KRAMPUSNACHT

Night of the Krampus! The night when the Krampus comes door to door, beating the bad children with a switch… and abducting the particularly bad children forever! In honour of this deadly evening, why not come out to an art opening?

Krampus Committee 2010 presents
‘Krampusnacht Art Show’
Dec 2, 2010 – Jan 10, 2011 at RESISTOR GALLERY
284 College Street 2nd Floor, Toronto (Map)
OPENING: Thursday, December 2 at 7:30pm – December 3 at 1:00am

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=161517740552315

Andrew Heffron Aaron Costain Aaron Leighton Attila Szanyi • Brian McLachlan Brandon Steen • Clayton Hanmer Crankbunny Craig Marshall Chris Stone Carey Sookocheff Drazen Kozjan Dan Turner Diego Bergia Diana McNally Faez Alidousti Hyein Lee Jessica Fortner Jesse Jacobs Jeremy Kai Janice Kun Jason Bone Julia Breckenreid Karen Justl Katy Dockrill Luke Ramsey Mike McDougall Marek Colek • Matthew Forsythe Maylynn Quan • Michael Comeau Michael Wandelmaier Pat Shewchuk • Prashant Miranda • Hayley Morris • Ryan Feely Randy Knott • Ron Gervais • Ro Rao Steve Manale Steve Wilson Sarah Lazarovic Tomori Nagamoto

…and before the the Krampus Art Show starts at 7:30pm, we’ll be throwing a very cool book launch… it’s CF and Brian Chippendale in Toronto! A double book-launch for their new works POWR MASTRS 3 and IF N OOF. I’m going to do a full announcement for that on Monday, but for now check out The Beguiling’s listing, and the Facebook listing, for this awesome event.

– Chris

Big changes at DC

Edit: Tom Spurgeon weighs in with some of the strangeness surrounding the announcements and non-announcements this week. Go read.

So there was a ton of big news at DC today. So far as I can tell, it boils down to:

  • They’re laying off 20% of their workforce, about 50 people out of 250 from their New York offices.
  • They’re keeping publishing in New York, but they’re moving all of the digital publishing stuff to the west coast, under the direction of Jim Lee and Jim Rood.
  • They’re shutting down the Wildstorm and Zuda lines, cancelling all of the Wildstorm books, and releasing everything else under the DC banner.
  • There are more changes to come, but there likely won’t be any more official word about it.

I’ve been trying to figure out what I want to say about this. I look at it and I feel like kind of a dick but it’s like “Is that it? Really? They look at what DC’s doing and that’s where they think the problem is?” It’s not nice when anyone loses their job, and I personally hope that the few friends I have there are safe in theirs. I know my DC rep has worked his butt off to get my store ordering more product and doing so intelligently–he’s great and it’d be foolish to let him go. Maybe tomorrow I’ll write a letter to that effect…

But as a reader I feel like–save for the occasional Grant Morrison project–DC Comics abandoned me years ago, with the event-driven nonsense, infinite sequels and spin-offs, and a truly awful trade paperback program… As a retailer I look at their plans going forward and I just shake my head. Publishing a bunch of mediocre-to-bad comics at Wildstorm is unfortunate, but next month DC proper is publishing like 13 utterly unnecessary Batman one-shots that didn’t even have CREATIVE TEAMS when that shit was solicited? Meanwhile Planetary Volume 4 is out of print for nearly 6 months between the hardcover and softcover, and we have lost sales every day.  I’m flabbergasted that this is the kind of stuff that gets a vote of confidence from the new management at DC but they decide that a digital content initiative or a separately branded licensed comics division needs to be shown the door? I don’t understand those priorities at all, and I’ve honestly gotta wonder if they understand them either. If DC Comics is really about integrating into Warner Brothers and generating new media ideas, how does their recursive publishing program tie into that?

So the whole thing strikes me as tightening-the-belt rather than a sign of any real trouble at the publisher, I guess it’s probably wise given the economic and publishing climate, but I have to wonder if Diane Nelson’s seemingly unquestioning faith in Dan DiDio and Geoff Johns to shepherd the DC Universe could maybe use the same touch of skepticism that’s touched every other part of the company. Perhaps we’ll find out more about that this week.

– Christopher

This Week In Toronto: UDON 10th Anniversary Party on Thursday

UDON - An illustration from Wizard from back in the day.

Hey folks!

I’ve been super-busy with work but one thing I did want to put out into the larger world — i.e. to folks not already facebook friends with me — is that The Beguiling and I are hosting a 10th Anniversary Party for Toronto Publisher and Creative Studio UDON Entertainment, this Thursday, September 16th from 7pm-10pm. It should be a lot of fun, with tons of the UDON studio guys, the launch of their 10th Anniversary book, some great food, video games, music, just… you know, a party. 🙂

This is open to the public and free to attend too, so I hope we’ll see ya there. 🙂

– Chris

UDON COMICS: TENTH ANNIVERSARY PARTY
And book launch for the VENT Anthology
Thursday September 16th, 8pm-10pm (Doors at 7pm)
@ Revival, 783 College St. (Just east of Ossington).
FREE

http://udoncomics.com/blog/
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=116007981786405

Come one come all, and celebrate the 10th Anniversary of Toronto Publisher and Studio UDON COMICS! Food, drinks, and of course video games, in honour of their decade-long career creating work on numerous video game and comics properties!

