Vito Delsante

Creator of Imaginary Worlds
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Latest Comics

  • Prisoner of None – Beginning Tuesday, March 5th
  • Prisoner of None – First Look
  • Stuck – Chapter 3/Page 12 (or, Page 36)
  • Stuck – Chapter 3/Page 11 (or, Page 35)
  • Stuck – Chapter 3/Page 10 (or, Page 34)

Blogroll

  • Caleb Monroe
  • Chris Arrant
  • ChrisCross
  • David Bednarski
  • Dean Haspiel
  • Dean Trippe
  • Edi Torres
  • Eric Wight
  • Javier Sanchez Aranda
  • Jay Piscopo
  • Jeff Powell
  • Julian Lopez
  • Mike Lilly
  • Project Rooftop
  • Rachel Freire
  • Rick Lacy
  • Sean Izaakse
  • Tom Spurgeon, The Comics Reporter
  • Win Scott Eckert

Make Your Way to TRIP CITY, Visit STEEL TOWN (NOIR)

by Vito Delsante on February 16, 2012 at 8:11 am
Posted In: News, Projects

I wanted to take a minute to hip you to a new project I’m working on, called Steel City Noir, for Trip City Arts. Trip City is billed as a, “Brooklyn-Filtered Literary Arts Salon,” and to be in the company that I am sharing is not only an honor, but fairly overwhelming. But I think I’m up to the task.

Beginning today, Thursday, February 16, and continuing every third Thursday (Thurdsday?), I will have a new offering on the site. Every even numbered month, Steel City Noir, with art by the grossly underlooked, Dave Stokes. Every odd numbered month, a column called Before/After Genius. Click the picture above to be taken to my first Steel City Noir piece, Tonight, Down By The River.

└ Tags: creator owned, dave stokes, film noir, noir, prose, steel city noir, trip city
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#FreelanceLife Week 7 – FCHS meets @Graphicly

by Vito Delsante on February 13, 2012 at 2:26 pm
Posted In: News, Projects

Took a few weeks off, and there’s no video (sorry Powell!), but I made a promise to myself to not come on here until there was something to announce.

There’s something to announce.

First, a couple of weeks ago, I announced that FCHS Volume 1 was now $9.99. Today, I’m going to offer it to you even cheaper…

If you download the Graphicly reader (for free on iTunes, and probably in the Android market), you can download FCHS Volume 1 for HALF PRICE! You can also download it to your desktop and read online. Click here and get started!

Note: If you want a physical copy, you can still order them via ComiXpress!

Thanks to everyone over at Graphicly! Trust me, this is only the beginning! There is much more to come!

└ Tags: creator owned, digital, Digital Comics, eternal kick, fchs, graphicly, rachel freire, vito delsante
1 Comment

Let’s Talk About #Drive

by Vito Delsante on February 4, 2012 at 9:48 am
Posted In: On Writing, Random

…because something needs to be said.

It’s a decent movie. I was led to believe that, based on public opinion, I would suddenly learn how to fly or that I would have the mysteries of the universe explained to me. That didn’t happen, but that’s not to say that it’s a bad movie. The one thing I loved about the movie was the way it was shot. I was especially impressed with the use of natural light, which looked to good it made me wonder if anyone had ever used it to this effect before hand…they have, I just can’t remember. Anyway, let me get into what, I feel, are the two most important questions about the movie, and how I think they could effect what you end up thinking about the flick as a whole.

SPOILERS AHEAD!

(It’s five minutes, stupid person who made this jpg!)

1. Was that first heist successful? This is crucial to how you view the character. From the opening lines of the movie, we’re to assume he’s good at what he does, and when we watch him evade the police, yeah, he looks like he knows what he’s doing. And then he pulls into the Staples Center, and walks away from the car. The Driver avoids arrest…but do the crooks? No, right? Here’s why I ask: If those crooks don’t get out of the car and get away, we never see the Driver successful as a getaway driver (the only other driving he does is the stunt for the movie, which goes well, and driving the race car around the track). Think about it; the only other heist he was involved in, in the movie, was the one at the pawn shop, and that goes south in a hurry. What this means is that the character isn’t who we assume he is, based on everything we’re given. The only thing we can safely say about him is, as a getaway driver, Gosling’s character has a driver’s license and can, by law, drive a car. There is too much assumption given that he’s good at what he does, and unless we see him as a successful getaway driver, we go into that second heist assuming he’s going to fail. Which means that, as the hero, our expectations about him are low. The only “heroic” thing he does is he puts Benicio to bed (by “heroic” I mean the only thing he does that endears us to him). We want him to be a hero…we expect him to be the hero…but how can we do that when he’s, essentially, a failure?

2. Does the Driver live in the end? First off, why did he kill Nico with that mask on? No explanation whatsoever. But anyway, I got this tweet in reply to the above one, and this might be the most important question that the movie needs to answer:

Is Drive film noir? Or is it pulp? Because the answer not only depends on your interpretation of the ending, but it also changes the perception of the hero throughout the entire film.

Folks usually attribute a pretty similar definition for them, but here’s the one I use: noir has deperate characters doing desperate things and usually, they have a downbeat, ironic ending. Drive has that, no question: The Driver gets stabbed in the gut pretty severely, he kills Bernie the gangster, and drives away, leaving Irene and Benicio behind. He doesn’t get the girl, he doesn’t get the money, and, if my understanding of anatomy is correct, he probably dies right around the time he runs out of gas. That’s noir as all get out! But…is it pulp?

