Kevin Mellon is a graduate of the Kubert School and has put out
several comic books and graphic novels since 2007, including Gearhead
and LoveSTRUCK with Dennis Hopeless, Heart with Blair Butler, American
Muscle with Steve Niles. Summer 2013 will see the release of Suicide Sisters Vol 1: Shoot The Devil, a 3-issue story about two sisters riding across
Texas, trying to find the Devil so they can get their souls back.
A Moment Of Cerebus:
How did you discover Cerebus and how long did you read it for?
Kevin Mellon:
I
read about it in Wizard Magazine #7, the March 1992 issue. There was a
2-page (I think) write-up about Dave and Gerhard having crossed issue
150 and it talked at length about the book and those guys. I was at the
right age (13) for it to hit me really hard as I was looking for new
things that were outside of the mainstream Marvel comics I was reading
at the time. Magazines like Comics Scene and David Anthony Kraft's
Comics Interview (and to a lesser extent, The Comics Journal) were
cluing me in on a new world of comics that I would then scour every back
issue bin to find. I was captivated by the idea of this singular vision
and ethic behind this monumental task of doing a book for 300 issues.
At that young age, I knew I was going to make comics and had already
been trying to make my own.
The first issue I
bought after reading that article was 163 (the first issue of Women - which Google tells me was late '92). I had absolutely no clue what was
going on in the story at that point, but I was hooked. I stayed with the
book from there to 300. It was pretty much the one constant in my life
through those years. I was enraptured by the world and the characters,
and even more so by the beauty of the story-telling and artwork and how
the lettering acted as an integral part of the art and page. The page
designs were like nothing I'd seen at that point. Mind you, this was in
the heyday of the Marvel guys going to Image craze, so page layouts were
insane at this point, but Dave's were some of the first that showed me
you could be inventive with page design and layout, yet have a cohesive
reading experience that enhanced the story. That said, Cerebus is still
some of the most inventive comics visual story-telling to this day.
Also,
I cared about the characters in a way that I had previously only
experienced in fits and starts with mainstream comics, but was more akin
to how a novel makes you care about character. The voices were all
unique, the characters all well-rounded. Everyone had a life, a voice,
and a story, regardless of how minor a part they played in the actual
narrative.
How has your own creativity/comics been influenced by Cerebus?
The
notion of one person having an idea and bringing that idea to fruition
on their own was something I got from Cerebus. The wealth of
story-telling ideas and forms that Dave played with throughout the
series were and are constant influences.
The
'97 edition of the Cerebus Guide to Self-Publishing (which I read as it
was coming out in the single issues in the 'Notes from the President'
sections) was and is a 'bible' of sorts for my making comics. I specify
the 1997 edition solely because, while I have the later edition, I don't
think the updates were necessary or warranted. Everything you need to
know about making comics is in that first edition, minus any extraneous
commentary added after the fact.
As far as
direct influences go, I used the typography/dialog running down the side
of the page, with the panels next to it (see parts of Jaka's Story, and
significant portions of Mothers & Daughters) format for a sequence
in Dennis Hopeless and I's book LoveSTRUCK. It was something that,
when Dennis and I talked about the scene, became an obvious device that I
could use to convey the metaphysical and "other" nature of the pages we
were building. There are other devices I learned from Cerebus, but that
one is the most overt in any of my published work.
Cerebus #167 (1993) | LoveStruck (2011) |
Has Cerebus influenced your approach to working in the comics industry?
Very much so.
I
have made some mis-steps in judgement along the way, but Dave, and
everyone else who fought so hard for creator's rights at that time, have
been big influences on my thinking and my approach to being in and
making comics. (Steve Bissette's posts on Taboo/Tundra, and the
Creator's Rights issues of the mid-to-late 80's are excellent reading
for where everyone was at during those times). Pretty much every
creator-owned book I've done has been an even 50/50 split with the
co-creator, and the basic understanding that Dave espoused working with
Gerhard of "You partially own what you fully create" (meaning that even
though Dave created Cerebus, he acknowledged Ger's massive contribution
and credited and compensated him as such) is something I take to heart
and espouse to collaborators. But I've still made bad deals and mistakes
with publishers, knowing all of that beforehand. Doomed to repeat, you
know?
