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Masterpieces

by leighton on August 12, 2015
Posted In: Uncategorized

(This post originally appeared on my old blog, Comics Class GO!, which was about my experiences teaching a class on comic books. This post has nothing to do with that class.)

In Moby-Dick, Herman Melville makes some basic mistakes that anyone in a beginning Creative Writing class would recognize. If the whole story is being told by Ishmael, why are there scenes where Ishmael is not present? How did he know what other people were thinking? Losing track of point of view is a rookie mistake, to say nothing of the rambling nature of the book, and the truly staggering number of pages that are devoted to minutiae about whales.

In terms of padding, though, it’s hard to beat Miguel de Cervantes. In Don Quixote, there is a section where the title character goes to a bar and finds a book. The bartender tells him that it’s a novel someone left there, and it’s pretty good, and he should check it out. So he does. Cervantes includes this (short) novel in its entirety, and it has nothing at all to do with the story of Don Quixote. It reads like Cervantes inserted an unrelated story into his manuscript in order to meet his word count.

Shakespeare also tries to kill time in Hamlet, coming up with excuse after excuse as to why Hamlet doesn’t just get his revenge already, until finally he gets to the end of the play, and everything wraps up quickly in a contrived duel that Hamlet doesn’t even initiate. The play is too long and the plotting is fairly lazy.

Moby-Dick, Don Quixote, and Hamlet are all flawed, sloppy in places, and seem like they could have used more editing. They have one other thing in common: they are three of the greatest books ever written. More than that, they are three of the greatest achievements of humankind.

Masterpieces aren’t perfect. They’re idiosyncratic, reflecting the quirks and obsessions of their authors. There are thousands of polished, technically proficient writers who have labored their whole lives and never produced anything half as interesting as Moby-Dick. At the end of the day, who cares if the point of view is inconsistent? Rookies in a creative writing class can give you consistent point of view, but they can’t change the way you think about the world.

Which is why it baffles me when people dismiss Jack Kirby’s work–the New Gods, for instance–because of his scripting. Yes, Kirby had a quirky writing style. He bolded words for no discernible reason, he used excessive quotation marks, and his dialogue is often awkward. There are countless creators who could write smoother, more readable prose than Jack Kirby. But none of them redefined the nature of comics storytelling like Kirby did. Kirby worked for years, polishing his approach, drawing stories with maximum energy and visual impact. He was better at composing a comics panel than anyone else who ever lived. With the New Gods, he created “An Epic for Our Times.”  When you consider those achievements, who cares about some oddly placed quotation marks?

Glory Boat

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Psychedelic Page 16

by leighton on August 11, 2015
Posted In: Uncategorized

The amazing Samantha Albert killed it on page 16, don’t you think? In the script I specified that panel 5 “should be crazy, trippy, psychedelic, visually stunning, with bizarre occult symbols in the background, strange lighting effects, etc.” That’s pretty vague; not much more than “hey, make this look real cool,” but she certainly did. It’s a great looking panel. Go look at it again, I’ll wait.

Page 16 ad
Sam Albert is young and full of life; like a young person, she generally reads comics online. But I am old, and come from a time when you could buy comic books at grocery stores and gas stations, so I think of comics as coming in 24 page chunks.

When I planned this first chapter of The Electric Team, I conceived of it as a 24 page story. That divides up into three sections of eight pages each.

The first eight page section introduces the setting and gives the backstory of Leeta and her father.

The second eight page section, now complete, shows the battle between the Electric Team and Commander McCarrot and his vegetroids. That’s over now, and the Electric Team won. Hurray!

The third section relates what happens after the battle. That begins on Thursday. SPOILER WARNING: The Electric Team will be invited to dinner!

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Killer Carrots

by leighton on August 6, 2015
Posted In: Uncategorized

On Page 15, we see Leeta, the Girl Who Was Raised By Unicorns, slashing and kicking Commander McCarrot. You may ask, “If Leeta’s such a great warrior, how is she outclassed by a walking carrot?” The answer is simple, friends, Mutated carrots are naturally tough. Their thick, carroty flesh makes them both stronger and harder to hurt than regular humans.

As an example of this, watch the classic movie The Thing From Another World, which features an evil carrot man from outer space as the monster.

 

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In the movie, a scientist gasps, “Why, he’s basically a . . . a walking vegetable!”  Or something like that . . . it’s been a long time since I saw it. I’ve only seen it twice–once when I was a kid, and I watched it on TV and thought it was amazing, and once in college, when I watched it in Genre Movies class, and was pleased to see that it held up very well. I remember being impressed that the male and female leads (pictured above) had a much more convincingly grown-up relationship than the characters in King Kong (in which the sailors basically say, “Ewwwww, a girl! Don’t let her come with us!”).

Anyway, the point is that the alien menace in The Thing is a vegetable man, and he’s extremely strong and virtually indestructible. So Commander McCarrot makes perfect sense, because surely they wouldn’t have gotten the science wrong in a 1950s sci-fi/horror film.

Besides, as Leeta says, she’s really not trying to beat McCarrot, just distract him for the surprise attack that you will see on TUESDAY.

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What Is This?

The Electric Team is a fantasy adventure comic for readers of all ages, with new installments every Tuesday.

The Electric Team is brought to you by Leighton Connor, Abigail Connor, and Samantha Albert.

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