A view from behind the pencil
Paul Saitowitz
Kra-koom! In a dank, tiny upstairs office just off Harbor Boulevard
lurk the likes of Locklord, Optica, the Romancer, Netwerk, the
Shrubling, Barbrazon and Kid Citrus, just to name a few.
Pla-Chow! In that same office -- amid boxes and shelves full of
comics -- a tall slender 32-year-old man sits at a desk armed with
just a pencil, but without that pencil, none of the above-mentioned
would have a prayer.
The man is Todd Nauck, creator of the “WildGuard” comic, and the
characters are part of the plethora of action heroes that make up the
newest book published by Image Comics.
After years in pursuit of putting out his own book, Nauck finally
realized his dream this past October.
“There’s absolutely nothing I’d rather be doing,” he said. “I’ve
always known that this is what I wanted to do, and I feel really
lucky that I am able to do it.”
What put Nauck in the position to get his own book was that he had
drawn all 55 issues of the highly successful D.C. comic “Young
Justice.”
“From working on ‘Young Justice,’ I had gotten sort of a following
and that has definitely helped,” he said. “Those readers knew my name
and have moved on to ‘WildGuard,’” he said.
Some of the characters in “WildGuard,” a comic about a group of
superheroes trying out for a reality TV show, were created more than
a decade ago.
“After high school, I went on to the Art Institute of Dallas and
studied graphic design, but always with the intent of using it for
comics,” he said. “That was when I first started thinking about
‘WildGuard,’ but back then it was a group of superheroes in a
‘Cops’-like TV show,” Nauck said.
His obsession with comics stems from the artistic lure of shapes,
colors and emotions conveyed through the art. From kindergarten on he
was fascinated with cartoons and eventually got into the likes of
“X-Men,” “Spider-Man,” “Captain America” and the “Fantastic Four” in
junior high.
“There’s just something that has always been intriguing to me
about drawing characters that can do amazing things in the context of
a story,” he said.
“WildGuard” was originally slated for just six issues, but with
the success of the first five that have come out, another six will be
hitting the stands later in the year.
“I’m excited about the way things have turned out,” Nauck said.
“I’ve even gotten a little bit of interest about making it into a
cartoon for TV.” When he’s not working on “WildGuard,” he also does
all the penciling for “Teen Titans Go!,” which is published by D.C.
Comics.
Over the last few years, the majority of comic book readers have
been made up of 20-something geeky fanatics that tend to dress like
their favorite characters at comic conventions. With “Teen Titans
Go!,” Nauck and D.C. aim to change that.
“It’s also on the Cartoon Network, which appeals to kids, but this
book has characters that kids can relate to,” he said. “Hopefully it
can make them look at comics the same way I did when I was their
age.”
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