Friday, July 31, 2020
IT'S DOCTOR TIME colour pages 1-6
I spent this week colouring six pages of this story, involving digital colouring and some acrylic tones mixed together.
Monday, July 27, 2020
STAR JAWS #37 - MOUNT A RESCUE pull out section
The new issue of Star Jaws is out now from Barnstormer Comics.
Inside is work from Robin Barnard, Martin Hand, and Paul B. Rainey.
In the middle is a "Star Jaws previews pull-out" dedicated to Mount a Rescue.
It's great to see this! It reminds me of comics pull out sections Marvel UK used to do.
Many thanks to Robin for having this in Star Jaws. More info on Barnstormer Comics can be found here.
Thursday, July 23, 2020
IT'S DOCTOR TIME page 6 inks
Here's the sixth and final page.
SPOILER ALERT!
-
Winston Churchill ends up in Dundee, and decades later an Oscar is handed out to an actor portraying him.
Wednesday, July 22, 2020
IT'S DOCTOR TIME page 5 inks
Winston Churchill joins the crew for a trip in space!
A return to acrylics to show the inter dimensional travel in panel four.
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
Monday, July 20, 2020
Friday, July 17, 2020
IT'S DOCTOR TIME page 2 inks
Page 2.
I snuck in a robot dog here, and introduced the look of the main character in the last panel.
The middle panel is painted with watered down black acrylics.
Thursday, July 16, 2020
IT'S DOCTOR TIME page 1 inks
Here are the inks for the first page.
There's a lot of black as the first (large) panel is set in outer space. I'll use photoshop to fill that.
I'll also be inverting the wave lines and the subtitle.
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE Previews 5
Here is the fifth and final installment of previews of my new comic.
Script: DR, Art: Clio D. |
Script: DR, Art: Pam Wye. |
T-Minus: Not Happening. Script, art: DR. |
Training Days. Script, art: DR. |
Script, art: DR. |
Water (load of rubbish). Script, art: DR. |
Women's Faces. Script: DR, Art: Norrie Millar. |
Mount a Rescue is available now from the Fred Egg Comics shop or at Comichaus.
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Monday, July 13, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE Previews 4
Here is the fourth installment of previews of my new comic.
Script: DR, Art: Ludi Price. |
Pub Quiz. Script: DR, Art: Mike Sedakat. |
Script, art: DR. |
Smells Good. Script: DR, Art: Marc KC. |
Spacegate. Script: DR, Art: Francesca Mancuso. |
Mount a Rescue is available now from the Fred Egg Comics shop or at Comichaus.
Sunday, July 12, 2020
THAT NEW X-MEN MOVIE: 20 YEARS ON
It's twenty years ago today since the first X-Men movie premiered.
Here's a little treat; an insight into how comic fans viewed the oncoming movie at the time. This is a discussion verbatim from the tcj.com bulletin board in the lead up to the film's release.
Topic: that new x-men movie
Matt
Silvie Member posted May 01, 2000 05:15 PM
I
justed want to announce to the comic book journal message board forum
that I have downloaded the new x-men trailer, both versions, about
ten times. sure, it looks stagey and sucky: the leather, the club
scene look and soundtrack, etc, typical comic adaptation bullshit.
But the 13 year old pot head inside of me is pretty damned psyched.
that subject matter is too pro-wrestling to be suited for the comics
medium anyway and I'm happy to finally see this stuff where it
belongs. I know I'm just psyching myself up for a big let down, but
at least it'll be sort of fun, two hours of garbage for six bucks is
better than a 15 minute read badly drawn for the same amount. so fuck
you.
Timothy
J Miller Member posted May 01, 2000 09:57 PM
...and
suddenly the Comix 2000 hate thread becomes MUCH clearer to me...
DSR Member posted May 02, 2000 07:48 AM
I
always suspected Wolverine's hairdo would look ridiculous on screen
but it actually looks alright.
KThor
Jensen Junior Member posted May 02, 2000 09:14 AM
A
significant portion of my new job entails voraciously sucking the
dick of this movie, so I don't know whether this is a sign of too
much sperm in my brain or just the general weakening of my critical
faculties that comes with age, but I'm actually gonna step out and
say that from everything I've seen it'll be a competent to good
action/thriller, probably spawning a sequel or two. Junk, sure, but
"entertaining junk." Now I'm waiting for the Comix 2000
movie.
eric
hess Member posted May 02, 2000 09:38 AM
quote:
I always suspected Wolverine's hairdo would look ridiculous on
screen but it actually looks alright.
yes,
surprisingly, the hair looks fine.
the
guy wearing it, however...
aw,
i'm just kiddin' around. have to admit, it looks like it's going to
have its moments.
