well, on the short term, I am just really concentrating on the John Law project and getting the Will Eisner site finished. They are my two major things at the moment, and just last weekend, I sat down and reviewed my notes for John Law, and I think that will keep me busy for the next five or ten years if things go well for the project. I do have a couple of individual projects, personal projects on the side, but they really do have to take a back seat to the John Law project at the moment. There is a Jackaroo series which might be recollected for the American market. I am waiting just to get some contracts in line for that. The Undertaker character might be seeing some sort of life online over the next months, as well, but that will only happen if my scheduling works out with the Law project.


ANDELMAN: Gary, I am just curious. How different or in what ways is the Australian comics market different from the American market?


CHALONER: Well, it has no backbone structure of a direct market distribution system, for a start, so a lot of the publishers down here, they have to decide whether they are going to self-publish and self-distribute through the internet, whether they hook into the overseas distribution system, like Diamond, or whether they think up some other magazine marketing distribution method for their title, so it has always been a bit of a hard thing down here. I have also noticed over the last 20, 30 years of Australian comics that the creative voice is quite a strong one, and the voice is one of, what’s the word I am looking for? There isn’t a superhero voice down here, there isn’t a crime voice. There are so many different subjects and variety of material being produced down here that you could pick 20 different comics and not two of them be the same. It’s total diversity. I think that is the word I am looking for. The subject matter down here is so diverse, and that is its strength as well as its weakness, because you can’t really get a pool of marketing together with several titles working together to help market themselves.





Sketch by Chaloner of a new character, Mango Belle... a Mae West style
bombshell who shakes up Law's life in the new adventures.



ANDELMAN: Do you think that there will ever be an Australian title that will break through the American market?


CHALONER: Yeah, I think there will be, actually. There are some amazing comics being produced by Australians down here, and there are a lot of Australian creators working big time over in the States at the moment, so again, there are two ways where Australian creators can go. They can be a creative force, like Platinum Brick, which is absolutely amazing. That is a web-based comic at the moment, Platinumbrick.com, but it also produces trade paperback collections on the web, relying heavily on Internet presence and word of mouth because it’s such a good comic.


ANDELMAN: Well, Gary, you have been very gracious and kind with your time and, of course, your technical know-how, without which we would not have gotten this far, and only you and I will know how difficult this has been.


CHALONER: This is true. I am standing on my roof holding the TV antenna and my left foot out!


ANDELMAN: I think we all have a good picture of that now. Maybe you could get your wife to snap a picture of that, and we could put that up on the web site.


CHALONER: Wait until I get some clothes on.


ANDELMAN: Now you’ve ruined the whole thing. Gary, thank you very, very much for your time.


CHALONER: It’s been a pleasure.



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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Will Eisner Exhibit to Ohio State University



By E&P Staff


Published: March 15, 2007 4:00 PM ET


NEW YORK An exhibit called "Will Eisner: Storyteller" will be held at Ohio State University's Cartoon Research Library from April 2 to June 8. Eisner (1917-2005) created the character of "The Spirit," who starred in a popular 16-page comic insert distributed in newspapers from 1940 to 1952. He was also a legend in the world of comic books and graphic novels, and taught for many years at the School of Visual Arts in New York.


On April 19, the Wexner Center for the Arts at Ohio State will host a free pre-release screening of a documentary called "Will Eisner: The Spirit of an Artistic Pioneer."


















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Pete Von Sholly: Frank Miller Goes "300" on The Spirit!


Pete Von Sholly works days as a Hollywood storyboard artist, but nights he's back at the drawing board, cartooning like crazy - heavy emphasis on crazy. He's been sending cartoons to me almost daily for weeks and I surrender to the laughter. If you'd like to see more of his work, check out new postings twice a week at the Twomorrows blog or you can order a bundle of his magazine parodies here.









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Sunday, August 06, 2006

Darwyn Cooke Interview







Darwyn Cooke.







If you’re a fan of Will Eisner’s The Spirit, these are heady days. Frank Miller is writing and directing a big screen adaptation of the character, with production slated to start in Spring 2007. And you’re now a few seconds of scrolling away from a first look at sample pages from Darwyn Cooke’s upcoming monthly Spirit series for DC.


Below, Cooke -- who is writing and drawing The Spirit -- reveals in great and entertaining detail how he was chosen for the assignment. He admits approaching it with trepidation and ultimately accepting the wisdom of Brian Azzarello in his approach to the project.


If you don’t know Darwyn Cooke’s work, check out some of his credits. He got his start in the industry as a Warner Bros. Animation storyboard artist on "The New Batman Adventures" and Batman Beyond: The Movie before accepting his first DC Comics assignment in 2000 with the one-shot, Batman: Ego. Following that, he’s enjoyed a steady stream of work including: Catwoman; Catwoman: Selina’s Big Score; and the six-issue, 384-page epic, DC: The New Frontier. And if you want to read more about Cooke’s non-Spirit projects, surf to Markisan Naso’s Q&A at Silver Bullet Comics; Newsarama interviews from 2002 by Cliff Biggers and 2005; The Critical Eye; and this bibliography at Read Yourself RAW.


But for now, enjoy this peek behind the curtain on the upcoming The Spirit series and the Batman/Spirit one-shot.










Rough pages from DC's upcoming The Spirit
monthly comic book by Darwyn Cooke.






BOB ANDELMAN: Let’s talk about you and The Spirit. How did this project come to you? What was the first that you heard of it?


DARWYN COOKE: The first I actually heard of it was shortly after Will had passed. DC -- actually Mark Chiarello -- contacted me and asked me about whether I had an interest in doing the project. I can remember the day pretty clearly and finding it hard to believe or absorb what he was asking me.


ANDELMAN: What exactly did he say to you?


COOKE: He asked me if I would be interested in doing The Spirit as a monthly project. It’s a remarkable question to be asked, because it’s probably the only question you kind of rule out ever being asked. It’s something you kind of break your heart over when you are 25 and you let it go. So, it was really an incredibly unexpected situation, especially considering the fact that Will had just passed on. It wasn’t until I sort of had it explained to me that this had been in the works for quite a while, and they had discussed it at length. It was something that Will had squared up before he went in for the operation, because he wanted to have certain things in order, I suppose.


I will be quite honest: I remember the only thing that mattered about this to me was that Will approved of the idea and that it was something he wanted done. Denis Kitchen is my touchstone in regard to anything like that.


ANDELMAN: It’s amazing that no one had been asked in over fifty years if they wanted to do an ongoing Spirit continuity.


COOKE: Yeah. Which explains the horror and exhilaration I felt at the time the project was offered.








A promo from DC's upcoming The Spirit
monthly comic book by Darwyn Cooke.






ANDELMAN: Where does The Spirit or Eisner’s work fit into your comics background? I have read some interviews and some stories on you, and prior to 2005 San Diego, I don’t recall that I actually saw it come up in anything.


COOKE: As far as Eisner?


ANDELMAN: Yeah. Your background and your interests, influence, that kind of thing.


COOKE: It is interesting, because I think everybody who is consumed by storytelling within this medium has had some profound schooling from Will, and I have never had the opportunity to express that in a manner I’d find comfortable. I have basically been doing work for hire during the time that I have been in comics, and I have never been able to slot Will into that category. I think to a great degree I guess I never felt that it would be appropriate, you know? “Well, the way I framed things in Catwoman… I owe it all to Will.” Sounds kind of ridiculous, you know? I don’t think I did it with the other guys that meant a lot to me, like Harvey Kurtzman. But in terms of how Eisner’s work affected me, I came in contact with it -- as I think a lot of guys my age did -- through the Warren magazines. I can remember it was one of those days when I was thirteen, and I was in a comic store, and there was nothing that I wanted to get. On the wall was a copy of Warren’s Spirit magazine. I think it’s number three, where he is running down the elevated track straight at you, and the train is behind him. It’s just one of the most exciting images I have ever seen, and I remember at the time I thought it was too cartoony for my taste, because I was thirteen. I liked Neal Adams and that type or work, but I kept coming back to look at this thing and eventually bought one of them. From then on in, I just tracked them down one by one.
























