Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
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    • 04 Juggling overlapping art decisions
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    • 06 Composition and Design principles
    • 07 Why design from reality
    • 08 Adding tone to a thumbnail sketch
    • 09 From thumbnail to final line
    • 10 Tone, how to add it
    • 11 Finalizing and coloring a concept drawing
    • 12 Struggling: Finding the right poses.
    • 13 Coloring poses
    • 14 The teaser trailer
    • 15 Story Theory and throughlines
    • 01 Story concept and rough outline
    • 02 Finding a style
    • 03 Designing Antagonists
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Monthly Archives: September 2012

A Lesson, Indirectly Learned from Brad Bird.

September 27, 2012 in THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WEBSITES

THE SIMPSONS NEWS – A Lesson, Indirectly Learned from Brad Bird.

 

Simpsons quote (…sort of):

“When in doubt, lower the horizon line” – Brad Bird

The quote above was taped to Simpson Director Steve Moore’s office door.

It had a self-caricature of Brad Bird happily pushing down a line while he stared straight at you. It was obviously an enlarged copy of a doodle/note that Brad Bird had written Steve at some point.

That thing was taped to Steve’s door for YEARS. The only reason it isn’t anymore, is because we moved to a new studio and I think Steve forgot to post it up.

I’ve worked for Steve more than any other Director on the show.  He’s been really good to me, and he even championed me to have the current position I have now. For which I’m truly grateful.

Going in and out of his office for all those years and seeing that note posted on his door, insured that I would have that quote embedded into my brain forever.

So, what does that DO to a person?

What it Did to Me

Just because I had a studio job didn’t mean that “I had arrived”. Through out my years on the show, I’ve also taken years of drawing class. Almost all of which where taught by industry professionals. And none of them gave me a grade nor college credit.

I took them, NOT to have a sheet of paper TELLING people I was TAUGHT to draw. I took them so I could SHOW people I CAN draw (and I still try to go figure drawing every week).

One of the classes I took was an animation development class. It was like what would probably be called a “Concept Art” class only for animation. Part of what was taught in that class was how to create well designed and composed environments.

The reason I bring this up is because of the enormous influence that class had on me and my work from that point on.  That class, combined with Brad Bird’s quote made me hyper aware of how I could improve the layouts of the scenes I had to work on.

The Result

Sometime in 1996, I worked on the episode BART AFTER DARK.

I believe this was around the time I was taking my development classes. My mind was reeling with the theories of dynamic compositions.

So what happens when you learn something new? Well, you can’t WAIT to try it out, of course.

Director Dominic Polcino, handed me a VERY involved section of the show. Lot’s of crowds and destruction. I couldn’t WAIT to apply what I had learned in my classes. So I took one look at the storyboards that were given to me of the scenes I was to layout and I did what Brad Bird had brainwashed me to do.

I lowered the horizon line.

In case you don’t know what that means, to put it simply, I lowered the camera in just about every single shot.

Behold, the sequence that is almost all up shot:

Okay, so the sequence begins with the scene above of some of the characters walking to the gate.  The board had the shot composed with the camera at about eye level. I lowered it.  The result was a much more dynamic angle on the characters and a more interesting size comparison.

As I was working on these scene, the biggest challenge I faced was the character designs.  The Simpsons just aren’t really designed to look good in any other angle besides 3/4 view.  When you lower the camera, you really have to solve the design so that it looks right.

For example:

The scene above was really difficult. The women had lip stick and needed to still look pretty and “on model” but how far back should I draw the bottom lip? How much should I push the overbite?

Well, I ended up cheating by diminishing the overbite a bit. Then they looked okay. But it took a few tries to get that right.

And then there’s Helen Lovejoy:

She’s got a one of the strangest designs on the show. Drawing from any angle is tough but from a low angle was just painful. I don’t think I got it right but it worked okay for this scene.

Again, I think this shot also had a much more straight forward composition but I lowered the horizon line. I also think the board had the characters in the background much more straight on and flat.  I added two point perspective here and made the crowd more interesting to look at.

In the drawing of Belle above, I really “squared off” her face to work with the perceptive of the drawing. I literally drew her face as a box and put her features on it.

