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Mark
Ricketts
NoWhere'sVille (writer/artist)
Mark
Ricketts, the critically acclaimed writer/artist of NOWHERESVILLE
has arrived. 'Nuff said.

#1.
Q: OK, let's start with an easy one:
Who are you, and what do you do?
A: Back in the days when I was
driven to join the rebel alliance against the thousand-year-old
empire known to many the Catholic school system I was an unholy
beast. All I had to do was think bad thoughts and glass would
break...bread would go stale. The nuns would daily beat the
love of Christ into my pink little buttocks and Father Duffy
refused to listen to my confessions due to their graphic nature.
Today I'm as pure as Krishna, as wise as Buddha and as innocent
as Baby Huey. I'm also the writer/artist of the subversive
comic known as "Nowheresville" published by Caliber Comics.
Oh, and I'm an untapped national treasure.
#2.
Q: Where did the idea for NOWHERESVILLE come
from?
A: You share ownership with 2 other
fellows in the special, and seem to have complete ownership by the
mini. Where are they now? (a) I had a revelation when reading the
passage from Steve Allen's 1955 classic "Bop Fables" where Little
Red Riding Hood questions the wolf in a grandma disguise by saying,"I
don't want to sound square or anything, but you don't look like
my grandmother at all. You look like some other cat." It dawned
on me that this little basket carrying chick was doing some detective
work (big teeth, big ears,etc.) to solve a mystery. That's a pathetic
answer. Here's an interesting story, that in a strange way, led
to the development of Nowheresville. Allen Ginsberg's classic Beat
poem "Howl" was dedicated to Carl Solomon. Carl was the nephew of
the owner of Ace books. Ace books pumped out trashy crime novels
in the fifties and due to Carl's nagging his uncle, also published
William Burrough's first book "Junkie". The cover to "Junkie" has
that great paperback cover art popularized by crime fiction of the
time with a tough guy keeping a blonde bombshell from her fix. Maybe
that's the first time the crime genre and Beat sensibility were
fused together. Still, unless you consider the old T.V. show with
John Cassavettes as piano playing, hipster detective "Johnny Staccato"
there hasn't been a lot of beat detective stories. Duh, what was
the question again? (b) I like to bounce ideas around with people
outside comics. Rick Conrad and Alain Sherter were never interested
in pursuing comics careers, I dragged them in kicking and screaming!
However at my request, Rick continues to do single illos for the
book. Also, I like it when he screams.
#3.
Q: Most comic book creators seem to have their
roots in superhero comics, yet I can't recall ever seeing your name
on an issue of Spider-Man. Where did you get your start?
A: Senator McCarthy ruined my film
career in the '50s. At age 12, my affiliation with the Banana Splits
fan club caused me to be blacklisted. I was forced to change my
name and turn to comics as a creative sanctuary.
#4.
Q: Who are your major influences, both in
the comic book field and without?
A: Astroboy. The Aquaduct. Kafka. WeeGee
( the photographer - not to be confused with the Oujii board . Though
I have been influenced by its otherworldly guidance on occasion.)
#5.
Q: How would you best describe both
your work on NOWHERESVILLE, and the comic book itself?
A: (a)We all know that the creation
of a quality comic requires complex scaffolding, sandblasting,
manuals translated from the original Sanskrit and a team of
eggheaded, pocket-protector wearing technicians working around
the clock with any number of electricity draining devices.
This book is no exception. Actually, I think in terms of Light
and Dark when I work on "Nowheresville". If you create a dark
atmosphere thick with fog and long shadows you've already
set the scene for a mystery. The characters that live in that
neon washed world are bound to be colorful, right? The city
at night is the most important character in a crime noir tale.
After the sun goes down, it's the place where the threat of
danger and excitement lays in wait, perched to strike. In
David Lynch's "Blue Velvet" the opening scene shows a sun-shine
soaked, normal, squeaky clean suburban lifestyle complete
with happy firemen and dad watering the lawn. When dad suffers
his heart attack and hits the ground, the camera follows moving
down into the little seen dark place of mystery and paradox
that lies hidden under that green facade of manicured lawn.
