Chris Batista’s Character Sketches for LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN

Landing in comic book stores today and in bookstores everywhere on Tuesday, LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN collects all six issues of the fan-favorite miniseries by writer Paul Levitz (LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES; WORLDS’ FINEST) and artists Chris Batista (Thunderbolts) and Marc Deering (SUPERGIRL).

 

In LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN, learn why the United Planets was formed, who tried to kill R.J. Brande the first time, what great power could leave entire planets desolate and lifeless, and more!

 

A must-have addition to the bookshelf of all LEGION fans, this special paperback collection also includes six pages of Batista’s character sketches. Below, take a first look at these designs and see how this 30th and 31st centuries superhero team looked the first time they came together to defend planetary colonies!

 

Exclusive Preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #6

For the past six months, fans of the Legionairres have seen the team form and develop in the explosive LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN. Today, the miniseries comes to an end and we here at THE SOURCE chatted to its creative team about what it’s been like working on this title and its lasting implications for the Legionairres.

 

“It's been great fun to explore the Legion's beginnings with a new look and new revelations,” writer Paul Levitz told THE SOURCE. “With Chris and Marc's energy, and the combination of new characters and new elements, we've planted bits that will be back in the Legion for years to come!”

 

“It's always a pleasure to return to the Legion,” said co-artist Chris Batista. “Let's hope we get to do this dance again! I hope you all enjoy what we put together.”

 

“Being fairly new to the Legion of Superheroes, I was really most excited to be working with Chris Batista and Paul Levitz,” continued co-artist Marc Deering. “Chris is able to catch some really great acting with his facial features and body language. I loved getting the real emotional story across through the characters acting that Chris brought to every page. Working with those kinds of really confident lines was a dream for me. Then bringing my A-game to the mix was essential. This was a great foray into the Legion for me being aided and guided by two of the Legion’s most enduring creators. Let's do this again!”

 

Click here to see an exclusive preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #6, on sale today.

Exclusive Preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #5

Last we saw the Legionnaires, they decided that they needed to recruit the help of Superman to help defeat the evil attacking their homeworlds. In LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #5, the team finds themselves in the midst of war. And as if that wasn’t enough, they become frozen in both space and time. Will they be able to defeat the alien forces trapping them in time to find out for themselves if the legends about the Man of Steel are true? Or will the Legionnaires be doomed for good? On sale next Wednesday, don’t miss the penultimate issue of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN, written by Paul Levitz and featuring art by Chris Batista and Marc Deering. [gallery link="file" order="DESC" columns="2"]

Exclusive preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #4

The Legion continues to form as new members join the team. But will the addition of these new faces be enough to stop an army of marauding machines? And when the Legion is given a new mission, which member of the Justice League will they turn to for help?

LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #4 comes to you from the creative team of Paul Levitz, Chris Batista and Marc Deering, and arrives in stores next Wednesday.

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Exclusive Preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #3

Time is running out for the Legionnaires to save the border worlds of the United Planets from an unknown alien menace. But to what extremes will a team that is so young need to go in order to stand a fighting chance against such a grave threat?

LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #3, in stores on Wednesday, is written by industry legend Paul Levitz and is illustrated by Chris Batista & Marc Deering.

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Exclusive Preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #2

If each of the Legionnaires come from planets where all species have powers just like theirs, what are their distinguishing factors? In LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #2, fan-favorite creative team Paul Levitz, Chris Batista and Marc Deering explore what makes the Legionnaires stand out amongst the other super-powered members of their respective races.

When a businessman is targeted by an assassin, it’ll be up to a group of teenangers, all from different worlds, to come together to rescue him. But can they save R.J. Brande before it’s too late? And with the threat of dark premonitions turning into reality, can the United Planets rely on this new army of teenagers to be their last shot at survival?

LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #2 is in stores on Wednesday.

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From The Editor’s Desk: Kwanza Johnson on LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN

My background is in online and digital media, which folks are saying is the future of comic books. So perhaps my evangelization of new technology (i.e. not evil fax machines; bane of my existence), apprehension to papercuts and healthy diet of Millennial broadcastings are why I was assigned to edit LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN, a space saga that takes place in the 31st century of the DC Universe.

