Oct 9, 2015 11:05 AM
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he New York Comic Con is three days of tightly packed comics action, a quick but enormous event in Gotham City. Sifting through the content, we ask some of our favorite comics creators questions on their craft in The A.V. Club’s Comics Questionnaire.
Duane Swierczynski is primarily known
for his crime novels, but he’s recently made a name for himself transitioning
his hard-boiled man-on-the-street perspective to the world of comics. Across
runs on Punisher, The Immortal Iron Fist, Judge Dredd, and
Bloodshot, Swierczynski has consistently shown the challenges of heroism
in the face of an unflinchingly cruel world. Now, with Archie Comics’
relaunched Dark Circle Comics line, Swierczynski has brought back one of the
great pulp heroes of the 1940s, the Black Hood. This latest incarnation of the
vigilante has no superpowers, just an addiction to pain killers, and takes to
costumed crime-fighting to ease his guilty conscience.
If an alien species discovered The
Black Hood as the only remnant of human civilization, what would they learn
from us?
Duane Swierczynski: They’d go back
home, quickly. They would learn that we are a fragile and troubled race. It’s a
guy that tries to do the right thing. In our world if you try to do the right
thing the universe pounds the shit out of you and shows you better. That
happens to this guy. I love noir stories. I love seeing guys on the worst
possible day and watching them scramble, and the whole series is this one long
scramble as the sand goes up under his limbs. Still tries to do the right
thing—that’s the worst. The noir universe hates do-gooders so it tries to pound
them and punish them and that’s the fun of the series, punishing this character
in a weird way. I root for him though.
The A.V. Club: So, humans as a race,
we generally just like watching each other get beat up?
DS: Absolutely, yeah.
If my résumé included a whole summer
spent reading The Black Hood, how could I spin that into valuable work
experience?
DS: I think managing pain with
narcotics could be a useful skill. Hiding your true self from you co-workers,
which is totally true. Exacting justice when it needs to be dealt.
AVC: Those are all useful skills in
life, but I’m not sure you’d want to bring them up in an interview.
DS: No. No. Definitely don’t interview
in a black hood, that would set a wrong precedent. Set up a red flag right
there.
If copyright law were no concern,
what character from another game, comic, movie, etc. would you like to see
crossover into The Black Hood?
DS: My Little Pony. (Laughs.] That’s
the natural fit for his world. Better Call Saul or Breaking Bad? Total
fit with Black Hood. Or The Wire.
If David Simon had a Wire comic, man, Black Hood would be down there in
Baltimore hanging out with the Wire guys.
AVC: Put the Black Hood there into
some modern TV drama.
DS: Exactly. But honestly, Greg as a
superhero, he has no powers. He’s an addict. He’d probably be killed quickly, I
think, versus anybody. Lamest superhero I can think of, he’d be killed pretty
quickly.
AVC: He’s the Walter White of super
heros.
DS: Totally.
for the entire interview go here:
http://www.avclub.com/article/duane-swierczynski-dreams-violent-new-cocktail-bla-226581
for the entire interview go here:
http://www.avclub.com/article/duane-swierczynski-dreams-violent-new-cocktail-bla-226581
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