Interview with Øyvind Thorsby, creator of HITMEN FOR DESTINY

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Øyvind Thorsby is arguably one of the most underrated cartoonists working today. His recently completed webcomic, Hitmen for Destiny, was a sprawling, comic, dark fantasy adventure unlike anything else. While his charmingly crude art style can take a little getting used to, after you read a page or two you're sure to become a fan.

This is apparently Thorsby's first interview, and I'm delighted to post it. While Thorsby does have a cult following (Hitmen for Destiny has even spawned its own wiki) I have no doubt that he's going to become much better known before long.


First, can you tell us a little about yourself? Where you grew up, what are some jobs you've had, stuff like that...

I try to not say too much personal stuff online. I’m from Norway.

Hitmen for Destiny had a very complex plot. How much of it was planned in advance? Did you follow a tight script, or make a lot of stuff up as you went along?

Very early on, before I started drawing, I worked out a very undetailed plot like “in storyline 3 X falls in love with Y”. This was before I knew almost anything about X and Y, like their names or how they looked. The things I planned out so early were the things that would make big changes in the plot. It’s good to plan out those things in advance, cause if you make it up as you go along, you’re likely to end up with a rubbish plot. And it is hard to do character development unless you plan it from the start.

The “missions”, like what monsters they are out to kill I made up later.

Action sequences were the least planned out. Sometimes I would have to change details as I went along, cause what I had planned didn’t work. Like, she can’t hit the monster now, it is to far away, or similar.

Any plans for a sequel, or other appearances for any of these characters?

I’m not going to do that. I think a new story with new characters is more interesting.

As far as I know, this was your first comic series. Had you done other comics, or other art, before this?

I drew some comics on paper as a kid, nothing worthwhile. I have written three deservedly unpublished books, two novels and a short story collection. I have written two text games. They can be downloaded from here: http://ifdb.tads.org/search?searchbar=%F8yvind+thorsby

Now that it's done, what are your feelings about it? Are you glad to get it done, or sad to see it end? Are you pleased with how it turned out, or are there a lot of things you'd change? (And if there are, what are a few of them?)

Though I enjoyed making it, I am glad it is done. I’m pleased with it.

Stuff I would have changed if I had to do it again:

Some of the attempts at being funny, especially early in the strip, are awful. There are lines that make me cringe.

I gave far to little thought on what Anette and Bianca was like before I started writing. In the early strips they have very little personality.

I tried to give each character a specific way of talking. With Bianca I thought I would not do anything special. So she would just talk “normally” and therefore be different that the others. In hindsight this was stupid. She would have been more interesting with a more distinct voice.

I would have not have drawn such wobbly lines on the background.

The characters would have had more realistic proportions. The giant heads and tiny legs often caused problems when drawing an action sequence. They can’t even reach the top of their heads.

Anette would have smaller breasts.

Was this a hard comic to do? Were you slaving over every page, or did it come easily to you? Were there ever times when you wanted to give up?

I wouldn’t say it was hard, except for the amount of time it took to draw. I struggled with working out the plot to the “Passion, lies and fungus” storyline, but not to the point that I didn’t think I could do it. I never wanted to give up.

Does Hitmen for Destiny have any "message"? Did you have some serious intent for it, or is it meant to be more of a straightforward comedy/adventure?

The latter. Though I guess my opinions comes though a little bit, occasionally.

What sort of response has the strip gotten? Are you happy with it?

I’ve gotten some nice e-mails, and seen it discussed on message boards. Some people like it a lot, and some thinks it is awful. Not much middle ground. I like getting feedback, wish I got more.

What are some of your influences, and do you feel those influences show up strongly in your work?

Joss Whedon, who made Buffy and Angel. His shows tend to have short (usually one episode) storylines that would stand on their own but would simultaneously move the bigger storyline for the whole series forward. I tried to that.

Neil Gaiman. Fusk and Vorte were heavily influenced by Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandemar from the novel Newerwhere. (Though Fusk is not based or Croup or Vandemar, and Vorte is not based on Croup or Vandemar. My couple is influenced by the whole couple.)

