All Along the Watchmen
Last night I guess some movie called Watchmen came out. You would have thought there would have been a couple of ads for it or something.
Anyway, all the way in Dallas, my good friend Jesse Jackson (no, not that one) attended a special premiere thrown by Keith's Comics. Keith does giveaways, and at Jesse's suggestion, I donated a bunch of copies of Love and Capes #8. (Gosh, the continued issue. What was I thinking? Heh heh.) In a bit of Karmic justice, Jesse won a copy of Watching the Watchmen that he and I were discussing just a couple of hours before. It's a great book, by the way. I have it myself.
Jesse was kind enough to send some snaps from the movie night. Click on any to embiggen.
I haven't seen the big movie myself, yet. Scheduling with the Usual Gang didn't work out, and while I seriously considered going to the midnight show alone and not saying anything, but it's always better to experience it with your friends. And so I wait.
But, just to publicly announce it to them, I can wait until Saturday tops to see the new Star Trek film when it comes out. There's a new trailer out, and hokey smokes do I want to see that.
New Review
There's a really nice review of the Love and Capes: Do You Want to Know a Secret? collection on Blake Petit's "Evertime Realms" site:
Reading this book, it’s very clear that Zahler both has a true love for superhero stories and a genuine understanding of the human heart. Mark and Abby as as realistic and well-developed a couple as I have ever read in a comic book. The Crusader and his pals — Darkblade, Arachnerd, Amazonia — all perfectly fit different superhero archetypes while still managing to have an individuality to make them Zahler’s own. It’s a nearly flawless story.
You can read the whole review here. Thanks, Blake!
Not a Planet
Last night I saw Dr. Mike Brown at the Kent State Stark speakers series. You may have heard of Brown when he unplaneted Pluto some years ago. I'm the proud owner of a Discovery Store "I Heart Pluto" button, but I have to say, I'm convinced. Pluto ain't no planet.
Don't worry, though, it's still a cartoon dog.
Dr. Brown was also a great speaker. Informative and funny as can be. If you get a chance to see him, I recommend that you take advantage of the opportunity. It's well worth it.
He's also on the interwebs himself.
MegaCon 2009: Day 2-3
The rest of my time at MegaCon was a little slow. MegaCon was packed to the rafters with people, but their seems to be a less buying mood on the floor. That could be the economy, or the nature of the crowd, or just a one-year glitch. And Im not doing bad, just down from last year. Id done more commissions at this point last year, and I expected the trades to move a little better.
Thats okay. No one wins every game, and a little down is better than oh, crap, I could have just set a pile of money on fire Joker-style.
I got my picture taken in a replica DeLorean from Back to the Future. The photos cost $20, but went to benefit Foxfans, which is the Michael J. Fox Parkison's group. I love Back to the Future, and have always wanted one of these cars. It was a great recreation, complete with working time circuits that even made the same noise when you entered them. Phenomenal.
They offered a $50 package where you could go for a ride in the car. Unfortunately, the time machine part wasn't working, or I would have done it and jumped back in time so I could make my plane flight. Well, after buying some Apple stock and some choice comics.
I have to say, though, Ive had the most fun Ive had at a MegaCon in a while. I met up with the lovely and talented Steve Conley, who will be doing his great Bloop character as a web strip in the next year, and through him, wound up going to dinner with Marc Nathan, Grand Poobah of the wonderful Baltimore Comic-Con and some of their posse.
Nothing I say can convey the fun that was had, because it defies description. When I say I was treated to a fifteen minute recounting, or should I say explanation, of Final Crisis, that sounds dry and boring. Far from it.
Add to that a recurring Mad Hatter impression (Disney style, not Jarvis Tetch) and I really cant remember the last time Ive laughed so much.
We even went miniature golfing as Disneys Fantasia Greens. The whole park is themed like Fantasia, the first, not the second. I dont think Ive played a worse round in my life. On the first hole I managed to knock the ball back towards me and onto the sidewalk. The last hole is basically a giant funnel at the feet of Yensid, the great wizard from The Sorcerors Apprentice recreating the giant whirlpool. And I took two strokes.
As Ralph Wiggim would say, Its Un-possible.
Yet, it was grand fun. Im tempted to make reservations for next year just based on last night alone.
Sunday was about the same, although I did sell more trades than any other day. I met some very interesting people, and did the Students of the Unusual Indy Comics panel. It was a great group of people, and I think I even brought the funny.
Question: So what are the advantages to self-publishing?
Me: Well, I don't have to worry about having to find a place to store all my money.
It was a great panel, with some really fine questions. I think weeven got some good information out.
Then Bob and I packed up my booth, we said our goodbyes, and headed back to the airport. One of the storms from the Casket on Ancient Blizzards was attacking the Eastern Seaboard, but our flight corridor to the Midwest and Cleveland was unaffected. We zipped through security, had a lovely repast at Burger King (really, the only place that was open with the Orlando Airport being under construction) and hopped on the plane back home.
