Posts Tagged ‘Eclipse Comics’

NEWS: Eclipse Comics’ Airboy Continues on Indiegogo

In the 1980s, writer Chuck Dixon teamed up with Tim Truman and Tom Yeates to resurrect the Golden Age hero Airboy. The run of the series lasted 50 issues, and featured other Golden Age characters like Valkyrie, Sky Wolf and The Heap.

Flash forward 30 years, and Chuck Dixon is back with Airboy #51, a comic that he’s scripted with art by Brent McKee and Jok. The comic picks up where the Eclipse Comics series ended decades ago.

The campaign to produce the comic is already well-funded through Indiegogo and can be found by clicking here.

$8 for a .PDF copy, and $10 for the single issue. For $100, you can get a signed copy of Airboy #51 with all of the (8) different variant covers.

I’m thinking of jumping in for a single copy. This monk already has a signed and CGC graded copy of Airboy #1 from Eclipse, and I’m looking forward to adding a new chapter of the Airboy legend to my collection.

As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

INTERVIEW: Embrace Your Inner (Radioactive) Hamster (Part II) – A Chat With Creator and Comic Writer Don Chin

(EDITOR’S NOTE: It’s time for the rodents to get off their wheel, as we conclude the Paint Monk’s Library interview with Don Chin, creator of the Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters. If you enjoy this interview, Don told me he always welcomes care packages of sunflower seeds and carrot-shaped chew sticks, with an occasional piece of lettuce thrown in for good measure.)

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is DonChinBanner-1.jpg

By WALLY MONK – Paint Monk’s Library Editor

WALLY MONK

You got a chance with ARBBH to make one issue in 3-D, and also a spin-off for Clint the hamster. Were other projects planned that got cut once the comics market changed? And what would we have seen from the radioactive rodents had the market not fallen apart following the indie explosion?

DON CHIN

“We actually did four 3-D ARBBH issues and probably my favorite was issue #1. That had an awesome cover by Par and interior art by Ty Templeton that was about professional wrestling. I actually had another talented Bay Area artist, Ken Hooper, start drawing a revival of the Hamsters where they all had super powers.

He and artist Greg Espinoza actually drew ARBBH Massacre the Japanese Invasion #1 for Eclipse, which was a one-shot where the Hamsters completely annihilate Japanese comic book characters like Speed Racer and Lone Wolf and Cub. 

Unseen cover art from what would have been “the new” ARBBH.

In the revival, the hamsters were maturing and weird side effects from the Cosmic Jello were coming into play. Chuck had the power to summon an iron fist (sorry, Marvel), Clint had a white-hot laser he could shoot out of his visor, Bruce was the huge, towering hulkish furry beast, and I believe I had Jackie as a super speedster. That project never saw print, but I really loved Kurt’s version of the Hamsters…they were more cute and furry than previous versions, but had an edge.

So if the market hadn’t imploded from the glut of comics being produced, you probably would have seen a “super-powered Next-Gen John Byrne era X-Men version” or ARBBH, and I would have loved for it to be in color.”

WALLY MONK

In issue #8 of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Leonardo, Donatello and company met and fought alongside Cerebus the Aardvark. Were there any crossovers planned between the ARBBH and other comic properties at some point?

DON CHIN

“I think Blackthorne Comics approached us to do a possible ARBBH / Hamster Vice cross-over, but it wasn’t something Eclipse or myself were really into. However, Parsonavich and some friends of mine did do some short ARBBH stories in Blackthorne’s Laffin’ Gas humor anthology book. I would still love to see a TMNT/ARBBH cross-over. Also, since Dynamite Comics has the exclusive rights to ARBBH, I always thought teaming up Clint and Ash from the Army of Darkness comic book to fight legions of zombies would be a riot.”


Don and the folks at Eclipse weren’t
particularly interested in a team-up
with Blackthorne’s Hamster Vice.

WALLY MONK

In addition to ARBBH, you wrote another comic book series called Enchanter, and another book for Eclipse. Did you have other plans for comics at the time, and do you still have plans for future work?