This event will also serve as the launch for VENT, the new coffee-table book project which includes a gallery of new comics and illustrations from all of Udon’s top creators, as well as a look behind the scenes of the company and extensive art tutorials. More than a dozen Udon creators will be in attendance, and all of Toronto’s creative community and fans are invited to come out and celebrate! Our friends over at A&C games will have a great big video game setup as well, featuring classic and new Street Fighter games.

This will be a big party, with music and fun in a very cool club setting, we’re expecting a massive turnout for this one…! Hope to see you there.

Presented by The Beguiling and UDON.

Earned Retirement From Comics

Photo by the lovely Jose VillarrubiaI’m no apologist for Alan Moore, but it seems like more than anything Alan Moore just wants to be left alone to pursue his other interests, and has largely retired from the comics industry (if not from the medium). An industry that has cost him money, friends, and a good night’s sleep, I might add. Good for him. It’d be nice if people left him to do that, rather than scaring up a new “Fuck you,” interview every six months. It doesn’t do anyone any good to put a great man into a bad mood and then capture it on tape, save for the bean-counters at Wired and Bleeding Cool, of course.

The main thing I think about this is that Tom Spurgeon, as usual, has the best take on the whole thing.

The other thing I think about this is: Can you imagine if Neil Gaiman actually gave interviews to the comics press, and let them know exactly where the bodies are buried? The masses would turn on him in a second.

– Chris

The comics industry and the big picture

I wrote last month, but got interrupted right before the end. I cleaned it up a little before posting, I hope you enjoy it. Let me know what you think in the comments.

This is just a small observation, but a pretty good one, so I hope you’ll indulge me.

I’ve taken over working Saturdays on the main floor of The Beguiling to give my boss an extra day off a week (he’s now up to 1-and-a-half). For those of you who don’t know, The Beguiling is split across two floors, with the first floor being set up as a ‘general interest’ comic store, with a focus on art, literature, and the kinds of books you read positive reviews of in mainstream media. Fantagraphics and D&Q, but also Picturebox, NBM, Top Shelf, Pantheon, Abrams, and the like. French-language and Euro graphic novels, art books, Tintin and  Asterix anchoring the kids section. Basically the platonic ideal of the non-superhero, non-manga comic book store… shoved into about half as much space as it really _needs_ to breathe. But c’est la vie.

The second floor, that’s for “the initiated”, the people who buy and large know what they want–either because they’ve been comics fans their whole lives and are buying their favourites, or they’re single-title/creator/genre folks (like the Gaimanites, Whedonites, and Zombieites). Maybe they’re in for the newest media tie-in too. Superheroes and other DM-centric publishers, manga, and the new-release rack. I work the second floor, mostly because my boss rules the main floor with an iron fist and I’m the only person at the store (and one of the only people in North America) approaching his level of product knowledge and so I cover the other sales floor. But I’m pretty handy the rest of it and so I can fill in for him if I have to… Just don’t ask me to find anything in French. 🙂

Because of the way the store is set-up, whilst there is a cash-register on each floor all of the debit and credit card purchases have to be rung out on the first floor. That means that, being behind the second-floor register, I see people making cash purchases, but almost entirely of stuff bought from the second floor — superheroes and manga. Sure, if it’s new comics day the interesting stuff that’s come out that week from the art comics publishers is still around–new releases from D&Q and Fanta get prominent display for 2 or 3 weeks. The “new mainstream” books like Oni’s JAM: Tales of Roller-dirby or KENK from Toronto publisher Pop Sandbox get their due, at least a week or two of full-face display. But that means that I’ll be ringing up orders that are 90% new releases–with Marvel and DC doing their damndest to crowd every other new release off the rack, week after week, and 100 new manga graphic novels in a given month–and it paints a picture of the comics industry.

The picture it paints is that the industry–and particularly direct market comic book stores–is 70% superheroes and then 20% manga and then there’s not-much of everything else. The second floor is, essentially, your average comic book store in miniature (although I’ve been in quite a few stores smaller than our second floor…). It paints a picture that the reason that the comic book industry is this way is because the fans are this way. This is what the fans want. But that’s only true until you remember that there’s still a first floor, and man, that first floor is very, very different.

So I’ve been working the first floor a little more, and the customer for comics is, frankly, completely different than we think it is. Sure, I just sold a copy of SCARLETT #1 by Bendis and Maleev to a dude wearing a Superman t-shirt, but before that I sold a copy of Gabrielle Bell’s CECIL & JORDAN and a Shintaro Kago import-manga to a 20-something girl and before her, I sold Sfar’s LITTLE VAMPIRE and DUNGEON ZENITH 2 & 3 to a dad and his two kids, cuz all of them are in love with those books. A guy today dropped a few hundred bucks on PictureBox and D&Q books. Guy approaching the cash right now has the work of Ken Dahl, Kevin Cannon, and Kevin Huizenga in his hands. Another lady came down the stairs with an armful of McKean, Seinkewicz, and Mack just now. Working the first floor, you get this picture of balance in the medium, and it’s a balance that heavily favours good, interesting, and ambitious works.

