Stumblebum Studios Archives
  Home Archives Features
 
Sucker Punch Spotlight by Dave Sherrill

Alright kids, this weeks Suckerpunch Spotlight is a very special issue. It's the one year anniversary of Stumblebum Studios! This week is the brain child behind this boxing themed website. My pal Paul Milligan. If you haven't checked it out before, Paul's comic, Der Wondervolle Bean, is a crazy misadventure of a dude, a scientist and a talking bean. Funny stuff I tell you.


Here's the Q and A.

STUMBLEBUM STUDIOS - What's your earliest memory of comics or comic strips?

Paul Milligan - Gosh, that's tough, my memory is awful. Uhm… I remember collecting comics when I was just a youngin' living in merry old England. A lot of the comics were these big magazine sized things and I got M.A.S.K., Action Force (which is what they called G.I. Joe over there… crazy Brits) and Thundercats. I used to draw pictures of the characters and send them into the magazines hoping that one day I'd get printed in one of the fan art sections. But they spurned my youthful advances. Now it's all about revenge, baby!

SS - What projects are you working on right now?

PM - Well, I'm constantly working on stuff for Stumblebum Studios like my article and comic reviews and things like that. And of course there's my comic strip,
Der Wundervolle Bean that I try to post up at least four times a week.
I've been kinda slacking on The Bean lately because I'm working on a sixteen-page comic called Mars: 1938 (with some hack named Dave Sherrill) which we're going to debut on Free Comic Book Day at Titan Comics and CAPE con at Zeus Comics.
There's a ton of other projects I'm working on like Twilight, which is slowly but surely getting done, various comic book scripts and the occasional freelance design projects. Oh, and my crappy day job. If it wasn't for the heavy drug use I really don't think I could cope.

 

SS - Der Wundervolle Bean has changed a lot since you first started the comic, what were the changes and how did they come about?

PM - When I first started doing the Bean strips it was for 24 Hour Comics Day and I hadn't really drawn anything of substance for a loooong time. I think you can tell when you look at those first fifteen or twenty strips, I had no idea what I was doing. They're awful looking, to me anyway. I think I was about 30 or 40 strips in when I really started being happy with the stuff I was producing. I started experimenting with the format and trying to challenge myself to draw more difficult things.
As the strip went on I was constantly learning things, lettering tricks, facial expressions, hand gestures and so on. For the most part though, the strip remained relatively the same until the beginning of this year when I completely changed the format. I was kind of inspired by a lot of the other webcomics I was reading at the time and most of them had that "daily newspaper" format going on and I decided to give it a try. Unfortunately the first several strips using that format were pretty much a disaster. They were all recap, originally meant to catch up new readers on what had happened in the previous strips, but it was soooo wordy and really not that funny and didn't even feature any of the main characters. It was just a cartoon version of me standing around talking. Ugh. That's why that series of strips ends with me getting shot in the head by one of the Bean characters, cause I was just so frustrated with myself at that point. Mostly I was just using those first few strips to experiment with the format.
Then I started a really huge story that was leading up to the 100th strip. There was so much stuff I wanted to do that most of those strips were double-sized so I could fit everything in. I was getting more comfortable with the characters and the humor so I decided to ramp up the complexity of the story and added a bit of drama too. And #100 itself ended up being huge, and was about six times the size of the regular strip. Plus it ended with a pretty huge cliffhanger that sorta changed the dynamic of the strip. I don't think I've ever been more excited about the Bean than when I was doing that storyline.
Once I'd hit that 100th strip I really wanted to change things up a bit. I was getting kinda tired of the way the characters looked and I wanted to play with that. Now that I've got a two-year old for a nephew I've been exposed to a lot more cartoons and I started really getting into some of them and digging the amazing style and character design that some of these shows have. I really wanted to incorporate some of that kind of stuff into the look of the strip. I can't tell you how happy I am with the way it turned out. And the strip is constantly changing. I'm always learning new stuff or tweaking stuff to make the strip look better. If only I could get the hang of drawing backgrounds.

SS - Where do you see yourself (in relations to comics) in five years?

PM - Bitter and angry and cursing my peers for their success.
Seriously, I'm really not sure. I hope that in five years I'll have published some of the comics I'm currently working on. Right now I'm just trying to take it one day at a time and not let myself get too complacent.
Or hell, who knows, maybe I'll be writing Superman comics and lighting my cigars with fifty-dollar bills.

Remember when we were watching that Tenacious D video and Jack Black gave Kyle Glass that friendship medallion and when they parted company they said "Friendship!" We should start doing that, ok?

PM - Uh…

SS - Sum up the last year of Stumblebum Studios, please.

PM - We've done a heck of a lot better over the last year that I thought possible. Hell, the fact that we still exist amazes me. It's been a fun year for sure. We've had columns and columnists come and go (and come back again.) We've added some amazing talents to our pool of creative genius. I think we're accomplishing what we set out to do, which is create a place for talented guys to showcase those talents and to entertain our readers by constantly updating and adding new stuff to the site. We've gone from just over a thousand visitors a month to almost three thousand visitors a week! We've self-published our own comics and we've appeared as guests at comic conventions all over Texas. It's been a really good year so far and we've accomplished so much, thanks to our amazing contributors and our fans. I can't wait to see how well the next year is going to go.
By the way, Dana wants us all to start wearing these tracking collars that he can use to shock us whenever a column is late. Now that's progress!

SS - Alright let's say there really was a Fast Food War, with all the little foods driving tanks and firing guns, who do you think would win?

PM - I want to say Whataburger… cause I loves me some Whataburger. Plus, they're 100% American Beef, baby! I think they'd put up a hell of a fight. But ultimately McDonalds would win through sheer numbers. Over one billion served… TO DEATH! Unless maybe there's some Iranian fast food chain I've never heard of. They could just nuke everybody else?

SS - Friendship!

PM - Friendship!

Check out more of Paul's stuff at

www.stumblebumstudios.com
or
http://der-magic-bean.livejournal.com/


And as always check out Dave's mindless pap at http://www.culturalvoid.net