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Old 12-24-2006, 09:24 AM   #1
MattBrady
 
SCOTT ALLIE ON HORROR @ DARK HORSE IN 2007

Sure, sure, you’ve heard about Buffy coming back to Dark Horse for “Season 8,” continuing in comics where the television series left off. But think of Buffy as the tip of a dark iceberg, a frozen mass filled with horror that’s slowly thawing.

Okay – Flowery speech aside, we’re talking about Dark Horse’s upcoming line of horror titles that will, effectively, be giving the publisher a shot in the arm when it comes to creepy comic books and graphic novels.

“The books just started showing up,” Dark Horse’s Scott Allie, editor of the impromptu line of horror titles said when asked what the impetus for revving things up was. “The horror line was never supposed to go away; it's just that there was less happening. I had been distracted focusing on Conan for a long time. Steve Niles was doing a lot of stuff for other publishers. Mike Mignola and I found ourselves waiting a long time for Hellboy: Darkness Calls, and The Goon went on hiatus for Eric to work on Chinatown. But then by the middle of last year, Niles was coming back to Dark Horse, we had Duncan Fegredo revving things up on Hellboy, and a bunch of new books were starting to get mapped out for this year. Joss was relaunching Buffy with us ... and it looked like a major critical mass of horror comics were gonna be happening in the first part of 2007. Which is really how the line started in 2003—we just had a lot of horror books in the works, and decided to make a concerted effort, and show people what Dark Horse could do with the genre. I wish I never let the horror line slide from view at all, but things come in cycles, naturally.”

We asked Allie to run things down a little…

Rex Mundi: “The ongoing bimonthly series, with issue #4 in February bringing back the worst villain, the Man in White, for a bloody showdown with Julien,” Allie said. “This book is increasing in mainstream appeal in part because of the news of the film in development with Johnny Depp and Dark Horse Entertainment. This was a long time in the making, with Johnny having been shepherding it for years before announcing it this fall. Volume 4 (of 6) wraps with Dark Horse's #5 in April, with both heroes and villain reaching all time lows, suffering terrible defeats. By February, three volumes of trade paperbacks will be on bookshelves, marking the halfway of point of this epic series.”

Steve Niles: “Steve came back to Dark Horse in 2006, but comes back with a bang in 2007 with City of Others - a new series with Bernie Wrightson, as well as a new Criminal Macabre [previously Cal McDonald] push. There will be plenty of others, with the most recent one to get signed up is Earth Vs. Monsters, with Nat Jones, his collaborator on The Nail and Giant Monster. Earth Vs. Monsters was something Steve pitched me when we first started working together, but we didn't have an artist. It's a big, crazy, explosive thing. A catastrophe in the tradition of the 1950s horror/sf movies. It should be a lot of fun. We just got a budget for the book, so it's still quite a ways off, but we're going to start soon. And Steve has a bunch of other things in the works. There's probably going to be another big horror line push near the end of 2007, and he'll have some new stuff then.”



Buffy: “Of course, one of our biggest events of the year is the new launch of Buffy in March, overseen by Joss Whedon, who's writing the first, middle, and last arc. The second series, after Joss's initial four, is going to feature Faith, and it'll be written by Brian K. Vaughan. We're real jazzed about that. Brian's the most exciting your writer on the scene for me—Ex Machina's my favorite book right now, which led us to using Tony [Harris] on covers for Conan for a while. So having Brian follow Joss really cuts the pain of not having Joss write the whole thing himself. After that, Jeph Loeb will be on the book, and some writers from the show—so we're getting the best possible people to run this series. Working with Joss opens doors.”



Hellboy: “With a new Hellboy movie going into production, we're stepping up publishing, getting a bunch of series rolling that we've been promising for years. Abe Sapien gets a miniseries written by Mike and drawn by Jason Alexander [Damn Nation]. Also, a series featuring Lobster Johnson and the B.P.R.D. in the 1940s cleaning up Nazi occult experiments will launch later in the year. A contemporary BPRD series by Mignola, John Arcudi, and Guy Davis continue, with Garden of Souls launching in March and a follow-up focusing on Captain Daimio follows immediately in August. Meanwhile, the main event is Hellboy: Darkness Calls launching in April by Mignola and Duncan Fegredo.”






The Goon: Eric Powell returns to his creation with the outrageous, nearly censored "Satan's Baby," featuring a story that has the business offices shaking in their boots. This will be followed by the return of the bimonthly series, and the long awaited Chinatown original graphic novel, to which Eric has hinted since the start of The Goon.”

Mike Richardson: “Mike is writing two new horror series this year—the creepy teen screamer The Secret, and the upbeat zombie apocalypse story, Living with the Dead. I think Mike just got the itch. He makes movies, publishes comics, supervises things, is always rewriting things, and I think he just missed the intimacy of doing a comic where you write it from the bottom up and no one else come in and monkeys too much. Producing some of Steve Niles's movies got him excited about horror, and he started getting ideas. So instead of hiring someone to write them, which he might have done five years ago, I guess he just wanted to write them himself.”



