Friday, 11 November 2016
Thursday, 27 October 2016
Rosie
I'm not an enormous fan of people
baring every detail of their lives online, but I'm about to. I'm
getting so many lovely messages and I'm struggling to keep up with
them all, I don't want them to stop, I just wanted to explain to as
many people at one time why I might be a little quiet for a while,
why I might not reply to you straight away and what happened to cause
this.
On Monday I had three beautiful
daughters, now I have two. My middle child, Rosie, took her own life
on Monday night. She was 19.
Rosie was a passionate, moody,
delightfully contradictory, caring, TV-show-binging, protective,
gorgeous, awesome teenager. When she was happy, she bounced off the
walls with it, spreading an infectious glee, when she wasn't, she
didn't. Her devotion to her dog, Darcy was beautifully intense, she
was an evangelically militant vegan and she was better at nearly
everything then she thought she was. Like so many teens, like so many
people, she battled to adequately communicate her real feelings, many
of our conversations revolved around sarcasm, hugs that had lasted
forever when she was little now had to be stolen, but I hope she knew
I always loved to be with her. Hiding away to watch
a terrible movie together when we both should have been doing more
productive things was a guilty pleasure I'd now give anything to do
with her again just once. I miss her so much, I generally only cry at
particularly poignant episodes of Dr Who. That moment when K-9 got
rebuilt gets me every time. This is obviously a lot worse. I'm struggling. I'm having
to drink more water to fund all of the tears, but I'll get there.
So I want people to know I'm going to
be busy for a while giving my full attention to the needs of my
lovely wife and daughters. I've lost one of the most important people
in the world to me, and so if you are expecting me to meet a
deadline/reply to an email/act rationally in the next few weeks,
please accept my apologies, but it's even more unlikely to happen
than usual.
Rosie hated having her photo taken, I
have hundreds of family photos with everyone else smiling and then
Rosie with a menu or a hand covering her face, these are the last few
photos I took of my baby, there's one nice one where she has baked a
(vegan) cake for my 24th wedding anniversary. It was
lovely, as was she.
I love you Rosebud. Hugs forever x
I love you Rosebud. Hugs forever x
Rosie Elouise Payne - 1997-2016
People keep asking me if they can do
anything, just asking is more than enough. If you are reading this
and feeling you want to do something......one thing you can do for me
- If you are fortunate enough to have people you love, stop spending
time looking at this and go tell them right now, in person if you
can, connect with them, hold them, kiss them, treasure them and
remind yourself that every single moment you can spend with them is
irretrievably precious.
If you were wanting to send flowers or anything like that, then please instead consider a donation to Rosie's favourite charity - Homeless Hounds at http://www.homelesshounds.org.uk
If you were wanting to send flowers or anything like that, then please instead consider a donation to Rosie's favourite charity - Homeless Hounds at http://www.homelesshounds.org.uk
Thursday, 13 October 2016
Keith Giffen Legion of Superheroes poster
I only helped stitch this together digitally, so it's a bit of a stretch even for me having my name alongside Keith Giffen & Larry Mahlstedt, but check out the original art for this amazing Legion of Superheroes poster on the comicartfans site.
Thursday, 1 September 2016
Kirby-Vision - Jack Kirby 99th Anniversary Portrait Gallery
Jack Kirby would have been 99 on August 28th 2016. Next year will be the big 100, feels like people all over the world should be building statues or organising parades or something? The Kirby-Vision blog on the Jack Kirby Museum Website is running it's 99th anniversary Kirby Portrait Gallery and included one of my pieces in it (below), go have a look!
Upcoming things for me in the next few weeks -
28th September - BettaKultcha, Manchester
I'll be one of the speakers giving a slideshow presentation. Tickets £6
2nd October 2016 - Bridlington Comic Con 2016
I'm a guest at Bridlington's first comic convention. I'll also be giving a talk on Jack Kirby.
I've also been doing a little work with the tremendous Trevor Von Eeden, who recently did a frank and fascinating interview that you can read in full here on Comic Creator News. The never-ending process of writing a book with John Watson continues, we have high hopes of publication soon. Or at least a new blog entry with some really good interesting news on our latest disagreements.
I'm currently on holiday in the middle of nowhere, trying to relax while at the same time desperately trying to meet some writing deadlines .....and achieving neither. Nice to see a bit of countryside though.