ANDELMAN: It really stood out. If you were thirteen at the time, I am going to guess that we are pretty close in age. I am 45.


COOKE: I’m 43.


ANDELMAN: So we are pretty close in age, and I remember seeing it on the newsstand in the magazine section and thinking, “What is that?” Not having the history or being too young for the Harvey Comics and having missed it entirely, but yeah, and I remember buying it myself and looking at it and saying, “This is really different than anything else and having to come back to it a few times to really grasp the humor and the difference in the style, the way it was written and drawn.








A promo from DC's upcoming The Spirit
monthly comic book by Darwyn Cooke.






COOKE: When people are asking me about the art, my influences regarding the art, Alex Toth is another giant that I mention, because he is the guy who also took me a while to come to. It is like, God, the ice cubes he drew, were just squares with light blue in them. It was so simple, you know? It took me a while to figure that out, and with Will, it was the same thing. The stuff was so superior on a story level and in terms of the different ways you would come into each and every story, that even at that age, it was beyond any artwork or any narrative string for me. I could see that this thing was being orchestrated by an incredible mind.


ANDELMAN: I can tell you that Will would have found that to be the highest compliment you could have paid him, because what he would say was that he knew the art was good, but what he really appreciated was when people complimented him on the writing and the construction and the structure, so I think he would have enjoyed hearing that from you.


COOKE: I met Will once, at San Diego Comic-Con, a couple years before he passed. It was kind of typical me – somebody I think the world of, and I am marching across the con floor, and I have my head down looking at something, and I bang into this guy, and I almost knocked Will Eisner on his butt! I grabbed him and went, “Oh, my goodness, I’m sorry.” I don’t do the whole, “Oh, Will Eisner, gee whiz!” I just said, “I’m sorry, are you all right?” He said, “I’m fine, I’m fine.” And he looked at my nametag, and I was working for Warner’s Animation at the time, and he said, “You work with those guys?” And I said, “Yes, story department.” And he goes, “Come on,” so we walked together back over to his booth. I don’t know if he would ever have remembered it, but it was one of those blunders I have made, God knows how many times, but we had a wonderful “Will” moment.


ANDELMAN: I was going to say, how great to have that moment now.
























COOKE: I have to tell you, I think that these anonymous moments are the ones that you can really cherish. I mean, if you are not coming at it where people are introducing you as fellow professionals, sometimes you meet by accident, just as people, and that’s pretty cool. We ought to go out and bang into old guys more often.


ANDELMAN: Let’s come back to your conversation with Mark Chiarello. Will passed in January of ‘05. Do you remember about when you and Mark had your first conversation about this?


COOKE: Yeah, I would say it was in February.


ANDELMAN: It really was soon. Okay.


COOKE: It was pretty late in February, and it wasn’t so much, “Let’s get going on this great guns,” it was more -- and this is what I took as the greatest compliment -- that they were interested in making sure that I would be interested and willing to make a real commitment to it, it was going to go. They certainly had no intention of trying to rush something out, and I remember even then that it was important to them that we waited until San Diego, which was Will’s turf, and make the announcement there.


ANDELMAN: Did you say yes immediately, or was there some back and forth?


COOKE: Well, you know, you have a tape recorder going, so I will tell you the truth. I didn’t exactly commit wholeheartedly. I made it very clear that I was incredibly interested and flattered and honored and probably, for sure, but let me sort it out a bit in my head. And I have to be honest with you, for the first day, it really looked like maybe I shouldn’t do it. I was really worried about the notion that everybody would want an homage or a replication in regard to specific things that had already happened. I thought, that’s ridiculous. That’s like refilming Psycho. And I am not going to be the guy who does that. It’s not needed.


ANDELMAN: It also killed the career of the guy who did do it.


COOKE: You know, I think so. Coming off of The New Frontier, I had had a certain game plan in mind, and I started working on an original graphic novel. It’s far more a fairytale, I think. By that, I mean, there’s life and death and giant robots, but it was way more out there for my own sake, something that I was really interested in pursuing. So the idea of coming in to do The Spirit, I don’t know how you could top what Will did, so I didn’t even know how to start with that kind of thing. It also seemed like it would pigeonhole me as a certain type of creator, and I think it’s like, gosh, the stories are there, reprinted now in glorious color. Why would you do it?









Comic Book Artist magazine cover by Darwyn Cooke.








ANDELMAN: Were you familiar at that point with the Kitchen Sink New Adventures?


COOKE: Yes. I really enjoyed them, to be quite honest. It is a very mixed group of creators, but I found it provocative. And I think in that arena, where a couple guys or one guy is coming in to do eight pages in an anthology, they want to hit certain notes that mean something to them about the strip. I think where it got different was the notion that this was going to be an ongoing monthly that has to live and breathe today. That creates a different set of rules. We’ve actually structured it so there are probably going to be specials twice a year where some very carefully selected creative talent does eight-pagers.


ANDELMAN: Oh, great!


COOKE: So you will definitely see that twice a year. The idea is Christmas and in the summer, which is a lot of fun, and it takes the load of two issues a year off my back. I think it is very much in keeping with the spirit -- it’s almost impossible not to say that, the spirit of the strip.


ANDELMAN: You are stuck with that, I think. When it was presented to you, were you offered the monthly as well as the Batman/Spirit one-shot at the same time, or did that come about later?


COOKE: The strategy that DC had put together was to lead off with Batman/Spirit, something that Will apparently had also agreed to.























ANDELMAN: Well, yeah. I wrote about this in A Spirited Life, that he and Denny O’Neil had worked out something, had agreed to do it twenty years ago, so he was game to do it for some time, but it never quite happened.


COOKE: It just didn’t gel then. I think it’s pretty obvious that Batman has the widest possible reach with their audience, so it’s kind of a great way to kick off. But, it’s the only crossover we are going to see at least for a year.


ANDELMAN: I give talks about Will, and at the end I talk about how you are doing the series, and I say, “The Spirit will be meeting Batman, and I would think Superman would be in that universe, but more likely, he will probably be more interested in meeting Lois Lane.”


COOKE: You know, oddly enough, I really want to see if we can just have a series that stands on its own, and just to that end, there is a wealth of new characters being generated in terms of people within Central City, and of course, some bold new villains. It’s very crime-oriented in that regard, what we set up, and I am hoping that we will be able to capture readers with some fresh new ideas in regard to characters as opposed to having to have the Spirit’s plane crash on Amazon Island. Although, let’s get Adam Hughes on the phone; that would be a great comic.


ANDELMAN: So the big question: the Spirit meets Batman, is that in that netherworld like Batman would meet Daredevil, or is there a door opening a crack there to what might happen in two years, where he might meet some other DC characters?


COOKE: Well, with having worked with Jeph Loeb on that, he’s got a real knack to placing things like that, and I think the way he saw it is that, this happened a while ago, it didn’t happen today. He was very interested in its having a very classic feel. So I definitely styled it in that regard. It’s also the best way to kind of mesh both of their worlds, because there is a heck of a cast in that book. I mean, it’s huge.


ANDELMAN: Can you give us any hint of that?


