Archive for ‘March, 2010’
Hi, Folks!
Remember how I used to do reviews of superhero movies on this site? I stopped after “The Watchmen,” because to me that movie sort of cleared the decks and made anything else seem redundant. I loved Iron Man, but it is very unlikely I’ll see it while it’s in the theater, and I’ll probably wait and get it on Netflix. I am very hyped about Kick-Ass, however. This just all goes to show that what I look for in a superhero movie is different from what others want. For example, here are a few comparisons:
- Mystery Men vs. Bryan Singer’s Superman = Mystery men
- Iron Man vs. Spiderman I or II = Iron Man
- The Incredibles against the Fantastic Four movies = The Incredibles
Keep in mind, I have not yet seen (and may never see) Wolverine or Spider-Man III. Yet, I wonder how cool a television show based on Planetary could be, or a big-assed movie based on the Authority? I suspect I’ll be left wondering forever, though.
So, having said all this, here is my wholly subjective and probably irrelevant views on some of the movies I’ve seen in recent times:
- 50 Watt Fuse: The G.E. Smith story is interesting, but not a blockbuster.
- A Quantum of Solace: A+
- Aeon Flux: Not as bad you would expect.
- Almost Famous: Outstanding movie! Deserves all the praise it got.
- Black Snake Moan—Outstanding, provocative, just a damn good movie
- Boogie Nights: A+
- Casino Royale: A+
- Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young–Living with War: It’s hard seeing your heroes get old.
- Hancock: Meh… The cum scene was funnier back in the Pro.
- Inside Man: Universe, please give this misspent time back to me!
- It Might Get Loud—Yes! Yes! Yes! Let guitar geeks rejoice!
- Journey to the Center of the Earth: This stretched suspension of disbelief to beyond breaking!
- Lord of War: I was moved. A+
- My Super X-Girlfriend: Even the wonderful Uma Thurman can make a real stinker, it seems.
- Natural Born Killers: Well, this was an eye opener.
- Pan’s Labyrinth: I hated this movie. Maybe it was brilliant, but I don’t care.
- Thank You For Smoking: I was educated. A+
- The Bourne movies: Excellent, excellent.
- The Illusionist: Very good movie.
- The Last Samurai: Very moving. With Tom Cruise, I expected less.
- The Mothman Prophecies: I liked it a lot.
- The Prestige: There were some very enjoyable elements in this movie.
- The Secretary—Talk about provocative! Yikes! But a great movie in any case.
- Ultraviolet: Unrealized, as if they ran out of money and had amateurs edit it.
- Windtalkers: Incredibly bleak. Watch at your own risk.
Why should it matter what I think about these movies? Well, if you dig Johnny Saturn, my movie preferences should go a long way in explaining what I like in making comics. Beyond that, my opinions are no more or less valid that yours.
Scott.
I usually prefer the look of art that I created by doing life-drawing from scenes in my mind’s eye, rather than those drawings where I painstakingly construct the characters out of lines, simple shapes, etc., building them up. To me, my mental life-drawing stuff just looks more organic and comfortable to my eyes. That having been said, I have switched back and forth between these two approaches many times over the years. Issue 6, and the current issue 12, is examples of life drawing from my mind’s eye.
When my visualization abilities are at full charge, I tend to go right to the art board and draw the pictures there directly, skipping thumbnails altogether. At all other times, I draw the picture on a separate piece of paper, make changes in the computer, and trace it onto the art board. I wish my visualization abilities were always at full charge, but stress or illness or fatigue can sideline them.
When I mention life drawing from reference pictures in my mind’s eye, I mean that I am using the same skills that I would use to draw a live models, props, or settings. Visualization and concentration are among the artist’s most powerful tools.
I have changed paper, inking supplies, pencils, and other tools often over the years. Sometimes I’ll hand draw backgrounds, sometimes I’ll use Sketchup to build the background. At one point, I cut and formatted all my own art boards, but now I use Blueline Pro paper exclusively. When it comes to inking, the mix of brush, crow quill, fountain pen, and technical markers in my art has changed regularly. These changes are based on my mood, but no one has ever noticed or pointed out the change, because my art looks like my art no matter how I did it. (It’s the artist, not the tools!) For years I drew with 4H pencils in lead holders, and now I’m partial to 3B in lead holders and draftsman’s mechanical pencils. I should be more consistent, but it’s the mood I’m in, and the availability of tools, and the tooth of the paper that makes up my mind more often than not.
I used to collect toys for reference. I have a drawer full of realistic looking squirt guns, for example, that have shown up as real guns in the comic again and again. If I am having trouble drawing a character from a sharp angle, I will often use my Art S. Buck plastic models posed correctly, or perhaps my old GI Joes. The older, large GI Joes are fantastic models, because they are well jointed and capable of almost any pose. I also have tons of vinyl animals, and lots of vinyl dinosaurs, but the latter rarely get used as art models, primarily because no dinosaurs have shown up in the comic. I love drawing and painting dinosaurs, so maybe it’s time for a Jurassic invasion of Spire City.
When drawing or inking, I am often in “the Zone” for hours on end, a higher state of consciousness when the pencil seems to guide itself, everything I do is gold, and I feel and overwhelming sense of joy. This is really a wonderful state, and the brain releases endorphins like crazy when I’m there. Like my visualization abilities, illness, emotional turmoil, and fatigue all have the ability to keep me out of the zone. I wish I could bottle this state, and take a swig whenever I needed it, but I cannot.
Despite have drawn tons of stuff over the last fifteen years, I feel confident in stating that life drawing at the Indianapolis Art Center’s open studios has increased my ability, and my visualization powers, by ten-fold.
When I revisit this subject, I will go into some detail on how to develop and make use of visualization in art.
Scott.