This coming weekend (3rd/4th September) is the always excellent NICE comic convention in Bedford, easily one of the best line ups of guests with a real focus on comic art and writing. If you are a fan of current comics, it's probably the best chance to actually get up close and personal with a range of today's top creators in a friendly setting. I can't recommend it enough - Tickets still available here.
Monday, 20 June 2016
Hull ComicCon 2016
Hull.
At the end of the M62. Massive bridge. My in-laws live there. The
2017 European City of Culture too apparently. Not sure what happens
with that if we leave the European Union.
The
second Hull Comic Con was great though, just great. A one day con,
just the Saturday. Probably the friendliest convention I've ever been
to. I was a guest last year too, for the inaugural event, and it was
pretty great then, especially for a first time con. This year the
organisers built on that, using the same venue (The “Asylum” at
Hull University, what a fantastic name for a comic con venue) but
expanded the space they used, spreading it out over three floors.
Cosplay! |
The
ground floor had all the merchandising tables and the TV and Film
guests, Trevor and Simon were there with Sophie Aldred promoting
their FREE audio sci-fi series Strangeness
in Space. I haven't had chance to listen to it yet, but there's
no excuse really is there? It's free, it's funny and it's science
fiction. John Challis and Hull's very own Jon Campling was there along
with his tremendous hair.
The
first floor was the Retro Game floor although I never actually
visited it. My brother-in-law Keegan was very kindly helping me out and he paid it a
visit. It had Retro Games.
The
comic guests were on the second floor, a little out of the way, but
to be fair last year the lighting downstairs had been quite murky and
they put the artists next to a big window so the lighting was good.
Several comic guests, so more than a lot of cons lately! Russ
Leach, Lee
Sullivan, Rachael
Smith and Adam Cheal
were some of those up there with me, conveniently opposite the room
where I was giving a talk on Jack Kirby later. Initial worries that
it was going to be quiet soon disappeared and it got absolutely
packed later in the day, with apparently six times as many people
coming compared to the previous year and a healthy turn out for my
talk.
There
were loads of talks too, three rooms worth, so at any one time there
were two or three talks/photoshoots going on. The one on Jack Kirby
was the best obviously, anyone fortunate enough to hear it was also
treated to a rendition of the “Jack
Kirby” rap from the Illus alum KABOOM!. LD
Wilkinson put a nice photo of me giving the talk on Twitter-
Jack Kirby talk at Hull Comic Con |
I
had a few unusual requests for quick sketches. One person asked for a
“kawaii Hitler”, which I think means “a cute Hitler”. What
would you do with a sketch of Hitler looking cute? Someone else
wanted a sketch of an invisible Deadpool. So I just gave them a piece
of paper, and they gave me £3. Odd.
As
things were winding up, Simon Hickson (the one from Trevor and Simon
that isn't Trevor) popped up to say Hi, probably not specifically to
see me as Lee Sullivan on the table next to me was doing some work
with him. Always weird meeting people
whose work you admire, but he was a really nice guy and insisted on
paying for one of my prints despite my best attempts to give it him.
And he had a nice hat. I only mentioned it a couple of paragraphs
ago, but since you probably didn't bother clicking on the link, I'm
going to try again - do check out his FREE audio sci-fi series
Strangeness in Space.
Keegan manning my table |
The
after-show party was easily the best I've ever been to. No
exaggeration. I'm aware this is all very positive, but hey, I had a
good time. I often enjoy the bits after a convention more than the
convention itself, whether its just chatting in the bar or something
more, but District 14 went the extra mile with this. There was the
usual disco and charity raffle, which was fine, but they also had
three events on stage, and they were all absolutely stellar quality,
I'd have happily paid to see any one of them. With theatre style
seating so you could buy a drink form the bar, and then find a seat
in front of the stage to take it all in. First up was legendary
comiccon quizmaster Tony Hitchman doing a talk/quiz on Gorillas in
comics (Ape Escapism). A journey through various bizarre Gorilla
based comics, covering Super-Intelligent Gorillas, Alien Gorillas,
Nazi Gorillas and of course Gorillas playing baseball.
Tony Hitchman's "Ape Escapism" Quiz |
Tony threw
bananas at the audience to reward correct answers, and engraved
trophies were awarded at the end. Coming third was one of the
proudest achievements of my career.
