Saturday, January 23, 2016

No. 58 Brian Bolland



First Prog: (front cover) 11; (strip art) 32
Latest Prog: (strip art) 238; (front cover) 1821

First Meg: (cover art) 1.16
Latest Meg: (cover art) 350

Total appearances: 170

Bolland warms up for his 'Gaze into the fist of Dredd' panel.
Words by John Wagner

Art credits:
Judge Dredd
Dan Dare
Walter the Wobot
A handful of Future Shocks, including the very finest Supercovers.

Notable character creations:
Sov Blok Judges
Rarely has a character made such a big impression with so
little screen time. Words by Pat Mills, the king of incidental
but memorable charcaters
Tweak the alien
Judge Caligula
Gestapo Bob Harris
Judge Death
Judge Anderson
Owen Khrysler, the Judge Child (I think)
Judge Hershey
Judge McGruder
Judges Fire, Fear and Mortis

Judeg McGruder makes a low-key first appearance as part of the Council of Five.
Words by Wagner and Grant

Mortis is everyone's favourite after Judge Death, right?
Words by Wagner and Grant
-heck, that’s three chief Judges right there! Four if you want to count Death as temporary Chief Judge during Necropolis. Five, even, if Bolland was the first to draw Judge Solomon in the relevant episode of the Cursed Earth.

Notable characteristics:
Immaculate character design. Sort of realistic style, without actually drawing real things. Solid, dependable black inks. Super dramatic compositions. Idiosyncratic covers. Dynamic poses. And, said to say, not being the fastest man with a pen.



On Brian:
Is he the definitive Judge Dredd artist? The definitive British Comics artist? The idea of both these things existing at all is of course ludicrous, and yet no one would argue if you put Bolland’s name into that conversation. He’s really very good. I struggle to imagine a young reader seeing Bolland’s work and not immediately thinking ‘Yup, that’s how you draw comics properly’.

The shattering glass and the zip of the bullet - pure comics class, that is.
Context by Pat Mills

At the same time, I also wonder if, somewhat unfairly, he’s also the sort of artist that a more seasoned reader still likes, but would perhaps pass over for the more stylized greats such as McMahon or O’Neill. And yes, when I talk about a generic ‘young reader turned seasoned reader’, I’m clearly talking about myself.

Bolland’s work is super exciting to look at, and always immaculately drawn. It has an air of perfection about it, coupled with an approach to realism that can even be intimidating.

The water! The hair! I can't begin to imagine being able to draw like this.
Words by John Wagner
The helmet sits correctly but looks wrong, somehow.
Words by John Wagner

And occasionally it looks a bit off – the most obvious example being Bolland’s commitment to drawing Judges' helmets not as pseudo-faces, but as actual objects that sits on top of their faces.


He's so famous now as a cover artist that it's easy to forget that he knows his way around stroytelling, too.

Dredd takes down two perps in three panels
Words by John Wagner

So far, so much about the style. It’s a huge part of Bolland’s appeal, but frankly I suspect the bigger part of his appeal is the man’s imagination. No, he didn’t invent Judge Dredd, or even anything about Mega City 1. But he did define the look and feel of a hell of a lot of the best supporting characters to grace Dredd’s world.

Solid black gives way to a burst of light. A classic Bolland trick that never fails to make a picture burst into your face.


The ectoplasmic spaghetti strand incarnation of Judge Death is still the scariest.
Also, check out how Bolland makes Anderson super sexy but also non-objectified at the same time.
Or maybe that's my male gaze bias speaking.


Famously, Judge Hershey's hairstyle is patterned on the shape of the helmet.

The first look at Judge Cal - a tyrant prone to outbursts of rage.
Bolland may or may not have been asked to model him on none other than Pat Mills...
Words by John Wagner (the real name of script robot John Howard)


Pat Mills circa 1978; photo extracted from the film
Future Shock! The Story of 2000AD



Judge Cal with his more roman-esque do.
One of the first Judge Dredd collections I ever bought.
I never did get hold of Book Two!


This version taken from the rather fun
Judge Dredd Board Game
A trend that continues right on down to some seriously throwaway figures. I doubt John Wagner gave detailed descriptions of a one-story perp such as Gestapo Bob Harris (although there’s a clue as to his look in his name for sure!), 


let a lone a single-panel gag of a character in Aaron A. Aardvark. But by gosh, does Bolland nail their personalities right down, and make these most unimportant of people linger in the memory down the years.