Once again, I lowered the horizon line on this drawing. The version of the shot in the storyboard was a little more straight forward.

OH, and by the way, can you tell I was having a little too much fun drawing the women? Yeah, I was single at the time. Sorry.

That said, drawing women is really really fun. Simply ask, just about any female artist. It’s usually their favorite subject to draw.

BIG pan on this one. A lot going on. This one took a while.

Helen knocking over plants, Maude stomping, Apu on a tree, Frink chopping down the tree, Otto throwing rocks, Jimbo jumping the fence.

And the cop coming toward camera had to work within the perceptive I had established.

Oh, and there goes Ned running in the background with a torch.

Below is yet another two point perspective with a low horizon:

I really posed out the stair climbing by Homer on this one.

You can really see that it was me who did this scenes because it has some of my “stand by acting”.  Belle has her arm in front of her with a “claw” hand.  I tend to draw the “claw” hand a lot.

And if you look at the blond woman in the back, she has her fist up in front of her and her shoulder up.  That’s my “I’m worried” Anime acting.

Low horizon again. Not the best moment to have gotten a screen grab of. Twin hand acting, is bad.

This is one of the few scenes where I didn’t over pose the women in the background.

Above we have, two point perceptive, low horizon and the Background artist didn’t re-draw my fountain. It was drawn fast and rough. I though the Background artist was going to put it on model. I’m not sure why it didn’t happen.

I made up the look of the mermaid on the fountain thinking it would be re-drawn. I made it look a bit like The Little Mermaid. No, I don’t have ANYTHING against the movie or character.

I remember drawing Moleman here, and it was a pain in the neck.

The scene was never meant to be seen like this. It’s cheated quite a bit. The camera move was meant to hide the perceptive cheats.

Above is another bad screen grab. Twinning again. Low horizon and two point perceptive.

Oops! There goes the Little Mermaid.

And above we have the final low horizon line shot of the sequence. A two point perspective AND Anime acting.

The thing about setting the camera down low is that you tend to get an interesting variety of sizes and shape, pretty quickly. It’s almost, instant depth of field. Especially if you have a foreground element like Homer above.

High Horizon Line

The next two scenes below have a high horizon line.

Believe me, I tried to lower the horizon but the director wouldn’t let me.

when it comes to crowd shots, I often try to compose them with a low horizon line, that way you only draw one visible row of people and the rest of the crowd is obscured behind the first group.  It’s less to draw.

Couldn’t get away with that in the shot below:

Yeah, the shot above was time consuming. And there’s Homer with my Anime acting.

OUCH! Yet another screen grab with bad twin hands acting. Don’t try this at home kid.

Had I tried this shot from a low angle, the crowd would have blocked Homer.

This shot was done as one long shot and was broke up into three in editing.

Once again, I have my over posed women in the background.

One thing I will say I’m happy with in this scene, is the acting on Homer’s singing where he sings, “Caaaaare”.  I thought it worked well.

An Open Message to My E-mail Readers

Thank you so much for responding to my question on last week’s e-mail. I wrote this post in direct response to you giving me feedback.

Next time I promise to respond personally to your e-mail. I’ve come up with a way I could do that which I mention in THIS week’s e-mail.

Again, thank you.

Now, if you’re reading this and haven’t opted in to receive some behind the scenes e-mail and other nuttiness, what are you waiting for?

In the e-mail I sent out this week, I wrote about and posted screenshots, of the sexiest scenes I did on this episode. Scenes which made me hope no one walked into my cubicle and caught me drawing. Very embarrassing.

You’ve missed out on this e-mail already but don’t miss out on the next one.

…well, tell you what, if at least ten people or more sign up to my e-mail list BEFORE next week’s post (next Thursday), I’ll send it out just to those new people too.

Sound good?

 

Sign up for, special content that I will NOT post on the blog. Don’t miss out.


 

 

 

WEBSITES – Drawing tools

Do you know what drawing tools you need to get started drawing?

If you do, you don’t need to go read my new post on The Drawing Website.

If you DON’T know, and you WANT to know, then find out the answer to this mysterious question by going to the site.

