How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way…

I really don’t know how many of you here are comic artists, although I’ll admit that intrigues me.  In recent years I’ve heard a growing sentiment among comic artists that “How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way” is out of date, not exciting enough, for beginners only, etc.  If you cannot tell by my tone, then let me spell it out: This is still the best book on sequential art for comics ever put together.  Sure, there’s Will Eisner’s book, and it’s great and all, but “How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way” brings it all back home for me.  I’ve had my copy since 1978, and I still pull it out regularly and study it.  And, I still find new nuggets of wisdom in there, or different takes on techniques that I’ve never really considered.  So, without further commentary:

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 |Part 7 |Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 |Part 12 |

Unfortunately, the embed function on these videos has been disabled, but you can still enjoy them via these links.

Ramblin' Man…

Hi, Folks:

I haven’t had the opportunity to prattle on with my lop-sided opinions lately, so it’s time I make that right.

When I saw the solicitations for the new graphic novel, “Neil Young’s Greendale,” I was momentarily confused—was I reading about music or comics?  Well, as it turns out, both.  I haven’t seen this comic yet, but chances are I’ll buy it.  On the album “Greendale,” I consider the songs “Sun Green” and “Be The Rain” to be masterpieces, and deserving of their places among Young’s other great songs.

Lately, I’ve been in intensely studying the human head, and how to draw it better.  Here are a few observations: 1) Andrew Loomis’ books (“Figure Drawing For All It’s Worth” and “Drawing the Head and Hands”) are the standard by which every other illustrator should aspire to; and 2) I have a high opinion of Jack Hamm’s books, too, as well as lifelong admiration for “How To Draw Comics The Marvel Way” by Stan Lee and John Buscema.

Most of the rest of my art books in my library fall well short of these classics.  In fact, many of these art books dish out incorrect information!  I was stunned by some of the wildly inaccurate proportions and measurements these books push!

You know what’s wrong with most art books created today?  They are trying to sell you a genre, not drawing skills.  You get all this “How to Draw Zombies” crap, or dragons, or faeries, or superheroes, or vampires, etc. ad infinitum!  These books usually include basic art instruction, but why not just teach artists how to draw!  Once the would-be artist gets a handle on drawing, then he can draw all the zombies and supers and dragons he wants!

Whew…  Settling down now.

This is why I’ve never written an art book.

In other news, you can now purchase “Johnny Saturn” issues 1 thru 9 from Graphic.ly via iTunes.  I just got to play with an iPad the other day, and I was very impressed with it—it makes a great comic reading device!

How did motion comics get popular?  They seem pretty much the same format as those terrible 1960’s cartoons featuring Captain America, or the Sub-Mariner, or the like.  In those cartoons, they cut up the original comic pages and then moved the two-dimensional characters around.  Well, modern motion comics aren’t that crude, but are more like movie animatics.  They are neither fish nor fowl, comic nor cartoon.  Marvel’s motion comics have looked pretty impressive, really, for all my complaining.  I’m speaking of the “Spider-Woman” webcomics, and the “Iron Man: Extremis” material I’ve seen.

Honestly, if I had the manpower, I’d produce a “Johnny Saturn” motion comic.  I have the source material, and the software, after all.  I just can’t make motion comics and keep up with the weekly comic work.

OK, enough blathering from me.  You may now return to your scheduled broadcast.

Happy Memorial Day!

Hi, Folks!

Happy Memorial Day!  Hope you are enjoying your day, and that the weather is beautiful wherever you are.

Do I get some sort of Iron Man award for never missing updates?  Keeping up with three color episodes a week is pretty grueling, but I’m oh so happy to do it.  In fact, I really enjoyed creating today’s and Wednesday’s episodes.  I listened to the Rolling Stones (Exile of Main Street, Sticky Fingers, etc.) and just really got into it.  I always feel there is a connection, on some level, between the song “Midnight Rambler” and the first Johnny Saturn.

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Writing Prose vs. Writing for Comics

Hi, Folks!

This is a short presentation Benita and I brainstormed to be delivered at a recent Writer’s Retreat. This might be of some assistance to those prose writers who are looking to break into the graphic novel or webcomic scene.

Writing for Comics:

By Scott Story and Benita Story, © 2009

DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PROSE AND COMICS WRITING

Whereas prose is very descriptive, establishing the narrative through words and the theater of the mind, comics are primarily a visually based.

