Tag Archives: my geek family

Matchett’s Musings: Creating Sparks Part 2

Creating Sparks Part 2: The Basics and Getting the Green Light

I remember in English class something my teacher said something to me which I feel is very true. ‘The moment you write something and consider it brilliant is when you should stop.’ In essence what she meant was ‘don’t get your head up your own ass too much.’ Indeed you see it all the time in comics, movies, music or any other industry you can think of. You see people struggle and fight for their spot, producing amazing work but then they get their big break. They become a sure-fire hit, they get told their work is genius and after a while that stops being true. The fire, the motivation to really deliver is gone because no matter what you do, people will buy it.

The reason I’m saying that is I never really think you stop learning to write, especially in comics. Literally every work, every project I learn something new. Sometimes it’s something small, sometimes it improves the quality of my scripts a great deal. However when I started out, after creating Sparks which was closely followed by a concept called The Immortals (more on that later) I had no idea how to put together a comic script. I wasn’t even sure how to structure prose properly and so I completed a lot of stories that went pretty much like this.

Turning to the audience, Glenn gives them a big smile.

Glenn: Hello audience!

Audience: Hello Glenn!

Taking a bow, Glenn proceeds to bask in the audience applause.

Around this time I also sent a full letter of ideas forward to Marvel. I posted it all the way to New York and even put in the legal form the big 2 make you sign anytime you want to submit work/ideas to them. Looking back it was so unprofessional and so deluded of me that the entire submission may have been done out in crayon with cute little backwards letters.

There are plenty of books on how to write comics or to write period. The likes of Stan Lee, Peter David, Brian Bendis, Stephen King, etc have all crafted books on how to write.

I’ll admit right now that I have read none of those. I certainly encourage others who would likely benefit greatly from it but I never did. I just learned through buying a lot of comics.

That might sound strange but one of the wonders of the modern age of comics is how much effort put into collected editions. With some of these collections you get an assortment of DVD/Blu-Ray type special features. You get sketches, pin-up art and sometimes you get scripts. Full comic scripts from the best in the industry and how I learned to put together scripts was by reading other scripts.

I also found a number of other writers putting their scripts online, what then has followed is some trial and error. I’ve included some stuff, ditched other things and tried my best to find my own way to do it. I learned the difference between full script and ‘Marvel style’, how to structure a page and some interesting things I never would have realized.

I found that there was no real ‘wrong’ way to do it. Every writer laid out their full scripts differently and I came across quite a variety of styles. I would probably call my own mostly a blend of Neil Gaiman, Ed Brubaker, J. Michael Staczynski and a little of myself.

Being an editor with GrayHaven I have the pleasure of reading literally hundreds of scripts for anthologies and I pick up interesting things here also. Little hints and tips I use to adjust my own style. If there is anyone out there looking to write comics or wants to learn how to do it better (we can all improve) I would highly suggest reading scripts from peers or pro’s. It’s astonishing what you can pick up. Often times whenever I green light a pitch for a GrayHaven anthology I sometimes get the writer going ‘This is great…now what do I do?’ I then send them some strong scripts I have received over the years.

I would like in particular like to mention GrayHaven vets Ray Goldfield, Doug Hahner, Sean Leonard and Jason Snyder who have great instincts when it comes to scripting. There are many others who I’ve found helpful but those guys are top-notch.

Something I really liked from Neil Gaiman’s scripts was the informal manner he wrote in. In her introduction to Absolute Sandman Vol. 3, Jill Thompson wrote how much of a pleasure it was to read Gaiman’s scripts because of this. I thought I would do the same and I do attempt to do so on a regular basis.

Now obviously it’ll depend on the artist and publisher. The majority of the latter I have worked with enjoyed it but others consider it a distraction. When it comes to your publisher, if they ask you to write the comic script standing on your head and reciting ‘Old McDonald’ then you must do so but…more on this later.

So I started to write comic scripts because mainly, I learn by doing. I first wrote a Booster Gold one I published on Facebook for fun. I was loving the comic series at the time and thought ‘Well, why not?’

I also wrote a script for artist Aaron Bir for his then website Sequential Stutter. I tried to find the story and can’t which is a shame because it was the first comic I had published anywhere.

Then came the beginnings of GrayHaven comics. I’ve told the story over and over so I’ll keep it as brief as possible. Good friend and fellow Jinxworld poster Andrew Goletz asked a bunch of us if we wanted to do a comic anthology for fun. It turned into Vol. 1 ‘The Thing With Feathers’.

