Showing posts with label aliens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aliens. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Roswell-Update

Do you remember this picture? The one I posted here and explained all about? Of course you do, you are true to my cause for self-publishing world domination and know about everything I do, and for that I thank you most graciously.

As you will remember from the post I mentioned that I was going to produce Roswell as a weekly webcomic, just like Brabbles & Boggitt but on its own site. But I've had a change of heart, a change in direction: now I may just publish Roswell as single, self contained story and go straight through to the printed comic book route as well as the new Kindle Comics Creator, a new way to view your comics on phones, kindles, ipads, computers and other tablets. This way I get the chance to produce them and place them at your disposal a lot quicker (hopefully).

That said I thought the very least I could do was to produce the first page of artwork and show you how the page and layouts are going to look.

Roswell will be produced along the U.S. comicbook size and not my normal European look.

The American format offers a different approach and almost encourages you to be more creative with the format. The European look is normally more rigid: four rows of one, two or three panels per row with a half page splash at the beginning. I tried to change that with my Brabbles & Boggitt look but they have their format for a reason and it doesn't bend too well. But the U.S. comicbook format is perfect for stories that require one big splash image to pages that need a dozen images, and I'm looking forward to exploring this new format and size with Roswell.

But like with all my projects, I will be keeping you updated as to its progress and to that end I gladly furnish you with the first page.

The whole 22-28 page story will be lavishly coloured and packed with the slap stick tom-foolery you've come to expect from me. I hope you like it and will keep coming back for more updates and sample pieces of artwork: I won't be publishing too many pages---wouldn't want to spoil the story for you now would I? But I do promise plenty of snippets and hopefully a behind the scenes look at the production process.









I'm planning on producing the Roswell comic as a full colour book, but that will bump up the end unit cost. A black and white will be cheaper but not as easy on the eye, so I would appreciate any input you have on the whole colour vs black and white thing.

The story I'm sticking to, the art and design I'm sticking to but the pricing, now that's what effects you, my readers and followers, so what would you prefer?

Either way, please keep coming back for more about Roswell, Sleepy Hamlet, I Told You She Wouldn't Believe Me! (my next children's book) plus whatever else pops into my odd-ball mind.

If you like my blog and the things that I say and do, please tell your friends; mention me on Facebook, Twitter and any of the other fine social media networking sites you use. I would love to have my work reach a much larger audience and although I could no doubt eventually get there under my own steam, I'll get there a lot quicker with your help, so please, please spread the word.

Thank you

Monday, June 10, 2013

Roswell---the next project

Roswell. What can I say about this little chap? Well he goes against every rule in comics as far as I've heard.

Let me elucidate: I produced Roswell originally as a comic strip around four years ago and dutifully sent it around the major five syndicates. All of them rejected it out of hand, and I was at a loss to understand why.

Oh don't get me wrong, this isn't my inflated artistic ego talking, I'm a professional cartoonist, I know all about the world of the rejection slip so it had nothing to do with that; and after a short period of reflection I can usually see why the syndicates turn my ideas down and try to learn by those mistakes and push onto the next idea.

But the thing is I never really understood why they didn't go for it. Everyone who had ever seen it loved it not only for the characters but for the idea, something that none of my previous efforts had garnered. So what was wrong with it...why did the syndicate editors drop it like a hot potato?

Well its been a few years since I've sent anything to a syndicate and I'm not sure if I ever will again: this isn't sour grapes, I'm just not sure if its the way to go forward for me. But lately I heard an interview with a syndicate editor---I think it was someone over at Universal Press---who was talking about the ever increasing mountain of submissions and how they filter them. I leaned in closer to listen.

And there, almost at the top of ideas that they reject out of hand, was 'Alien strips'. Apparently they have so many strips submissions about aliens coming down to study us, that befriend a little kid who helps him understand our culture with hilarious consequences, that they just stamp 'reject' and move on without even looking.

And there I had it. Right out of the mouth of the syndicate review board. That was why Roswell was rejected. Without nary a glance or a flick through the material they decided my submission wasn't worth it. Not once did they take into account the months of careful development and character definition and design, or the weeks spent writing and selecting the correct balance in gags that typified the strip exactly or the hours spent crouched over a drawing board; not to mention the cost in postage.

No it was just rejected. No thanks. We're not giving a reason, just go away and come back with something else that we may reject out of hand for reasons you'll never know because we can't be arsed to put it on the submissions guideline sheet.