Matthewwave
Member posted May 02, 2000 03:47 PM
KThor,
Do
you happen to know the film's budget? From the previews I've seen, it
looks pretty cheap, all in all, to me. I wonder if that will reflect
in the film and keep it from becoming popular enough to warrant
sequels.
I
can't get too excited about the film, even as throwaway
entertainment. Since 91 I've been bound by a contract with myself to
not give my money to Marvel -- excepting the out of The Joe Kubert
Clause -- and except for eight individual issues that fall under that
clause, I've kept to it. And I plan to continue doing so. Thus I
didn't even see Blade, which apparently was a decent, fun junkfood
movie. Plus I like Snipes, Kristofferson and Dorff.
But
Kubert they ain't, and so...
Oh,
and I've seen Hugh (Wolverine) Jackman in non-X Men photos -- he's
quite fine.
Matthew
Austin
English Member posted May 02, 2000 03:54 PM
The
real question: will it be better then Spawn?
Nick
Mullins Member posted May 02, 2000 04:07 PM
That
was a joke, right?
Matt
Silvie Member posted May 02, 2000 06:00 PM
Timothy
J Miller raves: "...and suddenly the Comix 2000 hate thread
becomes MUCH clearer to me..."
yeah,
I hated it cause it didnt have wolverine in it, you stupid prick. you
got me
Matthewwave
groans: "Since 91 I've been bound by a contract with myself
to not give my money to Marvel."
Aw,
shit man, you didnt quit till you were 91 fucking years old?! I was
15 when I quit reading that shit. sucks to be you.
KThor
Jensen shares: "This will be the greatest movie ever made."
I
dont know about that, KThor. It does look cheap and stagey, as noted
by old man Matthewwave. It looks like the whole thing was shot in one
dark as shit studio. The sets look cheaper than the shit they got on
tv. I'm 100percent sure this thing will suck hard, the question is,
will it be cool and nostalgic to see those old comic book characters
up on the screen, or will it be as dismaying as last years star wars,
or the batman movies. I'm guessing the latter. but I'll still see it.
Austin
English Member posted May 02, 2000 08:27 PM
Nick:
Of course! Although, I must admit, I did see Spawn, and it had a few
guilty pleasures in it. John Legquizamo (sp?) was funny as The Clown.
Matt
Silvie Member posted May 02, 2000 10:09 PM
I
couldnt stand spawn. the directing was such a mess I had no idea what
was going on, it had no sense of linear narrative. it was like just
these jerky shots of random scenes strung together randomly. it gave
me a headache.
DSR Member posted May 03, 2000 08:46 AM
I
was about to write that I've never watched Spawn, but I realised I've
never read a Spawn comic either.
I've
never liked McFarlane's artwork. It's just not to my taste. It looks
messy to me.
Nick
Mullins Member posted May 03, 2000 10:12 AM
Austin:
I saw Spawn also. I liked the compuyer graphics in the cape. But the
devil was so bad I laughed in the theatre. Also, all the other spawns
in hell were just the same CGI put into a perpetual loop. It looked
like Jazzercise in hell.
And
yes, the directing was horrible. The fight scenes made absolutely no
sense.
I
can't remember why I saw the move, because I've never read the comic.
KThor
Jensen Junior Member posted May 03, 2000 11:54 AM
Matt
Silvie drooled: "I suck dick in rest stop bathrooms for
quarters."
Don't
put words in my mouth, shitstain. We just finished up the summer
movie preview bullshit here and after sitting through hours of
crapola it's looking more and more like it's going to be this year's
one big summer blockbuster, akin to Independance Day or what have
you, only Bryan Singer isn't quite an Emmerich-level hack. And you
fucking started this thread so what the holy hell are you complaining
about? As for the budget, it is cheap (comparatively) at $75 million
- a drop in the bucket compared with, say, uber-shitheel Michael
Bay's "Pearl Harbor." As for "stagey," I will
agree that the locations are not great, and that will probably work
against it, but I can't see the leather costumes or the fuckshit
soundtrack causing any problems. As above: entertaining junk. "Cecil
B. Demented," the new John Waters flick, however, looks mighty
fine.
