downthetubes: Can you tell me what Kickback is
about, for those who haven’t seen the publicity?
DAVID LLOYD: Kickback is
about a corrupt detective in a corrupt force and how and why he decides
to change direction. He's a tough cop, but in all other aspects a regular
guy - and he's corrupt because everyone else around him is on the take.
He's just going down the same road as everyone else because it's easier
to do that than face up to his moral responsibilities.
It's something we all do in life, I'm sorry to say - in little ways or big
ways. If we didn't, we'd have a much better world to live in.
downthetubes: Who do you think will buy the book and why should they
buy it?
DAVID LLOYD: Anyone who likes good, atmospheric crime-noir,
a good police thriller, a good detective story with a psychological drama
woven into it, and an action thriller - it's all that.
downthetubes: What was the inspiration for the project?
DAVID LLOYD: Well, I always wanted to do a strip that was
like my favourite crime movies - things like Bullit, Point Blank, Prime
Cut.
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Click the image above for
a full page strip sample from Kickback. Art © David Lloyd |
But the actual story inspiration originates from seeing a documentary on
tv about airships. Something called an ‘axial walkway ‘ was described
in it. It's the central maintenance platform of an airship. It occurred to
me that if you were on such a walkway, inside an airship, there’d be
nothing to show you what direction you were going in, or whether it was the
right one. Even on a plane, if you can't see out of the windows, you don't
know if you're going backwards or forwards. So I had this image of someone
being taken somewhere by something, and kind of lost in the middle of it without
knowing it. It’s a metaphor for the situation that Joe Canelli – the
corrupt detective in Kickback – finds himself in. He's going
the wrong way and he's got to wake up to it.
downthetubes: How long has the project taken to complete?
DAVID LLOYD: I wrote a rough script in 1999, but I didn't
get time to sell it to anyone til 2003. I began drawing it in '04, for its
first appearance in France as a two-volume story - and finished it in September
'05.
downthetubes: Are there any particular stories or non-comics genres
that have influenced you in telling the story?
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Click the
image above for a full page strip sample from Kickback. Art © David
Lloyd. Below: the original covers from the French Edition Carabas
editions of Kickback, not feratured in the English version |
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DAVID LLOYD: As I mentioned, there are movies that influenced
me. I'm impressed with the style and quality of storytelling that marks the
best of classic crime cinema in France with movies like Le Samourai,
and in the US with the work of directors like Don Siegel and Robert Aldrich,
where visual detail is focussed on and script is sparse and serves it's purpose,
and isn't a vehicle for the writer's ego.
Of course the theme of corruption is a common one in movies - from Serpico to LA
Confidential - so I'm bouncing off familiar walls with Kickback.
But I guess my take on it is more from a regular guy's perspective. I'm
interested in why we're all corruptible. Policemen aren't more prone to
it than anyone else. The stakes are just higher, that's all.
downthetubes: What kind of reaction have you had to the story so
far?
DAVID LLOYD: I haven't sought out reviews from previous
countries of publication - France and Spain - although I know there have been
favourable ones. I judge it's effectiveness from comments I get at signings,
mostly, imperfect though that method of assessment might be. Frankly, I'm
amazed at the degree of success it's had in France, because a very traditional
style of artwork dominates the market there.
downthetubes: Kickback is being published
by Dark Horse in the US. Has it been a difficult book for them to sell to
retailers?
DAVID LLOYD: I don't see why it should be. A while
back, crime books were not easy to sell in the general market in the US,
so I sold Kickback to France for its first publication. In France, crime
stories are a staple diet for the comic readership. But things are different
in the US now. 100 Bullets, The Losers, and others are joining
classics like Sin City as regular sellers. And, of course, in this
case, there is the added extra-value ingredient of yours truly. I haven't
short-changed a reader, yet, and I'm not liable to in the forseeable future.
downthetubes: You’ve spent a lot of time publicising the book
yourself, is that something you would usually do and how hard has that been?
DAVID LLOYD: I've seen a lot of things I've put hard work
into swallowed up in the mass of comics and books that are issued every month
in the US and UK. There's lots of product on the market, and lots of good
product on the market, and it's almost impossible to guarantee that even just
one copy of what I've slaved over, despite it's quality, will be in every
comic store for every customer to see. When it comes to ordering, there's
just too much material fighting for the store managers attention, and there
isn't enough publicity on the ground in any comic shop area to direct customers
to any particular book in that store.