I could probably (and will likely) craft an entire article on where I get the idea for some of my GrayHaven shorts but my first actual printed comic work was in there. The feeling I got when I heard that first book, saw my name on the back (which I still miss) is something I will never forget. I also got to work on with artist Brent Peeples who went on to much bigger and better things with Images Last Of The Greats and other work for IDW, Zenescope, Valiant, Dynamite. I loved working with Brent and hope that one day, our paths cross again.

Vol. 1 of The Gathering was a big hit commercially and critically. It wasn’t perfect but people liked the potential and what it offered. A publisher was willing to let unknown creators throw themselves out there, for better or worse. Having learned over the years that breaking in was very difficult to those who could only write and not draw, it was great to see somewhere that offered that.

I helped out GrayHaven the only way I could in the early days which was financially and with any advice Andrew was willing to take from me. Time passed, more volumes got released and we even had some great pro’s like Gail Simone and Sterling Gates help us out.

Soon we had over 8 volumes with more on the way. New volumes were being announced, I’d sent pitches and Andrew approved them along with another opportunity. Due to my initial support he granted me a one shot. It was quite something as back then, the only solo work GrayHaven had approved was Doug Hahner and Donal Delay’s My Geek Family which had earned it through winning a contest.

I was over the moon and my mind exploded with possibilities. I went back to the idea that came first, I went back to Sparks. I pitched it to Andrew who liked it but wanted one change, he wanted it to be set in Britain and not the US because back then in the days of 2011 when this all happened it wasn’t all that common. Nowadays we have quite brilliant crime dramas set in the UK like Sherlock, Luthor and Broadchurch but at the time it was a great idea so I was all for it!

He then asked me who I wanted to draw the story and I gave him a list of 4-5 names, the first of which in an interesting twist was Kell Smith. However Andrew went above and beyond to a secure an artist (here thereafter referred to as artist A) who was immensely talented and seemed to be on the cusp of real success.

It was all set! The car was there, the key was in the ignition and it was all a go. I had only one problem. I had an enemy I wasn’t fully aware of. An enemy that had operated in the shadows for years but it seemed that now, just when things were taking off for me they were about to become my archenemies and a frequent pain in my rear.

Sherlock Holmes has Moriarty

Batman has the Joker

Even the Powerpuff Girls have Mojo Jojo

It turns out that Glenn Matchett’s enemy was named ‘impatience’ and we were about to get very well acquainted.

Next: Artist A, Artist B and Kell Smith

Got any comments, suggestions or questions? Let me know! Also follow me on Twitter @glenn_matchett

GrayHaven Phase Two Announcements

GrayHaven Comics has been hinting about their Phase Two for a while now and we got the first of their announcements last week.  Over the weekend they announced more projects, further diversifying their projects and showing why they’re an independent publisher to keep our eyes on.

GrayHaven Comics will be aggressively expanding their publishing line. New One Shots, Mini Series and Ongoings will begin to roll out over the next few months through New York Comic Con and into 2013

In addition to print collections of several of their popular web-comics there’s also the one-shot Sparks, a hard boiled detective drama by Glenn Matchett and Cassandra James and My Geek Family, a heartwarming slice of life tale by Doug Hahner and Dober-Man, a love letter to the Silver Age of comics by Travis Holyfield and Ed Whatley.

They’re also releasing 5 major projects in the first quarter of 2013:

Mini-series:

Chronographer– a time travel mystery by Erica HeflinFabio Pio, Edson Alves and Carlos Paul
Tomorrow sci-fi superheroic epic mini-series by Jason Hissong, John Coker and Devin Taylor
Run Like Hell – the comic adaptation of the hit YA Thriller by Elena Andrews and George Amaru

Ongoing Series:

11:59 – a post-apocalyptic horror series by Andrew Goletz and Nick Francis
Titanium Star a Sci Fi/Western series of mini series by Victor Gischler and Sam Tung

10 Questions: The Gathering Edition – Douglas Hahner

We’ve got our third entry of interviews with The Gathering and GrayHaven Comics team! You can catch our first and second interview which we ran earlier.

Up next is Doug Hahner, one of the editors at GrayHaven Comics.

Graphic Policy: How did you get started in the comic book industry?