Austin
English Member posted May 03, 2000 04:25 PM
Well,
I hope this film fails miserably.
j.
todd dockery Member posted May 04, 2000 01:23 AM
didn't
singer direct "usual suspects"? I mean, it wasn't a bad
film so...
however,
more leather clad bunk does not excite me.
we
are living in a post "matrix" world and unfortunately I am
not a post "matrix" gal.
t
edward bak Member posted May 06, 2000 03:02 PM
What
the hell is an "X-Man" anyhow? I don't read read those
books. They're like "super champions", right? Isn't there
supposed to be a "Superman" movie with Tim Burton?
Jesus,
I'm sorry I have to do this, but remember when Mr. Rogers used to
take everybody off to Never-Never Fairy Land or whatever the fuck it
was off in the Trolley and there were those weird puppets in that
castle? And there was that one old hag puppet. Remember that? Well,
the guy sitting at the computer a couple down from me sounds just
like that character. He keeps talking to his computer and snickering.
I'd
like to break something over his head BUT I JUST DON'T WANT TO BE
ANGRY ANYMORE, DAMN IT!!
DSR Member posted May 08, 2000 09:40 AM
Remember
years ago when they were first talking about making this movie and
Wolverine was going to be the crazy guy from "Hill Street
Blues"?
krisstacks
Junior Member posted May 09, 2000 02:26 PM
nope
Matt
Silvie Member posted June 08, 2000 05:19 PM
word
up, bitches
I
cant believe how unpopular this thread was. it was my baby and now I
have resurrected it.
anyway,
there's yet another version of the x-men trailer up now, at the link
below. someone tell Pete Bagge
http://web.archive.org/web/20010106061000/http://www.apple.com/trailers/fox/x-men/480_trailer3.html
Jon
Zajdel Member posted June 08, 2000 10:38 PM
I
see. So there is an evil force that threatens the world and these
"X-men" are some sort of heroic group of "go-getters"
who are going to intervene on behalf of humanity. Sounds interesting.
I hope they win.
Matt
Silvie Member posted June 10, 2000 12:57 PM
So
do I, Jon. But who can say? In the preview there is a cryptic moment
where Wolverine questions the legitimacy of fighting the evil mutants
instead of the racist humans. So I guess the story could go ANYWHERE
does
anyone think Halle Berry's miscast as Storm (Ororro? Oreo?)? I aint
bitchin that I'm gonna have to ogle her hot ass for two hours, but in
the comic isnt Storm alot older and wiser? Halle Berry's a feisty
little sex kitten with big titties. On second thought, I guess she's
the perfect comic book bitch. nevermind. my bad.
Matt
Silvie Member posted June 21, 2000 10:48 PM
yo.
so I've been watching this x-men preview about two or three times a
day and I'm kinda diggin that little chick from that movie, The
Piano, that Anna Pauquin (sp?), she's the little chick with wolverine
and shes got that hood on and shit. but I dont know what character
she's supposed to be. I'm guessing Kitty Pryde/Shadowcat. but who
knows? does anyone know? do YOU? also this friend of mine says the
bitch that plays Rogue is all that, but I dont remember seeing anyone
looking Rogue-ish in any of the three previews. who here on the comic
book message board forum will help me?
Matthewwave
Member posted June 21, 2000 11:13 PM
I
believe Panquin plays Rogue.
Matthew
Sean
Medlock Member posted June 22, 2000 09:44 AM
If
you ask me, Angela Bassett would be perfect for Storm. But then,
nobody asked me.
I
just hope they spin off a whole series of Wolverine movies so I can
relive my 7th grade revenge fantasies.
cian
Member posted June 23, 2000 04:30 AM
Need.
Alcohol. Now.
Eli
Bishop Member posted June 29, 2000 08:17 AM
Cian-
for God's sake, get off the computer and go to a liquor store before
it's too late! We can't help you here!
Sean-
I agree, but she's too classy for this thing and anyway she has
pupils in her eyes.
Silvie-
if there's a 13-year-old pothead inside you, better keep it to
yourself- statutory rape laws don't make allowances for who's on top.
Though "the 13-year-old pothead inside of me is pretty damned
psyched" might make a good blurb for the movie ads...
All-
I must admit that I read the silly promotional material on the
"mutantwatch.com" site and I'm wondering who the
ghostwriter was for some of this stuff. Some of it is kind of funny,
but not much compared to some of Alan Moore's throwaway bits in Top
Ten. In one of those, Mayor Genovese complains: "I mean, some
kid who lives on your block gets hit by some weird meteorite, next
thing you know he's flying, he shoots death-rays out of his ass,
whatever"-- which latter detail made me hope against hope that
they got Moore's permission to borrow that character for the movie;
Hollywood logic requires that Logan go up against Sabretooth, but who
will represent the dark side of Cyclops, if not that kid down the
block? With today's special effects, it can finally be done!