It's day meets night. It's light meets dark. It's good meets
evil. In "Nowheresville" - and especially "The Nowheresville
Special", I tried to capture that feeling by beginning the
story at night in a dark cafe, and dragging it through a series
of moonlit adventures to its sad and pitiful conclusion under
a backdrop of the harsh light of day. (b) Nowheresville is
a perturbation in the reality field in which a spontaneous,
self-monitoring negantropic vortex is born tending progressively
to subsume and incorporate its environment into arrangements
of unspeakable cool stuff. In other words, it's a crime cocktail
with a beatnik twist. Perhaps the best way to describe the
book is through the development of the characters. The typical,
violent crime noir detective character is devoid of spiritual
background and even though he appears to have a heart when
it comes to certain dames, he still uses any morally bankrupt
means to solve a case. In Nowheresville however, the main
character Chic, is a seeker of truth- he investigates on the
outside and lets the criminal expose himself - without resorting
to violence. Chic pushes, but he's a hipster and therefore
always in an understated state of grace. He's self sufficient,
but he's a curious cat. He's Jack (Kerouac), the quizzical.
Queeg is the other kind of hipster- the flipster. He's Neal
(Cassidy) , the sensualist. He likes to howl at the moon with
abandon. Wherever he goes that's where the action is. The
obvious problem I encountered was in trying to keep the two
sides of the Beatnik coin in Chic and Queeg's personalities
while throwing them in a genre formally inhabited by tough
guys. It's difficult staying on the road to enlightenment
when that road leads to homicide, but it's the contradiction
that makes it interesting.
#6.
Q: Moreso than most comics, NOWHERESVILLE
seems to need some serious researching for the look and the dialogue.
Seeing as how it's set in a period that ended quite a while ago,
what do you use for reference points?
A: Nowheresville is set in the 50's
so there's the obvious research to try and get the time period down.
Then, I must have watched "Kiss Me Deadly" and "Sweet Smell of Success"
a hundred times before I even started sketching for the first Nowheresville
book. There's a scene in "Sweet Smell of Success" where Tony Curtis
is slouching on a street corner in black suit, stove pipe pants,
and skinny black tie. He is giving a sideways glance of contempt
and envy to Burt Lancaster in the foreground. That slouch says so
much. It defines his character. It defines the time. It's the kind
of inspiration I look for to complete my own personal vision. In
"Kiss Me Deadly" there is the glowing, enigmatic suitcase that seems
to elude those who wish to possess it. That feeling of something
weird and sensational dropped in a cloak and dagger mystery is also
an inspiration. I noticed that Quentin Tarantino used the same "glowing
suitcase" image in "Pulp Fiction". I also studied "Touch of Evil"
and "Chinatown" for mood. I reread Kerouac's "On The Road" to examine
Beat philosophy and mythology, and Steve Allen's " Bop Fables" to
get a feel for the language of the hipster. I listened to Lambert,
Hendricks and Ross do Basie, Miles and 'Trane "Smokin" and "Cookin",
Babs Gonzales "Manhattan Fable"and Ken Nordine's "Word Jazz". I
soaked myself in the time, the culture, the Beat legends of Greenwich
Village, and the backstreet logic of pulp crime fiction.
#7.
Q: Open racism seems to be a part of the era
NOWHERESVILLE takes place in. How difficult is it to portray this
aspect of the book?
A: Does it ever get uncomfortable scripting
it? The worst part of it is that I'm always concerned that readers
will confuse me with one of my bigoted characters. Still if all
my characters were PC - the story would be pretty boring
#8.
Q: NOWHERESVILLE is one of a growing number
of crime genre comics out there today. It definitely has a different
feel to it than the others, but were you at all influenced by Sin
City, Armed & Dangerous, etc.?
A: No. I was more influenced by my
love of both Beat literature and Film Noir. I admire Frank Miller's
use of shadow in his illustrations, enjoy Brian Michael Bendis'
sense of humor, dig the whimsy of Paul Grist's art, and admire David
Lapham's ability to push the envelope of the genre... still, I can't
say that I'm influenced by them. But if we ( crime noir comics creators)
were all brought together to discuss our collective influences I
think we might find that they are somewhat similar.
#9.
Q: Caliber seems to be experiencing a resurgence
in popularity not seen since the days when they published The Crow.
How did you end up publishing with Caliber, instead of Dark Horse,
Sirius, etc.?
