The “Sovena Red” Project

Sovena Red promoI’ve scripted many comics in the past eight or so years, although none ever saw completion as both my time and Leanne’s time was extremely limited. Leanne is a superb artist, driven by her love of pop-culture, action adventure, super heroes, Power Rangers, Street Fighter and the like. It’s been clear since she started drawing superheroes in her early teens that her path as an artist would lead in the direction of comics, action figures and video games. However, the risks involved in taking the plunge as a full time professional artist are enough to make even the most optimistic curl up into a little ball.

It’s been tough trying to synchronize my desire to write, and her desire to draw because of day jobs and Leanne’s commitments to much better projects. But we both hold out that someday we will be able to bring to life a few of the stories we’ve been dying to tell.

So, with that in mind, early this year I decided I was going to go ahead and do my own comic. I would pay for the thing myself and make it as professional as possible. An interesting thing about my Sovena Red project is that it was not my first, second, or even third idea for my first ever completed comic book. I started out with my strongest idea, which I believe has the most potential for a series (thinking big like any naive newcomer would). It would have been a super-hero detective series with an interesting angle. It seemed to be the idea that would generate the most general interest as an Indy title.

However, Leanne and I both agreed that we wanted this particular title to be a collaborative one where we helmed the project together as husband and wife. Owing to her busy schedule, Leanne would not be able to start on it until 2010. We agreed that I would come up with an alternative project and use another artist.

It was difficult to settle on a secondary comic project that I didn’t desperately want Leanne to draw. I tried various ideas, each of which I loved, but ended up putting on the back burner in the hopes that someday Leanne could be the illustrator. Finally, after scripting several different projects, I settled on developing a comic around a child superhero I had created sometime back in 2003, named Sovena Red.

The ‘all ages’ adventure style of Sovena Red’s pre-teen / teen super hero subject matter would have suited Leanne’s cartoony open style perfectly. So heading into this sort of a book without her at my side meant I had to find someone else in whom I had the confidence to deliver that energy and characterization that was vital to the story. After a couple of false starts, I stumbled across John Amor.

John is from the Philippines, speaks perfect English, hosts his own comic book podcast, and gave up law school to dive into developing his comics career. He’s partially color-blind which has led to his great strength as an Inker making his pieces punchy and burning each panel into your retinas in a strangely pleasurable way.

Originally I had ran my 4th comic idea by John before I settled on Sovena Red. At the time I was leaning towards a zombie project which would blend cartoonish elements with this well established genre. However, I knew in my heart that it was a bit too indulgent and that the cartoon element might marginalize or alienate traditional zombie fans. The irony is that I don’t know whether Sovena Red would strike a better chord or not, but of the two projects, I could only afford to truly invest in one or the other. Sovena won because it would provide me with the perfect example of the sort of story I’d most enjoy writing if, as a bottom line, it only ended up being a portfolio piece. Back in the late 90s my goal was to become an animation script writer, and that drive towards all ages stories never left me.

Fortunately, I found an angle on Sovena Red which gave the story that extra ‘je ne sais quoi‘. That’s me trying to sound cultured and witty. That ‘something extra’ that is hard to describe was the added narrative hook in the form of a fairy tale perspective on a spandex hero.

John provided me with character designs that brought the supporting cast to life and made the project start to feel tangible. After a few unforeseen delays, John was finally able to start working fully on Sovena Red and so far his pages have been nothing short of stunning. Now I’m finding myself starting to question the very need for a colorist as the side effect of the strong inking is that the pages work perfectly well in black and white. Unless I can find the perfect colorist who can really blow me away, I’m fully considering the possibility of withholding colors for a possible deluxe edition sometime next year.

My plans for Sovena Red are initially a straight to IndyPlanet publication, followed by a TPB which I will pitch at book fairs, and a Manga digest format that I will pitch at Anime conventions. Depending on the strength of a grass roots promotion I will consider pitching it to comic book publishers as well. My bottom line is that Sovena Red is my first comic book and it goes straight into my portfolio of published work. Hopefully someone will genuinely enjoy the story and the character and then my work will have been done.