DON CHIN

“I think the only other book I did for Eclipse was another incarnation of Overload, The Fantasy-Humor Magazine. There has always been a character dear to me that I created in my youth called Arrowman and a bunch of his sidekicks, like the Amazing Boll-Weevil that I would love to share someday. They are kind of goofy anti-heroes like The Tick. I published a one-shot of Arrowman with Parody Press Comics that I drew and that my friend, the late Sam Wray, inked. Sam was a kind of a comic book mentor to me and the rest of the northern California crew. His talented son William Wray worked in animation on Ren & Stimpy and a Batman project with Bernie Wrightson.

I would guest write anything new for the ARBBH if someone asked me to. I also saw that Chuck Dixon is doing a book called Trump’s Space Force – I think that would be a hoot to work on, as I love political satire and relevant current events in my writing.”

WALLY MONK

Looking at your Facebook, you’re a kindred spirit in many ways. I value my Christian faith tremendously as a professed religious in the Roman Catholic Church – and I see from a quick look at your information on the web that your faith motivates you as well. How have your beliefs impacted your work in the medium and your views about the industry in general?

DON CHIN

“Thank you for noticing that aspect about me, Paint Monk. I have been a professing Christian for quite awhile, but to be honest, it has been a hard walk as I am a stubborn man unlearning bad habits and slow learner at times, but am thankful we have a patient and loving God.

Most of the times I would use Chuck in ARBBH to be the example of how I thought a sensible and loving Christian would act. It was also fun to partner in my comics career doing a lot of projects with my friend, Nate Butler, who does have a ministry teaching and publishing. He asked me to go to the Phillipines in the 1990s to reach international students and teach them how to put comics together. I got to join comics legends Kerry “Superman” Gammill and Carlos “Star Wars” Garzon.

We helped distribute some of Nate’s books like PARO-Dee and Behold 3-D into the direct comics market. We also worked on doing some comics tracts for American Tract Society and some Russian-translated evangelical comics for CBN and some “Truth for Youth” New Testament Bibles that had comic book stories inserted in them that were drawn by Frank “TMNT” Fosco.”

More unpublished ARBBH art. (Courtesy of Don Chin)

WALLY MONK

What are your thoughts about where the comics industry is headed, and have you considered work for a company like Kingstone, that publishes Christian comics?

DON CHIN

“To be honest, I don’t read that many current comics anymore, so I’m a little out of touch on what the industry has been producing. I’m not a big fan of the dark shift in comics where it’s hard to tell the heroes from the villains due to moral ambiguity, probably because of my faith, and since I grew up reading a lot of the 1970s and 80s books where things were still pretty distinguishable between good guys and bad guys. I think the last books I picked up were relaunches of Rom and Micronauts, which were staples of my youth. My grandkids are both really into Star Wars, so it’s cool to introduce them to comics and collecting Star Wars graphic novels and memorabilia. I’m not so familiar with Kingstone, but more power to them if they can make a living doing faith-based comics.”

WALLY MONK

In 2007, Dynamite Entertainment got the license to produce ARBBH stories and added a female character to the mix! Can you tell us a little bit about Dynamite’s version of the hamsters?

Dynamite Entertainment licensed the ARBBH in 2007.

DON CHIN

“I was contacted by Nick Barucci at Dynamite to see if I would oversee and give my blessing to a relaunch of the Hamsters, and it was really exciting to see them pull out all the stops and give the ARBBH a slick, color treatment.

Keith Champagne and Tom Nguyen and colorist Moose Baumann did a great job expanding the ARBBH universe and adding additional action-movie inspired characters that were inspired by Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jean Claude Van-Damme and Lucy Lawless, who was the female hamster you are referring to.

I’m pretty sure you can find the back issues for sale online on eBay, or even buy digital versions to read. They were a lot of fun to work on, and I was honored that Nick and Dynamite were willing to give them another opportunity for fans to enjoy them almost 20 years later from the time they were first introduced.”

Once again, a special thanks to Don Chin for taking the time to share his thoughts with our readers. Perhaps one day the Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters and the scribes at Paint Monk’s Library will get together to tackle the modern comic book industry. I can envision a team up, where the two get together to restore the “old school” look of comics back to the industry.
Hmmm…Don…sounds like an idea for a parody comic!