Very proud. 3rd Prize. |
Following
Tony, actor and skilled raconteur Simon Fisher-Becker performed a
slightly condensed version of his one-man show “My Dalek Has
Another Puncture”. Simon has toured with this, his second show in a
trilogy I think, (the first was My Dalek Has A Puncture! The last is
“Let Zygons be Zygons”!!). Concentrating mostly on his role as
Dorium
Maldovar in Dr Who, accompanied by slides, it was a fantastic,
fascinating, honest and often quite touching
autobiographical/anecdotal journey. You
can buy Simon's book here.
At
this point I would have left feeling like it was a great night out,
but then Norman Lovett did an hour's stand-up. I've seen Norman's
stand up a few times, and his meandering audience interaction is
masterful. I'm not sure he told a single actual joke, but it was
very, very funny. A master at work.
@skaromedia did the charity raffle with aplomb. Mysteriously, the Dr Who canvas from Russ Leach and Adam Cheal's Graphic Novels were chosen by the winners before my framed original art. Must have been the poor lighting in the bar......
@skaromedia did the charity raffle with aplomb. Mysteriously, the Dr Who canvas from Russ Leach and Adam Cheal's Graphic Novels were chosen by the winners before my framed original art. Must have been the poor lighting in the bar......
Add
a cheap bar and pizza to this and you can see why it scored so
highly. Awesome.
I also got to pick up some of Tony Hitchman's 4 page black and white comics, another blast from the past and exactly the sort of thing I don't see nearly enough of at comic cons anymore....
Thanks to Keegan for helping me out and to all the con staff for looking after us. Enormous
congratulations and thanks to the organisers District
14, and masterplanner Steve Bowman for doing such an exceptional
job, I don't think I've ever enjoyed a comic convention quite as much
as I did this one. Looking forward to seeing what they do next....
Find out yourself at Bridcon
in October! If you live anywhere near Bridlington, I imagine
that'll be great fun too.
Monday, 6 June 2016
Swindon Comic Con 2016 review
Swindon Comic Con scored points for me this weekend for having what I think was the most unusual venue for a comic convention I've ever been a guest at. It was held in the STEAM – Museum of the Great Western Railway in Swindon. So I spent the last two days sitting in front a beautiful old Great Western Railway Class 4072 Train. If you happened to be a TV/Film buff, a comic fan, AND a train enthusiast, then this was a pretty great weekend out!
Drove down with Marvel/DC cover artist
John Watson early Saturday morning. When I say early I mean obscenely
early, I got up at 3am, picked up John just after 4am and by 8:30am
we were negotiating the baffling roundabouts of Swindon. The journey
was a good excuse to discuss (argue) about the book
we're writing together, and I brought up some really good, sane
and relevant points about plot and characters that John is now taking
on board.
For Swindon, I'd bought a particularly terrible pair of shoes, but fortunately the car park was quite near the venue, so I made it there before they fell apart..
For Swindon, I'd bought a particularly terrible pair of shoes, but fortunately the car park was quite near the venue, so I made it there before they fell apart..
I spent all day Saturday behind my
table chatting to people, sitting between author Graeme
Reynolds and John Watson
and opposite artist and writer Grant
Perkins, selling prints and doing sketches. John Watson gets very
irritated when I sketch, as he spends an hour doing a gorgeous,
photorealistic, tonal drawing for people, while I do a quick sketch
that he says “looks like a monkey drew it.” I try and rise above
this harsh criticism and spread a little joy with my art. Look at all
these happy people-
Chatted and met some fascinating people, one that sticks in my mind is children's entertainer Jacko and his puppet Nunkey (I'm presuming that's the right way round). He wandered round terrifying everyone with a loud horn and was easily the most enthusiastic dancer at the after party that night.
On Saturday night the after show party
was hosted by Stu Arnold a Keith Lemon/Arnold Schwarzenegger
impersonator (no, seriously...) and had all manner of bizarre things
going on.
You had to be there really..... but I had a lovely time chatting to some of the other guests- Martin Griffiths, Graeme Reynolds, Dave McCluskey, Grant Perkins and their partners. The organisers put on food (vegetarian option too, nice one) and there was plenty going on. A reoccurring theme of this one - there was always lots going on, you got your money's worth with Swindon Comic Con.