 

For more comics and stories written by me: COMICS AND STORIES

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.

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3 Lessons Learned From my First Simpsons Director.

September 20, 2012 in THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WEBSITES

THE SIMPSONS NEWS – 3 Lessons Learned From my First Simpsons Director

Simpsons quote:

“Oh, everything looks bad if you remember it.” – Homer

Last week I wrote about learning a lot from my first Simpsons Director, Jeff Lynch.

I’m gonna quickly sum up three other lessons I learned working on my first official Simpsons show with him.

Lesson The First – Effects

Remember that little dark room I wrote about in the last post?

One of the many times I was sent there was to shoot an effect that was going to play during the Buzz Cola commercial that played on the television, during the episode.

I had no idea what I was doing but I gave it my best shot.

In order to give Jeff the best impression of the shot possible for the animatic, he had asked me to not only shoot the scene, but to actually cut out the shape of the explosion on each sheet of paper.

The reason for this? We shot animation over a lightbox. That way we could see through the paper and see multiple levels of artwork, like the background and other characters…stuff like that.

Well, if you cut our a shape into a piece of paper and put it on the lightbox, it gives a “glow” effect to the empty space.

I cut out, about, six or seven, jagged explosion shapes and shot them.

Jeff looked at the scene, adjusted the timing, told me to add more cut outs or take some out. BUT the most interesting thing he had me do, was to cover up the camera lens for a frame and  then, shoot the bright lightbox without a drawing, for a frame.

This gave a quick strobing black to white pop before the Buzz cola appeared.

Because I did this, it made the effect during the animatic really impactful and it sold the scene.

Lesson? I learned to do a cool explosion effect.

Lesson The Second – Antics and Overshoot

Anticipation drawings (Antics) and Overshoot drawings  are some of the first things you learn when y0u’re taught to animate.

Antics are drawing animators put in to help the watcher see the action that is going to happen. It’s basically there to telegraph the action, and by doing so, it makes the action look natural.  For example, if a character is going to reach for something, they would lift their hand up a little bit away, from the object before actually reaching for it.

Overshoots are drawings that are almost the opposite of Antics. An overshoot is used when a quick action come to a fast halt.  It’s a drawing that “overshoots” were the action ought to have stopped, before it settles into place. The effect in the final product makes the action feel natural.

Neither the Antics nor the Overshoots are really noticeable. They are FELT by the watcher, more than anything else.

When I did the scene were Lisa is yelling with the Malibu Stacy doll and shaking her at Bart’s face, I had Lisa Antic and Overshoot as she came closer to the camera. But I over did it.

What I learned from Jeff was how NOT to over do it. He gave me a quick rule of thumb: “Don’t antic, further than the final movement will be, don’t overshoot further than the movement was.

You’d think it would have been obvious to me, but I guess I got a bit too excited with the mechanics.

When I then did the scene where she almost hits Bart with the doll, I did a much better job.

Lesson The Third – The possibilities of animation

I was then asked to do the scene where Lisa throws the doll out the window. I did my best but it just wasn’t what Jeff was looking for.

He then sat me down next to him at his office and redid the scene for me.  And BOY was it epic. I had a front row seat.

I don’t know anyone besides Jeff who would do scenes like this. I’m not sure anyone even notices that he does this kind of thing on occasion.

What am I taking about?

Animated camera moves.

Jeff took that scene and animated the camera move. What I mean to say is, that he took the artwork, characters, backgrounds and all, and animated them as if the camera was moving. Then at some point during the scene, the camera DOES move and you don’t even realize what happened.

Take a look at that scene again. The whole ROOM, along with the characters, spins around, Antics and then animates away, BEFORE the actual camera begins to move. It was a phenomenal bit of animating and directing.

I remember inbetweening some drawing from that scene and tightened up two bits of rough drawings. The rest was all Jeff.

I haven’t worked with a Simpsons director since, that was willing to hand animate a camera move to make a shot work.

Jeff did this in a few of his episodes.  Now a days, we think it can only be done with computers.

My lesson from that experience? There are no boundaries in animation except for the ones you put up.

