This little animated film of mine had its world premiere at the animation fest segment of the 1st ANNUAL PASADENA COMIC CONVENTION. The true highlight of the convention however was reknowned comic artist/illustrator Bernie Wrightson being there. The guy even signed my (battered, well-read) SWAMP THING #1.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
SELLING YOURSELF... THE HARD WAY
A 12o'CS picture based on an actual photo from the Great Depression. I love how even if a guy was out of work and hungry enough to wear a sandwich board to sell himself, he still wore a hat and tie.
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
E-GAD, HOLMES! THE GAME IS A FOOT... AND WEARING A BOWLING SHOE!
A page of random doodles that unexpectedly came together as a Sherlock Holmes kinda piece. You have the unidentified guy sneaking past, a mad genius villian cackling maniacally and a pensive and pondering Holmesesque character being pensive while pondering.
Now if someone can explain to me what the bowler is doing there...
Now if someone can explain to me what the bowler is doing there...
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
STAR WARS EPISODE VII: IMPATIENCE OF THE DARK LORD
Did this single panel cartoon for USC's student paper The Daily Trojan. Kinda interesting 'cause I did it in brush and ink -- a departure from my trusty Sharpie Marker. Also interesting in that I drew it before anyone had seen Darth Vader's face (pre RETURN OF THE JEDI) so the "mystery" was still there...
For more handrawn SW laughs, I would be remiss if I didn't plug Craig McNamara and my SW blog:
For the true SW enthusiasts check out an animatic of one of the Star Wars Stripz at
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
OH MY GOD -- WE TOPPED 500!
That's right -- the month of January 2012 saw THE MOST visitors to this site ever. Over 560!! Not bad for a little homegrown blog spot.
Thank you to everyone around the world who checks out Vlam-ink (or just happens to stumble upon it). Tell all your friends -- and enemies!
(Picture is another panel from Twelve O'Clock Somewhere.)
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
STEPHEN COLBERT'S ANIMAL SIDE
Any resemblence to persons or pundits living or dead is purely intentional.
When my son Laird and I did the RATMAN comic, Dr. Leopold the mad scientist/bad guy/half-man-half-tiger was visually inspired by TV show host and former candidate for President of South Carolina, Stephen Colbert.
Now that Colbert has lost that election I wanted to do my part to keep him prominent by reprinting this, my favorite page from the RM comic.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
ROBOT!
No story... just a couple of robot sketches.
Actually, did you know that the term 'robot' comes from a Czechoslovakian play from the early twentieth century? I'd offer more details but Wikipedia is dark today.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
A WESTERN SAGA (WITH IRONY)
Back in college, one of my intrepid super-8 filmmaking friends, Kirk Mathison and I embarked on filming a western.... in Minnesota. We shot it at the sand and gravel pits on the southern side of Edina, the suburb where we lived. It was arid enough in mid-July, with lots of sand and scrub grass but without horses or an old western town the story was about a good guy and a bad guy hunting each other under the unforgiving sun, sans modes of transportation. The film turned out pretty well, considering, and that was that.
Jump ahead to 1995. I was working at Warner Bros. in Burbank, CA and one day, during my lunch break I fired up my super-8 camera and shot a bunch of footage (complete with horses!) in the studio's old western town located on their back lot. Little shots to add production value and scale to Kirk and my homespun western. One new shot featured the above WANTED poster of Kirk.
The end result is a shining example of irony -- what started as a genre film, shot almost entirely in a Minnepolis suburb, became a visual record of the WB western town... that was ultimately torn down to be replaced by, yes, a faux subruban neighborhood.
To view the film:
Thursday, January 5, 2012
T.U.F GUYS OF THE EIGHTIES
Years ago,(as lots of the postings on this blog begin) I gave my brother Jonathan a 4x6' piece of foamcore with a one-of-a-kind comic strip drawn in rapidograph and colored with Pantene markers.
