Kickstarter Spotlight: Enlightenment, Body Horror and The Meaning of Life
By Joe Badon
Writer and Artist
As any creator will tell you, ideas and story lines can really pile up on the creative “To Do List”. When I decided that it was time to launch a new personal comic book project, I began to rummage through the wasteland of would-be creative comic book exploits that had landed in my dusty catalogue of shelved concepts.
I had plenty of ideas but none that were really pulling at my heart. Then, one day, my teenage daughter showed me an eyeball that she had created on the back of her hand (she does special effects make-up). At that moment, a new story rattled through my brain. Yet another idea to, once again, throw on the heaping list of unfinished book outlines.
But this one tugged at my heart.
I had been recently watching plenty of Surrealist Films, such as Belle Du Jour, Eraserhead, The Trial, and the like. Also, having an inherent love for mind twisting yet moral minded horror/thriller/sci fi (like the Twilight Zone), I was primed and ready for something strange, personal and introspective.
The thought of a man struggling with a newly birthed third eye was making my creative wheels turn.
At this point, The Man With Ten Thousand Eyes was born. A story about a young man named Wendell who leads a fairly boring, mundane life. Wendell wakes up one morning to find a third eye smack in the middle of his forehead. This third eye gives him psychic abilities. At first, he’s able to controls those powers and is even able to help those around him. But after a while, Wendell begins to lose control of both his new found abilities and his sanity once more eyeballs start bursting forth all over his body.
For the story, I drew influences from movies and books that I felt complimented the concept. I looked to works of fiction such as Kafka’s Metamorphosis where a man named Gregor awakens to find himself transformed into a giant insect. I also contemplated the trials of Judd Nelson’s character from the film The Dark Backward as he struggles to adjust to a third arm growing out of his back. I pulled atmosphere and visual schemes from movies such as Eraserhead, 2001 and Naked Lunch to create a Noir, Body-Horror, Surrealist vehicle to transport the characters through.
At the heart of it all is a more personal story. As I began to create an outline and sew together all the various thoughts, I realized that I was writing, in a way, about struggles in my own life. Struggles to find God, peace, truth. Struggles to help others but many times hurting them instead. Struggles to find enlightenment and ultimate purpose in life. Things that we all, at different times in our life, deal with.
I don’t claim to have any answers but, with this finite brain, I hope to decipher a little bit of what life means. And doing this all through the dream-like lens of Surrealist Fiction.
I’ve launched a Kickstarter campaign so that I can raise the money that will allow me to take the time out of my freelance art schedule to finish the comic book and afford me the ability to make a decent print run.
Please check out my project and consider backing it!
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tting better. I’m working on it!” he said with a laugh.




