Steven Seagle on Imperial for Image Comics and Superman for DC Comics

Steven Seagle on Imperial for Image Comics and Superman for DC Comics

Dreamer Comics Full Episode channel:    / dreamercomicspodcast   My Links ● Website: https://www.dreamercomicspodcast.com ● Twitter:   / xenoglyphs   ● Instagram:   / dreamercomicspodcast   ● Facebook:   / dreamercomicspodcast   Thanks for watching, dudes! Ratings, favorites, and general feedback is always appreciated :) Steven Seagle on Imperial and Superman Omar: You talk about creator owned, and you only work in the creator owned now, why is that? Like what is kind of pushed that envelope for you to kind of focus on not telling other people's stories for them but focus on telling your own stories? Steven: I think I'm better at telling my own stories. You know, like I had X-Men and there were a lot of external pressures but I don't blame the external pressures for the way my X-men turned out entirely. I think I did not do the X-Men as myself completely and I should have. Even if it was a failure, I should have been exactly what X-Men is to me, and I think this fan thing we were talking about earlier, I think I was going, “well, this book hasn't been the book I loved since 20 years ago and I'm going to make it that book again”. Well, you can't, 20 years is gone, nobody wants that book now, it's a different time and I think I just got that. And I was like the things that I'm interested in talking to the world about via comic books are A. radically different and B. are not suited to me shoving it into a Daredevil Run, even though I love that book. So, I don't. I mean, the only superhero Image book I did, I did Imperial because I'd written Superman for a year, I did this with Marco Santos. And similarly, I wrote a book called It's a Bird, about how much I don't get Superman and don't like Superman. And DC publish that book, who knew they would do that? And then, I got offered Superman, and then, I took it. I was like, “well, now I've written about why I don't like superman, so I must like him now”. And I didn't. I still didn't get him and I did a year on that book going, “this is not the right fit for me”. So, I did imperial with Image to go; here's what I have to say about Superman if I were not doing It's a Bird where I'm meta-critiquing Superman. Here's what it would look like if I did Superman, and it's a book about a kind of dumb guy who gets picked by Superman to take over for him, he’s like, “you're going to be the next Imperial because I've got to move on do other things in the cosmos”. But the same guy’s getting married in a week, and so, he's got like this Superman kind of guy teaching him how to be a superhero, but he's also learning like how to do the dance at the wedding and getting fitted for a tux, and just a massive thing he's very uncomfortable with and which will win out. And through the course of the series, he talks the Superman guy into being a human instead of he himself becoming Superman, that's what I think of Superman. I think Superman would rather be a human being rather than everybody would idolize him like to be Superman. Omar: Yeah. Steven: Well, that's not a good story for Superman. Omar: It's true. Steven: But it's a story I could tell it an Image comic myself and go; that's what I'd say about that.