Working on FRINGE I pitched the notion of a shadow going around killing people. As opposed to the X-FILES episode with Tony Shaloub where, if people stepped into his shadow they sorta got sucked in, this was about a detached, sentient shadow that lumbered around knocking people off. I wrote the finished episode with Joel Wyman and it turned out great, but - as with every show -- along the way various ideas were tossed out and then... tossed out. One idea being the Shadow killer being delivered by a Renfield-like assistant via a seemingly empty overnight suitcase left open...
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
KICKING BUTTS AND TAKING FAME
On the TV show WEIRD SCIENCE big brother Chett (Lee Tergesen (HOMICIDE, and the upcoming RED WIDOW) was inspired to set aside his bullying ways and become a masked crime fighter. The writers came up with various monikers, one of which was BUTT KICKER -- years before the comic or movie KICK ASS ever saw print or screen. Dunno what we finally agreed on but these were some insignias I did for Butt Kicker.
Personally, I prefer the anthropomorphized letters... more along the lines of Superman's 'S'.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
ROBOT PARADE
Some design sketches for a screenplay idea all about NY gangsters and Nazis and, of course, robots.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
THE PORTRAIT OF THE LETTERMAN AS A YOUNG MAN
Apologies up front to James Joyce. This is a celebrity caricature from way back, before David Letterman A) moved to CBS B) wore glasses C) saw an orthodonist and D) went grey. A similar comparative drawing of Jay Leno is not available.
Sunday, August 12, 2012
DEAD TO RIGHTS
More concept stuff for the ongoing MONSTER RALLY saga... the first is an ink and watercolor of an undead lawyer who finds a loophole in the century-old contract that keeps monsters etc. literally undeground.
The other is a marker/india ink panel of a hapless zombie who doesn't even make it out of his grave before...
The other is a marker/india ink panel of a hapless zombie who doesn't even make it out of his grave before...
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Thursday, July 26, 2012
BARD DOG, BARD DOG....
On the road, I doodled this... can't believe the joke hasn't been done a zillion times before... but I've never seen it.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
30's DAMSEL (SOON TO BE IN DISTRESS)
Currently on vacation, so I offer these ones from the recent files -- the original drawing of the luckless "Miss McGinty" from Twelve O'Clock Somewhere, as rendered on copy paper in india ink... and her full color doppleganger, compliments of the always reliable Corel PAINTER 11
Thursday, July 12, 2012
AND THE AUDUBON SOCIETY AWARD DOES NOT GO TO...
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
ON THIS 4th OF JULY LET'S GIVE A NOD TO A 17th CENTUREY ENGLISH NOVELIST...
Daniel Defoe, author of ROBINSON CRUSOE and the famous pioneer of the contemporary novel was many things in 17th century England, but a P.I. he was not. Still, I always thought he should have been, what with his perfect, alliterative "Sam Spade-ish" detective name... (and while lunch was certainly around in the 17th century, telephones were not)
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
CHOOSE YOUR WORDS, HAN SOLO...
Remember in EMPIRE STRIKES BACK when that nameless freedom fighter warns Han Solo that it's useless to search for Luke -- and Han snaps at him and blows out of there? Well, true to Craig McNamara and my many delightful Star Wars Stripz, here's how that conversation plays out in the scene we never saw...
Monday, June 18, 2012
SMOKE 'EM IF HE'S GOT 'EM
For any good story you need a good Bad Guy. An old adage that was never more true than in the CW series REAPER. From viewers to the writers themselves, everyone's favorite character on the show was the Devil, splendidly played by Ray Wise (TWIN PEAKS, 24, SWAMP THING, HOW I MET YOUR MOTHER, etc. etc. etc.). So when the show runners needed a picture to put on water bottles to be given out as gifts to the cast and crew I did this picture of the big D, congenially hawking, what else? Cigarettes.
Friday, June 8, 2012
12 o'CS COVERED!
The cover for the book, except this wasn't done with the Corel Painter 11 but with real brushes and acrylic paint. I was going for that old Gold-Key comic cover look -- Boris Karloff Presents, etc., with cheesy cover paintings that didn't match the artwork inside at all. I did this before I changed the title to TWELVE o'Clock Somewhere from FIVE, as midnight is the betwitching hour and Five isn't very spooky at all.
And sharp-eyed followers of this blog will recognize the doomed myopic bird from an earlier post shown here as the Comic Co. logo.