Matt
Silvie Member posted June 29, 2000 12:42 PM
Oh,
Eli, you ol whip. You know that I didnt mean that I had a 13 year old
pot head's dick inside my asshole. I meant that I still have that
spirit of youthful vigor, anticipation and propensity for fantasy.
But thanks for asking, as your post allowed me the opportunity to
clarify for others who might have been confused.
As
for who the writers for this masterpiece are, I have attached a list
of the geniuses needed to craft this fine work:
Christopher
McQuarrie
Ed
Solomon
Laeta
Kalogridis
Blanche
McDermaid
Joss
Whedon
David
Hayt
Yes,
Eli, THAT Joss Whedon, of Buffy the Vampire Slayer fame.
[This
message has been edited by Matt Silvie (edited June 29, 2000).]
Ludwig
Member posted June 29, 2000 04:41 PM
That
would be Joss Whedon.
[This
message has been edited by Ludwig (edited June 29, 2000).]
Well,
now you've fixed it, so this post makes no sense. I hate this
edit-the-message-after-the-fact thing...
[This
message has been edited by Ludwig (edited June 30, 2000).]
Matthewwave
Member posted June 30, 2000 01:40 AM
Bassett
is reported to have actively campaigned for the role of Storm.
And
I read once in The National Inquirer that she actually *doesn't"
have pupils.
Matthew
Sean
Medlock Member posted June 30, 2000 06:15 AM
How
could she have pupils? She's not a teacher, is she? Ha ha ha!
Speaking
of dorks like me, I was reading somewhere that Whedon has publicly
bitched out the producers of the movie for not using his ideas. Oh,
and John Byrne is disappointed that they're not using Wolverine's
"real" costume.
Tim
Lockwood posted June 30, 2000 12:02 PM
That
comment by Byrne,if accurate,is par for the course for that guy.I
think that the odds are in favor of the X-men movie being as crappy
as the Batman movies were and using the comic book costumes would
just be another negative point. I always thought that the
costumes/uniforms thatsuperheroes wear was one of the genres' worst
traits and continues to this day.
Matt
Silvie Member posted June 30, 2000 12:40 PM
I
was at Target the other day and saw the x-men toys. the Wolverine toy
isnt called Wolverine, he's called Logan.
Matt
Silvie Member posted July 05, 2000 03:08 PM
speaking
of wolverine, what is his origin? I seem to recall this really murky
Barry windsor-smith issue of Marvel Comics Presents, that lame assed
anthology thing, that had wolverine in a lab with millions of tubes
sticking out of him, and he kills all the scientists and runs out in
to the snow. but that's all I remember. does anyone know the truth?
Eli
Bishop Member posted July 05, 2000 05:13 PM
Matt-
Well, maybe someone does, but you won't know unless you read this.
Aren't you sorry you asked?
Saturday, July 11, 2020
NEVER IRON ANYTHING: Star Wars #80
Tony Esmond and I discussed a favourite issue of mine from the Star Wars series of comics published from 1977-1986.
Have a listen here.
Friday, July 10, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE Previews 3
Here is the third installment of previews of my new comic.
A Good Memory. Script: DR, Art: Olivia Hicks. |
Hourly Comics Day. Script, Art: DR. |
India (and after) sketchbook. Script, Art: DR. |
It's Bin Said. Script: DR, Art: Zu Dominiak. |
Script, Art: DR. |
A Loud Bang. Script: DR, Art: Damon Herd. |
Morning. Script: DR, Art: Azuna Ikes. |
Mount a Rescue is available now from the Fred Egg Comics shop or at Comichaus.
Thursday, July 09, 2020
THAT COMIC SMELL: HEAVY COMICS
The new episode is online now.
From the web:
"This time on the podcast we get real. Like, really real. Yes, we are getting down, deep and dark by covering some “Heavy Comics”
That doesn’t mean we can’t have a good laugh along the way though. We have a little catch up, Mike has a little technical issue at the start and we gain an echo. Disclaimer! We did actually gain an echo near Nando’s books. There was a slight problem and we couldn’t get rid of it. It’s barely noticeable, but just so you folks know going in. It’s already heavy enough without the sound going that way as well.