Doug Hahner: It started for me when Andrew, GrayHaven EiC, posted on an internet message board “Who wants to make a comic?”  I responded that yes I did want to make a comic, but didn’t think anything would come of it because many many people on comic book boards think it’s a good idea to make their own comics.  Some even get an issue together, but Andrew had some publishing experience so he knew what needed to be done.  Now over 2 years later we’re still going having published many books already and we have about a dozen books at different stages of completion ready for publication.

GP: Were you a fan of comic books before?

DH: Oh dear God yes!  My parents’ attic is full of all the comics I purchased over the years, and now my wife has to deal with my obsession.  Fortunately I have been able to drag her into my madness (thank you Neil Gaiman’s Sandman and Mike Mignola’s Hellboy), and now she reads books too.

GP: Do you read comics now? If so, what are some of your current picks?

DH: I don’t think I will ever stop reading comics.  Right now my favorites are Mind MGMT by Matt Kindt (Dark Horse), Batman by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo (DC), Saga by Brian K Vaughn and Fiona Staples (Image), and I look forward to anytime Dark Horse puts out a new Blacksad HC by Juan Diaz Canales and Juanjo Guranido.

GP:  How did you get involved with The Gathering?

DH: It started with the comic message board.  It has always been a dream of mine to be a comic book writer, and Andrew gave me that opportunity.

GP: Each issue of The Gathering has a theme, how did that factor into the comic creation?

DH: We try to pick themes that are open enough to interpretation that we don’t hinder the writers and artists, but the stories can still be placed in that theme.  For example one of the future volumes we’re working on is War.  This book can feature historical stories, modern stories, stories about the war on drugs, futuristic war stories, or anything a writer or artist can think of dealing with War.

GP: What advice would you give to independent creators just breaking into the business?

DH: Listen to your collaborators.  Everyone is just trying to help make the story better.  On the second story that I wrote, I had a major story point happen in one panel of a 9 panel grid.  The artist I was working with, Aaron Bir, said he would draw it the way I wrote it, but it might work better as a splash or half splash.  It really made me think about the story visually, and I did a complete re-write cutting panels left and right, and ended with a much more open script that let the art breathe, and Aaron did an amazing job on the finished story.  Now if I’m writing a story and I have more than 6 panels on a page I feel weird.

GP: What’s the most important lesson you’ve learned through your experiences?

DH: Take advice from everyone.  Don’t just show your script or art to your girlfriend or mom, they’ll like it no matter what.  If your editor or artist have questions on your script, don’t just blow them off thinking they just don’t get your work.  If they don’t get it, maybe you didn’t explain it well enough.  That doesn’t mean your story is bad, just that it could be clearer.

GP: Do you think it’s easier today for creators to get published?

DH: Depending on what you define as published, yes.  Creating a web comic is pretty simple now, and there are ways of self publishing through Amazon to get your work out there.  Now if you mean breaking into the Big 2 (Marvel and DC) or even the Big 5 (Marvel, DC, Image, Dark Horse, and IDW) then it is still very hard to do.  Not to say it is impossible, but it is not easy.

However just getting your work out there for the public to see is not that hard.  You just have to be really good at marketing yourself to help people see it.  Social media helps with that, but it’s a very fine line between marketing yourself and spamming your followers.

GP: How do you think technology like social networking or crowdfunding sites like IndieGoGo or Kickstarter are impacting comic book publishing?

DH: I won’t lie, Kickstarter has been very kind to Gray Haven Comics.  It has certainly helped us publish as many books as we have.  I think sites like Kickstarter and IndieGoGo are helping many creators who need the help.

GP: What can we expect from you next?

DH: Coming down the pipe I edited GrayHaven’s Western and Romance 2 issues.  Both of them will be out before the end of the year.

Writing wise I have a story coming in our Tales From the Abyss book drawn by the amazing Leigh Walls, and something I’m very proud of, My Geek Family.

My Geek Family is a one-shot that I wrote that is a kinda/sorta sequel to the story I wrote for volume 1 of The Gathering: Hope.  While the Hope story was kind of heavy with a true life cancer scare in my life, My Geek Family is a typical Saturday in the life of my immediate family.  We are all geeks in our own ways about different things.  Should it prove successful I can certainly expand the cast to show how everyone, in every family, is geeky about something in their life.

My Geek Family will be drawn by Donal Delay.  He drew the story I wrote for Hope, and it is incredible to be working with him again.  He is such a great cartoonist on his own I’m thrilled that he’s willing to draw something that I wrote.  You can check out his web comic, The Legend of Tanin, on Gray Haven’s website at: http://www.grayhavencomics.com/category/webcomic/legend-of-tanin/