COOKE: Well, you definitely see all the major players in both of their worlds, and we sort of found a novel way to sidestep the old notion of they trade cities and trade villains, which every crossover is, right? I think we have found a way around that that is kind of neat. But I don’t give away stories.


ANDELMAN: No, no, I understand.


COOKE: Yeah, stories are like Christmas morning.


ANDELMAN: So the Batman/Spirit story is forty pages?


COOKE: Yeah.












Pages from DC's upcoming The Spirit
monthly comic book by Darwyn Cooke.






ANDELMAN: Has there ever been a Spirit story that was forty pages, twenty pages even?


COOKE: Well, gosh, I was reading your interview with Denis. It sounds like there is a fifty-pager out there.


ANDELMAN: Oh, the one that Will did.


COOKE: Exactly.


ANDELMAN: Yeah, that’s true. “The Last Story,” or “The Last Night,” what was it called?


COOKE: “The Last Hero.”


ANDELMAN: “The Last Hero,” that’s it.
COOKE: It’s an incredible title. I went nuts when I read about that.


ANDELMAN: Apparently, and I am sure Denis would share it with you, but apparently it was quite awful. Denis had begged Will, and this is in the book, but Denis had begged Will for years to come back to the character and do a story, and Will finally said, “All right, I’ll do it,” and he did it, and Denis had the unfortunate job of saying, “You know what? We can’t publish this.” It’s doesn’t live up to the past that he had done, so they just put it away. Now, in the ongoing, in the monthly, how long will the stories be?


COOKE: The stories are all single-issue stories, which is twenty-two pages, I suppose.


ANDELMAN: So they are full-length stories.


COOKE: Yes.


ANDELMAN: Okay. It’s not three eight-pagers.


COOKE: No. What we’re doing is what I think is the best way to go these days. People jump onto a new book. Give them single-issue stories. Give them something to read as opposed to something that can be flipped through in three minutes, so we are actually doing real content, heavy, twenty-two pagers. But I don’t think that the dramatic structure has changed much, it’s just now, when the Spirit decides to tear apart three security guards in the hotel lobby, he can take three pages to do that. Later in the book when those guys catch up with him, they can take two pages to paste him, paste him into the ground. So yeah, it allows for a little more visual room in the action, but we are keeping the stories very spare.









The cover of the Toronto Comic Arts Festival
program, by Darwyn Cooke.







ANDELMAN: Was it hard structurally? The stories had always been, even in the Kitchen Sink, The New Adventures, still basically eight-page stories. So there had never been that kind of exposition that you would get in Batman or The New Frontier, for example.


COOKE: No, exactly. It creates a couple opportunities and a couple limitations, to be quite honest, but I think one of the great opportunities is that there is a little more room to spend with the bad guys in these stories. We have a few extra pages to really get to spend with some of these colorful bastards that inhabit the city. So yeah, they definitely can’t be as concise, but again, with decompression and everybody writing toward graphic novels these days, it just seemed instinctively to me to go with solid single issues. Certain characters reappear over the course of the first year. There are a few characters that become key as we go along, but I never want people not to pick the book up and have to know what happened last issue to enjoy it. The stories all have to stand alone the same way Will’s did.











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ANDELMAN: I understand that P’Gell and The Octopus make appearances?


COOKE: Absolutely. I mean, actually, The Octopus is going to be in the first ten issues. He is going to show up around number eight.


ANDELMAN: And Ellen and the Commissioner?


COOKE: Oh yeah. Everybody is there. Ebony is there. That’s been a heck of a project.


ANDELMAN: What do you do with Ebony? Not to give away the plot, but how do you deal with an Ebony? A lot of controversy there, potentially.

Link
COOKE: Yeah, absolutely. In order to explain any of this, the first thing I should say is to explain what made me actually say, “Yeah, I want to do it,” and that was that, this has to take place in basically Neverwhere, but it’s today. It’s not 1944, it’s not 1953, it’s 2000 – and -- whatever. It’s a Neverwhere, but it’s today, the same way I think Batman Adventures was. They had computers and portable phones, but they were styled, so it looked very much like the Max Fleischer world, but it involved issues and stories that take place today.


When we sat down and talked about it, I said, “I think everybody knows how careful I am with the properties I work on and with honoring the original creative intent, but I really want to just place it today.” At first, some people were like, “That’s sounds fine,” and other people were like, “Why would you want to do that?” But it is the only way you can do anything new and move forward.


I had to look at Will’s work on his strip, and I had to say, “Now what is it about this? What does it boil down to for me?” And the best way for me to describe this is when he did Olga Bustle, the girl with the big, big eyes . . . he did that Jane Russell parody the month that her movie, The Outlaw, came out. His stories reflected the world he lived in, and did so on a weekly basis for his readership, and I don’t think The Spirit would have worked at that point in history if it took place in 1910. Will could tell any kind of strip he wanted and make it work, but it wouldn’t have been The Spirit if it had taken place in 1910 for the readership of the newspapers in the ‘40s. I hope that makes sense. So I thought, what could you possibly do, if it is 1950, what can you possibly do with The Spirit that Will didn’t do better before you?


ANDELMAN: Yeah.









2006 Shuster Awards poster by Darwyn Cooke.







COOKE: He definitely exhausted every possibility there was within the analog world it was placed in. When I was able to see this as taking place in a world that has changed over fifty years, I saw there was room to work. It is very much the same; there are still good guys, bad guys, and treacherous women, but there is a plethora of new story ideas and themes to explore and different graphic approaches that can be applied. I began to look at what The Spirit really was, and every week Will went at it, it was a new thing. It was very much of that moment. He used new techniques as soon as they were available, before anybody else. As soon as I was able to put my creative mind into it in that regard, then I saw hope for me to actually do something worthwhile here as opposed to just echo something that I could never touch.


ANDELMAN: Will the ongoing have a consistent logo, or will it change?


COOKE: The way it is going to go down is the comic book itself will have a consistent logo, and the spread that opens every story will have a completely custom logo.


ANDELMAN: That makes sense.


COOKE: Yeah, so you get both. Because, again, I want this book to succeed, and it’s not coming with the newspaper. So I think the idea of the consistent motif for the cover is a good idea in terms of being able to create recognition and getting readers to be able to locate it, and definitely we will go as far as we can with it inside the book creatively.









A page from DC's upcoming The Spirit
monthly comic book by Darwyn Cooke.







ANDELMAN: The original announcement was that the Batman/Spirit book would be out in December and that the ongoing would probably start this summer. Can you address the delay in both?


COOKE: Good food takes time! Actually, this has been such an important project that maybe we went at it a little slower and more carefully than we should have. We had a couple of things delay us as we went, but again, everybody was kind of committed to making sure we got it all right before we started and also that there is enough of an inventory that once we do go, it goes... My number one concern is that this is a monthly product, that we don’t get into the situation where the book is delayed for two or three months at a time, because we get behind. So it has taken us longer than we thought it would.


A couple of other things, like the Absolute New Frontier book and another little project regarding New Frontier that I am not supposed to talk about yet, took a certain amount of time, and we just felt it would be best to make sure that we have everything loaded and ready to go.


ANDELMAN: We are recording the conversation in mid-July, and this interview will run sometime in August. When will the first book actually hit the stores?


COOKE: Batman/Spirit is slated to hit the stores in November, and The Spirit is meant to launch out of that in December, or there is a possibility they might load them both in November to really try to hep it up. At this point, I am not sure which way they want to go. I do know we are at a point now where we have the material for either scenario.