An aside: When we (and I mean all of us comic fans) look at the newspaper page, we tend to groan at the ‘legacy’ strips like Family Circus or Hagar, where the original author of that work has passed on and handed the book off to their offspring or a trusted friend. It’s a lot of bland stuff on the comics page, but familiar, and we all kinda wish those strips would go away and make room for something new. Now realize that 90% of comics sold through the direct market are themselves “Legacy Strips”, choking out innovation with (more often than not) their original creators long gone, existing solely to hold a space on a rack. That’s not to say that good stories can’t be told–they frequently are. It’s just that we’re largely intolerant of the practice in one area of comics, and embrace it with a blinding obedience in another.

I’d like to suggest–or really, remind–that this balance in the medium could just as easily be a balance in the industry.

But the reason that we don’t have it I think? Most retailers, myself included, tend only to see what’s in front of them. If I only ever worked in one type of store, I’d be convinced that there’d only be one superhero-and-new-release-heavy model of doing business in comics as well. Hell I worked at that store for a long time–in my last 6 months there I finally figured out that you could order books not in the Diamond catalogue each month. That you could back order things. That books exist beyond their monthly solicitation or (increasingly rare) resolicitiation… I wonder how many retailers are in the same boat? Hopefully far fewer, with the vast array of online tools available… But…

So yeah, a small change in perspective for a few weekends per month, and… well it’s not so much that my view of the industry has changed, but that I’ve been reminded that it is possible to find balance and that good work flourishes and sells when it’s not just one shelf at the back of the store, but curated, selected, promoted, understood, and shared. That readers aren’t–or at least don’t have to be–superhero readers or artcomix readers or manga readers… they can just be readers. I know it’s going to seem obvious to a lot of the readers of my blog here, I feel like folks here tend to have a pretty open mind and wide tastes in what they read. But seeing that sort of customer in action is a nice reminder of what we could do in the industry as a whole. It’s worth continuing to work towards.

– Chris

Things to do in Shibuya, Tokyo: BECK Pop-up store Sep 1-26

From Scott Green/AICN on Twitter comes word of this awesome pop-up retail location for merch from the upcoming BECK animated movie, based on the manga by Harold Sakuishi. It’ll be in operation from September 1st to September 26th inside the PARCO Department Store complex in Shibuya.

Originally published in English by Tokyopop before being put on hiatus about a third of the way through the series (with the rights eventually reclaimed by Kodansha), BECK is a really great seinen (manga for dudes in their late teens and early 20s) about an average kid moved by rock ‘n’ roll to start a band and make it big. It’s the exact sort of thing that I think would speak to a lot of people who’ve ever wanted to become a rockstar, and the anime actually aired in primetime on MuchMusic here in Canada a few years back. I know Mal’s a huge fan of the manga too, and I think that’s a good indication that Scott Pilgrim fans would probably dig it 🙂

For the official pop-up store website (heh) with directions click here.

For the official movie website click here.

I love love love these sorts of stores when I stumble across them in Japan… You may have noticed my near-obsession with Japanese retail spaces, and seeing something like this, a dedicated (and well-promoted) merch store for an upcoming movie release is pretty-much genius. Wish I could visit!

– Christopher

Things to do in Massachusetts: New England Webcomics Weekend November 6-7

My good friend Meredith Gran (of Octopus Pie fame) just posted an update or two on Twitter about The New England Webcomics Weekend, a special webcomics-centric convention/get-together that she organizes being held November 7th and 8th: Almost half of the tickets are sold out, after only a week on sale…!

This is very good news for the event, now entering its second year. Tickets for NEWW are a very reasonable $10 for the weekend, though there are one-day and VIP packages available. I think it’s excellent that there are shows like NEWW, putting a laser-focus on a specific niche market within the greater sphere of comics. Of course, that said, that niche probably has millions and millions of fans across the world, which is what makes the event pre-registering all its attendees so necessary… 🙂 I mean, who knows what would happen if all 100,000+ peeps who read Questionable Content every day showed up at the same time, at an event designed for just a few thousand…?

The event is set up similarly to TCAF or SPX, with a selection of creators (entirely comprised of webcomics authors and publishers) set up and selling their wares, interacting with fans, etc., alongside panels and programming and larger group events. It’s a very communal, welcoming setting and a great relaxed space for fans to meet fellow fans and their heroes.

Initially I had planned to attend and help with some of the organizational efforts of the show, and I’m still planning on offering some advice and suggestions for programming and whatnot, but alas, I won’t be able to make it this year. Still, I think it’s going to be a remarkable event, held in a very cool building in a scenic locale with plenty of other interesting stuff going on in the neighbourhood. If you’re interesting in attending this year you better snap up your tickets quick, as it will definitely sell out in the next few weeks.

For more, check out http://webcomicsweekend.com/

– Chris