I pre-drew the panels, all of equal size and started filling them in, making up the story as I drew it, hoping against hope it would wrap up by the end of the panels. Shown here are some of the panels, featuring the ensemble of characters, including a panel of them filling up the gas tank of their jeep -- padding in the event I came up short.
As it turned out I didn't -- as shown by the rush to tie everything up in the last few panels of the big board. This strip still hangs (leans) on prominent display in Jonathan's laundry room. Funny how much the border marker faded so much over the years. Grimaces over the typos.
Thursday, December 29, 2011
OTR DOODLES
On the road in Minnesota for the holidays, I didn't forget to pack a page of doodles for this week's offering.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
I'LL HAVE A (NYPD) BLUE CHRISTMAS WITHOUT YOU...
Back in the late nineties, the cop drama NYPD BLUE, while popular, was constantly adding and losing actors. I drew this holiday card reflecting what cast additions the yuletide season might bring about. As I recall the inside of the card read: "Don't make me bring in Sergeant Rudolph... 'he's not half as pleasant as I am..."
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
WOW...A PAGE FROM 12 o'CLOCK SOMEWHERE!!
At long last, a complete page from the opus. But jeez, putting a comic together via computer IS NOT easy.
When I was a kid, I'd grab typing paper (or buy some -- my mom charged me half a penny for each sheet as we had plenty of scratch paper and typing paper cost money)and off I'd go, careful not to use markers that bled through the page.
Flash forward to now and, hey, computers are fun to do comics with but there is lots of grunt work involved. For this single page, I drew the pictures and colored them (the fun part) and then I used Word to size 'em and add the word balloons and dialogue. THEN I had to save the panels individually as PDFs so that I could use Photoshop Elements to collect and arrange each of the panels on a page, drop in a black background and publish it.
Whew.
I admit I am not the most computer savvy, especially in using my PC for this sorta thing, so if you have any tips as how I can remove a step or two from the above process, your advice would be greatly appreciated.
When I was a kid, I'd grab typing paper (or buy some -- my mom charged me half a penny for each sheet as we had plenty of scratch paper and typing paper cost money)and off I'd go, careful not to use markers that bled through the page.
Flash forward to now and, hey, computers are fun to do comics with but there is lots of grunt work involved. For this single page, I drew the pictures and colored them (the fun part) and then I used Word to size 'em and add the word balloons and dialogue. THEN I had to save the panels individually as PDFs so that I could use Photoshop Elements to collect and arrange each of the panels on a page, drop in a black background and publish it.
Whew.
I admit I am not the most computer savvy, especially in using my PC for this sorta thing, so if you have any tips as how I can remove a step or two from the above process, your advice would be greatly appreciated.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
EN GARDE! MORE DOODLES!
Waiting around for
meetings to begin (or end)
offer more than ample time
to doodle.
Here are a few such Ds
done while at THIRTEEN GRAVES.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
A PUZZLE (and classic art) FOR TURKEY DAY
Arnold Roth was one of the 60's great illustrators and the author of my favorite book as a kid, PICK A PECK OF PUZZLES. for Thanksgiving Day I submit a puzzle from that book -- and thanks for his trmendous artisitic influence on me as a seven year old.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
The X-FILES... something to cry about
In HELL MONEY, one of the X-FILES epsiodes I wrote, there was this sequence where a guy loses an eye in a game of chance and likewise doesn't get the cash to treat his daughter's (Lucy Liu -- yes, that Lucy Liu) lukemia. So he weeps and I had this GREAT idea -- tears stream out of his remaining eye but BLOODY TEARS come out of the orbless socket.
I was so sure the shot would be overlooked or misinterpreted that I drew the accompanying sketch, replete with color. As it turned out, the scene was shot just as I'd drawn it -- but the director incorporated a moody, dramatic sidelight so you see tears on one side and... while the other half of the man's face is in complete shadow.