I managed to finish watching Men With Brooms, a Paul Gross comedy about the sport of curling, and caught another episode of Supernatural. Man, I love that thing for watching TV on planes.
Then, a few hundred miles and almost as many degrees later, we arrived in the frigid Hoth-like environs of Cleveland and got home, tired from a good show.
So I flopped on the couch and put on another good show, Battlestar Galactica. But that's another story.
Day two delayed
No update today. Con was slow but afterwardsvwas filled with fun, frivolity and Fantasia golf. More recounting when I get back home.
Orlandos Other Than Bloom
Since I haven't left the state in almost fourteen days, I'm headed down to Orlando, Florida for MegaCon. I'll be hauling down the entire Love and Capes library, my Powerful Women sketchbooks, some shirts, and my drawing materials to do commissions. The con is always good, and I get to hang out with some of my Sunshine State friends that I don't get to see otherwise.
I'll also be on the Indy Comics Panel on Sunday from 2:50 to 3:40pm. It's osted by Terry Cronin and described as a Talk with Indy Comic creators Layne & Perry Toth, Jeremy Dale, Greg Williams, Thom Zahler and Robert Venditti. It should be fun.
Just Don't Stand Between Me and a Microphone
Hey, there's another interview with me up on The Pulse. Here I was grilled by the lovely Jen Contino. Well, not so much grilled. Actually, it was very pleasant.
Anyway, interview here. Clickity click.
Because If You're Gonna Build a Robot, It Might as Well Look Good, Right?
I got a commission request to draw Cameron from Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, which happens to be one of my favorite TV shows. (Please don't cancel it, Fox. Please. Don't you have enough blood on your hands already, killer of Firefly, John Doe, Lone Gunmen and who can remember what else?) Anyway, I had to draw Summer Glau.
Summer's got a really exotic face. I drew her years ago for the program book for the first Flanvention. I was having a hard time with her likeness, and I got lucky in that she was a guest at that year's WizardWorld convention and I got to meet her and actually see her face in three dimensions. Still, it wasn't an easy likeness to achieve.
Here, I needed to mesh that caricature quality with the stylized cartooning that I use for my Powerful Women books. I think they blended together fairly well. As much as the face, I think I got the cold, intense stare as well as the pose.
Oddly, my favorite part is the rifle she's carrying. I did the reference on it, it's an LR-300, I think. It's getting those little details accurate that I dig. And it strikes the right chord between cartoony and realistic.
When the Free Comic Book Day Book is a Little Less Free
Taking a step back, here's the alternate cover for the retail version of Love and Capes #10. Because of the new Diamond minimums, these won't be available through the Previews catalog, but they will be available on the Love and Capes website the Monday after Free Comic Book Day. They will be available for direct order by comic shops, too. I'll post more information about it soon.
And More Love and Capes Valentiney Stuff
Did I mention it's Valentine's Day? Did you forget to get something for that special someone in your life? You know what he/she/it (we don't judge here) would love more than anything? To appear on the cover of Love and Capes!
I soft-announced it a couple of days ago, but here's the full release an information. If there are too many words, here's the short form: Send me some money and you'll be on the cover of the double-sized LNC#12, coming out in November/December, as part of the wedding congregation for Abby and Mark. Click here to sign up. The full release follows.
You are cordially invited…
to attend the wedding of Mark and Abby in Love and Capes #12.
You might not have been invited to Lois and Clark’s wedding. You probably couldn’t attend Peter and MJ’s wedding (and, if you did, you don’t remember it.). But you can be in attendance for the comic book wedding of the 21st century! The Crusader and Abby are getting married in Love and Capes #12, coming out in December 2009, and you could be there.
Tickets to this wedding are limited and seating is first come, first served. Cost is just $40 per couple or $25 per single. No "crashers" permitted. To be part of this special event, RSVP by sending a photo of yourself, along with your payment, and you will be drawn into the wedding scene cover of Love and Capes #12 and mentioned by name at the end of the book.
To commemorate this special event, and to show our appreciation for the fans of Love and Capes, artist Thom Zahler will be creating a special limited edition 11 x 17 print of the wedding cover. All "attendees" will be sent a signed and numbered print to commorate their attendance at this "super" celebration. Interested attendees can also look for Thom Zahler at MegaCon in Orlando, Florida on Feb. 27-Mar.1 or the Free Comic Book Day event May 2nd at Rogues Gallery Comics in Austin, Texas , where he’ll have his camera ready to snap your photo on site.
If response warrants, an alternate version of the cover illustration (featuring Mark in his tuxedo, rather than his Crusader uniform) will be created to handle the overflow crowd.
Please RSVP by May 25, 2009.