ANDELMAN: That was my next question. As you sit there now, how far ahead are you? What is complete? I assume Batman/Spirit is done.


COOKE: Yeah, as far as I know. That’s been a while now. My partners, J. Bone (inker) and Dave Stewart (color), have done some of their best work on that book.









Absolute New Frontier slipcase cover by Darwyn Cooke.








ANDELMAN: And then how far are you on the monthly?


COOKE: I am working on the pencils on number four, and we have scripts with Denis Kitchen’s approval all the way up to ten. So the first year is worked out and is rolling. By November, we will be completing number eight or nine. The first year will pretty much be complete by the time we launch, and that is just a great position to be in.


ANDELMAN: Can a licensed product like this be as lucrative to you as something you do that is creator-controlled?


COOKE: If you are confident that you can produce something that people are going to respond to, then I would say long-term, no. However, I have only spent just about six years in comics full time, and frankly, this was the only thing that would have kept me sort of on the track I was on. So it is not as lucrative at all, this is just something, it’s like, man, I don’t know. It’s like Brian Azzarello told me. He said, “Man, you are going to fail, but you are going to fail beautifully.”


ANDELMAN: He said that with reference to this project?


COOKE: Yes.


ANDELMAN: Wow.


COOKE: Well, hey, trying to top Will Eisner? It’s like not very likely, so….









Solo: Slam Bradley by Darwyn Cooke.







ANDELMAN: I have always enjoyed Neil Gaiman’s comment about when Will and Denis were after him to write a story for The New Adventures, and he kept saying, “No, no, no.” I guess Will and Neil were together at a convention in Barcelona, and Will said, “Let’s go for a walk.” Will could walk and walk and walk. He was incredible; he could go on forever. Finally, they reached a point -- and Neil can talk forever, and Will could walk forever -- where Will kept saying, “I really want you to do this,” and Neil said, “I don’t want to do it, because any Spirit I do would just be a second-rate Spirit story.” But Will finally said, “Yeah, okay, but I would like to see what you could do with it.” So ultimately Gaiman caved. But is that a daunting part of it? I guess there are two sides of it. One is that the character is so old that the generation of people buying comics today, I have seen this first-hand myself, everyone seems to sort of know the character and sort of know Will, but they really haven’t read it, they haven’t spent a lot of time with it, so you have a great opening there, because there is a great character and a great background, but most people don’t know it.


COOKE: I firmly believe that a lot of people are going to really enjoy it, and I think that it is going to drive them to the archives and collections if I can tell decent stories. Yeah, I think it is just going to lead them to the real thing.


ANDELMAN: Is your ego prepared for the purists who may not like it so much?


COOKE: You know, yeah, I think that the last six years, I have learned a fair bit about that, and I have never discounted the stuff that I hear, and frankly, it’s really only the negative stuff that you can get any real value out of. If it’s constructive and negative, there can be very valuable stuff if you are up to taking it.


Evan Dorkin slashed me apart one time, and he’s one of my favorite creators. He’s the kind of guy that, when I read his books, I think, “Boy, I would love to go have a beer with him,” and he just savaged a book of mine. It kind of breaks your heart, but also, reading it, he had a lot of good points, as well. I will keep an eye on what people have to say, but at the end, I have to make a decision creatively based on what I think is right.








Superman and Batman image from DC: The New Frontier
series by Darwyn Cooke.





ANDELMAN: I would think you would have to be pretty comfortable in your own skin at the beginning to even take on something like this.


COOKE: Well, yeah. I think going in you just know there is going to be a certain percentage of people who are not going to groove on this no matter how I do it. He is certainly not a hero of mine, but Donald Rumsfeld, on TV one day, said, “The minute you decide to act with conviction in regard to anything, on any side of any issue, you are automatically alienating yourself to half of the people around you.” Unless you are on the fence, you are on one side or the other if you take action, I guess. I had to block out the idea of ever trying to top Will Eisner, and frankly, the first three issues I noticed I even dampened down . . . I have a certain bag of tricks that I use, and I found that I consciously kind of left them at the door and concentrated on the stories. That’s probably going to loosen up over time.


ANDELMAN: Did it help that Jeph Loeb wrote Batman/Spirit before you had to start the ongoing? Was that useful, or was that not a factor?


COOKE: Yeah, of course. I won’t even say it was like a warm-up, because it was far more than that. It was like a really great opportunity to take these two guys and put them together, and there is a lot of great stuff that came out of that. Just knowing that a star like Jeph had the confidence in me to pull it off goes a long way. But it was really Denis, I guess, who kind of convinced me that I could do it.


ANDELMAN: What kind of feedback have you gotten from him to story ideas and pages, and have there been some things where he said, “Naaah, I wouldn’t go there”?


COOKE: I got to meet Denis in San Diego last year, and we spent a couple of hours just going through it in general. In talking about it, I was able to quiz him a bit, like what are the no-nos? Show me the absolute caveats. We went through the general approach and a few of the stories, and I think it went really well. I was very nervous about it but enthusiastic, and I think he could see that I am coming at this without the need to deconstruct it. I want to embrace everything that I think it was about for Will and try to turn a bunch of new readers on to that. Denis gave me the feeling that he thought I was on the right track, I guess, and he is such a great guy to hang out with. He really puts you at ease. A truly stylin’ gent.









Slam Bradley by Darwyn Cooke.








ANDELMAN: Where does the movie fit in with what you are doing in terms of not necessarily the story but just the fact that they are getting set to go into overdrive on that? I thought that maybe the delay in getting the book out might have been to help coordinate with the movie plans.


COOKE: No, I don’t think so. I think if anybody who has followed my work looks at Catwoman -- the relaunched book and the movie -- they know that there is very little synergy!


ANDELMAN: And thank God for you on that part.


COOKE: Well, yeah, I think I came off looking okay on that one.


ANDELMAN: If only they had paid a little more attention to you.


COOKE: I tell you, to me, it’s very important to keep your focus on your own horizons.Everybody’s entitled to their shot at interpreting it, and the minute you get proprietary with things that are not yours, I think you are setting yourself up for a lot of heartache.


ANDELMAN: I don’t know, I think those Catwoman filmmakers could have withstood a big slap of proprietary.


COOKE: Well, you know, what happened there is that I believe when Halle Berry was attached to the project, it was totally up to her. It basically comes down to what she thinks is right at that point.














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ANDELMAN: The TV “Spirit” movie was pretty much an abomination, too, so what are you going to do?


COOKE: Well, you know, it’s a great movie project. With the right talent attached to it, the sky’s the limit. If there is a lot of excitement in that regard, it is just going to reflect onto the book.


COOKE: They are doing a direct-to-video of New Frontier over at Warner’s.


ANDELMAN: Congratulations.


COOKE: Bruce Timm is executive producing it. They only have seventy minutes, but I think they are going to come up with something excellent, and that’s getting announced down there, as well.


ANDELMAN: Pretty exciting.


COOKE: Yeah, it’s really something. To have Warner’s Animation producing a DVD of my book? Fantastic. Between that and the toy line, I have gotten quite a kick out of how New Frontier worked out.









Promo from DC: New Frontier by Darwyn Cooke.








ANDELMAN: Since you have been working so much on The Spirit, are you able to be working on other books at the same time? I don’t know how much work you produce in a day, but are you pretty much just doing The Spirit?


COOKE: No. There is one other project that I am involved in right now. That’s a Superman book that I am writing for my pal Tim Sale. It’s a six issue look at Superman’s first encounter with Kryptonite. As usual, I don’t know where things fit in the continuity stream, so I went back and read the very first story, which was by Bill Finger and Al Plastino and I loved it. I said, okay, we’re jumping off of this. It’s some of the best stuff I have seen Tim do in a long time.


