TFQ: HOW did you come up with this story?
PAOLO: Nightworld was created a dozen years ago for a very specific purpose: to take me out of anonymity, I tried to think of the much commercial comic book I could conceive. The blend of gothic horror and superheroes was very on-trend in those days but has been demonstrated to hold well today too, since with the help of Adam this book sees the light!
ADAM: When I first saw Paolo’s pages I was enchanted -- in a good and evil way :-). I sensed this could grow into the kind of pop lore that would establish Paolo’s talent in the U.S the way it deserves to be, and our creative process became telepathic…or maybe he just cast a spell!
TFQ: You started a kickstarter fund for this comic. Was this your first experience with Kickstarter? How was that process?
ADAM: It was my first experience, and a satisfying but exhausting one. I didn’t realize that begging was a full-time job :-), but you really do have to call on all your contacts and any communities that might be interested -- in this case, horror fans, admirers of the Kirby legacy, etc. Kickstarter is great for pre-testing what kind of audience is out there, and our cult certainly came together to put us over the line.
TFQ: So many people describe this comic as Kirby-tastic but besides the linework, the character designs reminded me so much more closely of Mignola (accepting of course Kirby's wide range of influence). How do you feel about all this feedback?
PAOLO: The artwork has been described also as a mix of Kirby and Charles Burns or as Mike Allred under the influence of hallucinogens! I hope it does not come out as something too bizarre for a wide audience.
Mignola is
one of my favorites of the Modern Age artists, it may not be so direct an
influence on Nightworld but both Mignola
and I are fans of classic horror movies so this may explain some affinity in
the characters’ design.
I'm not
interested in cloning Kirby (it would not be possible anyway!); the first
story was done 9 years ago, in the time since I have minimized the use of
crackle, squiggle and muscles done with slashed lines. My influence is a
blend of Golden and Silver Age (Ditko, Colan, Romita Sr., Everett, Crandall,
Maneely). I sure think that the classic style of comics is something to defend
but I'm not a revivalist, I try to use it to make stories that fit the modern
age and serve as a starting point for future evolution; in fact I came up with
the slogan “pure comics for now people”!
TFQ: What
were the major influences behind this story?
PAOLO: Both The
Demon and Satan’s Six by
Kirby, Hellboy, and Universal horrors
of the 1930s.
ADAM: The inspirations
I myself drew from were Mexican vampire movies of the 1950s and ’60s, and the
undersea nature-documentaries of Jacques Cousteau from the 1970s. I would see both
on TV as a kid and the monster movies featured a moody, dignified vampire named
Nostradamus and often had luchas fighting monsters. Nightworld’s hero Plenilunio looks like a merge of the vampire-lord
and the lucha-hero, along with kabuki -- Paolo’s creativity comes from multiple
sources that only a genius like him would relate to each other. But the
melancholy of those period-piece vampire flicks, and the poetry of Cousteau’s continual
voiceover on scenes of the alien world of the sea, were what I mainly had in
mind when the “voice” of this comic came to me. Plus a century of pop-culture,
occult beliefs and even news on real-life wars and fashion trends (which you’ll
see some of in Issue #2), shredded and pasted back together in this surreal
saga.
TFQ: How
did you come to release through Image Comics?
ADAM: I had interviewed
Erik Larsen for the Jack Kirby Collector
magazine, and was joking with a friend about how Erik told me he planned to
bring the undeveloped characters Kirby created to Image as new comics --
including my all-time fav Kirby character name (for a kind of sasquatch), “Thunderfoot,
Last of the half-Humans!” :-) -- my friend and I were reflecting on this with
admiration at a New York Comic Con in the mid-2000s and then Erik, whom I’d
never seen at that con, walked passed us as if summoned. So I showed him an
early proof of Nightworld #1, and he
asked if Paolo and I would like to do a story for The Next Issue Project, his series of retro comic anthologies. We did
an “Alias the Spider” story that appeared in “Crack Comics #63,” then two years later we had a chance to work on
one of the Kirbyverse characters ourselves. That didn’t work out due to
licensing issues, but Erik was all the more eager to make new legends, so he
looked again at Nightworld and
championed us while we finished the other three issues of the first miniseries.
A few more years later and Nightworld
is ready -- a fable about characters who are capable of great evil or good to
choose between, but a lesson to us ordinary fans and creatives to never give up
on what’s possible!
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