And sharp-eyed followers of this blog will recognize the doomed myopic bird from an earlier post shown here as the Comic Co. logo.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
BEWARE ALL HUMBUGS -- IT'S CHRISTMAS IN JUNE!!
Back in the day, DRAW COMICS THE MARVEL WAY was a big deal at the comics shop. I never bought it but somehow I had access to a copy and I tried my hand at DCMW. My muscled apeman turned out okay but it really came to life when I added my own Yuletide touch... and created a new holiday character to rival Scrooge, the Grinch and Charlie Brown's pathetic Christmas tree...
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
BATTLESHIP - THE MOVIE? WHAT TOOK SO LONG?
Forget BATTLESHIP - THE MOVIE, or for that matter any of THE TRANSFORMERS films. I drew this "movie poster" for the first Hollywood feature film based on a simple, non-story game back in the video arcade game's hey-dey. All the proof you need is that the star of the picture was to be the then go-to action star, Harrison Ford.
Ah, what a laugh we had at the Minnesota Daily, at the totally and utterly preposerous idea of launching a Hollywood feature based on a simple two (or, to be fair in BATTLESHIP's case, three) dimensional game. Could anything be more absurd? Answer number one: Equally as preposterous is that such a movie would cost over two hundred million dollars to make (BS) and answer number two: Be on the lookout for CHUTES AND LADDERS at a multiplex near you -- in 3D no doubt.
Ah, what a laugh we had at the Minnesota Daily, at the totally and utterly preposerous idea of launching a Hollywood feature based on a simple two (or, to be fair in BATTLESHIP's case, three) dimensional game. Could anything be more absurd? Answer number one: Equally as preposterous is that such a movie would cost over two hundred million dollars to make (BS) and answer number two: Be on the lookout for CHUTES AND LADDERS at a multiplex near you -- in 3D no doubt.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
CIVIC DUTY
When called to serve on a jury, the first part of the day entails crowding in with a hundred-plus other folks, waiting to get called. During the Big Wait, it's fun to bring paper and pen and draw pictures of fellow jurors-to-be. I didn't get many sketches off before I was called in to be on a potential jury for some nobody plaintiff named Kareem Abdul Jabar. Really. This IS Los Angeles, man.
Years ago I was actually on a jury presided over by the honorable Lance Ito -- yes, THAT Lance Ito. Then, after that, I was on a jury presided over by Judge Wopner -- no, not THE Judge Wopner, but the son of THE Judge Wopner (if you don't know who Judge Wopner is, he preceeded Judge Judy as the official; 'TV Judge'. if you don't know who judge Judy is, you're not watching nearly enough daytime TV...)
Years ago I was actually on a jury presided over by the honorable Lance Ito -- yes, THAT Lance Ito. Then, after that, I was on a jury presided over by Judge Wopner -- no, not THE Judge Wopner, but the son of THE Judge Wopner (if you don't know who Judge Wopner is, he preceeded Judge Judy as the official; 'TV Judge'. if you don't know who judge Judy is, you're not watching nearly enough daytime TV...)
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
A CAUTIONARY TALE....
The tale of a misguided alien invader who lacked the foresight necessary for happiness. Rendered in trusty dusty pantone markers in the Minnesota Daily advertising department when I should have been doing work.
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
PLATYPUS OF ALL TRADES
Like every cartoonist that ever lived, I thought it would be great to start a daily comic strip. My brilliant idea, something I hadn't seen before, was to feature a duck-billed platypus as the main character (this was before the invasion of Australian talent here in the US). With the comic strip friendly name of "Scooter", my paneled protagonist 's thing was that he worked lots of different jobs, hence the name of the strip "SCOOTER FOR HIRE".
In about ten minutes I scribbled thirty two vocations my guy could try out. You will note that some are not truly paying jobs ('ski bum', 'victim' or, arguably, 'writer') but it I had this stream of consciousness thing going...
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
COMPARING PROTO AND GOTHAM RATMAN IN A 21ST CENTURY CONTEXT
I drew RATMAN number one when I was twelve or so, rendered with a trusty ballpoint pen. I loved the outrageous,absurdist idea that Commissioner Gordon would replace Batman with the super-powerless, inept Ratman and considered the comic book to be my finest work -- a project I began that I actually finished.