Pulp fiction is pretty broad, and while it can have an ending like the one I mention above, it all depends, again, on your perception of the Driver. If he’s a successful getaway driver, if he’s the hero of the piece, and if he lives, then the movie is a pulp. Pulp usually has larger than life characters and can be just as lurid as noir, but in the end, the hero shows the villain that “crime doesn’t pay.” I have this print out of a Lester Dent essay near my desk that I use as a reference for when I’m writing. In it, Dent says:

FOURTH 1500 WORDS
1–Shovel the difficulties more thickly upon the hero.
2–Get the hero almost buried in his troubles. (Figuratively, the villain has him prisoner and has him framed for a murder rap; the girl is presumably dead, everything is lost, and the DIFFERENT murder method is about to dispose of the suffering protagonist.)
3–The hero extricates himself using HIS OWN SKILL, training or brawn.
4–The mysteries remaining–one big one held over to this point will help grip interest–are cleared up in course of final conflict as hero takes
the situation in hand.
5–Final twist, a big surprise, (This can be the villain turning out to be the unexpected person, having the “Treasure” be a dud, etc.)
6–The snapper, the punch line to end it.
HAS: The SUSPENSE held out to the last line?
The MENACE held out to the last?
Everything been explained?
It all happen logically?
Is the Punch Line enough to leave the reader with that WARM FEELING?
Did God kill the villain? Or the hero?

Before any of you doubts the words of Mr. Dent, let’s remember he created Doc Savage, the ultimate pulp hero.

If we take Dent’s path, and consider Drive a pulp, then we have to assume the Driver lives. He certainly sacrifices himself for the greater good, he proved that crime doesn’t pay (he didn’t even take any of the money…or did he?), and he drives off into the sunset…literally. So, which one is it? Pulp or noir? Does he live or does he die?

That’s the problem with open endings. I appreciate that the filmmaker wants to include the film viewer in on the storytelling, and say, “Well, what do you think happens?” but the reality is this; if this movie is a noir, it kind of fails (not entirely…just in the sense of the two questions I asked here). If it’s a pulp, then it makes sense. Then we can go back and say, “Oh, the Driver purposely failed in those heists because, subconsciously, he never wanted to be a getaway driver; he wanted to race cars and have a family.” I would like to think it’s a pulp, and it might even make me like the movie more…

But I don’t buy it. I now own a Blu-Ray that I’ll probably not watch again for months. Crud.

What do you think?

└ Tags: doc savage, drive, film noir, lester dent, movies, pulp fiction, ryan gosling
2 Comments

Buy #FCHS Volume 1! Now $5.00 Less!

by Vito Delsante on February 3, 2012 at 7:19 am
Posted In: Projects

The FCHS Gang. (L to R) Reilly, Jules Alisha, Hector, Dane, Marcy (front) Adele, Kennedy (top) art b

You can now by my original graphic novel, FCHS (Volume 1) for $9.99! There is absolutely no reason NOT to get it! For $5.01 less, you get:

  • Art by Rachel Freire
  • Semi-autobiographical story by me
  • Colored cover by Award winning colorist, Jose Villarrubia
  • Sex (full frontal female and male nudity!)
  • Football (’cause the season is almost over)
  • Alcohol (seriously, there’s like 5 parties in this book)
  • Fighting (mostly Kennedy kicking dudes’ asses)
  • After all that, do I have to explain that this is a Mature Audiences Book?*

Honestly, this book has EVERYTHING! Go to ComiXpress and order yours today!

As an added bonus, look at this poster Rachel did for the Criterion Edition of Modern Times:

Modern Times Poster for All Tomorrow’s Parties Criterion Collection by Rachel Freire

 

*However, I have no issue with giving it to a 16 or 17 year old. I even had a friend’s son read it and he said, “This is the most accurate portrayal of life here.”

└ Tags: adhouse books, comixpress, creator owned, fchs, rachel freire, vito delsante
1 Comment

Whatever Happened To…? (Aquarian 7)

by Vito Delsante on January 28, 2012 at 9:24 am
Posted In: Projects

Last year, I announced a new project called Aquarian 7. Not only did I announce it, but I said that it would debut in the Summer of 2011. That didn’t happen. In my yearly open letter, I revealed that original project artist, Eshwin Dhir, was unable to fully commit to the project. No hard feelings; I think Eshwin is a great guy and we both went in knowing that he had a full time job in the animation field. Regardless, I still wanted to do the book. In that same open letter, I announced that Sean Izaakse would be taking over the artistic reins of the book.

Sean is amazing, and we work really well together. Sean and I have been plotting out the second Stray mini series and it’s been nothing if not exciting. Sean, like Eshwin, has a great affinity for Aquaman, so I figured…if he’s interested, maybe he’d like to draw the A7? He was. He is.

I wanted to make sure that Sean was invested in the project fully, so I offered him the chance to come up with a team that was his, and not be tied to what came before (the concept behind A7 can also be found in that link, if you’re not familiar with it). With that, I wanted to present the first character that Sean has created for the Aquarian 7…BARRACUDA!

More to come!

└ Tags: aquaman, aquarian 7, character creation, characters, creator owned, eshwin dhir, eternal kick, Sean Izaakse, stray, vito delsante
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