Ultimate sad sack Aaron A. Aardvark
Words by John Wagner

The Kleggs - yet more much-remembered Dredd villains who haven't actually appeared much,
although they've had a bit of a revival lately, thanks to Rob Williams.
Words here by John Wagner

It’s not just character design. Bolland today is known and beloved around the world largely for his work as a cover artist. And it’s for his astonishing choices of what to show as much as for his ability to render them.

He began his career at 2000AD with covers, earning the very first Supercover credit. I’ve no idea if this image was entirely his own work, or if a scene was described to him. I get the distinct impression that some of his later covers were entirely his own idea.

Crying robots - can't get enough of 'em.

No doubt Tharg was keen to get this rare talent on strip work as soon as possible – but it was presumably known long in advance that he was never going to hit the page-creation rate of a Mike McMahon or Dave Gibbons, let alone a Carlos Ezquerra. And so it was that he did the odd Dredd episode here and there, alongside bursts of one-page nonsense with Walter the Wobot - Fwend of Dwedd. Nonsense in the charitable meaning of the word, of course.

I don’t know at what point it became obvious that he was a perfect fit for Dredd – it may simply have been that Tharg wanted one of his ‘best’ artists used on his most popular character – but it was such a good fit that he became exclusive on the character from then on. He managed just enough chapters of the one-two mega-epic punch of The Cursed Earth and The Day the Law Died that he genuinely was a regular Dredd artist. And then he started disappearing for longer stretches, drawing only those episodes that best lent themselves to his design and mood-setting talents.

When that allows for Judge Death and Judge Death Lives, it’s worth it. One imagines these are the two most-reprinted stories in the history of 2000AD.* With a single, gloriously memorable episode of Block Mania to his name, Bolland said farewell to 2000AD strip work, and went back to drawing covers – something he still does from time to time.

And what covers! I haven’t included them as part of his official count as contributor for this Blog exercise, but many of his most celebrated covers first appeared on the Monthly Eagle Comics reprints that were amongst the first attempts to package Dredd in a US friendly format. I’m sure it made the comics stand out on the shelves, although I also suspect they were amongst the most notorious examples of a common disappointment – why is the amazing artist on the cover not also drawing the pictures on the inside?**

 


 

One of the most dramatic examples of this, for me, was Bolland’s delightfully cheesecake cover for Brit-Cit Babes. I bet it helped shift copies of that issue of the Megazine, and may even shift copies of a reprint, but it sure didn’t prepare me, as a reader, for the Steve Sampson art that actually graced the strip. It’s actually pretty suited to the story, but it’s so utterly unlike anything promised by THIS cover.

Yes, this is pure titillation - although technically it fits with the undercover cops storyline, too.


Still, not Bolland’s fault. And it’s absolutely worth noting that the mans; work still comes across as definitive 2000AD material even though he’s produced just 8 official covers since 1982.

Dredd's grimace is both off-putting and strangely magnetic at the same time.


Bolland's most recent Prog cover - classic, if weirdly shiny.
He sure knows how to play the Dredd as fascist card, with a side order of poking fun at the USA.

Before I end, I can't resist posting the official Rebellion mini-biog of Brain Bolland:
How amazingly passive-aggressive is that final sentence

Rumour has it the man has expressed an interest in doing some strip work again for Judge Dredd. Who wouldn't pay to see that?

More on Brian Bolland:
His own Blog
A pinterest dedicated to his work.
Two part YouTube interview starts here
And I'd encourage you to visit his page on Barney, which has a gallery of some of his more obscure Dredd covers, chiefly from the Eagle reprints and the old Titan albums, treats one and all.

Personal favourites:
Judge Dredd: The Cursed Earth; The Day the Law Died; Punks Rule; The Forever Crimes; Judge Death; Judge Death Lives
-oh wait, I’ve practically listed every Dredd strip he drew (the missing ones are mostly where I’ve forgotten the name and can’t be bothered to copy and paste from Barney.)
And the non-Dredd stuff looked great, too.