I was so sure the shot would be overlooked or misinterpreted that I drew the accompanying sketch, replete with color. As it turned out, the scene was shot just as I'd drawn it -- but the director incorporated a moody, dramatic sidelight so you see tears on one side and... while the other half of the man's face is in complete shadow.
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
ADVENTURES IN NURSERY RHYMES: AFTER THE FALL
Hindsight is 20/20, even for humanoid eggs.
Little-known info on the subject: "The theory that Humpty Dumpty was a "tortoise" siege engine, used unsuccessfully to approach the walls of the city of Gloucester in 1643 during the Siege of Gloucester in the English Civil War, was put forward in 1956 by Professor David Daube in The Oxford Magazine, 1956.
Another theory posits that Humpty Dumpty is King Richard III of England, depicted in Tudor histories, and particularly in Shakespeare's play, as humpbacked and who was defeated, despite his armies at Bosworth Field in 1485."
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
SIGNED IN BLOOD
Originally this was a storyboard panel in a series of boardsI did to pitch MONSTER RALLY. Later when after I embarked on the always-enjoyable yet never-ending TWELVE O'CLOCK SOMEWHERE project I comandeered this and various other storyboard panels, colored 'em and used them for that.
Originally this was done in B&W in India ink with a pen and brush. Colored with Corel Painter 11.
Originally this was done in B&W in India ink with a pen and brush. Colored with Corel Painter 11.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
COWBOY & ALIENS? HOW ABOUT LAWYERS & CROCS?
Okay, with a headline like that you can fill in your own joke.
This mash-up of ideas came about back when David E. Kelley's uber popular ALLY MCBEAL was on TV and a feature Kelley wrote, LAKE PLACCID, had just hit movie theaters -- a feature that featured, yes, a giant gator. Kelley's work was so amazingly hot at the time I figured I should be the one to combine the airwave and box office power of both!
This was the result.
NOTE TO INTERESTED PARTIES: This was colored, like almost everything else on his blog, with Corel Painter 11. I've never worked with Photoshop but have been told the programs are similar. I don't work with photos or illustrations other than my own so as an artist PAINTER works great for me. It's intuitive, it has lots to offer (I discover new cool things all the time) and, if recent research still stands, it's FREE if you buy a a Wacom drawing tablet (also very cool) -- even a little bitty tablet. Okay. That's it. End of unsolicited plug.
This mash-up of ideas came about back when David E. Kelley's uber popular ALLY MCBEAL was on TV and a feature Kelley wrote, LAKE PLACCID, had just hit movie theaters -- a feature that featured, yes, a giant gator. Kelley's work was so amazingly hot at the time I figured I should be the one to combine the airwave and box office power of both!
This was the result.
NOTE TO INTERESTED PARTIES: This was colored, like almost everything else on his blog, with Corel Painter 11. I've never worked with Photoshop but have been told the programs are similar. I don't work with photos or illustrations other than my own so as an artist PAINTER works great for me. It's intuitive, it has lots to offer (I discover new cool things all the time) and, if recent research still stands, it's FREE if you buy a a Wacom drawing tablet (also very cool) -- even a little bitty tablet. Okay. That's it. End of unsolicited plug.
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
DISNEY THEME PARK RIDES - THE ARCADE GAMES!
Vestiges from my advertising days. One of the more prestigious (which is to say the only prestigious) clients we had at my first agency job was a software company with a contract to do video arcade games based on Disney theme park rides. Rudimentary stuff, very Pac Man-esque, back in the day of APPLE IIs, when Donkey Kong was king of the arcades. As seen above my design for the Matterhorn game was pretty close to the final product sold in stores. The JUNGLE CRUISE game however, that one never saw the light of a cathode ray tube. Old timers may recall the basis for my illustration -- from the original version of the ride... where the jungle boatmaster actually shot the hippo in its gaping maw, much to the horror of the kiddies aboard.