Both Joss’s shows and Neil’s writings has magic worlds that are secret from ordinary people. And they will make the secret worlds seen bigger by showing small details that is not explained. I tried to do the same.

Ray Cooney. I have only seen three of his plays but they were very funny, and are a large influence when I write farce.

Wallace and Grommit. There is a very funny and clever action sequence in “The Wrong Trousers” involving a model train. I am not sure if it has influences my writings all that much, but I think it is ideal for what an action sequence should be like. Or some action sequences anyway.

Some of the monsters are influenced by real biology. I don’t usually believe that truth is stranger than fiction, but it is usually true when it comes to biology. Monsters and aliens in fiction tend to be very unimaginative, while a lot of real creatures are mindblowingly weird.

Who was your favorite character in the strip, and why? Were there any characters that you got tired of?

I don’t feel very strongly about which character I like the most, but if I had to choose I guess Maythorn. She’s the nicest and the most realistic.

My least favourite character by far is Hurrger (the green dog-like warrior that fell out of a portal). When Anette says, “Shut the fuck up, Hurrger.” that is how I felt.


Are there any plans to collect the story in book form?

No.

What's next for you? Are you working on anything?

I just released a short comic called Lies, Sisters and Wives. http://www.webcomicsnation.com/thorsby/wives/series.php?view=archive&chapter=45522

I am not working on anything right now, but I have many ideas for comics, and I will probably make some in the future.

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The photography of Leonard Nimoy

This very interesting AV Club interview with Leonard Nimoy led me to this online gallery of photography by the Star Trek star. It's actually pretty great stuff. Nimoy put out ads asking for people to be photographed as their "secret selves," and these are the folks who showed up. The photos are well done, but the captions are what put the photos over the top.

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Comic-Con walkthrough video

Monday, July 26, 2010


Having attended the San Diego Comic-Con in the past, I can tell you that it's fun and exciting for a while, but the crowds, heat and sheer scale of the thing quickly become overwhelming and exhausting. Believe me when I say that this video walkthrough (courtesy of Blastr.com) is really as much of the con as you need to experience. All you're really missing is the pervasive aroma of nerd-sweat.

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The late John Callahan performs TOUCH ME SOMEPLACE I CAN FEEL

Sunday, July 25, 2010


John Callahan, "America's greatest quadriplegic, recovering alcoholic cartoonist," has passed away at age 59. Famed for his profane, scathingly dark and uncompromising humor, Callahan also had a more gentle and vulnerable side, which we see in this clip of him performing his own song, Touch Me Someplace I Can Feel.

(Via Metafilter.)

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SHATNER SUNDAY: Shatner narrates the MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH trailer


Now here's a space oddity for you: William Shatner narrating the original trailer for the incredibly head-trippy, 1976 David Bowie sci-fi picture, The Man Who Fell to Earth.

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SERENITY NOW trailer

Friday, July 23, 2010


Seinfeld, re-cut as a trailer for an action movie. Pointless and silly, sure. But neat.

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New TRON: LEGACY trailer online

A brand new trailer is online for Tron: Legacy, and I have to admit it's looking good. In the glimpses we get, the digitally-youthified Jeff Bridges looks surprisingly not-fake.

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A pug sings the BATMAN theme

Wednesday, July 21, 2010


Pow! Bam! Woof!

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Hannibal Lecter for Mentos

Tuesday, July 20, 2010


If there's anything that Dr. Lecter enjoys more than human liver with fava beans and a nice chianti, it's Mentos! The Fresh Maker!

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STAR WARS cereals

Monday, July 19, 2010





Attendees at the Celebration Star Wars convention will receive boxes of cereal featuring some pretty adorable Star Wars packaging. The two above are my favorites. When you display them together, Han Solo blasts a ring right through Greedo's breakfast! (Although I feel kind of sorry for poor Greedo here.... He looks so surprised and upset, like he was just sitting down to enjoy some toasted oats and Han came along and started shooting at Greedo's cereal for no reason at all. Hmm. Maybe this is why Greedo had such a grudge against Solo in A New Hope?)

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STAR WARS SUBWAY CAR!