As always, I am – Wally (AKA Paint Monk)

NEW SCOUT! An Interview With Timothy Truman

By JOESEPH SIMON – Associate Editor

The day following Tim Truman’s graduation from the famous Joe Kubert School of Art in 1981, he landed a job with popular gaming company SPI. This move would soon lead to Truman’s hiring at TSR Hobbies (the company which created Dungeons and Dragons) as an artist. A few years later, he’d team up with John Ostrander, gaining even more acclaim as the co-creator of Grimjack for First Comics.

While all of these exciting things happened in the mid 1980s, they would lay the groundwork and lead to developments in comics that would change how the industry worked – and many of these rumblings of the past are still felt in comics today.

First Comics played an important part in the independent comics movement that the direct market helped create. Grimjack helped pave the way for First and opened a readership for grim and gritty science fiction action.

Soon afterward, Tim created Scout for Eclipse Comics. Together with First and a number of other indie comic companies, Eclipse (partially due to the success of Tim’s books) remade the industry into much of what you see today.

Tim also created 4Winds, which was affiliated with Eclipse but published books independently. Through 4Winds (and Eclipse) Tim would work on series involving the pulp hero the Spider; golden age comic hero Airboy and the Prowler character. He would also publish work from South American and European creators (including material from Carlos Trillo, Enrique Breccia, Barreiro and Alcatena.)

This would delve into a wild career at DC, Marvel, Dark Horse (with a decade of being on Conan!), westerns, making music, creating more comic art and other fun. Decades of great work, including collaborations with other creators, were produced.

For me personally, Scout was always there as something to re-read and ponder. While created early in Tim’s career, Scout in many ways exploded into all that would come afterward. Science fiction with a western feel, research into the indigenous American cultures, a 45″ flexidisc (with Tim’s music) was inserted into one issue of Scout. Emanuel Santana (as Scout was known) comics could sit on the same shelf as other American comics as much is it could share shelf space with comics created overseas. It was a comic that in content resonates with what is going on in the modern world today and it is as exciting now as it was then!

Readers of Scout during its Eclipse run are no doubt excited by the announcement of the new Kickstarter for Scout: Marauder, as well as the news of a possible Scout motion picture. And readers  looking for an engaging, relevant and well-told science fiction story are in for a treat: Scout: Marauder is coming!                       

An Interview with Tim Truman – Part I

JOESEPH SIMON

Your son Benjamin has already established himself as a comics writer and game designer. I find this fascinating. I don’t have any children, but I always imagined it would be awesome to have a child follow in my footsteps. How cool is it that your son is not only an established writer, but he’s also collaborating with you on various projects like A Man Named Hawken and your current project, Scout: Marauder?

TIM TRUMAN

“What can I say? It’s quite cool indeed. I’m really proud of our children and the way that they’ve been able to stake out their own individual careers as creative people. Emily, Ben’s sister, is an editor, photographer, model, exhibited collage artist and CD cover illustrator. Ben wrote and was story lead for the hit game Black Mesa at Steam, wrote a comic project for Google and was one of the main contributors to the bestselling indie zombie anthology, FUBAR. He recently collected most of his best stories into a book called Trumanthology which is available at his website. They ain’t kids anymore, you know?

Both of them are now older than I was when I was doing Scout: War Shaman. But both of them served as models when I needed reference shots for Scout’s boys, Victorio and Tahzey. Em was Victorio and Ben was Tahzey! I’m trying to find some of those old reference shots to post in one of the Kickstarter updates, then show folks what they look like now that they’re adults. Should be fun.

Ben and I have a great time working together. We’re a good team. We have really different methods of approaching a story. He’s more methodical and analytical, and I just sort of go from the gut. In the end, it makes for a nice blend. By the way, we just found out that story we did for the comics anthology Vampire Tales, an adaptation of Robert E. Howard’s famous short story “Horror from the Mound,” just won the 2018 Rankin Artistic Achievement Award from the Robert E. Howard Foundation!”

