Tuesday, December 31, 2019

DRAWING BOARD DIARY #4: A CHRISTMAS MONSTROSITY (a work in progress)

Friday, December 13, 10:11 pm

Okay, I don't have time to really get into it, I'm just starting this post to document my progress. I'm working on the poster/DVD cover for Rhonda and Mark Parker's latest Beaver Alley Studios' film, A CHRISTMAS MONSTROSITY. Even though I knew about it and was formally asked to work on this back on November 20, I really didn't put anything on paper until... today. This morning. While I was AT Dunn Tire in Lockport waiting for my front and rear brakes to be installed and then my inspection to be done (which expired in November, by the way). And the deadline? YESTERDAY. December 12.
Yes. It's official. I'm a fuck-up. A FUCK-UP.
Anyway, whatever, I have to come up with some damn thing.
I'll be back. Oh, don't you worry..!

Saturday, December 14, 6:33 pm

So, I started my poster design yesterday morning at Dunn Tire. I was there at 8:30 and the estimated time for replacing front and rear brakes and doing my inspection was "a couple hours." So, I figured three to be safe.
So... I finally get out of there at... 1:30. I'm ready to head to Burger King or Wendy's and get some lunch. Except there's a rubbing noise in the front when I pull out of the parking lot. Fuckkkk.
So, I go back and it turns out that one of the brake pads was a little thicker then it should be so it was rubbing inside the rotor (er, the brake drum? Something brake-y.). An hour later, 2:30, they replace the brake pad and I'm finally out for good.
In that 6 hour period I didn't get much actual drawing done, but I did do some.
However between then and now i wound up ditching the original drawing and starting over. I like the basic composition but not how I drew Sid Blitzen's character. And I thought erasing what I had and re-drawing it on the same page would be messy, so I started from scratch. The original drawing was pretty sketchy, so it wasn't that big a loss, mostly psychological. Anyway, I started my re-draw and slowly started re-roughing in basic shapes and figures. Not a lot, though. And then we went out today to visit a friend visiting from out-of-town and then we went shopping at Whole Foods.
More or less that brings me up to date and to sum up:

    1. I have to really buckle down on this fucking poster. It was supposed to be DONE 2 days ago.
    2. I really need to finish this within the next 24 hours, which is, well, impossible.
    3. So, stop TYPING, Kimmel and start DRAWING!

(to be continued)

Sunday, December 15, 12:19 am

Well, I've been sort of drawing. Man, I wish I had more confidence in my "design"/composition. Part fo the reason I'm going so slow is because I AM slow, but part of it I'm unsure of what I'm doing. I wish I had better screen shots, I wish I had a better sense of what the film is like. Part fo me thinks it's an outrageous comedy, part of me thinks it's perhaps more horror than I realize because Rhonda (the director) wanted the poster to be kind of dark in spirit. So, I think the "tone" of the poster is throwing me. i don't think i have a tone, or what tone there is seems wrong, maybe?
Ugh, I have no time actually to debate this. I should just plow ahead and finish this damn thing and we'll see what happens.
And I have a LOT of drawing left to do yet.

Monday, December 16, 8:08 am

I'm still not done, but this was where I was up to in my progress yesterday at 11:30 am when I sent Rhonda a photo of what I had done so far, the first time she saw any of it since I started. Trying to finish it up today before work.



For the most part, she liked it. But, mostly she just wanted it done.
Today I have to be at work at 2:00 and then right after, I go to the December meeting of BM-VM at the Screening Room at 7:00 pm.
I'm going to try and finish the pencilling today beforeI go to work. At the very latest, finish it up tonight after the meeting. And then go ahead with inking it and then coloring it in with colored pencils. So, if I can get it all done, I'll try to get it Rhonda before work tomorrow, which would mean getting to her house in Lockport by 3:00 (I have to work at 4:00). Worst case scenario: I finish it Wednesday morning and give it to her then. I'm off Wednesday.
Okay, I'll be back.

Tuesday, December 17, 11:22 am

I told Rhonda I'd have this poster thing done by Wednesday. Hopefully I won't make a liar out of myself. This morning my initial game plan was to finish pencilling the design and then start inking it if I had time before I had to be at work (4:00 pm), but so farI've yet to sit down and draw. At one point I thought i'd be drawing by 8:00 am. Instead I ate breakfast, did some laundry (washing, folding yesterday's laundry and putting another load in as the first load dries), and some dishwashing. Shit, I gotta get this thing done! And then I received a text that tim at work wasn't feeling well and he was hoping I could come in at 2:00. Uh, no. But, I'll try to get there by 3;00. Actually, I may just leave at 2:00, stop at Country Max beforehand to get bird seed, then go to work. Shit. time always just... flies. Man, I really need to get better about my handling deadlines and managing my time in general.
Whatever. I'll be back.

11:44 am.

FUCK, there's NO way I'm going to have the pencilling done before I go, even if I didn't leave early for work. Whatever. I gotta just keep whacking away at the damn thing... Dammit.

Wednesday, December 18, 10:53 am

Man, yesterday was all distractions and ended with a lot of cart-pulling at work. I was too wiped to really do any drawing after work last night like I had hoped. Leaving almost 90 minutes after I was scheduled to leave didn't help either.
Anyway, I HAVE TO FINISH TODAY.
I still have penciling to do.
Hope to finish that in the next few hours.
We'll see..!

10:55 pm

Holy fucking shit. I'm STILL working on the pencilling.
I don't know if I am going to have it finished by tomorrow morning... and I really need to. CRAP.

Saturday, December 21, 1:54 pm

Okay! We're back! Howdy!
Cutting to the chase, I more or less finished. I did NOT quite finish what I had hoped to do, but as time ran out for me, I was able to finish it enough so that Rhonda and Mark could have the artwork and make their DVD covers for the DVDs in time for the film's premiere at the Screening Room on Saturday, December 21 aka.: TODAY.


Pencilling took freaking FOREVER. Here's where I was with the drawing at 3:55 am on Thursday morning. Yes, I told Rhonda I'd have it finished late Wednesday night (I figured it would be after midnight, and into early Thursday morning, at the very least). Shortly thereafter, I started inking.


Sunday, December 1, 2019

STELLARA ULTRANOVA (Part 2): The Miserable Joy of Trying to Create a Comicbook Character

Sunday, December 1, 5:00 pm

So... okay.
It's another weekend where I have Saturday AND Sunday off. I feel somewhat guilty about having such a scheduling luxury, but it's not my fault. The only day of the week I request off is Saturdays and the rest of the week, work can do with me what they will, so I'll take the full weekend off gladly. Especially since it was freezing rain today and there was ice everywhere (PS. I work outside).
However, my wife and I decided to have a relaxing "reading" day and I really didn't do much reading, unless you count reading on the internet. Okay, I said that as a joke, but I could have done some reading for research, so there could be genuine reading via the internet that I could've done, but I mostly didn't.

Anyway, back to this relaxing "reading" day.
Yesterday we went to the zoo... and it was cold! It was good, but it was cold.
But, having a day with "nothing" ostensibly planned merely accelerates the amount of nothing I'm going to accomplish. I mean, I can't believe it's after 5:00 in the afternoon already!

Although, I did finally figure out how to get rid of these pop-up ads I've been having appear on my computer. Took some time to look up how to get rid of this program that appeared one day on my computer and has hung around ever since. So, yes, I actually did some productive research on the net to find out how to get rid of this adware/pop-up thing and I followed through and did it myself. Yay!