You had to be there really..... but I had a lovely time chatting to some of the other guests- Martin Griffiths, Graeme Reynolds, Dave McCluskey, Grant Perkins and their partners. The organisers put on food (vegetarian option too, nice one) and there was plenty going on. A reoccurring theme of this one - there was always lots going on, you got your money's worth with Swindon Comic Con.
Trying to find our way home proved a challenge, we dropped Graeme, his wife and his newly acquired Stormtrooper suit off and me, John and Dave McCluskey parked back at the STEAM museum so we could walk from there back to the hotel. Unfortunately, the only way we knew back to the hotel, the tunnel under the railway line, was locked and gated by now so we all went on a confused midnight ramble around the A-roads of Swindon. It was funny for the first half hour but after a while I started to get worried we'd be sleeping on a roundabout and foraging for berries. My cheap shoes barely made it. We did eventually go in one very large circle, find the car again and just drove to a sidestreet nearer the hotel. Dave left to get assaulted by hen parties and we went back to the Holiday Inn.
In the hotel bar John Watson and I
bumped into the multi-talented actor and creature performer Paul
Warren and we stayed up having a great chat about movies, what a nice
guy! Well worth missing sleeping for.
Sunday was busy too, so again didn't
really leave my table, and continued to irritate John by drawing sketches for
people. On the one occasion I did leave my table, I came back to find
John had hidden my pencil, but I came prepared, I brought a spare and
was able to make some more people happy with my quick sketches.
Thanks to everyone who came by and said hello! Special thanks to
Chris who came over and remembered when I used to write for the BBC
Shropshire, he knew stuff I'd written that I didn't!
So a pretty great convention, very
busy, loved the venue. I did come home to a guy on Twitter saying-
“we
had a 'comic' con in Swindon yesterday where there were no comic
related guests, but were instead tv 'celebs' like a chaser.” which
was a little unfair.
I've read a lot of criticism
lately about UK comic conventions with no actual comic content, and
generally, it's fair comment. There are a hardcore few comicons left
that still do actually cater specifically to comicbook fans, with UK and international comic artists and writers. All organised by
people who love comic books - like London's LSCC,
the Lakes International
Comic Art Festival, Leeds Thoughtbubble
and Bedford's NICE comic expo, but a lot
of recent ones have next to no comic content – no comic artists or
writers as guests, no sign of any comics to buy.
Many so-called UK “comic conventions” in the last few years have
been more about TV and Film than comics. The worst ones are more like craft fairs.
To be fair to Swindon though, it did
have a Comic Zone with several comic guests and there were a few
decent sized tables selling nothing but comics. The emphasis was
still more on the film and TV stars, props and merchandise, but the
organisers also tried a lot of quite original things, they had a
really eclectic guest list, easily the most eclectic guest list I
have ever seen – Eddie the Eagle, Zammo from Grange Hill, Boycie &
Marlene from Only Fools & Horses, Eddie Kidd, quite a few of the
Red Dwarf cast, Andrew Lee Potts, Hannah Spearritt....sports, TV,
film,wrestling & special effects guests... Youtube stars,
cosplayers, authors, illustrators, movie props & cars. Giant
inflatables, Britains Got Talent performers, daleks and animatronic
dinosaurs. So if you wanted a good day out with your family, I know
it's a cliché, but Swindon really did have something for everyone.
Actually Zammo cancelled, but to be fair he is well known for 'just saying no'.
Actually Zammo cancelled, but to be fair he is well known for 'just saying no'.
Massive thanks to the organisers Luke,
Mark and Nathan for doing such a great job of organising a unique
convention and for looking after all the guests so well, looking forward to seeing what they come up with next year!
See John Watson's blog for his wildly inaccurate version of events.
Monday, 16 May 2016
Hollywood Comes to Blackpool - May 2016
Russell Payne at "Hollywood Comes to Blackpool" |
Just back from POD Event's "Hollywood Comes to Blackpool" at the Norbreck Castle Hotel's Norcalympia. Had a great time, the organisers really looked after the guests, it's the little things that count- I was asked constantly if I needed anything, people brought me water, coffee and biscuits, I was given cake and they even gave each guest a nice engraved award. Ten out of ten for being good hosts, thank you to Neil, Amanda and all the POD staff and helpers. The event was not a comicon as such, but the majority of comicons aren't really comic cons nowadays, this was more accurately billed as a "Film, TV and Comic experience" and was raising funds for charity.....although ironically it had more comics on sale there there than I've seen at many comicons.