Years and years later, Tom Spezialy gave me The R. Crumb Coffee Table Book wherein Crumb reprinted a comic he'd done when he was a kid -- and the version he re-drew as an adult. So I did the same thing. When I was living in Manhattan working on a Glen Gordon Caron show, I spent my evenings redrawing RATMAN number one, replete with the exact dialogue, sound effects and exclamations ("Yeeooo!") and, for the most part, the same panel composition.
Two comparative pages are posted above (guess which were the originals...)
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
AHEAD OF HIS TIME
Some years ago, Kathy and I were in Tucson visiting my late grandma. My mom was there too, from Minnesota and she was going through her parents' old photos when she came across this picture. Not a photo of an old family member but one of my great-GREAT grandfather's classmates from Cornell University. Like when I was in high school, evidently at Cornell in 1881 students swapped senior pictures for posterity's sake.
That's right. 1881.
Which is what makes this photographic remembrance -- and Frank Ramsey Luckey who conceived and "starred" in it -- all the more remarkable. The Lumiere brothers and Thomas Edison didn't introduce the world to motion pictures for another fourteen years, yet this guy, in a jokey keepsake for his buddies, created this -- twenty three different pictures of himself (the "serious" acceptable, portrait hovering in the center)via a visual, flip-book kind of sequence. But unlike a flip-book which conveys a single action, here Luckey shows all moods and expressions and even cross dresses (which seems to never go out of style).
Certain that Luckey was a drama student with ambitions exceeding the mere theatrical stage, I did a web search to see what noteworthy and creative heights he achieved... only to learn that he went on to become a Congregational minister in New England. I was disappointed at first -- I had expected more -- but Kathy reminded me that a clergyman (particularly of the non-dogmatic, open-minded Congregational stripe) is at once a writer, an actor and a source of inspiration.
Still if the guy had only hooked up with an inventor and a late-nineteenth century venture capitalist, who knows... maybe FDR and Churchill would've been Tweeting each other...
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
BIG BUNNY... one for the kids
One day, while working at the show WEIRD SCIENCE I decided to take a break from the complicated , soul-searching tales of two teenage boys and their adventures with a computer genie and decided to take a shot at a children's picture book.
I wrote the simple tale and roughed out the art more as placeholders than anything.... but ended up liking it enough to color 'em in. The basic story: Big Bunny wakes up to find a rockset ship parked outside his kitchen window. He and his neighbor friends (second page) postulate what the traveler inside might be like, B.B. has a dream that it's a green bunny like him with shared interests. In the morning, the ship is gone. A nod to the old adage: "If you find a spacecraft in your yard and you let it go..."
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
LIKE A ROCK
One of the monsters-in-cars series of acrylics I did, inspired by Big Daddy Ross's Rat-Fink and the Odd Rod bubble-gum cards. Driving top-down is the only ride for a gargoyle.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
MY BRUSH WITH A SPY
Scott Nimerfro and I had this series idea, right? About spy planes secretly being built in Burbank in the fifties... and the bad guy was a Russian spy (above), with an American accent and the all-American, above-suspicion vocation of Fuller Brush Salesman.... able to enter every home in the city and sweet talk the wives of the aero plant engineers... before running off to a pay phone to relate his findings to Moscow via long distance operator.
Thursday, March 22, 2012
A SPECIFIC RESUME IS REQUIRED
Inspired during my days of riding the MTC bus to campus. En route from downtown Minneapolis to the University of MInnesota I saw a door on the side of a building marked 'PLANT ENTRANCE' and, well, it sorta grew from there.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
OLD TIME COP
12 o'CS sketch. Just another big city copper, circa 1936, trying to figure out what the hell is going on after midnight in his city...
Thursday, March 15, 2012
STAR WARS -- A NEW HOPE - LUKE'S FIRST LESSON
This strip was selected from starwarsstripz.blogspot.com, your one-stop-shopping for an irreverant (and occasionally violent but always humorous) take on the 1977 STAR WARS film.
http://www.starwarsstripz.blogspot.com/
http://www.starwarsstripz.blogspot.com/
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
NO MYOPIC BIRDS WERE HARMED IN THE MAKING OF THIS CARTOON
An oldy but goody that always brings a laugh. Re-colored with my trusty Corel 11.
Charles Darwin might have had a cartoon like this on his wall if he had a computer to open it. Then again, if Charles Darwin had a computer, what a different world it would be now... which gets one to thinking: if Jules verne had driven a Chevy Volt back in his day, imagine what kind of even wilder stories he would have come up with.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
RAT DAZE (or How To Stop Worrying and Love the Bell)
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.
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...
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