And finally, I decided I should try to write another post and attempt to make some kind of dent in my 50,000 words challenge for the year.

I was hoping to either write one or two posts, maybe work on my STELLARA ULTRANOVA idea, too. And by work, I mean, like, draw. I actually did some kind of drawing on the character last night just before going to bed. I started VERY late and wound up going to bed around 4:30 am. Jeez. But I did do some drawing.
As I mentioned in Part 1 (although I don't call it "Part 1"), I've been trying to figure out what to do with this stupid character (and I say "stupid" because she seems formless at this point in her "development"). At most, I have a name, a moderately serviceable and blatantly derivative name. And I know what my IMPULSIVE INSPIRATIONS are, or at least, what some of the obvious and early inspirations originally were:

1. "Emily," a glamour model whose photos and existence I happened to unexpectedly discover one day on the internet last week and she made such an immediate impression on me that I wanted to use her as a physical model for a comic book character.
2. And I wanted to set this character in the sci-fi/action genre. That's something I've been wanting to do for a while, but I just never got around to it. So, I guess seeing Emily was my sudden bolt of artistic inspiration to try and finally follow through on that impulse, to some degree.

That's about it. Since then, the more I think about it (and Stellara), my ideas keep changing and I'm filled with more self-doubt about the wisdom of my choices and abilities to pull her creation off successfully.

So, yeah, let me continue there, with my self-doubts and the decisions I'm making because of those self-doubts.

At the end of Part 1, I think I actually convinced myself that what I want to do is draw and create something that I like, that I would want to read. Hopefully, others will like it and would want to read it, too. There's a lot of presumption in those last two sentences, but I think my age is making me the most aware of such presumption and apparent arrogance. I think if I were in my 20s, I'd be more focused on trying to create the idea first. Yeah I need more of that youthful, ignorant impetuousness.
Meanwhile, dear reader, let me show you this really sketchy thing I did before I went to bed last night/this morning:


And a little closer...


Yeah, I know. Big whoop.
But, it's a start.
When I went to bed, the last thing that was filling my head was, well, a few things, but foremost was fashion. I'm trying to create a female sci-fi character and part of my desire to do this is a result of my male genes. So, the references I'm working with are from the focus of an adult who thinks like an adolescent, someone who likes the way Jane Fonda of BARBARELLA and Caroline Munro of STARCRASH looks. Basically, a hot babe with strange and revealing (and impractical) fashion choices. At the same time, I'm hoping some female readers would enjoy reading this supposed comic I'm creating, too. Yeah, in my mind I'm envisioning a Venn diagram in which two sets overlap. Set 1 = Quasi-Horny Male Sci-fi Geeks and Set 2 = Somewhat Discerning Female Sci-fi Geeks. My comic's imagined readership would be the overlapping areas. Unfortunately, I don't think the sets are willing to intersect, dammit! At least, not in this case.
Ah, well.
I guess I should try to work on appealing to Set 3: Me. Let's see if I can make a comic that I would enjoy.

Anyway, so in that drawing above I was trying to create some kind of outfit for her and I wasn't too thrilled with where I was going. I just have to keep whacking away at it. I don't really design costumes, so I'm entering the world of, well, Get-Ready-For-Me-And-My-Shitty-Designs. Part of me is hoping that as I try things out and I'll inevitably hate what I've come up with, but then I'll be able to articulate what I specifically don't like, and then I hope I can articulate why I don't like this and/or that and then, hopefully, be able to address those specific issues by coming up with ideas or drawing goals and strategies to improve these designs. Yeah. I hope.
In the same way, I need to just start drawing Stellara over and over again to be comfortable with how she looks, too. To just get comfortable with drawing the character, you know?

Which brings me to another concern. Getting back to E., there is no doubt that I definitely enjoy looking at her nude form and the few pictures I've seen of her clothed completely changes that dynamic. Well, duh! Of course. What I mean, though, is that in those pictures where she's dressed, she's still definitely attractive, but I wonder at MY abilities to make her just as attractive and interesting on the comic book page by drawing her clothed versus drawing her naked or nearly naked form. Of course, I'm presuming my drawing her character naked would be worth looking at in the first place, too. Oh, yeah, there's a lot of presumptions going on here. But seriously, I have a lot of doubts as to how well I can pull any of this enterprise off, no matter how low or high my standards and/or ambitions. I guess we're talking about the Jean Rollin Effect, a phenomenon, by the way, that only I refer to as the Jean Rollin Effect. Of the handful of European Horror/Genre/Exploitation directors I like or at least seem to drift to, Jean Rollin is one of them. He specializes in vampire films, but has done zombie films and other genre exercises, including porn, though under a pseudonym. Anyway, of the films I've seen, I like them and his best ones have a strange, even charming, fairy-tale fantasy quality to them. But I think it also helps (me, at least), that he often has nude, attractive women in them. That's the Jean Rollin Effect. The inclusion of nudity (specifically female nudity) ramps up the interest level in the viewer. I'm sure my interest in his films would decline significantly if he clothed his actresses more frequently in his films. So, getting back to Stellara, I'm wondering if the main attraction to this comic would be simply seeing Stellara scantily clad/nude most of the time. (sigh)

Meanwhile, thinking about the fashion aspect made me dwell on how inexperienced I am with that, so a wave of insecurity gripped me and I just went to bed somewhat miserable and wondering why I'm pursuing this venture in the first place.
And that's part of an ongoing intermittent discussion I've had with myself re: the appropriateness of tackling subjects I have no experience with. Speaking as a 59 year-old man, why try to create a comic book protagonist who's a young woman? It seems I'm inviting failure.
Having said that, at the same time I understand the criticism of writers and creators of a specific demographic (let's say, for example, white men) attempting to write characters outside of that demographic (let's say, women or any characters of color), but there are positive examples where that potential liability of inexperience has been replaced by the writer's imagination and ability to empathize and to do research, etc. I particularly remember the criticism Lena Dunham started to get for the HBO series she created, GIRLS, which received rave reviews prior to its debut and then critical backlash shortly afterwards. Specifically, as noted in this Fresh Air interview on NPR: "critics charging that the show is narcissistic, lacks racial diversity and showcases whiny, privileged millennials complaining about topics only relevant to whiny, privileged millennials." And Dunham countered the criticism by saying she wrote what she knew and she was reluctant to write of characters who lived and worked where she had no experience. Well, Dunham articulates this much better:
"I take that criticism very seriously. ... This show isn't supposed to feel exclusionary. It's supposed to feel honest, and it's supposed to feel true to many aspects of my experience."
"I wrote the first season primarily by myself, and I co-wrote a few episodes. But I am a half-Jew, half-WASP, and I wrote two Jews and two WASPs. Something I wanted to avoid was tokenism in casting." 
"I really wrote the show from a gut-level place, and each character was a piece of me or based on someone close to me."
"And this is a hard issue to speak to because all I want to do is sound sensitive and not say anything that will horrify anyone or make them feel more isolated, but I did write something that was super-specific to my experience, and I always want to avoid rendering an experience I can't speak to accurately."