Thursday, July 15, 2010


This is all over the web right now, but if you haven't seen it, you really must. The scamps of Improv Everywhere bring a little Star Wars to the New York subway. (Previously, they did a little Ghostbusting in the New York Public Library.)

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THE TWILIGHT ZONETTES

Tuesday, July 13, 2010


In this clip from the early-1980s sketch comedy series The New Show, John Candy is Chris Serling, host of The Twilight Zonettes. It's Rod Serling's classic series - fun-sized!



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Hollywood really, really doesn't get THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME

Years ago, when Disney went ahead with a big, cheery, animated musical based on Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame, almost everybody outside of the studio gates knew it was going to be a huge flop. It was just such a baffling, obviously dumb idea. Why would anybody spend millions of dollars on a cartoon about a singing hunchback?

Well, now Hollywood is gonna try adapting Hunchback again - this time as a "high-concept action adventure story." Start selling off your Paramount stock now, folks.

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Darth Vader recording for Tom-Tom GPS

Friday, July 9, 2010


It's pretty funny to see Darth Vader getting fussy with an audio engineer, but I don't really get why Vader comes across as such an idiot. I mean, he spends like twenty minutes trying to master how to say "roundabout."

Normally I'm pretty good at recognizing celebrity voices, but in this case I just can't tell if that's James Earl Jones or not. It doesn't sound exactly like him, but if it's an impersonator, he's doing a very, very good job.

Yoda did one of these things too. Kind of a diva, he is.

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The Doctor is a Housemartins fan


In the Doctor Who episode Human Nature, the tenth Doctor (David Tennant) records an important video message for his traveling companion Martha Jones. We only hear part of the message in the episode, but Tennant improvised some amusing nonsense for the parts of the message that we see but don't hear. This strange little monologue must have been a real treat for any lipreaders in the audience!

Somehow, it's no great surprise to learn that Tennant's incarnation of the Doctor was at a Housemartins gig in 1990.

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Potato bugs are not evil!

Tuesday, July 6, 2010


"Potato bugs are drawn to the smell of alcohol, so when you drink late at night they’re more likely to infest your bed. They may gnaw your cheeks while you sleep, trying to get at the smell of the alcohol on your breath."

This and many other so-called "facts" can be found at Potatobugs.com, a site that purports to examine the insect that Native American tribes once knew as "Old Bald-Headed Man." Potatobugs.com makes no secret of their anti-potato bug agenda, writing, "This site is dedicated to the fabrication and perpetuation of fear, hate and disgust for the Potato Bug. Please, won't you join us?"

Sadly, anti-potato bug prejudice has become all too common online. Google "potato bug," and you will find countless forums full of people sharing their traumatic potato bug encounters. Well, potato bugs have taken enough abuse, and it's time that somebody stood up for them!

Everything you know about potato bugs is wrong. It's all lies spread by the potato bug haters. Potato bugs are not true bugs, and they're not particularly fond of potatoes. (Actually they'll eat whatever they can find, including roots and smaller bugs.) They are technically known as Jerusalem crickets, although they aren't crickets. They are large-ish, flightless creatures with fat, baby-like heads and stumpy, shiny little legs. They're nocturnal - leading Potatobugs.com to describe them as "evil bugs of the night." Contrary to legend, they do not have a terrifying, piercing cry, like a small child abandoned by its mother. Their "song" is actually the sound of their little bellies being drummed against the ground. They're deaf, so they communicate through vibration.

They are not venomous. When panicked, they can stink, and they can bite. But the stink won't kill you, and neither will the bite. Hey, if you frightened a potato bug so much that it bit you, perhaps you need to ask yourself who was really at fault - the big, clumsy human, or the poor, deaf little insect who looks like an escapee from a Cronenberg movie?

Just look at this cute little guy:





















OK, so, they are kind of horrifying. But you have to admit, they're horrifying in a cute way. And they won't eat your cheeks while you sleep. Probably.


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Superman vs. the KKK

Monday, July 5, 2010


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The Man of Steel has taken on plenty of sinister criminals and organizations, but in a 1947 radio adventure, he went up against some very real and very frightening bad guys: the KKK.