The real answer to this question would be a rundown of my favourite Bolland covers:


 


 

 

 

*I reckon Judge Death, as reprinted in the Best of 2000AD monthly issue 3, was one of the first two Dredd stories I ever encountered. I’ve never looked back since, so I don’t begrudge Tharg’s continual pushing of this story as a general way in to Dredd for new readers. Even if, thematically, it makes very little sense to take Judge Death as a typical Dredd villain or even Dredd story!

**Regular weekly/monthly comics readers are entirely used to this, of course. Frankly, I’m suspicious that US monthly comics market only exists at this point as a profit-making exercise because collectors are willing to pay for variant covers by big name artists.

But amongst readers who only glance at comics occasionally, the mismatch of cover artist-interior artist is one of the biggest bugbears going. Along with ‘why is the story so short, and unfinished’ and ‘why has one panel suddenly turned into part of an advertisement’. 2000AD, of course, avoids all these pitfalls by being an anthology – it’s built-in that the cover artist isn’t going to feature on every page, and that each story is serial in nature. 

Who could forget Jigsaw disease?
Words by John Wagner

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

No. 57 Al Ewing



First Prog: 1296
Latest Prog: 1861

First Meg: 251
Latest Meg: 359

Total appearances: 170

Creator credits:
Bones of Eden; Go Machine; Dead Signal; Damnation Station; Tempest; Zombo; Zaucer of Zilk

Other writing credits:
Judge Dredd
Various one-off twisty tales
-including Future Shorts, a set of one-page twisty tales
-and, although not technically a Thargian publication, that notorious mini-comic featuring Disco-Rogue deserves a mention…

Words and pictures by Ewing
-with a certain debt to the story Fort Neuro, by Gerry Finley-Day and Brett Ewins

Notable character creations:
Tempest
Zombo
Obmoz
Black-Ops Judge Bachmann
Rage Hard
Judge Joe (the caring, sharing Dredd from an alternate dimension)

How would you like your judges? Super-strict or super-caring?
Art by Nick Percival

Notable characteristics:
Intelligence, wit, ludicrousness, bile, OTT ZOMG craziness (that works as a tool to point out how annoying this trope can be in the world of comics, but can also in itself be a little trying). Also a fair amount of horror and bleakness, certainly more so than happy endings. And, it must be said, some extreme cleverness. One-liners.

Or, in this case, a two-liner...
Art by PJ Holden
 
On Al:
Alan* Ewing is one of the more recent examples of a stunning 2000AD success story. Some Terror Tales and Future Shocks here and there, a couple of shorter series, a bit of Dredd, then on to full-fledged returning series, and then the co-creation of what has become one of the comic’s best-loved new characters.

And then he moved on to write for an increasingly large and high-profile number of American comics.**

Although he seems to be one of a thankfully large number of successful creators who likes to write for 2000AD whenever he can fit the time in, so I'm pretty hopeful he'll grace the Prog and Meg in years to come. Hooray!

Albert Ewing was I think already known to a number of readers (not to mention editors) through 2000AD fanzine strips that were a hit on the UK convention circuit in the early 2000s – from the little I’ve read, these were chiefly funny. In direct contrast to his early published work, which was, as befits Tharg’s Terror Tales, frightening. 

Or, in the case of this Future Shock, frightening, funny and deeply weird all at the same time.
Art by Lee Townsend (I think?)
This speaks to something that has struck me as a mark of Alexei Ewing’s work generally – it always manages to be recognisably Ewing, but still manages to defy reader expectations.

Having established a small but serious rep as a writer of both horror and comedy, his first almost-crack at a series was Bones of Eden - a very straightlaced action story that in my head stormed its way to victory in the long-forgotten Winter Special 2005 competition because it was so odd everyone wanted to know where on Earth the story was going.***

Dog eats Prez.
Art by Russell Hossain
By this point, Alfonse Ewing earned the right to become yet more playful, sort-of inventing two new series, Future Shorts – basically one-page Future Shocks, (and as such not a new thing for 2000AD, but the first to earn a new logo) and Tharg’s 3illers

You think telling a story in 5 pages is hard, try doing it in 5 panels!
Art by Rufus Dayglo
It didn’t go out under that name, but Go Machine is a three-part burst of glory that set the template for 3illers to come…

Nothing says 'cyborg death arena' like having your furniture repossesed
Art by Richard Elson
Go Machine is ostensibly a story about cyborg arena death matches. If it’d been part of the 1993 Summer Offensive, you’d expect episode after episode of ugly cyborgs smacking each other to bloody, oozy, oily pieces. Instead, we got a bit of that, then a bit of family drama and a whole heap of philosophizing on both the human condition and media exploitation. And then it was all over in 3 episodes. Extraordinary.