I wish I could find the article I read years ago that was critical of GIRLS' lack of diversity, etc. I remember someone, a man (I believe) who commented on the article who dismissed Dunham's contention of wanting to write to something she knew of and he used one of the Marvel movies as an example of how people can write outside of their experiences successfully (because, obviously the Marvel filmmakers were not actual superheroes), so her response was essentially bullshit. He was using a superhero film as an obvious example of how it can be done, because obviously the real world doesn't have Iron-man and Captain America in it, so whoever was creating these movies successfully were writing outside of their area of experience. And I thought that was a cheap shot and poor example. Because in that example, we're talking about a fantasy film. We don't have real superheroes around to criticize the efforts of how non-superheroes attempt to depict their exploits. And that's a cheap argument to his cheap argument, but still, I think his example is actually a poor one, though it sounds clever at first.
Anyway, I understand Dunham's reluctance to try writing those characters (at least initially), but for her to be criticized for it after the fact (meaning after HBO okayed the idea pitched) seems incorrect to me.
Of course, this discussion is about half a dozen years old already, so this conversation has now moved onto other developments.
But...  bla bla bla... because: For whatever reason, I seem more interested in creating female characters. Most of my ideas are for female characters. Who knows why.
In my case, I guess I feel like creating another male fantasy.
Hell. Whatever. I should just try it and see what happens. Fuck.

Coincidentally, today I decided to check out episodes of ABSTRACT on Netflix to see if they had anything focusing on costume design, and to my delight, they did and it was someone I heard of, Ruth Carter, who won an Oscar for her work on BLACK PANTHER and who also did MY NAME IS DOLEMITE (which I haven't seen yet, but I really want to).
And it turns out that Carter's her first job doing costume design was in college. She actually auditioned to act in a show and didn't get it and they asked her if she'd be interested in doing the costumes despite her having zero experience at it. So, she wound up learning on the job. And after that, she then wound up being the costume designer in further college plays.
So, she more or less blundered into the field and tried her best while learning on the job, and built on her early success and experience. That's pretty much how it goes, I guess. Yay! And FUCK.
What the hell is my problem, though? It's not like I CAN'T draw. I mean, unequivocally I CAN DRAW. Having said that, boy, is there mucho room for improvement in my drawing. And again, the way to improve is to just keep drawing, over and over again.
FUCKKKK.

Man, these pep talks are getting to me!
By the way, I like how I kind of muscled up (oh, so slightly) Stellara's arm in my sketch above.

Oh! Another source of encouragement is knowing that Adam Warren's EMPOWERED comic series (supposedly) began as commissioned sketches for a "damsel in distress" which then progressed to him doing some short stories in which Warren piece by piece developed the main character and also added her supporting cast and developed her universe.
In that spirit, I'm thinking of doing a short, non-sensical story to sort of "test drive" Stellara's character and some ideas. I thought I'd try a little scenario that required her to do some action poses, and I even checked out some Jack Kirby fight sequences for reference and inspiration.

Also, as I continue to contemplate Stellara's character/personality part of me wants her to be various things:
1. An ACTION HEROINE.
2. A SEXY character, although to what degree, I'm not sure. Like, to the extent of her occasional fashion choices and how revealing/form-fitting they are, and perhaps a pin-up style variant cover? Or perhaps make a point of emphasizing that element to the extent that the sexy aspect is bonafide eroticism with more graphic elements of sexuality and thus, the comic itself needs to be treated more like an underground comic, like a sci-fi version of Spain Rodriguez's BIG BITCH comix, or Heavy Metal's FAKK2.
3. And now, part of me wants her to be kind of GOOFY, ABSURDLY RIDICULOUS and UN-SEXY (at times) because I think a funny woman is incredibly attractive.

So, I'm considering a bunch of elements to deal with creatively and I have no idea how well they'll all work out in terms of my execution and in mixing together tonally and narratively.

OMG. Is it actually 1:30 am Monday morning?
I haven't been writing this post ALL day, but I kept coming back to it, adding to it and also editing it in stretches.
UGH. Okay, I'm done with this one! In my next installment of kvetching about Stellara Ultranova I hope to have more actual drawing involved.
Stay tuned!

PS. Oh, I suppose I should also add this crucial piece of information as part of my IMPULSIVE INSPIRATIONS list above:

3. I decided to do the poster/DVD cover for Beaver Alley Studios' film, A CHRISTMAS MONSTROSITY. It's due in less than 2 weeks and I haven't done actual shit on it, yet. Hmmm, typical. Meaning, with regards to Stellara Ultranaova, this whole obsession I have with her has nothing to do with impulsive artistic inspiration, etc., but in reality, it's simply me avoiding working on the CHRISTMAS MONSTROSITY poster. AHA! J'Accuse, Kimmel!

Sunday, November 24, 2019

Oh, what to do with STELLARA ULTRANOVA?

Sunday, November 24,  11:14 am

So, as per usual, I've become obsessed with something and I've been turning it over and over in my head the last few days.
The initial obsession started when I "discovered" a new (for me) glamour model on the internet (she's apparently been around since 2013?). And yes, "glamour model" is a euphemistic way of saying I found some nude pictures of her. Anyway, she's rather amazing looking physically, and she triggered an almost immediate creative response from me (uh..., no seriously) to try and use her as the physical model for a sci-fi character named Stellara [pronounced Stell-LAHR-uh] Ultranova. For quite a while, I've been toying with the idea of creating a sci-fi character, and one that seemed full of possibilities was Anachronia Sands and her TIME COFFIN (the working title for a another comic idea). Hell, that's still an interesting idea.
But, now I have a new obsession.
Except, I can't figure out what kind of character I want Stellara Ultranova to be, besides resing in the broad genre of science-fiction. Part of me is thinking some kind of sci-fi/underground comix vibe, so something more off-beat and reckless than in a more mainstream approach. I had an idea for a one-off movie poster sometime ago parodying/referencing ONE MILLION YEARS B.C., except in this case it would be called ONE MILLION YEARS A.D. and then I thought maybe that basic concept might work as a series or at least a story for Ms. Ultranova. So I started spitballing some plot ideas and I considered Stellara's character being trapped as a soldier in this space war and a close female friend of hers waiting for Stellara back on Earth and that seemed like an interesting situation/character study, although in the version I ultimately came up with it became very downbeat and sentimental and I wasn't sure about that for thew overall tone of the story. I mean, my initial inspiration was very Barbarella and pulpy, and then this other idea with her and her friend, while still employing sci-fi tropes/concepts, etc. was ultimately very moody and character driven, almost a contemplation of loneliness and possibly PTSD for Stellara's soldier character. Genuinely interesting and worthwhile pursuing, but also a completely different and not light-hearted take on this character. Then I wondered if I could combine the two ideas, but... I don't know.
And then, just before I went to bed last night, I wondered about Stellara being an Edgar Rice Burroughs-type of character, but obviously a female-take on it. So, in other words, she'd be some unwitting Earthling sucked into a whole new sci-fi fantasy world and fighting to survive in a hostile, exotic and fantastic and most-likely scientifically implausible environment and culture and ultimately achieving great heights in terms of status, success and romance. That seemed like a promising imaginative journey and challenge to take. But, I don't know.
I don't now, I don't know, I DON'T KNOW!

nuts.

I should... just do some drawings of this character, by god. That would be a productive step and maybe seeing her fleshed out on the page might lead to some other more workable ideas.
Ugh. Okay. Whatever.