You can check out actual MATTERHORN SCREAMER game play at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAEyiDCN6jY
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
HARRY POTTER... MEET HENRY PORTER
Before the KIDSPACE MUSEUM moved to their new and current location in Pasadena, it was located in the gymnasium of a former grade school. Every October volunteers converted the place into a big, snazzy haunted house and busloads (literally) of kids from all around LA would come to see it.
Each year had a different theme and one October -- after the HARRY POTTER book series had started but before the first film had been released -- the theme was Harry Potter... sorta. No one wanted to risk copyright infringement so Harry became Henry, Dumbledore became Stumblemore, etc. They asked me to do the haunted house poster but I had no clue what the books were about (my own kids were pre-HP). I figured it's about kids in a magic private school, right? I worked off a cool fortress/castle in a HELLBOY comic and drew the accompanying students with the requisite magicical hats. I never clarified but while it might be assumed Henry is the boy with the glasses, I always thought he was the pudgy Asian kid.
Each year had a different theme and one October -- after the HARRY POTTER book series had started but before the first film had been released -- the theme was Harry Potter... sorta. No one wanted to risk copyright infringement so Harry became Henry, Dumbledore became Stumblemore, etc. They asked me to do the haunted house poster but I had no clue what the books were about (my own kids were pre-HP). I figured it's about kids in a magic private school, right? I worked off a cool fortress/castle in a HELLBOY comic and drew the accompanying students with the requisite magicical hats. I never clarified but while it might be assumed Henry is the boy with the glasses, I always thought he was the pudgy Asian kid.
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
HOLY PICKLE SPEAR, BATMAN!!
Coming up with an original superhero is never easy. Muscles are free, but inevitably a suit, a cowl or a logo are copyright protected somewhere. So when we had to devise a comic book hero for an episode of the WEIRD SCIENCE tv show -- CAPTAIN INVINCIBLE -- I devised a few options. This isn't what the showrunners finally chose but I thought it was kind of funny -- especially a big muscled guy waxing philosphical with a big ol' ice cream cone in his hand. What the headphones were for -- or what the insignia stood for, I have no recollection.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
X FILES MEETS BANKSY
Okay, maybe not Banksy exactly, but when I was four I drew Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer on my bedroom wall. Not his whole body -- just his head peering around the dresser. Still, I caught hell for it.
I didn't pull that stunt again until I was at THE X-FILES. I was on the third season staff (known to some as the beloved, golden, Darin Morgan season) and the writers' offices were in a little building on the FOX lot. I would sit at my desk and stare at the wall across from me as I pondered what I would write next. The ceilings were pretty high and there was a lot of empty wall to stare at -- so one day I grabbed a marker and drew an alien head peering over the door in the wall (the series overarching story dealt with extra-terrestrials). A week later I drew another head, one that pertained to the second episode of our unfolding season. Then I drew a third -- and soon I was on a season-long mission, drawing an alien to reflect each new episode as it was written. Late in the year the creator of the show Chris Carter came by the offices and saw the graffitied wall and after a long moment remarked, "Cool." Way better than, "Drawing on the walls? Your fired."
If you're familiar with the season it's fun to see which drawing represents which episode. Sadly this photo was taken before the last couple episodes were written, hence their absence. (FYI: The camera flash sorta obscures the one alien reading an X-Files comic as he's being struck by lightning.)
I didn't pull that stunt again until I was at THE X-FILES. I was on the third season staff (known to some as the beloved, golden, Darin Morgan season) and the writers' offices were in a little building on the FOX lot. I would sit at my desk and stare at the wall across from me as I pondered what I would write next. The ceilings were pretty high and there was a lot of empty wall to stare at -- so one day I grabbed a marker and drew an alien head peering over the door in the wall (the series overarching story dealt with extra-terrestrials). A week later I drew another head, one that pertained to the second episode of our unfolding season. Then I drew a third -- and soon I was on a season-long mission, drawing an alien to reflect each new episode as it was written. Late in the year the creator of the show Chris Carter came by the offices and saw the graffitied wall and after a long moment remarked, "Cool." Way better than, "Drawing on the walls? Your fired."