A: I picked up a Caliber title in a
comics shop and read a short story about two garbagemen. The story
followed the two men as they collected the day's garbage and engaged
in an existential conversation. It was brilliant, original, and
seemed to walk a line between the storytelling of underground comics
and conventional mainstream comics! I knew this had to be my publisher,
so I submitted my work to them. They published my first mini-series
("Warpwalking"). They published my second mini-series ("International
Cowgirl Magazine"). They published my third mini-series and complementing
graphic novel ("Twilight People/Book of Twilight"). They publish
"Nowheresville". That's a sci-fi fantasy, a satire, a horror tale
and now crime fiction. How many publishers are gonna give an up-and
-coming creator this kind of freedom to experiment and grow?
#10.
Q: While NOWHERESVILLE is a black & white
book, I've seen your color work as well - NOWHERESVILLE covers,
Mr. X covers, etc. Which do you prefer to work in?
A: If someone wants to pay for color
seps and printing, I'm going color!!
#11.
Q: While you don't shy away from the racist
language, the book still remains one that's pretty much safe for
all ages to read. How do you decide to draw the line and why? (ed.note-this
was the stupid question....)
A: Safe!!??!! I'm sure the Bible belt
would disagree with you on that score. Drug abuse. A murdering transvestite.
Homosexuals. Bondage. etc. (ed.note #2-silly me! I totally didn't
think of all that! My main thought was the lack of explicit sex
& violence. I explained that my parents read what I read, and simply
explained things to me, rather than banning them. Mark's response?
"Your parents are ver enlightened." Yes, they were.)
#12.
Q: Are any of the characters in NOWHERESVILLE
based on people you know?
A: I'm gonna take the 5th on that one.
#13.
Q: Which of the NOWHERESVILLE characters is
your personal favorite?
A: McCarthy... because he's a big jerk.
I almost feel sorry for him. Also, He's fun to draw. A friend once
said that he looks like a really twisted Jimmy Olsen.
#14.
Q: Do you have any plans for spinning
off any of the NOWHERESVILLE into their own one-shots or series?
A: I'd love to do a story about
Hayley sweating it out in an all women's prison days before
she gets the juice. Who knows?
#15.
Q: While writing NOWHERESVILLE, did you ever
worry that the dialogue would be too much for the average comic
book reader to take?
A: Have you cut back on the dialect/slang
at all in order to make it more accessible? I think it has put a
few people off, but those who stuck it out and got involved in the
story have come to realize how important the language is to the
mood of the piece. Some cats and kitties dig that word beat. You
just gotta stick your angel-head in the gone sphere, dad!
#16.
Q: NOWHERESVILLE is a departure from your
previous work (yeah, I did a little reasearch!) and, from what I've
read, The Lost is quite a change from NOWHERESVILLE. How difficult
is it to slip in and out of genre's, from project to project?
A: Which one of my multiple personalities
are you asking?
#17.
Q: Have you been approached by anyone wanting
to bring NOWHERESVILLE to the big - or small - screen?
A: No comment...just cross your fingers.
#18.
Q: Will we be seeing more of NOWHERESVILLE,
or is this all for the forseeable future?
A: If you're buyin'...I'm flyin'!
#19.
Q: Any chance I can get a mention of this
site (4Color-Review) in a future letter column?
A: You got it!
#20.
Q: Not a question, just figured I'd give you
a spot to plug your current and upcoming projects!
A: In March, "Nowheresville:The History
of Cool" hits the stands with a series of short stories illustrated
by Phil Hester (Swamp Thing, The Wretch), Brian Michael Bendis (AKA
Goldfish, JInx), and Galen Showman (Reinfield, The Lost). It also
features surprise guest artists, the ultimate '50s film noir list,
and Selena's 'cool blue' cocktail recipe. Also in March, "The Lost"
#3 comes out and Wendy gets her first taste, The Pan gets an eye
full, Hook leaves a love letter and Tiger Lily gets down.
If
you folks out there are interested in any of these books ("The
Nowheresville Special" #1, "Nowheresville:Death By Starlight"
1-4, "Warpwalking" 1-4, "Int'l Cowgirl" 1-2, "Twilight People"
1-2 and the "Book of Twilight" Graphic Novel) try purchasing
them directly through Caliber comics by calling 1.888.222.6642.
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