12:33 pm

So, curious about other sci-fi heroines out there, and somewhat self-conscious about how derivative my ideas are, I looked back on Travis Charest's SPACEGIRL strip. It seems that Charest's inspirations are less about the character and more about the spacecraft and tech of his fictional world. True, he does only a strip at a time for each "chapter" and by "strip" we're not even talking more than a single panel, let alone a whole page! So, you have to cut him some slack for that. But still, having said that, our first look at the Spacegirl character in the story is Chapter 2 and it's not much of a reveal of her. The next glimpse is pretty much a silhouette in Chapter 5 [UPDATE: Since I first published this post, the links to the SPACEGIRL comic no longer seem to work. Or at least, you can't go to a specific chapter. So, follow the first link (I updated it) to see the whole series and then find the individual "chapters" (actually, panels) from there. Sorry!]. We see her a few more times in the following chapters, but there are no close-ups. Again, Charest is being economical because essentially each chapter is a single rectangular panel, so there's some plot advancement he has to consider for each composition. Still, the first time we glimpse a new character, a very Emperor Ming-type villain, I'd say our first look at this villain reveals more of him than what we've seen of Spacegirl. So, I think that's fascinating. I mean, it's obvious that Charest's interests in what he wants to do with the strip are more focused on the sci-fi trappings, homages to the past, and space gear, which is fine. But, Spacegirl has no name and she seems disposable, a simple fill-in-the-blank to do whatever the story needs.
Meanwhile, another sci-fi fantasy heroine which I think is more successful in terms of her character grabbing your imagination right from the start is Julie/FAKK2 from Heavy Metal. Based on Julie Strain, an imposing physical presence to start with, and dressed up in a revealing "costume" and armed to the teeth and constantly brandishing her weapons with a snarl, you immediately get attitude from this character and a sense of where she's coming from mood-wise, without knowing anything about her or her situation. I'm hoping I can do that with Stellara's character.
Of course, another strong sci-fi character, although in films, is Ripley in the ALIEN film franchise as played by Sigourney Weaver. That's an inspiration.
Unlike Julie Strain, the model I've been looking at has none of Ms. Strain's personality in her photos. In fact, there are some photos where I think she's uncomfortable with the situation or at least distracted. She's very hit or miss. By the way, I've been hesitant to reveal her name for legal reasons, at the very least, but I should call her something, so I'll just give her first name, Emily. Even physically, sometimes she looks simply spectacular, and then sometimes, she looks awkward as to how she poses herself for the camera. Part of it has to do with her physicality. She's not only endowed, but she's also long-legged and broad-shouldered. In some poses it's quite an intoxicating blend; in other shots, it's somewhat amusing seeing how she carries herself. Sure, part of it is because of her specific circumstances, like trying to negotiate walking with high-heeled shoes in a grassy field, so she seems like an awkward fawn. Although some shots I think are part of a whole shooting day, so maybe they were never meant for public use, so I'm cutting her some slack for various goofy candid shots. But in some "keepers" she occasionally has a less engaged look, so again, she's hit or miss in terms of her attitude (or whatever you want to call it) in her pictures and how she regards the camera. Unlike another model named Emily, Emily Ratajkowski, who's also quite fetching. Ms. Ratajkowski, for instance, seems very consistent in her almost distant mood in all her photo shoots. So, with the Emily I've been scrutinizing, she seems less plugged into that blank, detached model stare that some models have (though, not in a bad way) and E. Ratajkowski definitely has (and definitely not in a bad way). But today I stumbled across some gifs of a photo shoot Emily was in and she's rather charming in very brief glimpses, so that's nice to see. Anyway, I digress.
By the way, the Barbarella character I mostly know by the Jane Fonda film. That film is also a possible influence on Stellara because I like the strong, weird fashion vibe of her character.

One of my (numerous) problems is my creative impulses are at odds with each other:
1. Foremost, I want to do something extremely pulpy, derivative and exploitative, like low-budget sci-fi trash cinema from the 80s. The ERB reference resonates here. Also, Fukitor by Jason Karns does, too, except not so disposable and coming across like a tossed off one-joke premise; so, in my case, I'd like to have much stronger character development and working of themes and plot.
2. Which ties into my other creative impulses, wanting to do something worth reading, so I'd like to have some character development, a reasonable plot, and not be completely exploitative. ARGGHH! I just need to try it out for a few pages, do my best and see what turns out.

Alright, I should get my ass motivated to do something constructive.
More to come... hopefully...

Thursday, November 7, 2019

DRAWING BOARD DIARY #2: "JOYRIDE!" Part 2

Tuesday, November 4, 2019 10:07 am

NOTE: Just a word of explanation here. This month I'm trying to focus on posting more on my various blogs and a lot of that effort is me trying to finish the numerous posts I've started earlier, either begun months or even years before. This is one such post.
Originally started back in June, it covers a number of topics I was preoccupied with back then, but eventually, we'll get back to where my head is now in November. Hope that makes this post more comprehensible... maybe?


Sunday, July 7, 2019  8:18 pm

...So, I'm trying to get my shit together as usual.
This post is pretty much a follow-up to this post, hence, "Part 2."

The main subject to these two posts is I'm just fucking trying to draw a comic book page. That's it.
I'm also trying to just get into a rhythm of drawing ANYTHING, too.
The last new thing I drew and finished, I think, was the movie poster to Rhonda and Mark Parker's* feature film, MESSAGE IN A BOTTLE, back in August 2017. Actually, I'm amazed I pulled that artwork out of my ass; okay, I slightly missed the deadline originally established by Rhonda, but made their premiere deadline, at least.
But, I digress (as usual), dammit!

I want to draw a comic book page (or pages), now.

The first "Drawing Board Diary" (DBD) post talks about a couple ideas I had for a short story, but of course, I keep expanding on the ideas, my usual m.o.
Anyway, I'm still trying to settle on a story to do.
I also have this weird sci-fi thing called V IS FOR VOID I came up with, a sort of variation on another idea called SPACE JUNK. If anything, VOID is a re-iteration of JUNK, although JUNK was originally a single character idea with one or two peripheral characters, and VOID was focusing on a couple or at least two characters.
I think my problem is my lack of confidence to commit to an idea and just DO IT.

I also have a few unfinished drawings/and or ideas I'm thinking of finishing:

1. Gorilla Ranch Girls (GODLAND fan art)
2. Beatbox-ish fan art (mostly just a pig with a mohawk and funky glasses and then overly drawn out of desperation). Here's a really crappy picture of it so far:



3. Re-make of my one-page comic page story, "Karen's Dilemma"/INTERPLANETARY ROMANCES debut.
4. This drawing I JUST started a week or so ago in my sketch book, a woman holding a pig and...? It was something I was drawing but had no idea what I was doing. I then started thinking about it and came up with a name for the two characters, CRANBERRY AND CAMEMBERT, and they're encountering wild outer-space aliens: Truffids! Get it? Triffids + Truffles? Camembert's the pig. Pigs and truffles? Yeah? No? Er...

November 5, 11:26 am

And... we're back.
Yeah, so... I'm re-reading this stuff from about 5 months ago and basically, my mindset is always the same in that I'm thinking of a project to work with a certain amount of obsessive intensity and then, just as quickly, another idea comes along and I more or less abandon completely whatever it was I was so devoted to and preoccupied with for a short period of time (day, weekend, week, month(s)).
Besides these drawing projects, I also have notebooks that I accumulate, feverishly write in ideas for new projects, which I then inevitably forget just as impulsively and reflexively.

grrrrrr...