ANDELMAN: When is that scheduled to come out?


COOKE: It is also scheduled for November.


ANDELMAN: Big time for you.


COOKE: It’s like I have been off the shelf for a couple years, but yeah, this fall I think I have four different things. Superman and Batman/Spirit in November. The Spirit in December and October sees Absolute New Frontier, with a dozen new story pages, annotations, unpublished art and the like. The book itself took forever. So there has been a lot of work to get done. Basically, The Spirit is my full-time job now. Writing for Tim on Superman is a lot more difficult in a way, but it doesn’t take anywhere near the same time as cartooning a whole book.









Darwyn Cooke, Denis Kitchen and Brian Azzarello.







ANDELMAN: Is your Spirit, is it closer to the animated Batman than say New Frontier if you had to put it somewhere on scale?


COOKE: No. I think it’s more me. The closest thing I can think of that I have done, that is out there, would be the “Slam Bradley” stuff I did in Detective and the Catwoman graphic novel. Yeah, it’s more in that vein, which is sort of my natural realm. I am much more comfortable with crime drama and human characters, and New Frontier was a real stretch for me in another direction. I have never really done the super-jock thing. That’s why I ended up with Cat Woman and characters like Slam, or the misfits in X-Force, because it was close to what I think I am suited to.


I remember last year in San Diego I took it in a portfolio with me, and I bumped into Paul Levitz in the booth, and he asked me if I was excited about The Spirit. And I brought down an illustration board I had done in first year college where I reproduced Will’s splash for the story “River of Crime.” I brought it out, and it had the old date on it, and I said, “This is how excited I am. When I was twenty, this is what I was doing on a Friday night, sitting at my drawing table trying to capture it.”


ANDELMAN: It sounds great. I am sure people are very eager to see it. There has been a long build-up.


COOKE: Yeah, that’s another thing that is satisfying and terrifying, the whole long build-up thing. Again, I have found that my saving grace in this business, because I don’t think the style of work I do is the most easily marketable for them, I find my saving grace has been in storytelling. I concentrate on that. All the draftsmanship, all your shot choices, all your technique should come out of that, and if it does, and the story ends up working, then everybody else will think everything is fine. How many places in the mainstream comic market can people go for a single issue that is going to make perfect sense to them and tell an exciting or dramatic or, in a couple of cases, humorous stories?


ANDELMAN: Will the Spirit get a fresh origin story?


COOKE: Yes. Issue three.


We will see how a tangential person is affected by it, and that leads to another story, but yeah, we are definitely sticking with what’s there. It couldn’t be more timely, could it?


ANDELMAN: No.


COOKE: A crazy guy is going to poison the water supply is at the behest of the terrorists. The other thing was that, Holy Moses, the whole dynamic of these characters that Will set in motion all those years ago speaks so clearly today.

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

Mike Richardson Interview, "Will Eisner: A Spirited Life"

Mike Richardson is having a pretty good year. The comics company he started in 1986 has survived two decades of industry peaks and valleys and is in the midst of celebrating its 20th anniversary.

Over those two decades, the company expanded in a variety of successful directions, including movies based on Dark Horse characters such as The Mask, Barb Wire, Hellboy, and Mystery Men, toys, a comic book store -- Things From Another World -- and even a nonfiction book publishing division, M Press, which put out my book, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life.

The tallest man in comics is also one of the busiest. In fact, he and I never connected during the book's research phase, although we tried. I knew Richardson had some things he wanted to say about Eisner, so he was one of the first people I asked to participate in a conversation for this Interview Series.And he knows something about research himself, having authored the book Comics: Between the Panels.

This was actually the second time I interviewed Richardson; the first was closer to the company's 10th anniversary, in 1996.

In the interview that follows, the Dark Horse entrepreneur talks about the impact that Will Eisner had on him as comics creator and as a businessman, as well as revealing details of his company's plans for future Eisner book projects and collections.

(Want more Richardson? Here's a QuickTime movie link to an interview with the man on the Dark Horse Comics site.)

* * *



Mike Richardson (left) with Will Eisner in undated photograph
(Courtesy of Mike Richardson).



ANDELMAN: Tell me about the first time you actually met Will, because you obviously knew who he was by that point.

RICHARDSON: Oh, of course. I was a huge Spirit fan. When I first discovered the Spirit, it was back in the 1960s during the comic book boom that was spawned by the Batman television show and probably had already begun before that, but it hit its zenith probably during that show. Everyone was publishing everything, and being the collector of everything, and I mean everything, that was comic book, I used to scour the stands and look at every single book and especially look for new things, because I always wanted to feel the excitement of a new discovery and picked up this big thick comic. It was a 25 cent reprint of The Spirit.

ANDELMAN: Was that the Harvey book, or was that the...

RICHARDSON: That was the Harvey book. The comics at the time were a dime or twelve cents. I think they were still a dime, though, maybe twelve cents, but anyway, the fact was, I could get two comics, or I could buy that one. I remember it as plain as day. It was like looking at the cover, looking at the way the logo was done, which I had never seen anything like, looking inside it and seeing just a comic book just unlike... It immediately struck me. I compared it to like the first time I heard The Beatles and the first time you saw Muhammad Ali, I mean those moments where you know something special is there, and that's the way I felt about it. Of course, years went by, and then Denis Kitchen and Jim Warren started republishing the stories.



















I remember attending a comic book convention back East in 1988, probably Chicago. Dark Horse was started in 1986 when there were a thousand other comic book publishers. Then we had Black September, and they all left the market all at once -- but we survived.

Anyway, through that process, Denis Kitchen was one of the few publishers at the time that was actually receptive to new publishers coming into the business. He was one of the people that I liked and stayed in touch with and admired what he was doing and found him to be someone that you could talk to, and he was a man of his word.

But anyway, Denis came walking through the convention with Will Eisner, and Will stopped to talk to someone, and I grabbed Denis and asked if he would introduce me. He did, and Will actually sat down and talked to me, which was amazing. When I met Stan Lee for the first time, somebody introduced me to Stan, and Stan said, "Just what we need, another publisher, "and walked off. So I sort of expected similar treatment, because Dark Horse was only a couple of years old, and there were a million other publishers, so there was no reason to think Dark Horse was anything special. But Will actually sat down and talked to me, and I thought that was amazing.




Promotional art for Mike Richardson's comics history,
Comics: Between the Panels
.



Two of the giants of the industry, of all the people and all the bad behavior that went on in the comic industry during that time, the two giants of the industry, the first time I met them, both of them sat down and talked for some time. One was Will, and the other was Jack Kirby, who the first time I met Jack, he sat down and talked to me for over half an hour. I thought that was always interesting, and I have always had that in my mind ever since that these people who really didn't have the time and didn't have the need to talk to some brand new publisher nonetheless did and were very nice and giving of themselves and their time.

So that was the first time I met Will, and after that, I would see him at conventions and always stopped and said hi. I would get him to go to have breakfast and started pursuing him. When I started Dark Horse, my goal was, I had a list of people that I had to work with at some point and Will Eisner was right at the top of the list.

ANDELMAN: When you mentioned how Eisner and Kirby treated you on meeting them the first time and that made a big impression on you, do you keep that in mind over the years as you are meeting with people?

RICHARDSON: Absolutely. I absolutely think of that. These were two people that had no need to stop and talk with me. But not only did they stop and talk, they stopped and listened and talked and exchanged ideas. That was the great thing about Will. And Jack was just a great guy. Will was actually different in that he was out there, he was interested in the exchange of ideas. He wanted to learn everything he could. He wanted to stay current, also.