This was officially the nearest convention I've ever been a guest at. I often drive 5 or 6 hours to a con, but I can see the Norbreck Castle from my bedroom window. I was there in less than five minutes. It was sponsored by Dominoes, so I also had the slightly odd experience of ordering a pizza the day before and having it delivered with a flyer that had my face on it.
The Norcalympia |
Sat with me and fellow local John Watson (also currently co-writing a book with me) in guest alley were actors Michael Henbury, Sandeep Mohan and Phil Hodges, and voice talent Marc Silk. All nice people, Marc was particularly good fun. His CV includes an astonishing number of characters - Aks Moe in Star Wars, Johnny Bravo, Scooby Doo, Pingu.... so he's good value for money - like having 53 guests in one. I did a panel with Marc and we all just sat back while he taught the audience how to speak like Scooby Doo.
Marc Silk voice actor extraordinaire Scooby-Dooby-dooooo! |
Michael Henbury (Labyrinth, Willow, Return of the Jedi) |
I'd just had a particularly short haircut so was trying to avoid sitting under any bright lights, it's difficult looking down and drawing without showing everyone your thinning hair. I think some people thought I was cosplaying as Cadfael. As usual, I spent most of the day behind a table, so didn't really get chance to look round, but there was plenty going on - Jedi Academy sessions teaching kids how to use lightsabers, photoshoots with green screens, movie showings, cosplay competitions, charity auctions, model displays and loads of trade stalls.
The event wasn't as packed as it could have been, but it's always difficult getting word out for a first time event, and everyone that did go had a good time. All went smoothly and the guys who did the MCing (Kerry King Neale as Ursula from the Little Mermaid and Chris Kemp as the Riddler) did a fantastic job of holding it all together, working all day long doing Q&As, cosplay announcements and general enthusing.
The music was great too, at one point they played the theme from the old Monkey TV show- "Monkey Magic". Ace. Hopefully POD can build on this year's success with their future events. As long as they have some more free cake, I'm in.
(Thanks to Darrell Till for taking photos and generally helping out!)
(left to right) Phil Hodges, Darrell Till & Sandeep Mohan |
Thursday, 12 May 2016
Writing a book: Part One, Revelation
Here's
a revelation. I'm nearly finished writing the first in a series of
novels, co -authored with John Watson, who you may know from his
work on the X-Men and Marvel's Civil War:Frontline series.
Why?
I hear you ask. Why are you writing a book with an artist? Isn't that
a bit like asking a gardener to do some plastering? Or ringing up
Halford's for recipe ideas? I'll tell you. It's a long and
fascinating story.
Well
it's long.
It's
been quite a few years in the making, so this is the first in a
series of posts giving a blow by blow account of the lengthy, often
painful journey from inception to completion. John is writing his own
wildly inaccurate version of events on his own blog, so you can have
fun spotting all the discrepancies. As a general rule, I'm right.
“A beginning is a very delicate time”
About
9 years ago John asked me to write a comic with him. I'd collaborated
before, but mostly with screenwriting, and I knew how difficult the
process could be. A little difficult for me relinquishing control,
but mostly difficult for the other person.
I
don't play well with others.
Writing
anything is such a personal battle against yourself, and such a
complex tapestry of interconnected things, like most writers I enjoy
writing only when the process is over, and it's best to stay out of
my way before then. I find that most readers, even the fans, (not you
obviously, the other ones) don't even pick up on the point of half
the things I write, so the thought of someone else getting involved
in the creative process who couldn't possibly understand the
complexity of my narrative is an anathema to me.
On
the other hand It's also unusual to find a collaborator that you can
have an honest dialogue with. So much of the creative industry is
plagued by sycophancy and I had no time to waste with someone who
would do nothing but say how fantastic my writing and everything else
I do is. I don't need someone to fulfil that role, I have my Mother.
In that sense, John is the perfect collaborator, he has exacting
standards and is as critical with others work as he is his own. I'd
like to take this opportunity to say what a pleasure it has been
working with John and how easy it has made the process of writing.
I'd like to, but I can't. More on that later.
9
years ago I was freelance writing in my spare time, while working 9
to 5 for the government. Fortunately the unique structure of the
British Civil Service meant that I had a lot of spare time during the
day to write as well, often fitting in a much as 6 hours writing into
a standard 8 hour day. The other 2 hours were my lunch break. This
allowed for me to drive to John's at least once a week and chat about
the comic during lunch, then drive back to work and write.