JOESEPH SIMON

You wrote Scout and Scout: War Shaman in the 1980s and 1990s. The comic industry is a lot different now. The great leaders in independent comics like Eclipse (who published Scout) and First (who published Grimjack) are sadly no longer around. Sales, demographics, comic stores, public perception of comics have changed, not to mention downloadable comics and more. What do you find interesting as well as troubling about the comic industry now as opposed to the days when the original Scout comics were released?  


The “Wilderness” graphic novel, produced by
Truman’s 4Winds publishing imprint.

TIM TRUMAN

“I think the biggest thing that affected the industry was the dissolution of distributors. God bless Diamond Distribution, but all told, things were better for the industry when we had 15 or more seperate comic book distributors to deal with – especially for indie comic publishers.

When I was publishing the 4Winds graphic novels, for instance, one distributor might order only 6 books but another would order 300. In between, other distributors would pick up the slack. To illustrate the point, my two Wilderness graphic novels sold far more copies than a lot of current books by big name creators by Dark Horse, IDW or whoever.

We actually did 2 separate printings and 2 hardcover editions at 4Winds plus two separate editions collecting both books in one volume through Eclipse and another publisher. They sold thousands in both the comics market and the historical book market. Would we get those numbers today? In the historical book market, perhaps yes. In the comics market, maybe not. So, though I think that there are many – if not more – people out there who read and enjoy comics now as there were then, less order sources make for less sales.

It has affected everything.The interesting thing that has happened is that the internet has certainly opened up the playing field. With things like Kickstarter, we can offer true collectible editions to our fans directly and even interact with them directly rather than splitting the profits with a publisher who in most cases isn’t even going to do marketing for the book. It’s far more work, of course – especially the work it takes to gather all your numbers and set things up at the site – but in the end it allows you more freedom to control the contents, format and things like that.

So in that way, it’s immersive – a total creative experience.  You’re constructing something heartfelt from the ground up in an almost “fine arts” way. As one of the earliest proponents for both creator ownership and self-publishing, I’ve wanted to move back into it for years, and so it feels great to be doing so.”


Scout #1, from Eclipse Comics in 1986.
 

JOESEPH SIMON

Scout began publication in 1985. Emanuel Santana (AKA Scout) is a Native American of Apache heritage living in a dystopian United States that has basically become a third world country. The story starts in the then-future year of 1999. The story revealed that due to a series of ecological disasters and economic excesses, other nations were forced to levy vast sanctions against the US for exploiting world resources. In 2017, I’m curious about a few things. First, how has the time passed since the Eclipse Scout comic’s 1999 in the time period of the world you and Ben will depict in Scout: Marauder? 

TIM TRUMAN

“Well, the original miniseries ran for two years, so it covered the ‘future’ of 1999-2001 or thereabouts. Scout: War Shaman was set 12-15 years later, so let’s say that miniseries covered ‘2016-2018,’ when Victorio and Tahzey were kids. Scout: Marauder is set about 15 years after War Shaman, so ‘2033’ in ‘Scout years.’ So yay! It’s the future again!”

JOESEPH SIMON

Do you feel that perhaps with how things are turning out in the present day that our future could still turn out like Scout’s 1999?

TIM TRUMAN

“In many ways we’re already there.”

JOESEPH SIMON

You name-dropped the titles Scout: Marauder as well as Scout: Blue Leader years prior to the Kickstarter for Marauder. Is this the same Scout: Marauder as planned previously?

TIM TRUMAN

“Absolutely. The general idea was planned and plotted out since the time of Scout: War Shaman #1. When I re-read the first half of War Shaman a few years ago, I was amazed at how much groundwork I’d actually laid. In the first two issues, even though Vic and Tahzey are clearly seen as young children in the stories themselves, the text in the captions are a young adult Victorio as a captive being interviewed in a detention facility.

Seeds of this current series were sewn throughout War Shaman. People new to Scout need not worry much about continuity, though. We’re consciously writing this as a stand-alone tale, with key info about the boys’ background sewn throughout. For those that want to dive deeper, though, we’re offering PDFs of the complete Eclipse run of Scout and Scout: War Shaman as part of our rewards. In coming months, I’ll have downloads available for sale at my website as well.”

(End Part I of this interview)