Monday, October 30, 2006

Salligadoola Mitchigaboola Pluggety-Bloggety Boo


Review of the collection of Leviathan by Charlie Hodge in SFX #150.
© 2006 Future Publishing Ltd, reproduced here for review purposes under the
Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988.

Apologies if you're getting a bit sick of this self-referential stuff, but I've not been a media darling before and I suspect it's not going to last.
Ian rang me last week in a state of great excitement to tell me that the Leviathan collection had a full-page review in SFX #150. I nipped out to get a copy and sure enough, there we were - occupying a full page of the magazine's 2.5 pages of comics reviews, and not only did they call it "the best story (2000AD) has published in the last ten years," but they even used one of my favourite panels as a half-page splash. Absolute bliss, though I'm still wracking my brains to try and remember the day I pulled a thorn out of Charlie Hodge's paw...
It also led me to thinking about the value of reviews. For the creator, that is - obviously a good review in a newsstand magazine like this should help sales (as Ian put it, "real people will see this one!"*) - but there's a danger as a creator in paying too much attention to reviews of any kind. Working in a commercial arena like comics is a bit like walking a narrow causeway between two abysses; on the one side is the pitfall of overconfidence, on the other excessive preciousness. Whatever happens, you always have to balance the need to maintain quality against the need to bash out your week's quota of pages, and regardless of how well or badly a job has gone, you have to see it through to the end.
Drawing a comic swallows up so much of your life that it's very difficult to see anything bad said against your darling; I have one friend who was plunged into gloom over the three negative reviews of his work, when there had been twenty good ones (though he cheered up a bit when I pointed out how he lucky was to get twenty-three reviews, good or bad). When the first issue of The Great Game came out, the thing that worried me most was it attracting seriously negative comment, as I was going to have to stay awake for a week to finish issue four regardless.
For actual feedback I rely on a few old friends whose opinions I know I can trust, and particularly, who I can trust to tell me when I'm going astray. Compliments are wonderful, but they don't teach you very much**, and as a professional artist, I'm judged by the worst work that I turn out each year.
So I maintain that lofty old-thesp-style stance of "I never look at my reviews, dahling" which is, of course, horribly disingenuous, as I have Ian and other friends to ring me up and let me know when someone's said something nice about me. And let's face it, it "the best story (2000AD) has published in the last ten years," is pretty damn cool.

(Though the pie chart ratings kinda put me in my place - 20% for "gorgeous art" but 25% for "no Celine Dion." You've got to hand it to Charlie, he's got his priorities straight.)


*Ian wishes me to point out to members of the comic-reading fraternity that he does love you all really.

**please don't let it stop you though.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi
As a non 2000ad reader, but a fan of your work, I am looking forward to the Leviathon collected coming out - when will that be?

Dave

Bolt-01 said...

Saw that Matt- We got Fanzine of the month in the same issue! Not as much room as you, but just as nicce a feeling!

Unknown said...

Dave - given that it's Rebellion, add together the numbers in your date of birth, divide by 2 and take away the number you first thought of... hopefully soon though. Last I heard it was due a couple of weeks ago, and since SFX got a review copy, I imagine it shouldn't be long...

Bolt - congratulations!