ANDELMAN: Do you remember anything you talked about that first time you met Will? Because what I have heard in stories like this is that people are usually surprised by what an interest he has taken, especially in a publisher. I know with Denis, he was fascinated with the independent distribution system.

RICHARDSON: When Will first talked to me, I do remember what we talked about. He was interested first of all in this thing called the direct sales market. He thought it was great that publishers like myself could get involved and have greater control of the distribution. The non-returnable market -- which is the direct sales market -- saved the comic book industry at the time, and he was interested in that. He was also interested in the fact that Dark Horse had publicly pronounced itself to be a creative rights company. In other words, we were interested in getting into business with the creator, not taking and owning his work.

ANDELMAN: That must have been something that he was particularly interested in.

RICHARDSON: He was, and he said that was geared to his own interest. The interesting thing in that conversation was that Will was asking me questions. Many people in all professions tell you what they want you to hear. Will was asking questions. That was the way Will was all the way through his life. He always asked questions. I always thought that was fascinating, because you got into very interesting conversations with him, and it was a give and take. It wasn't a lecture, although for me, I was interested in hearing everything Will had to say. There was so much knowledge there. I wanted to hear what he had to say, and we would end up in these fascinating conversations about the future of the industry, how things could change, and during the dark times, during the bleak times in the '90s about how do we get things out of here.

I remember one breakfast I had with him at a convention in Chicago when the market had fallen to its lowest point. The comic industry had been taken over by girls in tight suits and companies that were doing all kinds of dark and aggressive story lines. We were sitting at breakfast and Will, always being upbeat, said, "Well, the good thing about this downturn is maybe it will clear out all the bad publishers and retailers." I jokingly said back to him, "What if it gets rid of all the good ones?" The smile went right off his face. He sat there quietly for a moment and then he said, "I never thought about that. I am going to have to think about that... Well, I am sure it won't." He was such an optimist, that side never occurred to him.

ANDELMAN: He just believed in natural selection. You told me in a previous conversation that Will was one of the reason you got into comics publishing and that Will was the model that you tried to follow in terms of...

RICHARDSON: I got into comics because of my love of comics, which explained why I loved Will and his work, and he was one of the giants. Like I say, you have those moments where it's like the duckling that is imprinted upon first sight. You see certain things at certain ages, and they stay with you. And of course, that 25-cent giant comic which, in both format, design, and content, was so different from all the other comics out there, fueled a lifelong interest in Will's work. And getting to know Will increased that desire to know him and know his work better.



Mike Richardson, publisher of Dark Horse Comics.


As far as him being the model, he was exactly the model because Will is one of those people who controlled his own work all through his life, and he also ran his business. He worked on both hemispheres of the brain, I guess. He was able to be successful business-wise and he was able to be successful creatively.

I never meant to start a company. What I wanted to do was do comics, and when we first started Dark Horse, we were doing our own comics. We were writing our own comics and finding people to work with us, and evidently whatever we did caught on. Dark Horse took off and suddenly I found myself to be a publisher and later president of a large company. But I still write comics, I am still involved in the creative things we do, and so Will was the perfect example for me because he found a balance that worked both ways.

People tend to try to put publishers on one side and creators on the other side, and I have always resented that because I always thought of myself as a creative person that ended up publishing. I have tried to run the company in a financially solid way. My problem is that I tend to side with the creators against myself, because, again, I was an art major, I was an artist a number of years before I started Dark Horse, and so I constantly find myself siding with the artist to my own detriment, but that's the way it goes. Because of that interest in the artist, I think that Dark Horse has managed to find that balance as Will did that has kept us alive after the big companies that were around when we started have come and gone. You take Marvel and DC out of the picture, and how many of the hundreds if not thousands of comic companies have come and gone since 1986?


















ANDELMAN: What was the first work of Will's that Dark Horse published, and how did that come about?

RICHARDSON: We have done a number of his books. The major breakthrough with Will was Last Day in Vietnam. I pursued Denis hard, and we have done reprints. I talked Will into letting us do Hawks of the Sea, which was his very first work. Will at first was not necessarily excited to see that republished, reprinted. He had seen it in the larger form. He wasn't that happy with it. I actually asked him if we could shoot it down to a smaller size and told him we would put it in a nice format, which he did. He wasn't sure we could shoot it down; we shot it down and showed it to him, and he said, "Wow, it looks pretty good." He had this great drawing he had done, a pirate illustration that had no connection to the book, but I asked him if we could use that on the cover, and he said yes, and what we ended up with was a book that he was pleased with.

ANDELMAN: You are saying that he resisted that for quite a while.

RICHARDSON: It's not that he resisted, it's just that he wasn't that excited about seeing it. I think he probably did it more due to my persistence in wanting to increase the Dark Horse library of his work as to any real desire to see it done. What is interesting is that after we did that, then we started talking to him about packaging some of his other less known work, and he became more receptive to it after he saw how Hawks came out.

ANDELMAN: One of the bigger projects that you took on was the Will Eisner Sketchbook.




The Will Eisner Sketchbook, published by Dark Horse Comics.



RICHARDSON: Yeah. That was such a great project, and we were so excited by it. I think it's one of the nicest things that we have ever done, and I know Will loved it. He was very excited.

ANDELMAN: How did that come about? What was involved in that? It seems like it must have been a huge project.

RICHARDSON: We have done a number of sketchbooks, and Diana Schutz suggested we approach Will about it, and I thought it was a great idea. Will was all for it, and we decided to really give it a first-class treatment, and it evolved as we went. To this day, I love picking it up and looking inside it. I was intimidated by Will because one day he called me and said, "Hey Mike, pick any drawing out of that. I want to give it to you as a gift." We had all the stuff here, so I couldn't choose. I finally did and sent it back to him, and he wrote me a wonderful note.

ANDELMAN: What piece is it?

RICHARDSON: I had the piece where the Spirit is tied down on the floor. I felt I needed a little bondage, so he's down on the floor, and his assorted villains are sitting around him. He is laid out, arms outstretched. I would tell you exactly where that came from, but I can't remember. It's off one of his covers.

















ANDELMAN: Did you ever seek out specific advice from Will, or was it a more casual relationship, that when you would see him, you would make conversation?

RICHARDSON: Oh, no. I talked to Will, I would call Will and talk to him about different things, but Will never said, "Here's some advice for you." I would end up in a conversation with him, and I would start talking about something. I would get the benefit of his experience, and he freely gave that, but he would never say it like, "Now here's what you do." He would discuss it with me, and I would listen to what he had to say, because he had been there and done that and because he had such a great perception of the industry -- not just the creation of the work but also of the business side of things. I would call him and say, "Hey, you know, I was thinking this..." or, "What do you think about this?" And we would end up in a discussion. And by the way, even in those discussions, he was always asking questions, too, because, again, he liked the exchange. He really loved to talk about comics and talk about them in an intelligent way. The time would just pass when I talked to Will.

ANDELMAN: You had him out to Milwaukie at some point.

RICHARDSON: Yeah, we had this idea. There is a Lake Oswego Festival of the Arts, and it has been going on for some twenty-five years, I think, maybe longer. One of the ladies who knew me suggested to the festival's board that they think about approaching me about comics art, because she had seen my art collection. At first they pooh-poohed the idea. These are the society ladies that were used to thinking of art in different terms. But Sandy Hagerman invited them to come down to my office. In my office, I rotate my art collection on two of the walls, and the greatest comic artists in the world are framed there, so there is Frank Miller and Geof Darrow, Al Williamson and Will Eisner, Paul Chadwick and Adam Hughes and on and on. It's a who's who of who is in comics, and when these people came in and they saw the comic artwork framed, one of them exclaimed, shocked -- and I can't overstate the shock -- "This is art!" Well, bingo.