The Inferior Five
Aside
from John's singular obsession with Aqua Lad, we like (and dislike) a
lot of the same things in comics, Kirby, Toth, Adams, Romita. Many
hours were spent creating a definitive spreadsheet of the “top 50
comic artists of all time”. I think aside from Don Newton and Kevin
O'Neill we agreed on just about everyone. We also found we had a
shared appreciation of the relatively obscure DC humour comic “The
Inferior Five”, so we had a few chats about the direction we wanted
it to take if we wrote a comeback for those characters. I'd written
mostly comedy before, so was significantly happier writing something
comedic rather than your usual superhero fare.
I
went away and wrote a script for the first issue and a synopsis for
the next five. It was mostly parody, picking at current storylines like Infinite Crisis, Civil War and Secret Invasion. You can read the full "Inferior Crisis" script here. I wanted to try something a bit new, a humour comic
with proper jokes within the plot and situations, not just funny
visuals and one liners. The world's first “Sit-Comic”. In my
objective opinion, it was one of the greatest comics ever written.
John drew up a few of the pages, they were pretty great too. Don't
take my word for it, here's a few of them, hastily lettered by me just now to give you an idea of what might have been-
DC
Editor Mike Carlin took one look at the idea and although he obviously
could see the sublime talent behind it, told us that DC just
didn't do humour comics anymore, so passed on commissioning it.
Possibly a commercially wise move, the comic did revolve around an
inflatable man battling a giant budgie, but disappointing after all
the work we put in. In hindsight, it was a classic rookie mistake,
developing a series using characters other people own.
Randomers
So
the next logical, obvious step was - develop our own series. I
adapted the Inferior Five script, but altered the characters. In some
cases obvious rip-offs, in others we came up with new stuff. We
called it “The Randomers”. Still a sit-comic, but slightly more
grounded in reality than the Inferior Five. Ideas came and went.
After many long chats we both decided we may as well go the whole hog
and design a team from scratch rather than base it on existing DC
characters, so we kept the name “The Randomers” and I wrote a new
script with no inflatable men or giant budgies. It was progress.
Version 3 and it was still a comic, with me writing and John drawing.
This time though John had much more input into the writing, I used
characters he suggested, and we spent time discussing their
motivations, their personalities and how it all worked into the new
plot. It was a constant process of distillation and refining. Barely
anything of the original Inferior Five plot or characters remained,
but when some really good was in there, I tried to keep it in. In
theory, the longer we spent on this, the better it would get.
John
drew up some character designs. One he did of “The Fifth
Dimension” with Kirby Krackle running diagonally across the centre
was particularly nice. It was starting to be a true collaboration,
like comics should be but often aren't. With most modern comics the
writer and artist never meet each other, often barely speak to each
other if at all, and the end result suffers because of it. I wanted
to do a comic where it all came together as a cohesive whole, like
comics at their best can be. John was now having much more input,
throwing in ideas, characters, changes, it was a proper back and
forth and I could see something potentially special starting to form.
The
comedy was still in there, one of John's character - “Johnny Zebra”
was a gangster with the head of a zebra. In one scene he was battling
“Captain A” a Czechoslovakian character. Johnny asked the Captain
why he continued to persecute him and broke John Cleese's three rules
of comedy and had him reply -
“Because
Czechs don't go with stripes.”
The
merits/failings of that sublime pun were the topic of much discussion
over the next few months and are probably representative of an
ongoing battle – I think we're writing a comedy, John doesn't.
We
had a few issues planned out and started planning covers, basing
characters on people we know. We even had some photo pages mocked up
in photoshop and plans for romance issues and even an issue entirely
in Czech. There were t-shirts, songs, videos planned. We were going
to take over the world.
In
my excitement I registered a domain – therandomers.co.uk. This was
in October 2009. In hindsight, not the best use of my money. In our
heads it would all be ready for 2010, published by Marvel or DC the
same year depending on who won the bidding war, and the film
adaptation would probably be in cinemas by 2011. I'd pencilled in
Chris Hemsworth to play me, with Danny Devito playing John. We
still had a long way to go. The next step was a big one though,
seismic, we had a revelation about the state of the industry and
what we both really enjoyed creatively and it changed the whole
direction of the project - dropping the comics part altogether and
re-writing the Randomers …..as a novel.