But I have a few points to make on the syndicates rather ill thought through viewpoint:

  1. There has never been, to my certain knowledge, a cartoon strip about an alien--- with or without a little wise cracking boy--- in the papers; so how do they know this will be a doomed concept?
  2. Isn't the idea of the syndicate to bring to the masses cartoon ideas that they would like to see? And seeing as just about ever strip ever written has at least one little wise ass kid, how do they arrive at the conclusion that an alien strip in this format wouldn't work any better---especially seeing as they've never tried it.
  3. And if they want to give to the public something they like then they should look at the plethora of alien based web sites there are out there; when I did a simple Google search there were over 32 million of them---now that's just sites, not the people who read them.
  4. And finally, my biggest point is this: my cartoon strip Roswell is not about an alien and a wise cracking kid, and if the editors had bothered to even look at it they would have clearly seen that it is a strip about an alien teenager and his Big Foot teacher. Yes Roswell gets involved with our world but--- and this is the biggest bugbear of his Big Foot tutor who needs him to not be seen--- he likes to lead by experience. So the sight of Roswell working in a McDonalds, or in a call centre or selling you life insurance door-to-door would not be an unusual one. But none of these things would be based around a confused alien trying to understand our ways, it would be an alien joining in and seeing how much fun he can have before getting spotted. Its a buddy strip with no wise cracking kids, in fact the only regular and reoccurring connection he has with humans are the two FBI agents who are trying to capture him and keep him under wraps, a short sighted and slightly deaf old lady who thinks Roswell is her little Jimmy come back from the war and Bo and Clem, two mechanics working out of one of those desert gas stations in the middle of no where who do the many and varied repairs on his space ship, not once being fazed by the fact that he's an alien. And Roswell, eager to please as he always is, never questions how they can always fix his star ship with the spare parts from an old caddy out back. Then the final humans he has contact with are Abdul the Bomb-Bomb, an Al Qaeda terrorist whose plots destruction but fails, due mainly to Roswell's interference and Hetty and Filbert Spieglebeen. Hetty is a hoofer of a woman who has had some kind of past with B.F. that he doesn't want to talk about it and would rather be anywhere but in her presence, and Filbert is her weakling and innefectual husband.
In fact Roswell was more about how we perceive aliens than the other way around. We see aliens as poinkers of probes and impregnaters of susceptible young cheerleaders: who only want to be taken to our leaders and to crush us under their advanced war machines and laser rays. What the syndicates would've seen, if they'd bothered to look further than the cover letter, was a strip that was more about the relationship of a tired and defeated Big Foot tutor and his new alert,
inquisitive, balls out teenage alien pupil. Of how this open and honest little personality just wants be be every one's friend.

They would've seen a strip of many tiers that has Roswell time travel, go back to his own planet and visit his parents---serious monk like creatures that float everywhere and are the leaders of the three planet system they run---they would've seen a strip that was about how other creatures from other planets may be more like us than we think. And as to having a wise ass kid teach them about us, had it never occurred to them, like it did to me, that maybe, just maybe a civilisation so advanced as to traverse the many billions of miles of light years needed to get here, and who have already supposed to have been here on countless other occasions throughout our history, might actually already understand us?

Obviously not. According to their narrow view point, these highly advanced sentient beings still need a baseball toting, bubblegum blowing wise ass kid to help them.

But this post isn't just about a gripe at big syndicates thinking in narrow and small minded ways. I appreciate that they have a lot to do and stuff  just gets lost under a pile of daily tasks and ultimately rejected without having a good chance to be reviewed. I also understand, probably more than they realise, that submitting cartoons to a syndicate is a crap shoot at best and expecting every single idea to be thoroughly vetted is a pie in the sky dream. But to reject a whole genre just because it might have a wise ass kid in it is just plain crazy .

But the real reason for this post is this: having learned about their somewhat jaundiced view of alien strips I decided to go it alone. I'm not going to produce it as a comic strip, I'm going to produce it as a weekly webcomic, very much like the Brabbles & Boggitt page we have every Friday. I'm going to make, as my next project, an episodical set of cartoon stories about the one subject that the great and unquestionable syndicate editors say none of you want to see...so lets see how it goes, eh?

And I promise you, no wise ass kids.

So keep coming back to learn more about the Roswell project. And of course all the usual stuff will be going on as I  keep entertaining you with my life, my ideas, my silly stories and my comics...and remember, its still all 100% FREE!!!

If you like my blog and the things that I say and do, please tell your friends; mention me on Facebook, Twitter and any of the other fine social media networking sites you use. I would love to have my work reach a much larger audience and although I could no doubt eventually get there under my own steam, I'll get there a lot quicker with your help, so please, please spread the word.

Thank you

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