Get Fun E-mails

In this week’s e-mail, I went through the rest of this episode and gave my thoughts and small anecdotes on specific scene I worked on.

It was an experiment and it was fun because the readers got a sneak behind the scenes.

Don’t miss out. Opt in and join in the fun, next time.

 

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WEBSITES – Working on a Drawing Equipment Post

I’m currently working on the next post for The Drawing Website.

In it, I will write about the mysterious drawing equipment you need in order to learn to draw.

Here’s the rough under drawing for the header picture, I will use on the post.

In the post, I compare drawing tools to Kung Fu weapons, so I thought I’d give my character, Brush Lee, a very unorthodox weapon.

Yes, that’s a pack of gum.

Why is he holding a pack of gum as a weapon? You’re gonna need to read the post when it goes live next week to find out.

 

For more comics and stories written by me: COMICS AND STORIES

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.

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How I Spent Hours in a Little Dark Room Choking Matlock. Dante’s fractured arm

September 13, 2012 in BOOKS, FAMILY, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WEBSITES

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Simpsons Quote:

GRAMPA: I say we call Matlock. He’ll find the culprit. It’s probably that evil Gavin MacLeod or George “Goober” Linsay.

BART: Grampa, Matlock’s not real.

GRAMPA: Neither are my teeth, but I can still eat corn on the cob, if someone cuts it off and smushes it into a fine paste. Now that’s good eatin”!

When I first started out on The Simpsons, I was a cocky 18 year old with a big ego and crumby drawing skills.

A bad combination.

It didn’t help that I was just passable enough as a draftsman to get hired on the show.  I strutted around as if I DESERVED to have gotten hired. If I could go back in time to talk to my old self, I’d smack myself upside the head.

The Second Simpsons Show I Worked On.

I literally owe my career to Director Jeff Lynch. To this day, I have no idea why put up with me.

If I had been a smarter kid, I’d of gotten his subtle hints that I really  stunk and I should really not be so cocky. But, unfortunately for me, and everyone else, I wasn’t.

The second episode of The Simpsons I “officially” worked on was: LISA VERSUS MALIBU STACY directed by Jeff.

I worked on about five scenes in each Act. Mostly crowd scenes. Jeff would find scenes that I couldn’t possibly mess up or that would take me a long time to do and I’d do those scenes.

I remember drawing this scene. It’s one of my first memories working on the show.

The first scenes I worked on in this particular episode were, in fact, the opening scenes with the old people and Matlock.

These were given to me because:

  1. It was full of crowds and
  2. it was all secondary characters

The reason he assigned me scenes with secondary characters was because the family is so tricky to get right, that it’s much more obvious when they’re off model. The secondary characters are a little more forgiving if you don’t get them just right.

It was prudent for him to give the stuck up rookie a scene full of secondary characters.  This is the only time Matlock appears on the show. No one can tell how badly off model I drew him since no one had even seen what he was SUPPOSE to look like.

Exiled to The Little Dark Room

In order not to give me anymore work than he needed to, when I turned a scene in to Jeff, he would take one look at it and give it right back,

“Shoot it,”

“Oh, okay.”

This would send me to a little dark room, the size of a closet, where a video machine attached to a camera was set up.  Here, I would sit in the dark, time out a scene, and then “shoot the scene”. In other words, put it on video, taking a picture of my drawings, one frame at a time. This was LONG before we had computers to do this in.

The Matlock scenes I remember spending the most time on were the one where you slowly see him coming up the steps with both canes, and the close up choking scene.

Choking Matlock

The choking scene in particular took me hours (or was it days?) to shoot.

I’d done the scene and turned it in, but Jeff had asked me to shoot it. So I did, and I showed it to him. It was stiff as a board and looked awful. So he sat down in that dark room and reworked the drawings. He sketched out new, better, but very rough drawings.

They had a LOT more energy and power than the ones I had made.

He then wrote some rough timing on the corner of the pages and asked me to expose the drawings accordingly.  So I did.

I showed him the scene again, but it wasn’t quite right. It was MUCH better but not quite right.  He added a few more drawings, took some out and changed the timing again.

I shot the scene again. I showed it to him and he adjusted the timing a little bit again. So I shot it again.

