Author Topic: Who is important in Comic writing?  (Read 1006 times)

Offline DJ Doena

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Who is important in Comic writing?
« on: August 31, 2009, 06:07:05 PM »
Hi,

I organize my books with DVD Profiler, too: http://doena-soft.de/phpbookprofiler/

It's not ideal but sufficient for my needs.

I simply use the crew/writer/writer for the author on a normal novel.

But when it comes to comics, there are quite a number of jobs and I am not certain how important these people are in the creative process.

For example
Xena: Warrior Princess: Contest of the Pantheons
Writer
Artist
Colorist
Letterer

I assume that the Writer invents the story and the Artists draws it (an initial draft). But what does a letterer do, exactly?

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Omnibus
Script
Pencils
Inks
Colors
Letters

I assume that Script equals Writer. But what equals Artist? Pencils or Inks and what's the difference?
Karsten

Abraham Lincoln once said The trouble with quotes from the internet is that you never know if they're genuine.

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Najemikon

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Re: Who is important in Comic writing?
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2009, 06:29:15 PM »
Comic production is similar to film production.

A publisher has an idea and hires a writer, or a writer contacts a publisher with an idea. Then the writer is teamed with an artist to create the story. How much choice either have varies, but in the end, the final product is a collaboration between the two. Judge Dredd was an idea by the main writer to this day, John Wagner, but he's credited as co-creator with Carlos Ezquerra, the artist, because he invented what Dredd looks like. Since then, both have worked extensively on Dredd, but not always together. Carlos has drawn for other writers, Wagner has written for other artists (in fact, Judge Dredd: America, my favourite Dredd story, was drawn by Colin MacNeil). They've created other work together, like Strontium Dogs and so far as I'm aware, have been the only people to work on it. Dredd though is probably owned by the publishers more than Dogs, so they are able to get more variety in tone.

In the food chain, the colourist and inkers are like cinematographers, if the artist isn't doing it themselves. They're there to do job, which they may do incredibly well, but it's a production job all the same. Think about the "tracer" jokes in Chasing Amy... :laugh:

I think Ezquerra inks and colours his own work, but I've heard lots of stories about people not being happy with the result. On regular strips in 2000ad, I understand that the writer and artist are not forced to meet and the general relationship between the two groups is of mutual hatred!

The letterer's are unsung heroes. After all, they literally do the bubbles, but where they go has already been suggested and what they say is in stone. For the most part, I suppose they have the least creative input, although sometimes they are very inventive and the different styles help tell the story.
« Last Edit: August 31, 2009, 06:32:32 PM by Jon »