November 7, 2:28 pm

Well, I haven't done much of anything today. I start work at 4:00 pm today and this morning I had hoped of getting something done by way of household chores before work, but then I started watching TV while eating breakfast, then I fell asleep abit, but mostly I'm looking at the weather outside and we're having our first light, wet snow of the season and I'm, like, crap. I have to work in this stuff tonight? Guh. Just not in the mood, yet.
So, I really shouldn't be on the computer, either. But let me do a quick cut and paste here and then I'll move on.
I actually started another post as well a few months ago and I'm just going to add it to the end of this post because it's all about my art goals for the year. I actually made a list:

February 6, 2019

GOAL 1: Put together my drawing table.


GOAL 2: Finish my story for the Apple Corps Comic.


GOAL 3: Create a piece of merchandise for Society 6.


GOAL 4: Finish THE CAT'S MEOW.


GOAL 5: Finish SWAMP SQUAD OF THE DEAD.


GOAL 6: Illustrate Visual Encyclopedia for JOURNEY OF THE AVENGER.

Part 1: Do 10 illustrations.

GOAL 7: Update my Portfolio.


GOAL 8: Create a website for my work.

-Before I buy a domain, etc., I must have at least 10 individual cartoons of TABLE SCRAPS ready.


Thursday, August 8, 10:53 am


Okay, here's an update sports fans: I HAVEN'T DONE JACK SHIT ON ANYTHING YET.

And, that's still a good list, so I'm not going to amend anything.
Meanwhile, tomorrow is the beginning of the 2019 Buffalo 48 Hour film project and I'm heading up Team BM-VM's efforts to make an entry this year.
I still have a bunch of last minute preparations to address before tomorrow's start at 7:00 pm, but this is my game plan for the rest of August:

1. Aug 9-11: Focus on the Buffalo 48 Hour Film Project


2. Starting Aug. 12: Focus on drawing. Attempt to do a drawing a day (give or take). When I get to 10 drawings, re-assess my progress and speed.


3. Aug. 23-29: Enjoy the Buffalo Dreams Fantastic Film Festival.


So, the seven goals seem solid enough.
And as for my plans for August, well... I did #1 and #3.

I'm thinking of calling this month, #BetterNovemberThanNever, as a way to justify finishing up some artistic loose ends, like Inktober drawings, for instance.
NOTE: JOURNEY OF THE AVENGER is a sci-fi/adventure book that Sam Qualiana wrote and is currently re-writing. It's his first effort and he had compiled a reference of strange creatures and aliens that populate his novel, with drawings by him (and some by his brother) along with descriptions. I saw it and I thought I could do a better job of illustrating the creatures and he said sure, give it a shot. So, that's yet another project I impulsively forced myself upon.

Anyway, I should get going.
More later.

*local filmmaking pals of mine, writer/director and cinematographer/editor respectively.

P.S. BTW, I don't know what the (occasional) deal is with Blogger. Every now and then, I'll make corrections to a post and thoise corrections don't seem to stick. So, if you're wondering why sometimes font sizes don't seem to be consistent from one blog to the next, it's not intentional! I try to correct it and it seems to have gone through, but then when I look at the actual blog, it hasn't. No clue why. So, similarly, I tried to correct the colors of the font above where I list my art goals in February and then comment on it in August. I tried to make them all blue, but obviously, for some reason, Blogger has different color schemes in mind. Whatever.

Sunday, November 3, 2019

MY SUMMER 2019 BUCKET LIST

Thursday, June 13, 2:01 pm

Okay, I'm just taking five minutes (if that) to start yet another (possibly unfinished) post.
I'm taking five from cleaning up the house. My wife's upstairs working on cleaning and other things and I'm focused on the garage area (sun room, TV room, downstairs bathroom).
I more or less finished the sun room, which was mostly vacuuming, and now I'm slightly goofing off before getting into the TV room.
Mostly, I want to say "out loud" that I'm going to make a comic book this summer, somehow, some length, some way. I'm going to be fucking SIXTY YEARS OLD in pretty much eight months! So far, for my 59th year on this earth, I've notched a couple good personal accomplishments.
First, I directed my first play in 14 years: ANNAPURNA, a two-hander starring Lisa Ludwig and John Profeta and produced by the New Phoenix Theatre in downtown Buffalo. Although I was very stressed out during the entire rehearsal process, it wound up doing okay. Getting a 4 out of 4 star review in the Buffalo News didn't hurt, either.
Second, shortly after doing the play, we finally sold our old house in Lockport! We moved to our "new" house* in the fall of 2017, but the old house sort of became this albatross hanging over our head for, like, 21 months. Part of that delay was mostly my fault because I still had a bunch of cleaning and moving to do. My wife moved her stuff out but my belongings were so disorganized she left that entirely up to me. Plus I had some additional cleaning up of areas in the old house, too. Anyway, due to circumstances (like going back to work when we moved in 2017) and mostly my dragging my feet, it just took forever for us to finally wrap things up in Lockport. And, boy, did that pose problems, mostly financial as we were then saddled with the expenses of two houses in that period of time. About the only positive aspect of that situation was in 2017, when friend and actor John Karyus needed a place to stay briefly before he left the area to move back to L.A. (long story) and we let him live in the old house from, uh, I think, a few weeks in November to very early December. And it was during that stay that just before he departed for the West Coast, I shot some footage of him (and me) for a ridiculous and spontaneous movie idea called THE RESURRECTION OF THE BLUE AGOUTI. But, that's a whole other (and currently unfinished) story. ANYWAY, I finally got my shit together and this past spring got around to doing what I had to do at the old house, then Amy and I finally got the house straightened out to have a realtor come through and we put the house up for sale and it sold.
It sold.
IT SOLD.
We weren't exactly confident that that was going to happen, what with no home-inspection, and selling it as is, warts and all. We sold it and we also made a small profit, in terms of what we were expecting and the bills we had to pay, but the upshot is: no more mortgage to worry about, no more Lockport utility bills, no more going back and forth to Lockport to cut the grass and shovel the snow, etc. That era of our lives was finally over and we could finally MOVE ON.
So, two huge accomplishments!

Now, I'm just trying to capitalize on that sense of achievement and keep the "momentum" going this year, dammit!
Alright, gotta go.
More later.

Friday, September 27, 5:04 pm

Well, summer's over, man!
And even though I didn't work on a comic book at all, let alone complete one, I DID work on and direct this year's Team BM-VM entry for the 2019 Buffalo 48 Hour Film Project. It happened the weekend of August 9-11. Our entry was called THE CASE OF THE MISPLACED HERRING.


Meanwhile, I still have to get into some sort of habit/routine of doing artwork and making films.
ARGHHH.
But back to housecleaning.
(I know, I know! Two and half months later, and I'm still doing housework!)
Still, I did a short film and it was for the Buffalo 48 Hour Film Project. Yay! That's accomplishment #3!

Friday, November 1, 1:56 pm

Howdy.
Okay, well, this year is just hurtling along.
And I'm still looking to get into some sort of regular work routine. "Work" meaning drawing regularly, writing regularly, filmmaking regularly. Plus my regular household chores AND finishing up with the various stages of remodeling on our house.

Getting back to drawing and artwork...
So, I've done a lot of squat so far this year in that area.
More recently, I was hoping to do something for Inktober 2019 and I did nothing. Well, I started three drawings and jotted down ideas for other prompts. But I didn't finish penciling any of the drawings and I didn't get close to even inking, the whole purpose of the month-long event! But, also, I hoped to get some work in on the my Apple Corps Comics story. And update my portfolio.
Yes, I'm just re-hashing here what I haven't done so far this year.
Which hasn't stopped me from having new, additional ambitions: possibly being a guest artist on a Numina Comics comic, and inking some pages (officially) for Mark McElligott and John Warren's comic, GOOD CREATURES.