This happened for a while. I spent my day shooting the scene.

When he finally got what he wanted, I asked him if he wanted me to clean up his roughs,

“No, just touch them up a little bit. Erase some of the darker lines and rougher bits but keep most to the drawings as they are.”

“Okay.”

So I did as I was asked.  I believe that I still have one of the rough drawings that he took out of that scene. One of my many Jeff Lynch mementos.

The Lesson

I was a complete moron and a lousy artist and animator, BUT those days, doing what Jeff had asked me to do and working under Jeff that way, where the BEST learning moments of my career.

My current understanding of timing and animation, EVERYTHING that I  know now, has it’s foundation in those hour and hour of being in that dark little room. It was my own little cave of knowledge where the wise man taught the foolish young man what to do.

Yet I was so foolish, I was hardly aware it was happening.

Thanks Jeff. Lessons learned.

Get e-mails

In this week’s e-mail, I got a bit candid about my emotional reaction to watching LISA VS. MALIBU STACY, for the first time in YEARS.

If you missed out on this e-mail. Opt in below to join the fun.

Sign up for, special content that I will NOT post on the blog. Don’t miss out.


 

WEBSITES – The Drawing Website is Officially Up

Finally! The Drawing Website is up!

Alright, so if you don’t know anything about this new site, it’s one that I’ve just put up in order to help people how to draw.

If you don’t know how to draw a straight line, or a good stick figure, I help you fix that problem.

If you’re just, down right embarrassed about how little you know about the whoLE process, I help you with that too.

I’ll teach you what pencils to buy, what paper to use, what you need.

I’ll hold your hand through out the whole process and answer any question you have as you learn.

If any of this sound good to you, click on the link below to start learning:

TAKE ME TO THE DRAWING WEBSITE

BOOKS – Free copy of The Tower’s Alchemist Kindle book

Just a quick plug/update on my wife Alesha’s book.

I’ve been pimping this book ALL week.

If you haven’t heard, for this week and this week only, THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST is FREE to download for the Kindle.

That means, if want to get yourself a FREE copy, you’ve got today and tomorrow to get it. Otherwise, you’ll need to*GASP!* buy it.

But seriously, most everyone reading this post will have missed this deal. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t still pick up the book even though it’s now $2.99 (which is less then a Starbucks coffee and even a COMIC BOOK!).

If you don’t own a Kindle device, that’s okay. Turns out, you don’t need one. Amazon is in the business of selling books not Kindles.

As I’ve been telling people all week, if you have an iOS device, download the Kindle app for FREE. Also available for Android, Windows 7 phones and blackberry phones, FREE. Or you can download the Kindle program on your Mac or PC, FREE or you can read the book on Kindle Cloud, for FREE.

CLICK HERE for info about this from  directly from Amazon.

In case you’re wondering, here’s what the book is about:

Wizard Vs. Nazi Warlock Vampires.
It’s a very different World War II. 

The Nazis have unleashed occult forces throughout Europe and the Allies are forced to recruit and employ wizards to counter their attacks. 

Among them is the battle weary spy, Isabella George, a Gray Tower dropout trained in Alchemy. Longing for retirement and a life of peace, she accepts one final job–extract a deadly warlock from Nazi occupied France and prevent him from unleashing an alchemical weapon that will devour the continent.

But France is crawling with the Cruenti, vampiric warlocks who feed off other wizards. When things don’t go according to plan, one Cruenti sets his deadly eyes on her.

Betrayal is everywhere. Even some of her closest allies cannot be fully trusted. Worse still, she finds, she can’t even trust herself. She becomes a woman torn between her charismatic spy lover who offers her what she desires most, and one of her closest confidants, whose soft seductive eyes hold deadly secrets about her past, and the Gray Tower itself.

Plans within plans. Plots versus counter plots. Heists gone wrong, sword-wielding Catholic priests, and the greatest manipulation of history that has ever been seen, is just a taste of what Isabella George is in for, in her final mission.

If this sounds cool to you, click the link below and pick up a copy. Also available in hard copy:

BUY THE TOWER’S ALCHEMIST

FAMILY – Dante Fractured his Arm

Thursday night I came home and only three of my four kids greeted me at the door.  I asked where my 4 year old son Dante was and my wife informed me he was in bed. Seems he had been misbehaving and was put to bed early.

