Showing posts with label Warren Ellis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Warren Ellis. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Comic Book Script Archive and Formatting

Comic Book Script Archive

One of the great things about writing comics is that there's no set format for writing a script. Unlike screenwriting, where there are lots of set rules that have to be applied to formatting. I've been playing around with my own template for writing comic book scripts in word, and I've been getting inspiration from The Comic Book Script Archive, which is a part of Andy Schmidt's Comics Experience.


What I like about the archive is that has lots of scripts from some of comics' greatest writers, as well as a template from Comics Experience for newcomers to use for their own scripts. While picking the same scripting style as another writing won't make you a better writer yourself, sometimes it just helps to see how some writers tackle different panel descriptions and how they communicate to the artist.

Some of the writers that are featured are Warren Ellis, Jason Aaron, Matt Fraction, Neil Gaiman, Mark Waid, and Brian K. Vaughan.

I actually used the Comics Experience template as a jumping off point for my own script format, which is pictured below.

Kenny Porter's Current Script Template



If you want more information on how to format scripts or create your own template I'd suggest reading Make Comics Like the Pros by Greg Pak and Fred Van Lente. They lay out how to create your own template in a very simple, concise way.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Welcome to the Strange

There are times when I'm able to step back and realize something about myself as a reader and watcher of media. Ever since I was little I've loved stories that were bonkers. What do I mean by that? I've always loved things that went into the realm of the strange and got a little bit creepy. I think that Alien might be the first example. That film really moved me when I was little. It also got me into a ton of trouble when I drew a picture of the chestburster in my second grade classroom (and later the Predator ripping out someone's spine). I never had a cap on what I could watch when I was little, and I think that really gave me a head start in terms of enjoying film, TV, and literature.

Now that I'm older I keep gravitating toward those stories that have a bit of science fiction, a bit of mystery, and just a touch of horror. Grant Morrison's Animal Man, Doom Patrol, and now The Invisibles have really inspired me to explore the strange in my own comics and writing. There's only so many times that you can write one person fighting another, but creating situations where people fight ideas and face the horrors of reality is just as fun to write, if not more.

The last thing I want to do is copy anyone's style. That's not my aim. I don't want to be the next anyone except myself. My goal is to just tell the kinds of stories that I enjoy and share them with readers. If that means telling stories set in situations similar to the work that Neil Gaiman, Warren Ellis, or even Morrison have done, so be it. I just think it's interesting that I never noticed how big of a part these writers have played on my subconscious and how it's affected the way I approach a story.

I've always outlined a story completely and moved from point A to point B in my own mad scientist kind of way. But now I'm thinking more about how I can make the comics medium work to the best of its ability on the page, doing things other media can't, while remembering that writers like Gaiman, Ellis, and Morrison are there to show me that there is no set way of doing things. You have to carve your own path in anything that you do in life, and I've woken up today with a big hammer and chisel.

And after reading that last sentence I want to assure everyone that it's not a morning wood joke.

Most people say write what you know. And that's true to a point. But I think it should be amended a little. The way it should be said is "write what you love." Because you could know a lot about a subject and no one else would want to read it. When you write about something you love the passion comes through on the page and it resonates with everyone that reads it. Not everyone will love it, some might hate it, but it'll be the purest form of what you put on the page.

That goes for any and all creative endeavors that you set sail on in the ocean of imagination.

I hope that this inspires someone the way that those writers and countless other artists have inspired me to share my musings with the world. Because in the end that's all we're really doing. We're sitting around the celestial campfire and sharing stories on a global scale.