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Sergio Aragones Quotes


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Sergio Aragones
September 6, 1937 -
Nationality: Spanish
Category: Cartoonist

Comics is a great medium to get a lot of stories out.

   

If the gag is complicated, you spend more time thinking about the way you're drawing it.

   

I live in a very small town and now that I've closed down my studio, I'm working at home.

   

I'd love to do a whole series of stories and have them collected into books.

   

Once you've established where you are, you go to the character and elaborate on expressions and action.

   

Anyone can write a story based on the kind of horror where you see a guy in car and then there's the bad guy in the back seat. It's infantile to rely on that for telling a story. That's like going to bed and thinking there's a monster under your bed. It's silly.

   

The Boogeyman is your conscience. The Boogeyman is the result of your own bad behavior. I love this Boogeyman.

   

Suspense is very important. Even though this is humor and they're short stories, that theory of building suspense is still there.

   

I don't enjoy the boo scare when you're watching a movie and then suddenly there's a big shark on the screen. The only thing they're doing is catching you off guard.

   

The Western, when I do one, will be one long, continuous story.

   

My work is so unorthodox that from one panel to the next, the drawings are completely different... totally opposed to the way of working in something like animation, where every drawing has to look like the one before.

   

Eventually I would like to touch all the genres. I would like to do some detective stories, and I want to do a Western. I would want to do humorous Westerns.

   

The reason I love comics more than anything else is that the longest story will be just a few pages. With a novel, it takes so many pages to get to one thing happening.

   

I have always loved horror very much. I used to write stories for DC's House of Mystery. It was one of my first jobs writing for comics, and I loved it.

   

At the end of the '60s, I was trying to enter the world of comics.

   

When sadness happens in the middle of work, I separate my personal grief from my train of thought.

   

With Groo, I try to do one story every book. Sometimes the stories are better if they go a little longer, and I choose to do it in four issues.

   

Generally what I produce is new. Of course, they are often variations on the same subject.

   

When you're drawing comics, you get very involved in how the story is going to develop and you spend more time daydreaming on that particular subject.

   

Sometimes, you start with the drawing and then the gag comes to you in the middle of it. That is when you start working on the solution of the gag, which is composition, placing, equilibrium, and character design.

   

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