Always room for a bit of casual bloodshed
Art by Richard Elson

Dead Signal wasn’t at all like Go Machine, but it showed Alberich Ewing’s willingness to really go for it in terms of gung-ho action, rug-pulling plot reveals, gruff narration and above all (to me it’s the main thing, anyway), philosophizing. The hero of Dead Signal thinks he knows who he is, but also knows he doesn’t really know who he is. He also thinks he knows what kind of person he wants to be – or at least, what his fans want him to be - but maybe they’re all wrong? I can’t help but read some Ewingian self-analysis into all this.

Who needs action heroes when you can have action metaphors?
Art by PJ Holden
Over in the Judge Dredd Megazine, Alfred Ewing was pushing the OTT button. Hard. A selection of Tales from the Black Museum went as far into weird/silly/horrifying as that generally hyper-imaginative series has done. 

Jimps with Gimps, man.
Art by Robin Smith
And then there was Tempest. At the time – 2008 or so – it seemed to me that the comics-reading internet was awash with fans and critics embracing strips that made a point of mashing up ludicrous genres, be it ‘underwater samurai zombie hunters’, or ‘Aztecs fighting marines while singing 1920s showtunes’ and that sort of thing. 

Tempest: lives in the Undercity, has a soul patch, likes to get things a bit gory.
Art by Jon Davis-Hunt
Tempest reminds me of that, but in a knowing way. It remains for me the most Al-Ewing-y of his work, which is in itself something of a disappointment, as I’m fond of his ability not to be what you expect him to be. But at least the actual plot of Tempest is every bit as unpredictably twisty and turny as you could ask for, with a side order of me not entirely being able to make sense of it all at the end.

Meanwhile, Aldridge Ewing joined the increasingly rotating team of Judge Dredd writers. He’s proved to be one of the best. Dredd stories have a lot of room to embrace different genres, but they do also fit a template, which involves violence, humour, satire and future weirdness. It’s no surprise the Algernon Ewing is good at this.

Ewing is the master of packing story beats into an incredibly tiny number of panels. Action to tragedy to sleaze all in a small package, perfect for Dredd.
Art by Andrew Currie (a not insignificant part of making this work, mind you!)
His very first Dredd was a delightful tale about a new costume, as designed by Brendan McCarthy. Given free reign to come up with a story that made sense of this, Ewing brought the costume itself to life. Lunacy ensued. 

Ewing brings his lyrically ludicrous narration skills to the world of Dredd, and makes it fit like a glove.
Art by David Roach
But what really propelled him into the stratosphere of Dredd greats, for me, was Rehab – the tale of a college professor who embraces anger so fiercely he turns himself into Rage Hard – memorable Dredd villain number 1; who then, along with Dredd, encounters Judge Joe, the moral opposite partly of Judge Dredd, but in turn also of Judge Death. Memorable anti-villain number 2.

Bring back Rage Hard! We demand to revisit the Angerocracy.
Art by Karl Richardson
I don’t think he’s ever submitted a straightforward, let alone boring Dredd tale, a powerfully high hit rate even with the high standards of recent years. A pair of modern/classic Dredd pastiches under the title Choose Your Own Xmas saw yet more cleverness, mixing nostalgia with invention and originality. An Alvin Ewing Dredd hasn’t graced the Prog since the triumph of the Cold Deck/Trifecta – and the killing off of Black Ops chief Judge Bachmann, another classic Dredd foil. However, the Megazine has only recently seen The Cop, one of the absolute best noir/gangster type Dredd stories. Yet another example of Ewing going where you don’t think he’s going to go.

Dredd wins at chess.
Art by Henry Flint
I’m gushing, aren’t I.

Although I must confess I’m left a little colder by his recent non-Dredd work. No one can write-off Zombo, the most 2000 AD slice of lunacy in forever. The first series was conceived by artist Henry Flint, who presumably was mostly into the people-eating fun.

