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Entries in boom studios (3)

Sunday
May162010

Interview with Michael Alan Nelson

For followers of Boom! Studios (as the Dollar Bin tends to be), the names of a few creators start to become very familiar both for the amount of work they produce for the growing publisher as well as the quality of it. One of those names is Michael Alan Nelson, writer of DB staff favorites like HEXED, DINGO, 28 DAYS LATER and numerous others. Despite this very hectic writing schedule, Michael was recently able to carve out some time for this Dollar Bin e-mail Q&A session.

DB: Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to answer a few questions for us. If you don’t mind, can you start with telling us how you first got interested in comics and how you got started in the industry?

MAN: It’s quite funny since I never really read many comics growing up.  I lived in a small rural town in the middle of nowhere and the closest thing we had to a comics shop was the local public library.  So I only had access to a couple of Elf Quest books and a graphic adaptation of the movie Alien.  It wasn’t until I graduated from college that I really started getting into comics.  My brother colored comics for years, so I began by reading the books he worked on.

As for how I came to write comics, my path was a bit unconventional.  After several years of trying to break into the world of fiction, I wrote a novel titled DINGO.  I published it online under a Creative Commons license, posting a chapter a week.  Fortunately, Ross Richie had read it and really enjoyed it.  So he approached me and said he was starting a new comic book company and if I’d like to try my hand at writing comics.  So I sat down and wrote a short story for Zombie Tales.  Ross like it and has been asking me to write for him ever since. 

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Sunday
Aug092009

Interview with Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep editor Bryce Carlson

Of the 36 novels Philip K Dick authored, probably none has garnered the mainstream attention that Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep has. Surely part of the fascination with the story is the 1982 movie Blade Runner, that was based on the novel which itself has a cult following. But as one of many stories by the author to have made the transition to film, the movie itself is not the only enduring snapshot of the story’s importance. Many of the themes in this book originally published in 1968, are still widely used plot devices in science fiction especially the never ending debate of what truly makes us human. But Dick’s influence is not limited to this particular story or to science fiction films but is also felt by many of his fellow authors. A new 24 issue maxi-series published by Boom! Studios will attempt to not only directly translate the original novel into a different format but also to help showcase how the author has influenced this medium as well. The editor for this series Bryce Carlson recently took some time out from his busy schedule to answer a few questions about this project for The Dollar Bin.

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Sunday
Jul272008

BOOM! Studios teams with Disney-Pixar

Mr. Incredible by Mike MignolaFrom SDCC and the BOOM! Studios press release…

 

EXCLUSIVE COMIC-CON PREVIEW BOOK ON SALE AT THE BOOM! STUDIOS BOOTH

 

When was the last time you gave a comic book to a kid?

July 23rd, 2008 - Los Angeles, CA - BOOM! Studios and Disney Publishing Worldwide announced today that they will bring brand new stories from beloved Pixar properties to the comic book medium. Comics will feature characters from the groundbreaking TOY STORY franchise and blockbuster FINDING NEMO film, as well as this summer’s box office success WALL*E.

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