Re: the Numina Comics thing.
During October, I got re-acquainted with local artist/writer Aaron O'Brian on-line mostly through Twitter and followed his daily progress as he did Inktober 2019. Which he did! I know Aaron mostly through the Visions comic anthology from Queen City Book Store (a local comics shop owned by Emil Novak, Sr., whom I know through the store and then through some filmmaking projects he did years ago (THE ACCUMULATOR and BANSHEE) that he enlisted me to help him with, and then BM-VM which he introduced me to). Aaron had a self-published comic he did called RETURN TO SNAKELAND. Anyway, I wound up re-checking the website to Numina Comics of which he is one of the creators. I guess they started it in 2017 and as far as I can tell, they haven't created an actual full issue yet. There is an introductory on-line comic, though. So, I'm wondering if they could use an artist..?
Of course, I should NOT be one of those artists because I NEVER DRAW. But that fact NEVER stops me from suddenly having some ambitions to get involved, my usual impulsive, unrealistic, over-extending m.o.
In addition, there's GOOD CREATURES, the comic that Mark and John are doing. And I'm wondering if they could secretly use the help of an inker over Mark's pencils?
I think both of these are legitimate ambitions, BUT before I officially ask both parties and offer my services, I should:
1. FINISH MY ACC (Apple Corps Comics) COMIC BOOK STORY.

So, there's my first goal in order to achieve yet another goal.
Of course, I've already insinuated myself into Sam Qualiana's affairs by asking (quite some time ago) if I could adapt his short zombie film, SWAMP SQUAD OF THE DEAD (to which he said, "Sure!" and I promptly did NOTHING with it). Or Steve D'Addieco's short comic story from the mid-80's (!), THE CAT'S MEOW, that I've been meaning to illustrate. Obviously, I need to do some shit first before I move on to other projects.
And I should move quickly if I'm serious, because re: GOOD CREATURES, Mark is cranking out the pages and John is cranking out post-production: inking, lettering, coloring, publishing. They've already published two comics so far.
So...
TIME WAITS FOR NO MAN, motherfucker.

Sunday, November 3, 9:15 am

Speaking of Time, today is Daylight Savings and so we all "gained" an hour. Yay.
Oh, some catching up: Who is Sam Qualiana and Steve D'Addieco? What are Apple Corps Comics?
Why is my computer table only standing on three legs? Oh, sorry, that last one's a new topic (but something I do have to address today before my table goes boom and my computer goes, well... I need to address this issue TODAY...  stupid wood screws...!).
NOTE: My apologies if I'm repeating myself (and I'm sure I am) for the following background info. I'm sure the Apple Corps Comic Book Club and Sam and Steve's names have come up before somewhere at least once in previous blog posts, not necessarily with THIS blog, but maybe here, too. Anyway, some catching up:

1. Apple Corps Comic Book Club: I've mentioned this group before in previous posts, but myself and another artist/aspiring cartoonist, Pam, have been supposedly working on a comic book for well over a decade (!) with no comic book to show for it yet (!!!). We call ourselves the Apple Corps Comic Book Club. We both used to work at Great Arrow Graphics (aka GAG. I left there in 2003), a greeting card company that prints all their cards through silk-screening. We started a comic book group there called the Crabapple Club (don't ask!) and the additional members were Joshua Hrizak, Dan Clark and Will Rice. Well, the group eventually fizzled out but Pam and I tried to continue and fulfill the goal of making a comic book and we've met infrequently ever since. "Apple Corps" is a nod to that original group ("corps" being a homophone of "core", get it?).

2. Sam Qualiana is a WNY filmmaker who I first met at the first Buffalo Screams Horror Film Festival (which eventually became defunct, but also evolved into the current Buffalo Dreams Fantastic Film Festival). Sam and I became friends through the local filmmaking community and he actually became our trusted cat sitter when we were living in Lockport. He's perhaps most famous for this Youtube trailer of his first feature film, SNOW SHARK: ANCIENT SNOW BEAST (815,000 views!). He made a number of short films prior to SNOW SHARK and one of them is a compact, straight-to-the-point, effective short zombie film called SWAMP SQUAD OF THE DEAD.

3. Steve D'Addieco is my best friend from high school. He's still my best friend, but I've been shitty staying in contact with him consistently over the years. Although we did see each other last summer to celebrate our 40th high school reunion which he couldn't actually make (so we met halfway in-between just to catch up along with another classmate). He also was a Marvel comics fan (thanks to Bruce Allen, another classmate, for introducing us!). During high school we talked about doing a comic book together, something called Dimensions, an anthology comic. I think I may have roughly drawn a page or two for a couple stories. One was called, I think, "Life: A Universe Away, A Thought Away," and then there was this barbarian character we were talking about called Myrak of Cyrania and the story was sort of a cross between sword & sorcery and The Tempest. Steve actually went to film school and has written a few unsold screenplays. Post college (well, maybe during), Steve wrote this comic book script for me of a short story called The Cat's Meow. We're talking over thirty freaking years ago! I actually started drawing it a couple times back in the 80s and then again around 2000 when I was working at GAG. I took some pictures of GAG colleagues Jim Cole and Joel Menter as references for the two characters.
Still never finished it. One of the big drawing albatrosses around my neck. Still have a few cool ideas for illustrating the story. And, I think I actually found the script to the story while cleaning out the house for moving. Now, if I can remember where I put it...

Okay, I'm going to post this for now and just move on.

Our new house is pretty much my family's home since 1969. We moved there and I lived there pretty much through the rest of elementary school (I was 9 when we moved), middle school and high school. I lived in Pittsburgh for two years (1978-80) when I went to the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, then I moved back home for a couple more years (I can't remember exactly how long). My parents stayed there until they both passed (my mom in 2007 and my dad in 2016). And then I inherited the house outright. But we remodeled it before moving in. So, that's the "new" house.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

DRAWING BOARD DIARY #1: "JOYRIDE"


December 22, 2018

It seems I've started another project.
A one-page comic book story.
The last time I did a complete one-page story was almost 40 years ago. And I wrote and illustrated it, pencils and inks, in one day. Approximately within 11 hours.
So, I’m CAPABLE of doing this.

The main purpose for me writing this post was to try and come up with a one-page comic story plot-line and then try and finish it before 2019 and to detail my thinking process and progress. So, this is my little diary of how I'm trying to go from Point A (My Idea) to Point Z (My Completed Comic Page). That is my goal and that is my deadline.

This time, I actually have a little more space to work with. The space I worked with before was closer to a square, dimensionally, and now I’m using 50% more space than a square, my dimensions being 10”x15”. Also, in that first cartoon, I opted to add a “cover,” since it was a comic genre parody, and that also ate into my story space. This time, I’m devoting the entire space to the story. So, that should allow me a little more breathing room. I’ll take that as an asset.

