Posted: 21 February 2008 at 12:26pm | IP Logged | 4
|
|
|
A few years back I was working on a small press (supposedly) quarterly anthology. Half the (48 page ) book was a translated comic (which of course was translated by the (literally) dyslexic publisher instead of me, the guy with a postgraduate degree in literature and languages).
We had 6 months lead time on the first issue, I had a story in 4 six page chapters already written (with a story bible covering at least 12 more possible stories) and drew up the first chapter within a month of start-up. Which is when I get the feed-back "why did you use an 8 panel grid for your layout?" "Well I wrote that in the script that you approved" "Oh. I didn't read that part. It's too boring. Draw it another way."
Another 3 months of needling and demands for revisions on the colour scheme etc. Then I get an e-mail. Another artist needs a script. I write one up, draw out some layouts to make sure the idea gets across, mail it off a few days later. The pages come back for me to colour and letter and they're all wrong. People in the wrong order, silly designs that completely wreck the concept, futuristic steel buildings freehanded with a squiggly line. I ask for revisions and I'm told that's suddenly MY job.
After going through endless revisions THAT strip is finally approved and I'm told that "hey, guess what: The other guys think it's not fair that you get two strips in each issue so your own strip will have to wait until issue 5."
So I play the good soldier and hand in finished scripts for the next storyline. I'm told that the artist can't draw that. So I hand in plot outlines for the next stories. "pick one and I'll finish it ". Then suddenly the artist decides to draw from plot. And completely messes up the story. I'm given the pages and told to fix them. Because the other artist can't be bothered.
Meanwhile everyone else keeps handing in their stuff later and later. But no-one nags them because they're The Editor, The Publisher and the Art Director.
As the deadline comes for the second issue I get an e-mail from the Art Director:" could you look over my script for the first story? I'm starting on the penciling tomorrow and I'm not happy with it."
I spend a day rewriting and laying out a 10 page script to make it work (and he did incorporate most of the changes I recommended) but for crying out loud: The Art Director is starting on the strip AFTER the deadline has passed?
Finally the whole thing collapses under its own weight after a year and a half and 2 published issues. I'd never missed a deadline, been subjected to endless revisions and I hadn't had a single page of my artwork published.
Let me tell you, I absolutely hate it when people screw up their deadlines. Because that's how I got screwed.
|