DAVE SIM:
Hi
Tim - I think what I'm going to do is just blather -- since this is our
first time doing "after the issue" -- and leave it up to you if you
want to run the whole thing all at once or dribble it out. Issue 2 of The Strange Death Of Alex Raymond took about two and a half months. I hope I get faster but I'm not counting on it.
The Strange Death Of Alex Raymond #1 Art by Dave Sim |
THE NEXT THREE YEARS
Tim,
I really didn't mean for you to keep communication to "essential only".
You're more than welcome to keep me apprised of what's going on: I
know absolutely nothing about what's going on in CerebusLand or comics
in general. I don't know if there's anything you want to ask me about.
All
I was saying was, for the next three years (MINIMUM of three years --
it's only three years if I can a) keep STRANGE DEATH OF ALEX RAYMOND to
the contracted 18 issues and b) stick with a bi-monthly production
schedule. I have no idea if either of those are remotely plausible.
What
I DO know is that I will be finishing issues as I go along. And AMOC seems a good place to check in to. So it's really a matter of
prioritizing what you want to ask about because I'm only going to
allocate so much time when I'm done the issue. But I'll be glad to just
keep your faxes as you send them to me and answer things in order when I
get to The End of the Issue. As I'm doing here.
Thanks for the kind words on the cover of STRANGE DEATH OF ALEX RAYMOND No.1. Good news bad news. It does create a level of expectation that I'm pretty sure I'll never be able to measure up to. Three years of picturing what comic book you would want under that cover.
I'm
not sure there's much to say because I'm in the middle of working on
STRANGE DEATH. I mean, if you think about it, most entertainment is
that way. If it takes three years to make a movie, you aren't going to
hear from the people making the movie until the movie's made because
they're making the movie. You DO completely disappear for three years.
This is a very unusual way to do comics, but it seems the only sensible
way at age 57. I work for three years to produce a year and a half's
worth of entertainment. I'm sure there will be websites and promotions
and teasers and any number of things. But not three years "out". Or two
years "out". Or a year "out". If I get issue 12 done and I'm making
good time, that's when we'll start thinking of how to promote it. And a
year after that, I'll be able to promote it full time, as you do with a
movie. But right now, all I'm suggesting IDW do is to have a little
corner of their website that says "STRANGE DEATH OF ALEX RAYMOND No. 2
is now in-house" and maybe show the cover. But even there, people want
to know "Well when can I see it?" Uh not for three years. WHAAATT?! But
what's the alternative? "Wow that was good. When's the next one?" No
idea. "Next month right?" Uh, no. Dave's only on page 3 and it took him
two and a half weeks to get there. "BUMMER!" The next issue finally
comes out five months later and no one remembers how No.2 went. "I'll
wait for the trade." Sales drop. Book's no longer viable.
There's
no guarantee the book will be successful my way, but it will at least
come out on a monthly schedule, win lose or draw. If it's a "Wow! I
can't wait for the next one" which I fervently hope, then at least I can
say, yep, thirty more sleeps and it's here, cowboy. God willing, of
course, but all the production is done, the printer has had it in the
on-deck circle for eight months or a year. It SHOULD come out on time.
1 comment:
Serious question: If Dave is drawing the entire series before release... why release it monthly at all? Why not put out the entire graphic novel? If the market is as TPB/GN oriented as people say it is, why bother with the monthly book?
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