Anyway, I’m going to try and figure out a beginning, middle and end to a story right now.
Okay, here was the original idea (SPOILER ALERT! Actually, this will be my last "Spoiler Alert" because I'll be giving away plot points left and right throughout this post. So, hopefully I WILL finish this project and if I do, I'll post it and then add a link back to this post in case you want to read all the behind-the-scenes crap. So there.): A young, attractive, and spoiled couple borrow/steal a Chronocycle - a motorcycle time machine - and go joyriding through time. As they do so, they show their disregard for the past and anybody else. Finally, they visit pre-history, and while there, the young man is killed and the woman, who doesn't know how to operate the cycle, is left alone thousands and thousands of years in the past. The End.
Since then, I've been thinking about that ridiculous story line and I was thinking of making the woman a sort of pre-feminist, so perhaps setting the couple's original era is the 60 or 70s. And, also typically, I've been thinking of continuing the story, i.e. complicating my original creative intentions - a simple one-page story, natch! - which is how I typically, compulsively, perpetually start a billion ideas and projects of varying degrees of interesting potential yet NEVER FINISH ANYTHING.
So, in an attempt to stay on track, I'm allowing myself this out: this is the first episode. There! Easy-peasy! If I WANT to continue her story, it will have to be in a follow-up episode or episodes.

I've come up with the couple's names, Sergio and Francesca.
And then I impulsively and nonsensically decided to make them Italian and set it in Italy so that I can have them speak Italian! I think the idea of them being glamorous and fashionable just seemed Italian to me, hence.
But, then I felt I couldn't reconcile Francesca as this character I was thinking of, so now I'm contemplating a whole other additional idea. Adding a third wheel, Beatrice, Francesca's childhood friend who now lives in the States and is visiting. Bea is not very confident and a more overt victim of gender politics and the general culture. But, for contrived reasons, all three wind up going back in time, and to Bea's horror, S and F get killed, and Beatrice winds up abandoned in a strange land and in a time nowhere near her own.
That seems more interesting to me (and maybe cruel, too, considering Bea's fate), but I can't cram that all in to one page. Or maybe even two, which is what my cheat was going to be.
So, I'm thinking...
I don't know what I'm thinking.

Okay, I do know this. I want Sergio to be killed by a prehistoric, carnivorous kangaroo.
There. I said it.

Other inspirations/points of reference: Chester Brown's YUMMY FUR comic. The first issues contained short segments that seemed totally non-connected, but eventually they started to make connections and developed into the long-running story, ED THE HAPPY CLOWN. Part of me is considering doing the same thing with this story and maybe, eventually intersecting with yet another, and arguably more involved, time traveling concept of mine, TIME COFFIN: THE ETERNAL JOURNEY OF DR. ANACHRONIA SANDS.
Part of the YUMMY FUR attribution is the nonsensicality of the vicious Jurassic kangaroo, so to speak.

Anyway, no matter how nonsensical my ideas, for some reason I feel they won't seem as terrible when finally presented on the finished page. It'll just be, you know? It is what it is. That's the theory. Sort of like the Indian Superman and Spiderwoman movie from 1988. you look at it and wonder, understandably, "What the actual F?" yet, it is what it is and there is joy in accepting its weirdness for what it is.

Oh, also, I had this idea to have "Joyride" in Italian. When S and F talk, it's in Italian. Not translated, just leave it as is. Of course, I don't speak Italian at all, so the dialogue will all be badly google-translated Italian. Plus, I came across this link for Italian slang, for additional authenticity.

December 23, 2:05 pm

OMG, I’m SUCH a loser!
Ah, I’m just kvetching about how hard a time I’m having trying to come up with a simple plot for this one-page story. Perhaps I can ask Laszlo for help.
I don’t know. I feel like I’m stuck on a perpetual loop of failure every time I want to do a comic book page, etc.
I’m trapped and I have to bust out. That’s the only solution. Even a really SHITTY comic book page would be a success. Start SOMEwhere. Then IMPROVE.

FUCK ME.

Alright, I have to go to work.

December 25, 11:42 pm

Hey, Merry Christmas.
Well, I seem to have survived getting to and through the holiday. But, boy did I spend money in the last couple weeks! I have to spend the next month saving money and also replenishing the funds I borrowed from our savings for the holiday.
Meanwhile, I really cleaned up loot-wise today. But, that’s not really news. Historically, I do well gift-wise on this holiday.
But, getting back to the subject at hand… re: this fucking comic page I’m trying to do.

December 28, 4:46 pm

Meanwhile, of the few fragmented 2018 resolutions I could possibly (maybe) complete, we still have housecleaning to do in preparation for visitors tomorrow after I get home from work. Oy.
I was hoping to have watched 100 films this year; I would have to watch 11 in the next 3 point something days. I wanted to have posted 50,000 words total on my various blogs; I’ve only reached half that amount. Argh. Oh, and also do a new one-page comic thing.
So, we’ll see if how many more films I can cram in (not eleven, that’s for sure). Let’s see if I can get to 30,000 words, maybe 35,000. And I’m still hopeful about the comic page.
Now, let’s do some vacuuming!

10:17 pm

Well, I did some vacuuming in our TV room and on the main floor of the house. Did some cleaning, some laundry, but was also kind of distracted.

December 29, 2:51 am

OMG, what am I still doing up??? I have to be at work at 7:30 this morning! Can’t believe I’ve been wasting time on the internet the last couple hours.
Plus, I should’ve washed some of my work clothes and I never did that. I’m such an idiot! I could’ve at least done THAT and then, even if I wasted time metaphorically jerking off on the computer, I’d at least have the wash done. Ugh! Stupid stupid stupid.
Okay, I just put a load of clothes in and in about an hour that cycle should be done and I can put it in the dryer. THEN I can go to bed and get up in a couple hours (around 6:00 am).
Alright, stay focused.
There are a couple things I can still do cleaning-wise while I’m waiting for the wash to be done.
Like…. Clean my bathroom and the downstairs litter boxes.
Okay. I’ll be back.

Oh, but first: another idea, “Segue”. I have an idea to do a page of just transitions, for lack of a better word.
I’m trying to think of an ending.
Basically, I start with one character and setting and then transition to another character and setting, yet the two juxtaposed scenarios are related.
The trick is coming up with transitions that don’t seem completely arbitrary.

For instance, I’m thinking of starting with a guy at his drawing board and he’s looking at a big fat blank sheet of paper (hmmm, wonder where I came up with intriguing scenario..?).
Then, we see the shadow of his nearby window cast across his drawing table.
It’s night-time but there’s a full moon brightly shining. The cartoonist turns to look out the window and his shadow is cast across the table. We see the shadow change from man to beast.
Then we see his feet walking.

December 31, 12:04 pm

Ah, screw it!
I’m apparently totally incapable of writing a one-page comic story!
I always keep adding ideas and complicating the basic concept. I don’t develop ideas, I make them more freaking convoluted!
Even when I compromise (i.e. change my own rules), like, “alright, maybe two pages, tops!” even then I can’t stick to my own guidelines.
So, I went from coming up with a non-linear story idea (more or less) and trying to keep it to just visual transitions, and now I have this much longer idea that also introduces my cats as characters. Then I tried to return to the one-page concept again by saying, okay, let’s make each page be a chapter. Or each two pages be a chapter. But the “story” is starting to get away from me, or should I say plot and introduction of characters.
In fact, now I’m thinking this might be my Apple Corps Comic story. Originally - well, actually, no, that’s not totally correct – when I last thought about my ACC story (that’s more accurate), I went from a sci-fi parody called “Close Encounters of the Furred Kind” which introduced my cats as characters as well, to a spaghetti western parody called “Once Upon a Time in the Backyard.” Aside from loose ideas for either idea, I hadn’t progressed too far with it. This supposed one-page story I was working on now, "Segue," which wasn’t going to be TABLE SCRAPS-related (TABLE SCRAPS being the title for my anticipated comic of stories featuring my cats), is now turning out to be yet another TS concept, but ridiculously I’ve gotten much further with it. So, I’m not killing two birds with one stone, I’m just slowly getting around to, uh, choosing a bird to kill in the first place, apparently. And, since the number of pages I need for my ACC story is (at least) 12 pages, I think this might be that story. For now, I’m still calling it “Segue.”
Cripes.