Note that I wrote space saga.

Despite the title LEGION often being followed by “of Super-Heroes” (always with a hyphen), this series has long been a galactic odyssey with a tapestry as vast as many other beloved sci-fi series. Looking at DC COMICS-THE NEW 52, it is clear that the line has diversified to embrace a number of other genres, but the LEGION have always been ahead of their time (pun intended) because in the future, puns are cool… unlike the word “cool,” which by three thousand--*cough cough cough*-- is insanely dated.

What is not dated is the killer squad of talent that I have the pleasure of working with on the series; grand maestro of all Legion lore, Paul Levitz, two of my all-time favorite artists, Chris Batista and Marc Deering, who should draw everything involving lasers, rounded out by our hombre of hues, Wes Hartman.

I am sure you’re thinking, why isn’t this jerk writing about the sprocking story? Uhm… “SECRET ORIGIN?” You may think you know how The Legion began but DC flipped the table back in August and it is still spinning in the air by the 31st century. I know because there is an app for seeing the future on my iPhone. It’s called iSee… Stuff and you can’t download it because in the future no one “downloads.”

But since I have wasted your time, on the Internet, where no one wastes time, like never, how about a look at some pages from Issue 2, where a lot of cool futurery (totally a word in the future) cool stuff happens and you can go, “Wow! Look at all those future teens with powers and future!”

[gallery link="file" order="DESC" columns="5"]Okay, one more sneaky bit of info; since each of the Legionnaires come from a planet where all their species have powers like theirs, what exactly makes them so special?

Ah?! Aaaah?! Find out by reading more LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN, the first issue of which hits stores tomorrow.

Exclusive Preview of LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN #1

Who attempted to assassinate R.J. Brande?

What threat brought together the United Planets?

What led to the creation of the Legion of Super Heroes?

In the new 6-issue miniseries, LEGION: SECRET ORIGIN, industry legend and LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES writer Paul Levitz and artists Chris Batista and Marc Deering answer these questions--and more.

The series, in stores next week, brings new insight into the world of the DC COMICS-THE NEW 52 in the 31st Century. Here's the very first look at the series.

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ChrisCross and Marc Deering kick off Artist Spotlight Series on THE SOURCE

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A baseball game has nine innings. Catwoman has nine lives. Here on THE SOURCE, we’ve got nine art teams we’ll be focusing on over the course of the next week. We’ll be in conversation with various artists – pencilers, colorists, and inkers - and editors to shed spotlight on nine samples of art. Needless to say, comic books are a visual medium, and we here at THE SOURCE like to pay extra attention to those artists who bring our stories to life.

Why nine? Obviously there are far more styles of comic book art, but nine is just the nice, magical number we decided on. The artists we’ll be spotlighting run the gamut from superhero artists like Brett Booth or ChrisCross and Marc Deering (whom we’ll be leading off with today), to genre artists like Moritat, to the cartoonists of children’s titles like Art Baltazar and Franco.

ChrisCross and Marc Deering have formed a dynamic pencils/inks team, as evidenced in the above spread from the upcoming issue of SUPERMAN/BATMAN with writer Cullen Bunn.

Up next for those two after this arc of SUPERMAN/BATMAN? A stint on SUPERGIRL, joining writer Kelly Sue DeConnick with issue #65. ChrisCross and Deering's next issue of SUPERMAN/BATMAN is #83, and hits stores next week.

sb8305inkspencilsWe asked the duo to talk a little bit about what it’s been like for them collaborating on these titles and to give us a backstage tour of how they take the script pages and turn them into the final art you see in their books. Click on the jump to read what they had to say:

“For my part, this has been an awesome opportunity,” Marc Deering said. “ChrisCross is a phenomenal artist and it's been a pleasure to ink him. I try to bring a slick, clean look to everything Cross draws as well as adding all the textures that an epic story like this asks for. It's been a blast!”