Find
out how that happened in part 2.
Wednesday, 27 April 2016
Supercharge colouring
Some colouring and titles I did on a Trevor Von Eeden Pin Up recently for the mighty nice people at Mighty Good Friends.
Tuesday, 19 April 2016
Hollywood Comes to Blackpool
I'm a guest at the "Hollywood Comes to Blackpool - Film, TV and Comic Experience" this May the 14th. Yep, just 4 weeks time. I never do events this near to where I live, so it'll be a nice change to just pop down the road instead of driving for 5 hours and staying in a hotel. See the Facebook link below for more info.
Fellow local and Marvel/DC/IDW artist John Watson will be a guest too, as well as some actors from the latest Star Wars:The Force Awakens movie, a Jedi Academy for kids and all sorts of other stuff, it sounds pretty good!
I'll be sketching and signing on the day and selling a few signed books and prints, so if you live anywhere near Blackpool, come down and say Hi. Tickets prices are low and it's for a good cause.
Fellow local and Marvel/DC/IDW artist John Watson will be a guest too, as well as some actors from the latest Star Wars:The Force Awakens movie, a Jedi Academy for kids and all sorts of other stuff, it sounds pretty good!
I'll be sketching and signing on the day and selling a few signed books and prints, so if you live anywhere near Blackpool, come down and say Hi. Tickets prices are low and it's for a good cause.
Tuesday, 22 March 2016
Fightin' Iris colouring
New story, new characters. Drawn by the tremendous Trevor Von Eedon. Coloured & lettered by the resonant Russel Payne. Part of a planned multi-feature issue, "Anthological".
Posted by Mighty Good Friends on Saturday, 22 August 2015
Tuesday, 23 February 2016
London Super Comic Con LSCC 2016 - review
LSCC
“An
hour to Cambridge, an hour to London, I'd be back at midday.”
“Russ has also apologised for being an egotistical nightmare “
and
“Yet, this time, I knew, I was the idiot. It wasn't Russ, it was me.”
February 20 & 21, 2016
Excel, London
Back from this year's London Super
Comic Convention – LSCC 2016.
LSCC is one of the good ones. One of the few remaining comiccons that isn't dominated by film and TV
stars. It's about comics and comic creators, and it's run by people
who know comics and love comics, so the guest list always has a good
selection of UK and International artists and writers. Its in it's
fifth year now so maintaining the wow factor is a challenge, but with such headline guests as Brian Bolland, Frank Cho, Marv Wolfman, Mike
Zeck and internationally acclaimed poet, writer and artist Russell
Payne, they didn't do so bad. It's also about cosplay, so you have to
be able to cope with standing in-between a gun toting psychopath and
a zombie in the Gents, but you get that sometimes in London anyway.
I had a carefully orchestrated
multi-stage plan for the weekend, but as usual it all went wrong
before the con even started. Unusually though, none of it was my
doing, all fails were perpetrated by Marvel and DC cover artist and
professional non-driver John Watson. I generally give John a lift to
LSCC, but this year he was getting the train down from a family
holiday on Scotland on the Friday, I was going down on the Saturday
morning and taking some of his stuff, and I was bringing him home on
the Sunday. John realised on Friday that half the stuff he needed to
take was still locked in his studio, so he had to get a train from
northern Scotland to York, then to Poulton on Friday night, to pick
up his forgotten folders and then we both set off super early (I got
up at 2:45am, which is more of a bed-time than a get-up-time)
Saturday morning to still get to LSCC before it started.
I was happy to bail John out though and
I'm sure his blog will be full of praise and thanks for my kindness,
interspersed with nice comments about how talented I am. The drive
down was a useful opportunity to chat about the book we are writing
together, it's John's first novel so I'm showing him the ropes,
trying to teach him essential writing skills such as procrastination
and work avoidance, but he's a slow learner and keeps writing stuff
down and producing chapters.
Astonishing, we got there in plenty of
time, managed to park for free on set up the table before even
earlybird ticket holders got in. The table was between JK Woodward
(really nice guy, with some great Trek/Dr Who art, especially an
image of Spock and Tom Baker dreaming of Jelly babies - check
out his blog) and Chicago based artist Jill
Thompson, who was lovely and has done all sorts including drawing
Sandman and creating Scary Godmother and who had her young niece sat
next to her painting. LSCC often arrange the Artist Alley in
alphabetical order, there's a theory that this is to prevent Ian
Churchill from borrowing John Watson's clothes.