Alright, I have to fill the bird feeders and finish beta-ing a FROZEN fan fiction story by my friend Laszlo. I’ll be back. Oh yeah, I have a day off to end the year and a day off to start the year. Yay!

Oh, a weird idea. An obvious reference/homage to Acme products used by Wile E. Coyote, et al in the Warner Bros. cartoons, I’m going to have my cats use various products from the Chinese Li’l Xing-fu Toy Company. Visually, it’ll be modeled on Fisher Price products, but also part of the idea is Sanrio’s Hello Kitty products, which are ubiquitous and also weirdly far-ranging beyond just kid related merchandise. The Li’l Xing-fu (which means “joyful or happy”) logo/mascot is a perpetually laughing and joyous, chubby panda cub.

12:59 pm

Well, I did the bird feeders.
Since this one-pager is now a full-blown story and an intro to my TABLE SCRAPS comic, I’ll elaborate more on that universe. Here is the breakdown of the cat characters and some ideas I have for them or want to explore with them (so far):

ARGYLE – Modeled on our one male cat, Finn (short for Phineas, natch!). Argyle is fat and his main focus is eating. He’s also not the brightest bulb. Both of these ideas are based on the real-life Finn. I’d like to expand and elevate these ideas hopefully to more comic effect. In “Segue” I also wanted all three cats to be playing with some kind of Li’L Xing-fu product, and I had the toughest time with Argyle’s fixation. I thought about him wanting to put together a puzzle but he just has no clue how to do it. He doesn’t start with the frame or the outside of the puzzle - you know, looking for and putting together straight-edged pieces first - he just keeps picking up arbitrary pieces and then can’t match them. Mostly he buys these million-piece puzzles because he likes the pictures which are primarily of this glamorous feline celebrity he has a crush on, a seductive looking Siamese cat (no name, yet). So, that’s one running gag. When Argyle isn’t thinking of food, he’s thinking of this cat.

DAISYCAKE – Modeled on Minnie (short for Minerva). Daisy’s character looks the sweetest because she’s also dressed in pretty girly dresses and has a big decorative bow in her hair, but she’s clearly psychotic, gun and weapon obsessed, and hates mice. The mice in the comic are to Daisy like the Yancy Street Gang is to the Thing in the Fantastic Four. So she owns guns of various degrees left and right and is constantly practicing with them on mouse targets. Her guns are Li’l Xing-fu brand.

SPARKLE – Modeled on Velvet, our sweet, neurotic, long-haired black cat. Sparkle’s go-to expression is wide-eyed with her tongue sticking out based on the real-life Velvet. She likes to write fan-fiction, the specifics I’ve yet to figure out. She writes on a Li’l Xing-fu plastic typewriter.

NARRATOR/MONTAGUE FLAXBUTTER – The Narrator, a rooster inspired in part by Masterpiece Theatre’s Alastair Cooke and also the Mary Tyler Moore Show’s Ted Baxter. Namely, Monty would love to be Alastair Cooke in presentation and personality, but in reality and execution he’s more Ted Baxter. Fortunately, he has Hattie as an assistant. Vain and easily flustered, Monty wears a variety of toupees. I’m thinking of having a running joke where he interrupts the narrative constantly but from various specific perspectives: as archivist of the strip, as general foot-noter, etc. But each POV is a different get-up, so he’s constantly getting into different costumes, much to his sweaty consternation.

HATTIE - A young hen who seems somewhat relegated to assisting Montague constantly behind the scenes although occasionally spilling INTO the scenes. She’s much more together and composed than him, wears glasses, a bit chubby, sexy in her togetherness but not overtly glamorous. Eventually, you realize she’s got much more going on than Montague. Further ideas: she hosts her own horror show and dresses more vampishly, but still wears glasses. In fact, I had this weird idea where she doesn’t normally wear glasses, but when she does have to appear in the strip, self-consciously puts glasses on. It’s like her getting into make-up. Also helps Montague with various other behind-the-scenes tasks linked to the narration, like researching footnotes, etc., and a running-gag of him wearing actual different hats for different narration tasks which Hattie helps put on his head as she assists in his frantic costume changes (hence, “Hattie”). Although, I think she personally likes wearing different hats, so she’s forcing her fashion tastes on Monty. But she usually wears a cap behind the scene, and then something dressier when officially appearing. I like the idea of her character already but I’ll have to be patient and introduce Hattie later. I think I have too much going on already in this “Segue” story.

Arghh, I really should get to Laszlo’s story. Dammit!

January 1, 2019 10:31 am

Happy New Year!

OMG. So, I re-read this post in the hopes of wrapping things up, since it is 2019 now, and simply continuing writing about my work-in-progress efforts in another post or posts. But, I'm realizing I have two, maybe even three, different projects that I talked about here.

"Joyride" started out as a possible one-page story, then I stretched it into a two-pager, then it became a sequel to a longer idea: to clarify, I think "Joyride" would establish the characters of Sergio and Francesca and their impulsive, spoiled, amoral nature, then they find this time-traveling motorcycle and joyride through time recklessly and irresponsibly for the hell of it. I then thought about a darker ending to this story but it seemed like I needed more pages to accommodate such an idea. So, as a possible solution for the story, I added a third character, Beatrice. So, now I'm thinking "Joyride" could actually be a self-contained 2-page story, and then I continue the concept by adding Bea to the mix. But, things become complicated between the three characters during the time-traveling journey and they wind up in a prehistoric world. There, S and F will die and Bea will be trapped alone. How fun! Actually, the idea of this modern woman starting to experience the feminist movement in the 60s/70s and now thrown into a situation where she has to rely on herself to survive sounded like an interesting idea. So, that's the third idea, and I'll call it "Stranded" for now, with Beatrice trying to live and survive in this savage world.

"Segue" also started out as an attempt to be a one-page story, supposedly simpler in concept then "Joyride" and then, of course, it blew up big time and went in a completely different absurd direction. Now (I think... we'll see how long this lasts), it's going to be my Apple Corps Comic story, about 12 pages long, and also be an introduction to my proposed webcomic/comic series called TABLE SCRAPS featuring at least three cat characters based on my own cats [NOTE: We actually have four cats at home, but I have problems trying to figure out how to use our fourth cat, Pixie, as a character in the comic. Pixie's personality just seems different enough to be problematic. She's sort of the Zeppo in this mix, though for different reasons than the actual Zeppo, at least for now.].

So, where does that leave me?
Even though I started "Segue" because I had problems trying to end the "Joyride" story, re-reading my ideas and then considering "Joyride" as a prequel to a longer story with Beatrice in it, "Joyride" now seems like it could possibly be done as a two-page story, my original goal (well, sort of).
"Segue"'s weird evolution from a stand alone short comic to now the introduction to a regular comic series wasn't my goal, but it just worked out that way.
Therefore, I'm going to try and follow through on both "Segue" and "Joyride." I'll chronicle my progress on both counts via further Drawing Board Diary (DBD) posts, with the subjects being whichever story I'm working on at the time.
Let's see if I follow through on any part of this process, shall we?

Meanwhile, I did get to Laszlo’s story and he did post his latest chapter to his Frozen fanfic. You can check out Chapter 6 here.

(to be continued)