Oh, and if you are interested in Sovena Red and would like to contribute a pinup or sketch then I would love to hear from you.

Sovena Red update!

At Heroes Con, Leanne and I had our table next to the After School Agent team (Scott Weinstein, Chris Zaccone, and Gino Patti) and we had a blast. I wish we had been able to spend more time together outside of the show. Scott, Chris and Gino are a laugh-a-minute group of New Yorkers who we made quick friends with back at Heroes Con 2008. Scott and Chris are the creative force behind After School Agent, a comic book about a 12 year old secret agent with super powers.

Scott is the nicest guy we have ever met as well as the producer for Saturday Night Live’s “Weekend Update”, Chris is a superb artist and after only seeing him briefly at New York Comic Con in February, it was a long overdue to finally get to hang out with him at Heroes. Gino is an art teacher for high school students with a comic project of his own that he is currently developing. Gino got lucky and when the table on the other side of After School Agent ended up being empty throughout the show, so he was able to spread out and occupy it all by himself. It’s these guys that make the show for us so great and I can not wait to see them all again whether it is at Baltimore or New York.

After School Agent Team

Both Chris and Gino each generously offered their time and talent to a commission of Sovena Red. I was honored to have these two great guys tackling my character and making her tangible outside of my writings. I could not have been more blown away by either piece.

Gino drew me a beautiful airborne Sovena Red with just the right amount of mischief on her face to perfectly capture her spirit and personality.

Chris drew me a picture of Sovena Red looking admiringly up at Captain Wonder (her fellow super hero crime fighter from the 1960s and 1970s).

Check out Gino’s new site for artists. Chillustrators.

You can see them pictured below, including the silhouette mock up that Osmarco Valladao (the Sovena Red logo designer) threw together to accompany the logo design as a fake cover. Osmarco is a writer as well as a colorist, based in Brazil. He has an absolutely stunning comic / graphic novel titled “Sinchroncity” which he writes and colors, with Manoel Magalhães.

On the Sovena Red comic book front, the amazing John Amor continues to impress me with each new page. I have now uploaded the first three pages as a teaser. You can view them below.

Artist Luis Lasahido is working on a pinup that may end up being the front cover and as soon as I get the finished piece I will share it here.

The wheels of steel are turning and the traffic lights are burning as the Sovena Red machine heads into July. Now I just need to settle on the colorist…

John Amor’s interpretations of “Sovena Red”

I have just signed John Amor onboard as the artist for Sovena Red #1-3. John is a superb artist with a variety of styles and influences from cartoons to horror… my kind of guy! Living in the Philippines, John hosts his own comic news podcast, has his own webcomic, and has most recently completed working on an 8 page Zuda submission titled Jenny Strange. Check out his website, and if you’re in the position to do so, hire him!

You can view all of John’s character sketches here.

But, “what is Sovena Red?” I hope you are asking…

Sovena Red is a modern day fairy tale in spandex and a cape. Created and written by Rod Hannah. Art by John Amor.

Sovena Red (Soviet Era)For sixty years Russian born Sovena Red has been the world’s greatest super hero while trapped in the body of an eleven year old girl. Gaining incredible super powers on her eleventh birthday, Sovena’s godlike super strength, ability to fly, teleportation, and project energy blasts, came with one small snag… There was a hidden power that she only discovered as the years wore on. She had become immortal!

Since her eleventh birthday, Sovena has shown no visible signs of aging. Sovena’s physical body never reached adolescence and so she was denied teenage hormonal changes and the accompanying emotional development. Immortality has proven to be more of a curse than a blessing. Years of research by the brightest scientists in the world have yielded nothing. Sovena has seen her friends grow old around her. She has never truly been able to fit in. She has never grown up… and never been kissed (that’s worse luck than Susan Boyle!).

Like a fairy tale princess with magical powers, Sovena dreams of the spell being broken so that she can live her life like a normal girl.