They became very excited about it, and based on my art collection, they created a three-day show and comic art museum. I was told it was the largest turnout they had ever had.

In the course of that, they wondered if I could bring anyone to talk to the civilian public about comics. I wanted to get two people. I wanted them to be interesting to listen to, and I wanted them to be contrasting, so Will was the first one I called. He seemed hesitant to make the trip. I said, "You know what?" There will be tens of thousands of people that come here, and they have never heard of comics, and you will have a chance to talk to those people. "Will said, "I like that idea." The idea of talking and preaching to the unconverted really excited him, so he and Ann came out.

Contrasting him and someone who also is knowledgeable and fun to listen to talk about the comics industry is Harlan Ellison. Harlan came, and I suggested that we have a panel discussion that I would moderate with Harlan and Will and audience participation. On top of that, I said, "Let's sell tickets," which they had never done before. The first night was pretty much sold out; the second night was nearly sold out. Two very good turnouts, raised a lot of money for the Festival of the Arts, and we also did a series of posters by four key artists in the industry, one by Will, a terrific poster, basically promoting comics as one of the true American art forms. Since I started Dark Horse, I have always told people that comics, like jazz, is one of the few American art forms. I said that in front of Will at the Festival, and Will interrupted me. "Mike is 100 percent correct with that," he said, "but I want to add one thing to the front of that. It's one of the few American art forms, like jazz, created by immigrants." Which put a whole new reflection on it, and of course, I wouldn't have thought of that, but it's absolutely 100 percent true.

ANDELMAN: I understand on that trip that Will got a tour of Dark Horse.

RICHARDSON: Oh, yeah. We took Will through Dark Horse and toured the town with him and had a wonderful, wonderful time with him and his wife Ann. Just a great time. We put him in a hotel on Lake Oswego, and it was just great. I will never forget the time. It was a close and rewarding time that we spent while he was here. It was one of those great things that you always wish you had time for or always wish the right circumstance would come up, and in that case, it did.

ANDELMAN: Do you recall anything about how he was perceived by other people at Dark Horse?

RICHARDSON: Oh, I can't tell you how much respect people had for him. Many of them knew him, including my mother. She was eager to meet him, and had lunch with us. She told Will that she read The Spirit in the newspaper supplements when she was a kid. My mom graduated high school at the age of 16 so was a college freshman at the age of 16 and won a national art search by one of the major magazines, Life or Look, and won a scholarship to any college in the country. You know those contests they used to have? Well, she was the national winner for her art, and she was a pianist and just incredibly talented, and the reason I am bringing all that up is that she was also a fanatical comic book fan. So one of the reasons I became such a fan myself is that first of all, they weren't prohibited in our house, we were encouraged to read them, and I attribute my ability to read when I went into the first grade because of my desire to know what was in those books, those comic books that were around the house.

ANDELMAN: Any interesting exchanges amongst the three of you at the Festival? I know Harlan is pretty outspoken, claiming to be the world's number one fan of Will. I know you might take issue with that, and other people might.

RICHARDSON: Yeah. Harlan loves Will, and I can't even, again, I can't overstate his affection for Will. I think that it was such a great time. Harlan tends to be a little harder on the audience than Will. That led to a few exchanges, including Harlan sending one unfortunate young man out of the auditorium. Another time, Harlan told a story and warned everyone, "If you are easily offended, please, please leave. I am going to tell a story that may offend some people; if you are easily offended, please leave. I just want you to know." And he told a story, and a woman stood up and told him, "How dare you tell that story? I find it offensive." Again, Harlan sent her packing, too. Actually, security took her away as Harlan explained to her that she was not the smartest person to stand there and listen to something after she had been warned.

ANDELMAN: I remember his eulogy for Will at the memorial was just a tour de force of Harlan. Earlier when we were talking about the Will Eisner Sketchbook, you said to me that you thought that all of Will's work should be available and that that's still a goal of yours.

RICHARDSON: Yeah. I think that because of Will and who he is, even some of the humorous stuff that he did that probably isn't among his best known creations -- and probably doesn't stack up with some of his other works -- needs to be preserved for archival reasons. I worry that some of it will go away. I think that we need to be able to see all of his work and have it available to those people who care to know about comics and their history. So it's our intention to publish as much of Will's work as we can, as we are allowed to publish it.

ANDELMAN: Do you have other projects coming up that are scheduled at this point or that are in the works?

RICHARDSON: Yeah, we do. We have a couple of things that we are talking with Denis Kitchen about, and one of the most solid is to publish an archive volume of the Spirit material that was done by Kitchen Sink in the late 1990s

ANDELMAN: Oh, The New Adventures.

RICHARDSON: Yes, The New Adventures.. We have talked to DC, and Paul Levitz has generously told me that we could number it at the end of their Spirit Archive series, so it will be part of that series even though it will comesout from Dark Horse.

ANDELMAN: That must be several years off now.

RICHARDSON: Yeah, it is several years off, because some of the rights issues haven't been taken care of over the years, and we are trying to go back and make things right with everyone.

ANDELMAN: That's a question that I have been asked a lot, and you read that on forums a lot, "Will DC, as part of reprinting The Spirit, will they reprint the Kitchen Sink books?" and there has never been a definitive answer.

RICHARDSON: Dark Horse will.

















ANDELMAN: What other of his work would you like to see back in print? You mentioned some of the funny stuff. He did the Gleeful Guides, of course, and a lot of children's stuff for Scholastic.

RICHARDSON: When the dot.com industry was in full bloom, Will and I were trying to get a project together online, basically novels. Will would illustrate novels, there would be some Flash animation, and put them online, but of course, the dot.com bust and it all fell apart. But he had a number of books that he illustrated. I think all of those should be published in some form, because while some of them were nothing more than sketchbooks, he did quite a bit of work on them. I think some of those are unknown and would be interesting. I don't have a schedule right in front of me, but we are talking about... We want, as I said, to publish everything that we can of Will's.

ANDELMAN: Do you still distribute, or produce, The Spirit lunchbox?

RICHARDSON: We do. We have our own toy company. It's called Dark Horse Deluxe.

ANDELMAN: Are there any other Eisner products in that line besides the lunchbox?

RICHARDSON: We will definitely be doing more products in the future. I can't tell you what they are right now; I don't have the schedule with me, but again, much of what we do reflects my interest, and obviously, I have a huge interest in Will's work and in Will.

ANDELMAN: You also mentioned that you had desperately tried to get the rights to publish The Plot. What was going on there?

RICHARDSON: I can't tell you what the process was in the selection, but I thought it was a major work, and I thought it was a work that needed to be promoted in a major way, and Will saw it as a very important piece, so I tried hard to get it but didn't end up with it.


ANDELMAN: As I understood, his reluctance there with you and with DC, for that matter, was that he just felt that that was his...

RICHARDSON: I think he was afraid maybe, and maybe I am putting words, maybe it wasn't exactly true, but I think maybe he felt that coming from a comic book company, it wouldn't have been taken as a serious work.

ANDELMAN: Right. That's what I understood.

RICHARDSON: I believe he expressed that to me when we talked about it, because I was disappointed, because I tried really hard to get that.

ANDELMAN: You understood that it had nothing to do with you or Dark Horse, it was just...

RICHARDSON: Oh, absolutely.

ANDELMAN: .... something else that he was looking for.