And what isn't fun about people getting ate?
Art by Henry Flint
Aldebaran Ewing, drafted in the plot and script the story, was seemingly more interested in the satire on shady government conspiracy angle. And above all the chance to spout Monty-Python levels of surreal one liners.

Zombo is in control of two pet death vortes thingies. It makes just as much sense as it needs to.
Art by Henry Flint
Subsequent Zombo outings have been even more anarchic, but equally barbed in their attacks on popular culture, be it TV talent shows, political PR, You Tube hacks, or, for some delightful reason known only to Algonquin Winnebago Ewing, Jack Kirby era Fantastic Four.

Zombo is certainly thrilling, massively memorable, often hilarious - but it’s also, for my taste, too insane for its own good sometimes.

In direct contrast to Damnation Station, Al-Jazeera Ewing’s spacewar saga. It looked from early episodes as if it was going to be a bit about poking fun at characters in a wartime setting, but soon proved to be very much an exploration of what it might actually be like to go to war with aliens. Not bug-eyed war-crazed space invaders, but beings whose very concepts of existence were utterly different to our own. 

There's always room for a metaphor
Art by Mark Harrison
There’s room for stories about what actual combat might be like, what combat fatigue  / PTSD might be like in this context, and above all there’s some deeply clever long-form plotting in terms of how humans might ever be able to win. This isn’t your 1970s spacewar comic, nossir.

Now that's what I call nihilism
Art by Mark Harrison

I’d really like to read this all in a proper collected edition, please, Tharg. It was at times too disjointed in the Prog, but I’m pretty sure there’s greatness in the whole.

Which brings us to the second artist collaboration, Brendan McCarthy’s Zaucer of Zilk.
No doubt impressed with his work on Zombo, McCarthy picked Allthatjazz Ewing to bring script coherence to his tale of a layabout fame-hungry wizard-hero. Much like a lot of McCarthy’s work, it’s more of a mood and feeling story than it is a narrative, but Ewing does force a complex narrative into it all.

A gooey end for the wicked Zultan
Art by Brendan McCarthy

I’ll be honest, I haven’t read it since it was in the Prog, where I bathed in the visuals and the purple prose, but didn’t entirely engage with the thing itself. It’s every bit as pretentious as the likes of Sooner or Later, and smacks of the sort of comic that is not quite as clever as it thinks it is, but is also definitely cleverer than I think I am. It’s both very Ewing, and also very un-Ewing in that it’s Ewing try to both be himself and not at the same time, and trying to channel McCarthy, too.

And that’s as good an absurd summary to end on as any for this foray into the mighty world of Al ‘Call me Al’ Ewing. 

Art by Ben Willsher

More on Al Ewing
Ewing’s old blog (at least, I think it’s his?) hosts the entirety of the Disco Rogue comic, if you’re curious.
An interview on the Forbidden Planet blog from Ewing's relatively early days.
A more recent interview with Games Radar, covering Trifecta
If you're looking for back issues of Zarjaz, start here, at the Quaequam Blog
If you want to read lots and lots of words - insightful ones - head over to Colin Smiths' 'Too busy Thinking about my comics' blog for a 2-part interview, and follow the 'Al Ewing' tags down a rabbit hole of wisdom from Marvel to 2000AD and beyond.

Personal favourites:
Go Machine
Dead Signal
Judge Dredd: Sex, Vi and Vidslugs; Idle hands; Rehab; Harry Sheemer, Mon Amour; Choose Your Own Xmas; Cold Deck/Trifecta; The Cop (and frankly, all of his Dredds)
Damnation Station (I like the later parts more than the early parts, but to a large extent it works best as a continuous whole)
Zombo: The Day the Zombo Died tickled me more than the others, for some reason.



*I’ve no idea what ‘Al’ is short for, if indeed it is short for anything. Frankly I prefer not to know. But as an Alex who has always hated being called Al, I’m going to take this joke and run with it.

**Being honest, I probably like his run on Loki, and his current New Avengers, even more than any of his best 2000AD work. I hear his Jennifer Blood is fabulous, too.

***The story did continue for a bit in Zarjaz, I think? Did it ever reach a conclusion?

I’ve not met the man, although I’d lay a wager Al Ewing is a paunchy white man with a beard and glasses. Just maybe, though, just maybe, he’s the alter ego for a certain former NBA star…