If you're familiar with the season it's fun to see which drawing represents which episode. Sadly this photo was taken before the last couple episodes were written, hence their absence. (FYI: The camera flash sorta obscures the one alien reading an X-Files comic as he's being struck by lightning.)
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
DOGGY DO-DON'T...
Years ago I wrote a feature script about a kid at summer camp who sees an alien spacecraft land nearby and (of course) no one believes him. The alien pilot is on the lam and (conveniently) looks like a kid, sans hair. He has, among other world-dominating skills, the ability to re-jigger a household toaster into a dangerous shape-altering, ally-recruitment device (see picture). Not to worry, there was a good alien kid that also infiltrated the summer camp, intent on re-capturing the bad one. Hilarity ensued, our human protagonist was exonerated and lessons were learned.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
RAIDERS OF THE LOST STORYBOARDS!
As part of my craze over the film RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK I bought The Illustrated Screenplay of RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK. The illustrated parts were mostly storyboard panels of the action sequences in the film. Pretty interesting stuff -- but then Craig McNamara (of our STAR WARS parodies fame - starwarsstripz.blogspot.com)and I went on to storyboard our own panels for scenes that never quite made it to the finished film. Very much in the SCENES WE'D LIKE TO SEE series found in old MAD magazines. Here are a few examples:
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
DANGER & X-I-MENT!!
Before Kathy and I moved to California (and way, WAY before RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES) I was noodling with DANGER & X.I.MENT. The story (originally conceived as a comic strip -- a newspaper strip (!?)) followed a government agent who was teamed with a lab chimp who, thanks to various experiments, was vastly smarter than he was (hence the glasses and bowtie). The agent's name was gonna be 'Dangerfield' or something and the chimp of course was 'X.I' 0r X.I.Ment for short. I thought it would be kind of fun if the story broke through fairy tales and ancient mythology and incorporated other such charcters in procedural roles, hence Agent Humpty Dumpty and Cerebus the three headed dog giving his field report.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
12 Midnight... Cocktail Hour
A rough draft-to-final page from 12 o'Clock Somewhere. Between the sketch and the final version I realized -- nothing speaks blood lust better than a cool pupil dialation.
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
ZOMBIE ROAD TRIP!
As our cross-country roadtrip continues, I thought this painting seemed appropriate.
It's one of several acrylics I did to help pitch a movie idea about monsters in a cross-country road race. Inspired by the style of the classic “Odd Rod” trading cards from the sixties and seventies, the pictures all featured the monster at the wheel, not the car they were in. Who wants to look at a car, right? I showed them to my (then) manager who was impressed, but worried, “Are all their cars going to be so tiny?”
It's one of several acrylics I did to help pitch a movie idea about monsters in a cross-country road race. Inspired by the style of the classic “Odd Rod” trading cards from the sixties and seventies, the pictures all featured the monster at the wheel, not the car they were in. Who wants to look at a car, right? I showed them to my (then) manager who was impressed, but worried, “Are all their cars going to be so tiny?”
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Yeah? Right.
Years ago, back in Minneapolis, my brother Jonathan and I were part of an alternative band. Our four man rock band had the dismissive, cynical name of YEAH RIGHT, though the music we played were hardly cries for anarchy or slams against The Man. Nothing proved this contradiction better than this flyer I drew for one of our local concerts. For anyone visiting the Twin Cities, 7th Street Entry is still there, adjacent to First Avenue, home to many a great TC band.
Our one and only video is now on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EJWdWf_Tb0
Monday, August 8, 2011
America's Deadbasket
Missed last Wednesday's blog as we were driving across the country on a road trip to Minnesota. On the day I was to post we were at 8300 feet in the Colorado rockies with no wifi signal in sight. From there we returned to sea level where we passed many a Nebraskan cornfield. As a tribute to that I present a storyboard panel from my super 8 opus 'GOOD LUCK' whose shocking climax occurs in, yes, a cornfield.
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