This and all the usual comics chat on…
That Comic Smell!
Get us on…
Soundcloud: tinyurl.com/y8vzeh3c
Spotify: tinyurl.com/y2qtu2cs
YouTube: tinyurl.com/yajnxcno
Apple Podcasts: tinyurl.com/hwbqxab
Podbean: tinyurl.com/yxvecykj
and most places you find podcasts.
Barefoot Gen (Keiji Nakazawa)
Essex county (Jeff Lemire)
Hip-Hop Family Tree (Ed Piskor)
Persepolis (Marjane Satrapi)
Illegal (Eoin Colfer, Andrew Donkin, Giovanni Rigano)
March (Congressman John Lewis, Nate Powell, Andrew Aydin)
Lighter Than my Shadow (Katie Green)
My Friend Dahmer (Derf Backderf)
Suffragette (Mary Talbot, Kate Charlesworth, Bryan Talbot)
King (Hoe Che Anderson)
Malcolm X for Beginners (Bernard Aquina Doctor)
Apollo (Chris Baker, Matt Fitch, Mike Collins)
Lulu and Mitzy: Best Laid Plans (S. Eddy Bell)
Eightball #23 (Dan Clowes)
Maus (Art Spiegelman)
Charley's War (Pat Mills, Joe Colquhoun)
Rosalie Lightning (Tom Hart)
Heavy Metal (Various)
Raze (Claire Spiller)
Anxiety Me (Nicole Bates)
Decomposition (Steven Ingram)
Barking (Lucy Sullivan)
Blue is the Warmest Colour (Julie Maroh)
In Waves (Aj Dungo)
My Friend Dahmer (Derf Backderf)
Heroes For Hope: X-Men (Various Greats)
Heroes Against Hunger (Various Other Greats)
Teen Titans (Marv Wolfman, George Perez)
Green Lantern/Green Arrow (Denny O'Neil, Neal Adams)
Superman/Batman #26 (Sam Loeb, Various)
Heroes (Various Marvel, Alex Ross Cover)
Amazing Spider-man #36 (Strazinsky, John Romita Jr)
Fax from Sarajevo (Joe Kubert)
The Silence of our Friends (Nate Powell, Mark Long, Jim Demonakos)
Close to the Heart (Megan Sinclair, Various)
Chernobyl: The Zone (Natacha Bustos, Francisco Sanchez)
Wrinkles [Arrugas] (Paco Roca)
Wired up Wrong (Rachael Smith)
Stand in Your Power (Rachael Smith)
The Tale of One Bat Rat (Brian Talbot)"
Labels:
Art Spiegelman,
Charley's War,
Dan Clowes,
Eightball,
Heavy Metal,
Joe Colquhoun,
Lulu and Mitzy,
Maus,
Pat Mills,
Podcast,
Podcast DR,
Rosalie Lightning,
S. Eddy Bell,
That Comic Smell,
Tom Hart
Wednesday, July 08, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE Previews 2
Here is the second lot of previews from my latest comic.
Down to a Tea. Script, art: DR. |
Encased in Chocolate. Script, art: DR. |
Fifty Fifty. Script: DR, Art: Veddabredda. |
Forgive and Forget. Script: DR, Art: Emma Oosterhous. |
Generations. Script: DR, Art: Paddy Johnston. |
Story: Ethan Robertson, Art: DR. |
Script, art: DR. |
Thanks to Alan Henderson of Penned Guin.
Tuesday, July 07, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE at THE AWESOME COMICS PODCAST
Dan Butcher, Tony Esmond, and Vince Hunt discuss Mount a Rescue on their latest episode, around the 1hr, 34mins mark.
Have a listen here.
Monday, July 06, 2020
MOUNT A RESCUE Previews 1
Here is the first installment of previews of my new comic.
Awesome 250. Script, art: DR. |
Based on a True Story. Script: DR, Art: Cherish York. |
Butter Dream. Script: DR, Art: Tim Kelly. |
Clap. Script, art: DR. |
Script: DR, Art: Rebecca Horner. |
Coming of Age. Script, art: DR. |
Script: DR, Art: Neil Paterson. |
Mount a Rescue is available now from the Fred Egg Comics shop or at Comichaus.
Labels:
Awesome 250,
Based on a True Story,
Butter Dream,
Cherish York,
Clap,
Comics performance,
Coming of Age,
Crusader,
Mount a Rescue,
Neil Paterson,
Previews,
Rebecca Horner,
Tim Kelly
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