When we say comics are visual, this doesn’t mean the writer is unimportant—in fact, he is just as necessary as ever.  But, the comic writers’ role is different than that of the prose writer.

Consider this: With prose, you establish a mental picture or emotion in the reader’s imagination; in comics, you present a mix of images and words that instantly elicits a response from the reader.  A non-fictional variant of this would be the word “Stop,” and then seeing a red stop sign.  The word intellectually tells you to stop, but the stop sign downloads directly and creates an instant mental response (hopefully followed up by a physical stop!)
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Evil for Evil's Sake

Good Morning, Folks-Welcome to December 08.

Recently, I requested a critique for “Johnny Saturn” on a certain forum, and several of my webcartooning peers were kind enough to offer their opinions.  One such critique set me to thinking, though: It stated that many of our “Johnny Saturn” villains were evil for evil’s sake, and that we didn’t offer good reasons for them to be this way.  This criticism centered on Tactical and Dr. Wissenschaft.

As much as I welcomed the critique, I have to respectfully disagree with this assessment.  There is that old Stan Lee adage, that “there are no villains, just fallen heroes.”  That same line of reasoning goes on the express that everyone is the hero in their own story, and every villain believes he’s on the side of the angels no matter how awful their deeds.

I don’t buy it.

Josef Mengele, the so called Angel of Death, is a loose inspiration for Dr. Wissenschaft.  This should be pretty obvious to those of you who know anything about 20th century history.  Did Mengele feel he was walking a moral high ground in doing the things he did?  I doubt it.  My guess is that he was all about the science, and that he was a total sociopath, devoid of any empathy for his victims.

Tactical, in his origin as a Balkan war criminal, is loosely based on any number of similar war criminals, both those that have been brought to trial in the Hague, and those that have yet to be apprehended.  Did these men relish the slaughter they ordered and oversaw?  Did they feel terrible about the massacres and rape camps?  I doubt it.  I think they performed their deeds in a misguided sense of nationalism.

Does every villain have some defining moment in their life when they become evil?  An “origin,” you might say.  Or, are they all sociopaths and psychopaths?  This is the standard comic book way, but I don’t think it’s the real way.  I think many of these people grow up in hell holes, and they grow up with cruelty.  It’s what they know.  They become inured to the suffering of others by their environment, and they learned cruelty as a second nature.

To put a point on it, many of the “Johnny Saturn” villains are simply those who put the ends before the means.  If they want something, they will do anything to make it happen.

In the real world, we know some people are bad, and we neither know (nor usually care) what made them bad.  The same rule applies to the “Johnny Saturn” villains.

Scott.

Random Thoughts Monday

Hi, Folks!

 

We’re a couple months into running this new “Johnny Saturn” site, and I feel really positive about how things are panning out.  There’s still work to be done on the site, and still some new digital products to roll out, but overall I think we’ve aimed this bus in right direction.  Hmmn… Maybe I should have said “plotted this boat on the right course,” or “piloted this plane on the right heading,” or some such.  Somewhere there is a great analogy, just waiting for this moment, yet I didn’t think of it.

 

Over on Comix Talk, Tim Demeter has a trio of articles about the future of Webcomics and the difficulties of long-form webcomics.  Tim’s a really smart guy, and his answer is to package webcomics for easy reading on handheld devices like iPhones and cell phones and the like.  This may be a big component of webcomics future, but I’m undecided.  I’ve never loaded a comic onto an iPod, and I haven’t bought any of the cool gadgets like iPhones, so I don’t really have a feel for this yet.  Maybe this is the future, and I need to see the writing on the wall before I get into it, and maybe it’s not.

 

When I first heard about webcomics, it was Stan Lee’s webisodes that drew me in.  I only watched a couple of these, because they were more akin to crude animation than comics.  Later, when the webcomic revolution hit, most creators and fans settled on good, old fashioned static comic pages.  No animated elements, no soundtrack, no voiceovers.  The static comic strip let comics do what they were good at, and yet still allowed for digital delivery.

 

I passionately love cartooning, as you can probably tell, but I also take it seriously.  Delivering pages on schedule feels to me like Benita and I have our own television show, and the show must go on!  The fact that people read what we write and look at our pictures makes it seem all so worthwhile!  We are storytellers, first and foremost, and being able to share our tales is at the very heart of what we do.

 

So, Thanks!  Scott.