Stage 2 of the plan was to meet up and
share a table with Barry Kitson. This also failed. Barry didn't
manage to get to the con until 3pm, so I spent most of the day
explaining to people that I wasn't Barry and that Barry wasn't there
yet. Barry has a lot of fans and we heard the words “Where's
Barry?” so many times we considered doing a series of books on it.
When he did arrive, the helper who met Barry at the door didn't
recognise him. Not recognising Barry Kitson at a comiccon is a bit
like not recognising Mary Berry at a Cake Convention, but it got
cleared up and he got straight into painting some gorgeous
watercolours. I've been a fan of Barry's work since I was a teenager,
a few hours of Barry Kitson is still better than 3 full days of most
other artists, so I'm not complaining.
Even better, after the arrival of Barry, my daughter
Chloe also arrived. She lives in London, so I was staying at hers
that evening and it was a lovely opportunity to spend a bit of
dad/daughter time wandering round the con. I haven't quite adjusted
to her being an adult and kept trying to buy her Disney Princess
merchandise, but she eventually convinced me that she no longer has
any need for Lego Ariel earrings or a Tinkerbell Pop Funko and we
went out for an evening meal at Canary Wharf instead. I stayed over at Chloe's flat in Northwest London and had an emotional reunion with her chinchilla Coco.
Meanwhile......John went
back with Barry to his house in Norwich.
Norwich is 120 miles away. I expected
John and Barry might get chatting about art and be a bit late the
next day so stage 3 of the plan was to get to the con early on Sunday
to man the table for them for a couple of hours while they drove down
form Norwich. This also failed. Barry had deadlines to meet and
wasn't coming, so John got dropped at Cambridge to catch a train to
LSCC. Turns out that trains from Cambridge to London are only very
slightly quicker than walking.
So Sunday was a lot more people asking
“Where's Barry?” followed by “Where's John?” and "Then who are you?". When John
finally got to a part of the country that had a mobile phone mast, I
was able to keep his legions of fans updated with helpful text
messages like-
“Sat on a train, It isn't moving.”
“Sell everything.”
and my favourite text, that I read out
to an eager crowd of people waiting for news-
“Should be there at 12.”
Useful considering I received the text
at 1:30pm.
Had a great time sketching for people
though, which is much easier when John isn't there because he tends
to hide my pens to stop me showing him up with my superior art. I did
a little sign offering to “draw anything” which was possibly a
mistake as people began to take it too literally, the high point
being a request to draw Nicholas Parsons attacking Jim Bowen with a
dart. I rose to the challenge. It may actually have been my best work
to date. (Thanks to Mick for sending the photos!)
I also did Rapunzel, Han Solo vs Starlord, Deadpool fighting Wolverine, Bane, Penguin and a lot of Batgirls for some reason.
I also did Rapunzel, Han Solo vs Starlord, Deadpool fighting Wolverine, Bane, Penguin and a lot of Batgirls for some reason.
A man came by a couple of times to
invite me to the Barbados comic convention, this seemed a little too
good to be true. I eagerly await his email. I possibly should have
mentioned that I don't have a passport. I sold prints, did sketches and I got some work too, so a worthwhile trip. I was also
offered some comic cover work by a publshing company, but I have a
strong suspicion this is because they thought I was Barry Kitson,
Other honourable mentions to -
Gary Frank, who I had a chat with about
Jack Kirby and must pressgang into a Kirby panel in the future.
TomTricks
who could create just about anything people asked for out of a
few stretchy balloons. Available now for children's paties.
George Gechev of GGComics
who managed to enthusiastically tell me about his new comic despite
my best efforts to escape. George uses dark red writing on a black
business card and a font so tiny that his website address can only be
read with an electron microscope. One out of ten for the card, ten
out of ten for enthusiasm though, hope he does well.
..and that elusive enigma Barry Kitson
whose latest volume of Empire
can be read online at Thrillbent.
Many thanks to the organisers George, John and Imran for
doing such a great job once again. If you want to read an even more
wildly inaccurate review filled with such gems as -
“Russ has also apologised for being an egotistical nightmare “
and
“Yet, this time, I knew, I was the idiot. It wasn't Russ, it was me.”
Then don't miss John Watson's account
on his blog here!
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