Original graphic novels: “In January, we see the release of Blessed Thistle and The Messengers, two original graphic novels in the horror line. The former is Steve Morris's winner for the 2005 New Recruits contest, a bizarre psychological yarn for fans of David Lynch. The Messengers is Sam Raimi's upcoming film told from an entirely different perspective, by Jason Hall [Beware the Creeper].

“Basically, when looking at the line, I want a lot of variety, because I think the genre lends itself to that. But in general I want smart stuff that uses the medium to best advantage, being colorful and dynamic—in terms of having some good loud stuff that you want to see a guy draw—and has some humor in it. I get a little bored with horror stuff if it's just entirely somber and takes itself too seriously. There's got to be some tension between wallowing in the weird stuff, and showing how it can be a little funny, or that people's reactions can be funny. And we want real good art—the line tends to be sort of art driven. Not to discredit our writers, but the art determines a lot of the character of the individual books, and we want artists who can deliver the mood, rather than expecting a superhero artist to create atmosphere.

“So that’s what the start of the year looks like. Some of the projects I mentioned go out a little further, but basically it all revs up from January to April – it’ll be a good time to like horror comics.”
 
Old 12-24-2006, 11:33 AM   #2
Tom Daylight
 
Did he say "second series"? I really hope they're doing the Buffy thing as an ongoing series rather than a series of miniseries; you just know it would lead to some dodgy subtitles on the cover...
 
Old 12-24-2006, 11:47 AM   #3
e_galston
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fetsur
Did he say "second series"? I really hope they're doing the Buffy thing as an ongoing series rather than a series of miniseries; you just know it would lead to some dodgy subtitles on the cover...

from the first announcement of the new "season" its always been a series of minis...
 
Old 12-24-2006, 01:37 PM   #4
Derf
 
I am over the moon that Joss will be writing 3 arcs and twelve issues of the Buffy Season 8 comic. At this rate we'll be getting new issues of buffy comics for 3-4 years. I hope Georges Jeanty continues as the artist as I really love the preview pages we've seen so far.
 
Old 12-24-2006, 01:41 PM   #5
Dirk Manning
 
And a frightful new year...

Scott Allie's line of horror comics at Dark Horse has been one of comicdom's best kept secrets for several years now...

But it looks like that is going to change in 2007!

Congrats in advance, Scott!
 
Old 12-24-2006, 05:14 PM   #6
BlueThunderArmy
 
I've never gotten into the comic edition of Buffy, but I'm definitely on for Season 8. Sounds phenomenal. And the OGNs caught my interest, as well.
 
Old 12-24-2006, 05:28 PM   #7
Mike Hayden
 
Simply Fascinating!!!

hmm buffy is back. Well maybe i will give it a shot.
 
Old 12-24-2006, 06:47 PM   #8
EMeadow
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Fetsur
Did he say "second series"? I really hope they're doing the Buffy thing as an ongoing series rather than a series of miniseries; you just know it would lead to some dodgy subtitles on the cover...

They'll probably treat them the same way they did the first time:

Regular issue number above the "part whichever of 4" line.
 
Old 12-24-2006, 08:59 PM   #9
pseudosham
 
woooohooooooooo!
 
Old 12-24-2006, 10:04 PM   #10
TurdFerguson
 
WOOO!!!!

SATAN'S SODOMY BABY!!!! cant wait for that. i demand it. goon is great


lookin foward to rex mundi too
 
Old 12-25-2006, 02:55 AM   #11
Equinox
 
Fantastic. I've been hurting for some horror comics from Dark Horse; this will make me smile for a long long time.
 
Old 12-25-2006, 03:04 AM   #12
Mithel
 
Is Chinatown in any way releated to the excellent film(starring Jack Nicholson) of the same name?
 
Old 12-25-2006, 10:03 PM   #13
Koben Kelly
 
Thumbs up Say it with me:

ABE SAPIEN SOLO SERIES

In the words of Jakeem Thunder... "So cool!"

---Koben
 
Old 12-26-2006, 04:56 AM   #14
George986
 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Derf
I am over the moon that Joss will be writing 3 arcs and twelve issues of the Buffy Season 8 comic. At this rate we'll be getting new issues of buffy comics for 3-4 years. I hope Georges Jeanty continues as the artist as I really love the preview pages we've seen so far.

I think I'm more excited about Drew Goddard's issues than Whedon's - I certainly thought Goddard was the best writer on Buffy season 7 and it was a shame he hadn't joined the series earlier. Although I liked both Goddard and Whedon on Angel season 5.

And Brian K. Vaughan writing Faith will be fascinating. It's a shame they probably won't be able to use Wesley because IDW has the rights to Angel. The Faith/Wesley dynamic is totally awesome (and it could take place during Angel S5 ep 8, when Wes wasn't at Wolfram and Hart).
 
Old 12-26-2006, 03:27 PM   #15
tyopot
 
mignola and bernie wrightson rocks the house.
 
Old 12-26-2006, 10:58 PM   #16
ShinAkuma666
 
Question Mike Richardson's The Secret

Will get this in TPB, very happy with what Mr. Richardson did on the Star Wars: Crimson Empire series, there was supposed to be a third one at some point, but it never happenned, I am wondering if it will ever come out ?

It was really good, he's a capable writer.
 
 
   

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