I went to see him and discovered he was still awake. I went over and kissed him good night. As I was leaving he stopped me,

“Daddy, my arm hurts right here,” and pointed as his arm. This is typical. He’s always complaining about something so I went over caressed his arm quickly and said,

“There, now go to sleep,” and walked out of the room. I didn’t think anything of it.

The next day at work, Alesha calls me from the doctor’s office.  Baby Luke had an appointment that day.

“Dante has a fractured arm.”

“What?!”

“He was complaining about pain in his arm…”

“Yeah, I know, he did that last night.”

“Oh, he did? Well, he seemed really hurt because when he moved his arm around he would cry, so I told him we’d have the doctor take a look at it while we were there. The doctor checked him out and took x-rays. His arm is fractured.”

“HOW DID THAT HAPPEN?”

“I have NO idea. He told me he fell.”

“Maybe he through a big tantrum when you sent him to his room and hurt himself.”

“We’ll, he and Elizabeth were playing pretty rough yesterday, pulling each other’s arms. I told them to stop.”

“Yeah, I don’t know…I think he through a tantrum. You know how he is.”

Well, anyway we STILL don’t know how it happened but he had his arm in a sling for a few days before he got his cast.

He was sooo happy to walk around with that sling on his arm.

And now that he has a  cast, it’s like he’s proud of it or something.

Kids are crazy.

 

For more comics and stories written by me: COMICS AND STORIES

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.

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Why I chopped Quentin Tarantino’s head off. More about My Drawing Website. My current obession.

September 6, 2012 in SOME THOUGHTS, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, WEBSITES

THE SIMPSON NEWS – Why I Chopped Quentin Tarantino’s head off.

Simpsons Quote:

“This is indeed a disturbing universe.” – Maggie Simpson

I’m not a Quentin Tarantino fan nor am I a fan of his movies.

I’ve never met Mr. Tarantino.  It’s possible that if I did, I might like him and think he’s a great guy. But from interviews, documentaries, and other things like that, where I’ve heard him speak, he’s rubbed me the wrong way.

How it began

A long time ago, back when I was working on Season 8 as a Layout Artist, sometime in 1996, I was put on Show 3, Directed by Chuck Sheetz.

I was given the storyboard for the show and took a look at what we were going to be tackling. It was the Sherry Bobbins show and I thought it was very funny.  Then I saw the Itchy and Scratchy section of the show.  I thought it was awesome and decided I wanted to do it.

Some Directors ask the Layout artists what scenes they want to work on, while others simply assign them a section they think fits their strengths. My preferred method of getting layout scenes was simply to get them assigned to me. This time, I made an exception.

I walked into Chucks office and I asked for the Itchy and Scratchy scenes.  I didn’t know if he had another assignment in mind for me. I just wanted to do those scenes.  I explained to him how I REALLY wanted to draw Itchy chopping Tarantino’s head off because he annoyed me.

He told me it was fine and also assigned me some other scenes, since the Itchy and Scratchy section was so short. This was the first and last time I ever asked a director for a specific section like this.

The fun part

I returned to my desk triumphant.  This was going to be fun.  I was going to go to town on these scenes.

One of the best parts about working on the scene was just making fun of how much Tarantino uses his hand when he talks.  I think I had recently seen him interviewed in some talk show and it was fresh in my mind.

I over acted the heck out of the poses during his lines. So much so, that I didn’t think there would be time to put all my poses in the short amount of dialogue he had.  I just wanted him to look as erratic as possible.

It turned out looking alright in the end.

The Irony

I don’t ACTUALLY want to harm Tarantino, I thought perhaps it would be cathartic to do it in cartoon form, knowing I wasn’t actually doing anyone any harm.

On hindsight, I think the REAL reason I wanted to chop of his cartoon head off was because of that ear chopping scene in RESERVOIR DOGS. When I saw that movie and that scene came up, it made me feel sick to my stomach.  I was like,

“What WRONG with this director?! He’s sick in the head!”