“You never know how a story is going to go and how one should tackle it until you read it,” ChrisCross told us. As for his artistic process?

“My method usually goes: editor gives me the script, and I go automatically to the heading to see if the writer put their personal info up on the top of the front page of the script. I read the script ‘cover to cover’ 2 to 3 times so I can memorize all I need to know so that I can dream on the story a bit.

Then I call up the writer and talk with them. And most time's not even about the script. Just to hear them. Get their views, their humor, their lifestyle. SO I can mimic them. Get in their minds. Their heads. I spend an inordinate amount of time collecting tons of reference. Either from the editors themselves or the writers, but mostly from books I have or the web. Or taking pics from outdoors. Take a trip. Take a pic. By either my phone camera or an actual factual, 'hood way of saying, ‘the real deal.’

I start thumbnailing the pages. 2 to 5 pages at a time to get the rhythm and to figure how many moves are in one panel in word form so I can make decisions. Add more panels, or take away panels and/or combine. Ad-lib some panels to make things more natural as far as flow ...

sb8312inkspencilsThen I get into the actual drawing. I blue-line and then I pencil. After each page, I scan at 400 dpi and import into Photoshop. I clean up the page to the best of my ability (I can be messy on a page) and switch it to grayscale. Then to duotone, which gives me many options as to which type of blue I’m going to turn the gray and black lines. Once converted to blue-line, I switch to RGB mode, which now allows me to "stroke" borders in black on top of the blue in layers. I don't ink borders anymore and neither do the inkers I work with. They thank me heavily.

I add in many layers and many sfx that will tell the story. It could be clouds, trees, leaves, cracks in pavement, explosions, tornadoes, speedlines, energy signatures, Kirby Bubbles...even 3D rigged cities and photographs altered by various other programs at my disposal (including Photoshop)... whatever it takes to make it seem flawlessly hand-drawn when it gets inked, colored and printed. After I apply my PS techniques, I collapse the layer and turn it that background layer into a "0" layer. By this time, I have already set up background bordering that will fill the gutters between panels that will accent or spiritually mood the story. You won't notice it on purpose, but your mind has already accepted it as information. I do tons of graphics that will go behind panels. Art you'll never see in one image. But it's there. Once I fill those areas and add whited borders to separate the panels from the background art in the gutters, I finally collapse the page and name it for the file folders, which I hold on to until the job is over.

I then make small grayscaled jpegs of the images for the inker, the editor and the colorist. For the inker, so he can see what he couldn’t in the blue-line on the page he's inking. For the editor, to give he/she the virtual idea of what it will look like when it's finished in black and white. And to the colorist for color notes, which I will work on again in Photoshop with notes (purely digitally) so that the colorist knows what I'm going for – yet not encumber their abilities. That's a fine line. Colorists and inkers can make you or break you. So you have to treat them right. :)

I put the blue-line TIFF files on the DC FTP server or the inkers personal server, or even mine, where they'll be able to print the blue-lined and black and white images on paper from their own printer – thus saving on courier costs.

And then it starts all over again the next day until it's all done by, GOD HELP ME .... DEADLINE!

All that production goes into a page so that the reader can enjoy something from me that will be of singular experience to that of any other artist. Storytelling, graphics, draftsmanship, special fx. Even cinematography. I take a ton of pics that in some way will find itself in those pages. I wanted SUPERMAN/BATMAN #81-84 to feel like a great cartoon or a cool DVD the reader had just picked up and could had the time of their life with. And that's what I had on those four books. And having a great team with me... Marc Deering, Brad Anderson and Cullen Bunn didn't hurt one bit. I wanna do it again with Supes and Bats soon!”

It's Superman with a sword.

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Batman's well-known for his near-endless supply of weapons and gadgets. Superman, on the other hand - he's generally weapon-free. Granted, any weapon probably pales in comparison to Superman's natural powers, but I can't help but getting excited over seeing him let loose with a broadsword every now and then...

... Especially when he's fighting off an army of Solomon Grundies, as he is on this cover for SUPERMAN/BATMAN #82 by Travel Foreman, on sale in March.

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