Hello Pulp Friends,
I am so excited to share the latest 2 lobby cards with some support words from two comicbook legends and a huge inspiration of mine: Jim Steranko and Warren Ellis. I am lucky enough to call Jim a friend and he has always been enjoying The Black Beetle since the ashcan from a few years ago, so having his stamp of approval (being the Pulp authority he is) really means a lot to me.
And to add another cherry to the pie, Warren asked to see the pages from issue 1, enjoyed it and gave me the blurb I used on the lobby card below. More thumbs up from these greats means I might be doing this right :) Let's hope I don't screw it up along the way ;)
Issue #0 (collecting the NIGHT SHIFT 3-parter published in DHP plus extra material) is coming out in less than two weeks and there is still time to put in pre-orders for issue 1 coming out in January.
Speaking of issue 1 of NO WAY OUT, here's an excerpt of an interview that was recently published on CBR (done with Daniel Glendening) in which I talk a bit of the story, The Black Beetle, and show some sneak peek of the book (first 3 pages).
~~Ŧ~~
Back
alleys shrouded in darkness and long shadows cast by dim streetlights,
all-night diners and wise guy gangsters, esoteric artifacts and Nazi secret
agents: this is the world readers have come to associate with classic noir, and
the world readers will find in writer/artist Francesco Francavilla's "The
Black Beetle" from Dark Horse Comics.
With the release of "The Black Beetle" #0, collecting the three-part story "NightShift" that originally ran in Dark Horse's anthology series, "DarkHorse Presents," on December 19 and the subsequent launch
of "The Black Beetle: No Way Out" four-issue miniseries on January
16, Francavilla continues his impressive rise in the comic book industry.
Francavilla nabbed the 2012 Eisner Award for Best Cover Artist as well as the
2012 Eagle Award for Favourite Newcomer Artist. He brings his signature
graphic, pulp aesthetic to every panel of his developing series, eagerly
sharing the process on his "Black
Beetle"-centered blog.
"We
are still at a very early phase of the Black Beetle's history,"
Francavilla told Comic Book Resources. "We know he operates in Colt City
and we know he is some sort of masked vigilante or hero. The events in 'Night
Shift' span one night -- We've learned what the Black Beetle is capable of, and
where his 'base of operations' is located."
The
Black Beetle is a hero, to be sure, and he's willing to take a bullet in
defense of the innocent. However, he is not without his flaws, as hinted at in
"Night Shift," and Francavilla compares him to Humphrey Bogart's
character Rick Blaine in the 1941 film, "Casablanca."
"[The
Black Beetle] operates outside the radar of the law, which allows him to get
information on criminal activity in Colt
City and act accordingly,
sometimes adopting unorthodox measures," said Francavilla. "He is a
hero, after all -- not a perfect hero, but still a hero."
[...]
"There is something else going on more than just simply 'protecting the citizens of Colt City,'" said Francavilla. "What is that 'something else?' That's one of the major plot-points that we'll discover a bit at a time through the next several issues in the series."
"There is something else going on more than just simply 'protecting the citizens of Colt City,'" said Francavilla. "What is that 'something else?' That's one of the major plot-points that we'll discover a bit at a time through the next several issues in the series."
[...]
"A
main goal I had for this book is to explore several genres of the pulps,"
Francavilla explained. "'Night Shift' was a mix of spy-war story with some
supernatural elements, while 'No Way Out' is more of a crime-mystery
story."
Francavilla
cites the pulp and noir films and serials of the 1930s, '40s and '50s as direct
influences on The Black Beetle, as well as classic pulp crime fiction writers
like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. The series is also clearly indebted
to early masked-heroes like The Shadow and
The Spider.
"I
always loved the high entertainment value of those stories," said
Francavilla. "You didn't need to know much going in except that some bad
guy is going to do something bad and The Shadow or The Spider was going to take
care of him. Same goes with the gangster or crime movies from that period: you
were going in without any pre-conception or knowledge of the characters;
getting to meet the hero (or anti-hero) during the movie, and deciding to like
or hate him or her at the end. You probably thought you knew how the movie was
going to end, but somehow the whole experience wasn't as predictable as you
thought. And that made it fun, entertaining. Hopefully I will be able to
achieve the same effect with 'The Black Beetle.'"
~~Ŧ~~So please spread the word about BB, pre-order #1 and #2, tell your store to order some extra copies, and -last but not least- have a wonderful Pulp Sunday, everyone :)
Cheers,
Francesco