What I hope to do by publicising Kickback myself - and, shortly,
touring with it up the East Coast of the US - is to assure store owners that
I am being as helpful to them as they are being to me by stocking my book.
I will do my best to spread the word of Kickback to all media areas I can
access, so that customers will know where it is and come to buy it.
Is it hard to do? No, if you've got friends to help you with necessary information
- and I like talking about my work. But it is time-consuming.
downthetubes: They do seem to have more of a reputation for film
and TV tie-ins and manga than more traditional original graphic storytelling
such as Kickback, so why Dark Horse?
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Click the image above for a full page
strip sample from Kickback. Art © David Lloyd |
DAVID LLOYD: I've worked with Dark Horse a lot in the past,
and I see Dave Land every time I go to San Diego - except for this year, I'm
sorry to say. It's good to work with people you know and trust, and the job
DH did on producing Kickback was great. Made a cool package of it.
A 92-page, comic-sized hardback with a grabbing cover. Couldn't look better.
And I think, style-wise, it fits quite well into their menu of products.
downthetubes: You’ve long championed comics storytelling beyond
the costumed superhero. Has that challenge gotten any easier in recent years?
DAVID LLOYD: I can always find something to do that I like,
so I'm not challenged too much, personally.
The major challenge is for the industry. Apart from
the slight advance in the production of crime material, and the anthology
books coming back a bit, we're still dominated by the super-hero stuff. It
would be really healthy for the whole industry's growth to change that situation,
but it would mean re-structuring the industry's elements, I think - and
I can't see a joint effort like that occurring in any circumstances short
of a crisis. If the big comic companies in the US had somehow been able
to understand and forsee the impact of manga on their industry, years before
it became the phenomenon it has now become, that might have been a sufficiently
loud wakeup call. Unfortunately, such was not the case.
downthetubes: Do you think there’s more acceptance of graphic
storytelling in the US and the UK from the ‘literati’ than there
was, say, ten years ago, with publishers like Jonathan Cape throwing their
hat into the ring.
DAVID LLOYD: The middle classes always have a spot in their
hearts for the combination of words and pictures that we call comics, because
they are naturally brought up in circumstances where art and literature are
respected. But they only like comics that have very little ' pop ' or restricted
' pop ' appeal. Books like Persepolis or Maus rarely sit
on the racks in bookstores with those horrible collections of superhero miniseries
that pretend to be graphic novels. They're in a special place where real books
go.
Good for any creator who wants to make use of that market - and it's a great
market for the product that fit's into it - but its growth won't make the
middle classes, the literati, the Establishment, or Joe Public gaze with any
more respect on the comics medium as a whole.
downthetubes: There are huge changes taking place in all forms of media
as the Internet and new media develops, do you think these will affect the
comics business in future?
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Click the image above for a full page
strip sample from Kickback. Art © David Lloyd |
DAVID LLOYD: Yes, but every medium has its own particular
values that are the key to its success and make it attractive to people. The
prosperity of any medium depends on those who can maximise the appeal of those
values in any environment, whatever the competition may be for audiences in
that environment.
downthetubes: You’re probably still best known for V for
Vendetta, a work you drew over 10 years ago. Does
that strike you as odd, given the huge amount of work you’ve done
since, such as War Stories, Global
Frequency et al?
DAVID LLOYD: Well, most of my things - if they're known
about or seen at all - are in the comic stores for two seconds, and then become
a back issue. Vendetta is a graphic novel that's in every store all
the time across the globe, and happens to have been written by one of the
world's greatest writers.
downthetubes: What are you working on at the moment?
DAVID LLOYD: Letting people know about Kickback.
downthetubes: Is there a comics character you’d like to work
on but have never been given opportunity?
DAVID LLOYD: I'd love to do Nick Fury in its very earliest
days version. Suited, and like a secret agent Mike Hammer, with all of
Kirby's gutsiness of approach. I suggested it to Marvel once. No go.
downthetubes: If the chance arose, would you draw them?
DAVID LLOYD: That would depend on circumstances.
downthetubes: What one piece of advice would you give an aspiring
comics creator starting out in the field today?
DAVID LLOYD: Be yourself.
downthetubes: David, thanks very much.
• Read our review of Kickback: Click Here
• Buy
Kickback from Amazom.com (Hardcover): Click
Here
• Buy Kickback from Amazon.co.uk
(Hardcover): Click Here