RICHARDSON: Oh, absolutely. Look, Will had projects that he wasn't that sure about that we talked about, and he would say, "Okay, go ahead," and there were other projects he would say, "No, Mike, I can't do that, and this is why." There was always a reason that was 100 percent understandable, and by the way, I understand his reasons for where he went. It didn't change my disappointment. I expressed that to him, but I was very sorry to lose that. I would have loved to have published The Plot.

ANDELMAN: The other thing I wanted to ask you about is, obviously, more personal to me. Last year, Dark Horse published two of the three definitive books on Will, Eisner/Miller and A Spirited Life.

RICHARDSON: A Spirited Life, what a brilliant book.

ANDELMAN: No sucking up, now.

RICHARDSON: It was a very good book, and we also published what I think it may have been Will's last work, his story in The Escapist

ANDELMAN: Oh, we'll come back to The Escapist. Let's talk for a minute about Eisner/Miller. Eisner/Miller took a little longer, maybe two to three years longer to get into print than it was supposed to, but what was the concept of the book? What sold you on the idea of doing it?

RICHARDSON: I think the idea of having two people who have a tremendous influence on our industry, captured in a book in which they sit down and discuss the industry to me was fascinating. I thought that it would make for interesting reading for those of us who are interested in comics. Obviously, they both have strong opinions. You can see that in the book. They don't always agree on things, and that makes for some fun reading.

ANDELMAN: Yeah, politically, it was, as it turned out, it was kind of the end of their relationship.

RICHARDSON: I don't know that that is true. I know that there was a little friction there, but I think that Frank had gigantic respect for Will.

ANDELMAN: Oh, absolutely. Were you frustrated when the book took so long to kind of work its way through?

RICHARDSON: No. I sort of, especially dealing with projects like that where major creators who are very busy have to take time to do certain things, I have learned to just sort of be patient.

ANDELMAN: You must have been pleased to see that book be nominated for an Eisner Award this year. I am sure that is very exciting.

RICHARDSON: Very exciting, yes.

ANDELMAN: And then, of course, A Spirited Life.

RICHARDSON: Brilliant book.

ANDELMAN: Yeah, okay, okay! I try to use all of the professional detachment that I can here, but why was Dark Horse interested in publishing a biography of Will Eisner?

RICHARDSON: I can't remember if it was Denis Kitchen or Diana Schutz who first asked me if I would be interested. I thought, "This will be the definitive book on Will," and once again, my interest in Will and all things Will, Once again, I wanted Dark Horse to be the publisher of that opus.

ANDELMAN: Again, trying to be professionally detached, what -- if any -- response have you had from people that you talked to about the biography?

RICHARDSON: Oh, people love the book. I mean, not only is it informative, but it's a nice reflection of Will's life that many of us appreciate having. I am so glad we did it when we did it. I am so glad that it was done. I am glad, for instance, that you took the time to really go in and create this, because how many comic artists and writers and creators, how many of them have their lives detailed for future generations?

ANDELMAN: It was funny to me. Starting this project, as someone who grew up in comics, kind of went away for a while and then came back, when we started it, I assumed that there had to be biographies of other comics creators done as traditional biographies.

RICHARDSON: If you made a list, give it to me, because I know of only a very tiny few.

ANDELMAN: I was amazed at how few there were, so then it became, the notion of let's do a real biography of a man as opposed to bowing and scraping and sucking up....

RICHARDSON: Again, that's what made it interesting because it was a biography, it was about his life. There was no attempt to turn it into something that would appeal to the comics market, it was a genuine biography.

ANDELMAN: One of the biggest surprises for people that Will influenced and touched over the years goes like this: "I can't believe he told you the story about how he lost his virginity -- and he let you print it! It's like, well, it's a real biography; that's what happens.




Comics: Between the Panels,
co-authored by Mike Richardson



RICHARDSON: We interviewed Will for another brilliant book, Comics: Between the Panels, by another brilliant author. We could have filled that book up with Will. There were so many great stories. We chose which stories to tell, one of them being the Jack Kirby pal story, which is always one of my favorites, and Will would always laugh when he talked about it and talked about Jack throwing mobsters out the door and Will holding his breath. He had so many stories like that, and again, because of the experience on that and listening to Will tell some of those stories, that's what made the idea of a biography so interesting to me when the project was offered to us. Immediately, I thought, there are great stories there. There is a great life there. There's a spirited life.

ANDELMAN: Now, the third book and the final book was Will's contribution to The Escapist. I didn't know until after Will had passed and Diana had told me the story of how A Spirited Life and The Escapist books wound up being connected. She had gone out and tried to twist Michael Chabon's arm into doing the introduction for my book after he had offered to do it, then had to back off because of his work schedule. Then I guess there was some horse trading... What do you know of that story?

RICHARDSON: Well, my story about how it came about might be a little different than Diana's, because sometimes two people work along parallel lines. When I was trying to get The Escapist to Dark Horse -- no use being coy -- DC wanted it badly, and one of the things that Michael told me that was appealing to him about going to DC was that he could team The Escapist with some of the Great Golden Age characters. So it occurred to me that well, maybe we can't get those DC Golden Age characters, but maybe there are other characters we could get. There are a couple of very well known Golden Age characters, or reasonably well known, that are public domain, and there are others we could get rights to. And then, of course, if you have read Kavalier & Clay and you know Will's connection to it, in Michael's mind, all of a sudden it just seemed naturally apparent what a great team-up The Spirit and The Escapist would be. Basically, that's how I remember it coming about, then saying to Diana, "Let's talk to Will about teaming the characters up." Diana may have another story. That's my memory.

In my mind, it was DC's, the lure of DC's Golden Age characters that popped it into my head and caused me to approach Will about it.

ANDELMAN: That's great. That does expand the story, because I think at that point it picks up with what had happened with Diana and Michael and myself, which is, after I interviewed Michael, I had boldly asked him if he would write the introduction for the book. He didn't know me from a hole in the ground, but because it was Will Eisner, he said, "Yeah, as long as it didn't interfere with his own projects" and he needed plenty of notice. With all the production delays on A Spirited Life, a year passed by the time I finally went back to him and said, "Hey, it's about that time, could you do it?" Michael said, "Well... "I think he was working on scripts for Kavalier & Clay and Spider-Man II and he said, "I don't think I am going to be able to do it."

So I went to Diana, all dejected, and she said, "Oh, he'll do it; I'll twist his arm; I'll make him do it." And then I didn't hear anything for a while. Then, suddenly he did it. After Will died, Diana told me that what had happened was that she had talked to Michael, and he said, "Well, you know, I would really like Will to do a story with the Spirit and the Escapist... " Until then, Will had kind of resisted, but he had been so supportive of me and the project that Diana told him, "Look, Michael's willing to do the introduction if you would do this," and Will said, "Okay then, I'll do it." And I was just astonished to hear that after the fact. He had been so great to me all that time, but that was wild. So you explaining what happened before that, I appreciate that. It's a great thing. Any other incidents or times that you had with Will that you would like to touch on?

RICHARDSON: The biggest thing for me is whenever, for instance, I was at a convention, and I was tired, and person after person after person came to me. I can't imagine how tired Will used to be as they shuffled him from this thing to that thing to this thing. That was the amazing thing about Will -- he always seemed so upbeat and stuff, but what I will always remember about Will is whenever I saw him, he would come walking in, he would always have a big smile on his face, as though he was glad to see me, and I always had a big smile on my face, I know, because I was always really happy to see him. I like seeing everybody, but Will was special, and like many people whose lives Will affected, I really miss him. I have his picture right over my desk, and he has a big smile on his face there.

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