Lefty journalist Stetson Kennedy had gone undercover in the Klan, and on a lark he'd shared some of their codewords and other top-secret info with the creators of the Superman radio show. The Superman boys ran with it, pitting the last son of Krypton against the KKK in a series that won praise from the National Conference of Christians and Jews, the American Newspaper Guild and the African American newspaper chain, the Calvin Newspaper Service.

Hey, this was the guy who regularly kicked the butt of Lex Luthor, world class supervillian. What chance did a bunch of dumbasses in white sheets have?


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SHATNER SUNDAY: William Shatner Recalls DeForest Kelley's Chihuahua

Sunday, July 4, 2010


The echo on this clip is a little distracting, but stick with it for Shatner's sweet, funny and sad story about DeForest Kelley and his beloved barking rat.

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TOY WARS: STAR WARS acted out by toys

Friday, July 2, 2010


Noted toy-mod artist Sillof (previously featured here for his amazing homemade Terry Gilliam movie toys) is now remaking Star Wars using a cast of plastic action figures and a mix of store-bought and homemade props and sets. It's really kind of stunning to watch, even as I find myself wondering why Sillof isn't putting all of that effort into making something original. (It's a response I have to a lot of really elaborate fan projects. If you have talent, ambition, and a lot of free time, why not create something of your own, instead of playing around in somebody else's universe?)

This clip also reminds me of how the original Star Wars works in all of the ways that the prequels don't. It's kind of amazing how moody and suspenseful this movie is, even when all of the dialogue is removed and the story is acted out by plastic dollies.)

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VideoTrace: Create 3D models by tracing 2D video


The University of Adelaide and Oxford Brookes Computer Vision Group have developed VideoTrace, an astonishing program that allows you to trace an object in a conventional, 2D video and quickly generate a 3D model of it.

In the video below you watch as footage of an SUV is traced, then that footage is used to spawn a detailed, CGI model of the SUV. Then the SUV and the CGI model version are shown parked beside each other, both looking like real trucks as the camera moves around them.

The possibilities are dizzying. If this thing could be hooked up to a 3D printer, you could make your own replica props tracing scenes from your favorite movies. Imagine you're watching an old horror movie, and you see a statue in the background you really like. You could trace that statue onscreen, then print out a 3D copy to display in your home. I'd love to see how well this program handles the human form. Is it possible to trace old footage of Jane Fonda in Barbarella, let's say, and then develop a 3D model of her? And could I then print out my own 3D copy of Barbarella? Please?

The project is apparently still in beta, and the Australian company Punchcard is trying to secure the funding to make it available to the public. Hopefully that will happen soon. Something like this reminds you that we're actually living in the future.


VideoTrace: Rapid interactive scene modelling from video from gallo1 on Vimeo.


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Flying squids


Flying squids are squids that can fly. Don't believe me? Look at the picture. See? A flying squid. Still don't believe me? Well, here's some fancy science-talk:

Members of the Ommastrephidae are small (about 10 cm ML) to large (about 100 cm ML), muscular squids that are often the dominant large squids in oceanic and, occasionally, neritic waters. A number of species are fished commercially. Ommastrephid squids are among the strongest swimmers in the Cephalopoda. Some are commonly known as "flying squid" due to their ability to glide over the ocean surface as seen in the photographs.


What, you still don't believe me? Jeez, you're really starting to get on my nerves, bub. Head on over to the Tree of Life web project and bother them with your incessant doubting. Go on, scram.

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No DOCTOR WHO movie for Depp

Thursday, July 1, 2010

In news that will shock and amaze practically nobody, the BBC has announced that there's no truth to those rumors about Johnny Depp starring in a Doctor Who movie.

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About This Blog

"Science fiction plucks from within us our deepest fears and hopes, then shows them to us in rough disguise: the monster and the rocket." - W.H. Auden

Who is he, this one who is called "Greg Stacy"?

Greg Stacy began the MONSTERS AND ROCKETS blog in April of 2009. Prior to that, he was editor of the popular sci-fi/horror news website DARKWOLDS.COM. He has also written for LA WEEKLY, OC WEEKLY, UTNE READER and LOS ANGELES CITYBEAT. He always feels weird writing about himself in the third person.

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