I guess this spoof was my attempt to “get even” for making me feel so sick.

Well, the joke was on me.

After all, the scenes I was working on where spoofs of that very scene. When it was time for me to actually work on the scenes, a horrible realization came over me. It never occurred to me that in order to do the spoof justice, I had to…well…do  research. I had to see how it was done in the actual movie.

In other words, in order for me to do this spoof, I had to look at the ear chopping scene in RESERVOIR DOGS, over and over and over. Analyzing it, freeze framing it, playing it over, ACTING IT OUT. I had to LIVE that scene in order to get the movement right.

“Why did I chose to do this?! Aaah!”

It came back to bite me in the butt.

I also had to do the same with the Pulp Fiction Dancing scenes. But that wasn’t nearly as bad. And it was much more fun to breakdown the dancing in those scenes, so I could pose out my drawings.

It didn’t take away the bad taste in my mouth I ended up with having to see the RESERVOIR DOGS scene so much.

The Catharsis

Well, perhaps it fueled me more when I finally got to the head chopping part.  I made sure to make it as silly and cartoony as I could. I made the head bounce like a rubber ball when it hit the ground and added the tongue sticking out.  I also added a small swagger to the decapitated  body as it took a step back before he fell forward, butt in the air. Too bad this last bit wasn’t quite timed the way I had seen it in my head.

I drew the scenes really fast. Faster than I’d ever drawn any scenes before.  There were just so many poses. By the time I was done, the scenes were huge. Some of the biggest ones I’d ever done.

It turned out the be one of the best looking scenes I’d ever drawn too. So much so, that I photocopied the scenes and I still have those copies at home. It’s one of maybe, three scenes that I ever did that with.

So yeah, it was fun and satisfying for me to do that scene in the end. But I think Tarantino got the last laugh, considering I had to look at that ear chopping scene so many times to do it.

 

When I was working on this episode, I didn’t really have a convenient way of looking at the reference I need.

This week in my e-mail, I write about the archaic method I used to reference the movie.

It was pretty sad and pathetic.  If you missed out on that info and don’t want to miss out again, sign up to receive the e-mails from me. Sign up in the side bar or in the opt in at the bottom of this post.

WEBSITES – The Drawing Website Update

Here’s a short update of where I’m at, with the launch of The Drawing Website.

I’ve created a Twitter handle for the site.

It’s: @DrawingWebsite.

It doesn’t have an avatar yet. It’s on my list to do.  I just need to get the site up and running before I tackle smaller things like that. You can follow the site if you want. I’ll see about throwing update on there.

I’m also trying to finish up the two site mascots for the main page.  Here are my roughs:

And yes, they’re holding pencils.

Did I mention I’m treating the drawing site like a Kung Fu class? Well, now you know. Learn to draw like you would learn Kung Fu. You’ll have fun. I’m having fun already and I haven’t even launched the darn thing.

Get an e-mail about the site’s launch by signing up in the opt in.

SOME THOUGHTS – My new current obsession

Four years ago I wrote a post about my obsessive personality. Included in that post was the following diagram:

Well guess what? You can officially add some new unexpected obsessions to this list:

36. Business

37. Entrepreneurship

38. Marketing

39. Copy writing.

That’s right, I’ve become obsessed with this stuff lately. I’ve just been reading about it and thinking about it and I’ve even started putting it into practice.  It’s very possible that I’ll be writing far more about it in this blog, since that’s where my heads at right now.

Similar to the way I was writing about board games and role-playing games.

I hope that, when I do, IF I do, I can show you why I’m so obsessed with it and why I find it as creative as drawing and writing stories.

Oh, and by the way, “Drawing” should have been on the list above, but for some reason I left it out. Just imagine that number 10 reads: “Painting/Drawing”.

 

For more comics and stories written by me: COMICS AND STORIES

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Comments are appreciated as well.

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Hi, Welcome!

This blog is your window into the daily life of a Simpsons artist. See what it's like work on a hit TV show!

I update this blog once a week, on Thursdays and (sometimes) Fridays. If you don't see anything new, just check back on one of those days.

My e-mail is: luis(at)luisescobarblog(dot)com

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