I got into Puma Blues around the same
time (because of Cerebus, of course. Puma Blues a book that has
influenced me just as much as Cerebus. If Cerebus spoke to my mind, Puma
Blues spoke to my soul), and while it had long been over by the time I
got to it, the issues of PB with front and back matter dealing with
their dispute with Diamond, and the Cerebus issues with commentary
dealing with those same things, were and are a great primer for how the
industry works (again, see Steve Bissette's lengthy documenting of all
that on his website). I use the present tense because a lot of the
issues they were fighting against then, are still common and ongoing.
What's old is new, etc., etc.
I am currently
self-publishing for the first time since starting working in comics in
2007. It's hard, and it's not going to get any easier, but it's
something I knew I had to do. I think it's something that I should have
started out doing, and this is me "stepping backwards" so-to-speak, to
take that leap and give it a shot. I won't be setting the world on fire
doing it, but I am building myself up, and making things solely on my
terms. I am forever indebted to Dave and the others for paving the way.
Do you have a favourite scene/sequence from Cerebus?
Man.
I dunno. Hard to nail one sequence down, but a lot of the sideways page
layouts in Mother's & Daughters broke my young brain and I remember
ripping those off extensively for the comics I was making at the time.
The use of text pieces to convey large chunks of dialog or prose was and
is ingenious. The world-building that Gerhard did in every single
panel... I could go on. Sorry for being so vague, but there was no "one"
sequence that made me go "OH FUCK". There were a lot of those. Melmoth
was something that moved me in a way I can't fully describe even now.
Also, Melmoth got me into reading Oscar Wilde, same as Fall & the
River got me into reading Fitzgerald.
Would you recommend others read Cerebus, and if so why?
Of course.
Why?
For the obvious reasons of it being a massive undertaking by a singular
vision that was started and then completed, it's contribution to the
art-form of comics being incalculable, and that I think it's a good
story. Most comics are, at best, mediocre by process of assembly-line
(more than a few of my own included). When a scant few come out good,
it's usually in spite of that process, rather than because of it.
Cerebus was, and is, something that was made by 2 people sitting in room
and a strength of vision and creativity that you just don't get for
that many pages in a row, by doing it any other way. 6000 pages in
Western comics made by two people is an amazing feat, and it should be
recognized and celebrated not just for that, but because it was good
comics the whole way through. It's also some of the funniest dialog and
story-telling put on paper. The drama and the comedy are intertwined in
an amazing and beautiful way that allows for your heart to be broken on
one page and then you laugh on the next.
5 comments:
"I had absolutely no clue what was going on in the story at that point, but I was hooked."
With the exception of the very few who started before High Society, I think this is every Cerebus fan's opening line, isn't it? It's certainly mine...I'm pretty sure the first issue I read was #28, "Mind Game II" (which was also the first issue to have typeset text next to the images). And I can honestly say: "I had absolutely no clue what was going on in the story at that point, but I was hooked."
"It was pretty much the one constant through those years." Me, too. I wonder how many comics readers of the late 80s-90s can say that,especially given the paucity of good comics in those days. I know that for the better part of 20 years,Cerebus was the only comic I bought every single month. Most months, it was the only comic I bought, period.
@Tony
Haha, very true. I don't know that there was a good jumping on point for Cerebus single issues.
@Jeff
Yeah, there were quite a few months, probably years (especially in the late 90's), where the only thing I bought was Cerebus.
I respectfully disagree, Kevin. I'd say there was no bad jumping-on point. As the saying goes, either you get it or you don't - and for most people, if you didn't get it right away, with whichever issue you came across first, you probably weren't going to get it, period.
The first Cerebus I read was a single panel printed in our local TV guide! There was an article on comics, mainstream and alternative. The Cerebus panel featured Pope Cerebus leaning out of an ornately designed window shouting "That's it! You can all go back to your worthless, miserable lives now!" That's all it took for me.
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