Here are a couple more 3D computer images from Frank. This time with a dinosaur shaped pilot. Notice the very important tail sticking out of the back. I'm loving this!
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Here are a couple more 3D computer images from Frank. This time with a dinosaur shaped pilot. Notice the very important tail sticking out of the back. I'm loving this!
My boy Frank Gauthier came up with this amazing 3D computer model of the Dinosaur attack ship:
If you take a look at the Gallery you'll also see some awesome 3D art he did of my Tinn Man robot.
Frank, keep 'em coming. And take a look at the previous post: you'll see that the dino ship is actually rounded on the bottom, not flat. How does it land, you may ask? Who said anything about landing?
DH
And now a brief discussion on Dinosaurs Robots Cheerleaders and Feminism. As much as I try to avoid politics (people are not capable of being rational while talking politics) I should at least address the portrayal of women in comics.
Some may look at DRC and just dismiss it as "male fantasy". First of all, yes, it is. Thats kind of one of the points of the comic: to combine boyhood fantasies in ridiculous ways. But if a male fantasy is either the hero saving the girl, or a sexy heroine who can kick butt, is that so horrible? Either way, its about protecting women. Furthermore, there's nothing wrong with portraying attractive women, as long as there's more to them than that.
Which brings me to the other side of the coin. Male fantasy is okay, (Twilight is basically female fantasy- nothing wrong with that) but it shouldn't be insulting to the female audience. There's certain things I won't do with DRC. No contrived story lines to get the girls out of their clothes. Sure they wear cheerleader outfits (that are less revealing than a lot of real life cheerleader uniforms, or Wonder Woman's original costume for that matter) and it will be explained why they still wear them well into the Dinosaur invasion. Also, I wanted to make sure each cheerleader is an individual. I didn't want them to be a group of shallow airheads, or for the reader to be hoping to see them get eaten by dinosaurs. I want them to care about each girl. With that I present the names of each cheerleader labeled on the pencil drawing I'm working on, followed by something interesting about each one:
Jenny: the heart of the team. The most motivated of the group. She has a physical handicap she had to overcome to be here.
Amber: Of all the cheerleaders, she fits in the least. She has unusual reasons for becoming a cheerleader
Ashley: Her fun loving attitude may lead to problems...
Nikki: Sweet, a little boy crazy, and an expert in her field of study. Think of "Kaylee" from Firefly.
Molly: The leader. Already introduced in a previous BLOG entry. She's hell on wheels, but suffers a tragedy early on in the invasion.
Looking at the picture, I think of two things: 1) I love the look on the Dinosuar's face, and 2) the occasional skirt blowing up is perfectly realistic: it happens in real life, plus its still not Wonder Woman's costume.
DH
Here's a full colored in version of a panel I've posted before in different stages of completion (pencils, inks, partial colors)
I used this picture to try out different colors on Nikki's uniform. I think this is the unifom color I'm going with.
DH
Behold in all her awesome glory: Molly! She's the head cheerleader and she's as tough and fiesty as she is gorgeous. I based this character partially on my wife (she doesn't read my blog so she'll never know) and partially on Starbuck from BattleStar Galactica (I will campaign to have Katie Sackhoff portray her for Dinosaurs! Robots! Cheerleaders! The Movie) I fell in love with this picture as soon as I drew it. I decided to scan the pencils to post on the BLOG! On a whim, I started blocking in colors on the computer right over the pencils to get a feel for how it would look. What resulted is one of the prettiest pictures I ever crapped out:
I really like the look of the blotchy colors over a pencil drawing. I'm not sure if I'll use this style for any actual comic pages, but it sure looks pretty.
DH
Just saw X-Men First Class. Seriously, go see this movie. Afterwards my friends and I were discussing if this is the best comic book movie yet (is it better than Dark Knight? Better than X-Men 2? I say yes) This could be it: The best movie this summer. I'm not sure if Transformers or Captain America can beat it. It had the feel of a Sean Connery James Bond flick, Kevin Bacon as an Evil Mutant and a cameo you won't believe. There were some obscure mutants that they chose for this one, but it all worked. Of course, Magneto and Professor X were spot on, but I also liked how Banshee was portrayed too. Emma Frost was awesome. What really had me sold on this was the early 1960s setting. Anything that might have seemed cheesy could just be seen as contributing to the James bond atmosphere. In a way, that reminded me of one of my all time favorite movies The Incredibles. I really like the idea of doing a superhero movie in a certain time period. When the Fantastic Four movie first came out, I wished they had done it with a 1960s background. That era suits them better than present day. I also wished the Spider Man movies took place in the 60s, with Mary Jane in go-go boots, and Peter Parker hanging out with hippies. Even better, I wish they would do an X-men movie that takes place in the 80s. Picture Kitty with big frizzy 80s hair, or Storm with her mohawk, and soundtrack provided by Journey. I grew up reading Xmen comics in the 80s so I will always see that as their hey day. That was the first super hero comic I read as a kid. Thats why it was so fun seeing these characters again on the big screen portrayed so perfectly. I was blown away.
DH
While I'm coloring in the 7 pages of chapter One, I'm also pencilling in the pages for Chapter Two. (Chapter One comes out JULY 4th, Chapter Two: OCTOBER 31st) I do this in parallel so I can go back and forth and keep a fresh perspective on my drawings. Too many times I think I'm drawing something epic, only to come back to it a few hours later to realize it actually sucks. Here's a peek at the pencils for page two of Chapter Two: The cheerleaders looking up in shock at a Spaceship hovering over their pretty heads. Here's my first attempt:
Looked okay.
Something else I do is sometimes draw two versions of the same page. This way, I can come at it from a different angle without feeling the pressure I would otherwise feel if I had erased one to start over. Here's another version I lliked better and ran with. The lesson I learned is, if in doubt, an upshot of the cheerleaders always wins. Enjoy:
DH
Page One colors are finished. Page Two almost. I posted a colored version of the dinosaur in a spaceship shot. Since then I improved the coloring job. In the older version, the sky is more of a gradient. It looks fancy, but it becomes too much with all the coloring going on with the ship and the city below. Here's a closer to final version. Still figuring things out with coloring, and everything else.
DH
A while back I started working on another version of the cover picture. I just finished inking it in:
I'm not sure if I will like this one better than whats on the front page now. This one is more exciting, and better drawn, but whats on there now its more iconic, and gets the idea across better for a home page.
We'll see how it looks after I color it in, which will be after I color in the rest of chapter one.
DH
Finally finished coloring in page one. Here's panel one, you've seen previously without colors:
Took longer than I thought.
At this point, if I do a page a week, I'll make my self imposed deadline. There is some value to just sticking to your own deadline. Its never going to be perfect, so I would never get anywhere if I didn't at some point just force myself to move on. By the time I get to the coloring, I'm usually working on a drawing I don't like anymore. But its better to move on than be stuck trying to perfect a page.
Then again, it would be nice to just take as long as I needed to make a page that was flawless. For example I picked up a copy of "Nonplayer" by Image Comics. Amazing artwork. Apparently took a year for him to make. Hope the next issue doesn't take as long.
Awesome.
DH