Monday, July 20, 2020

Abrams to Release 'The Art of Invader Zim' Book on Tuesday, July 28, 2020

After a delay, Abrams Books is set to release The Art of Invader Zim, a brand new book which will take fans behind-the-scenes of Nickelodeon's cult-favorite animated series, on Tuesday, July 28, 2020!


THE ART OF INVADER ZIM
By Chris McDonnell | Foreword by Rebecca Sugar

The official behind-the-scenes guide to Nickelodeon’s cult-classic animated series and Enter the Florpus

Created by indie comics artist Jhonen Vasquez, Invader Zim tells the story of extraterrestrial outcast Zim, from the planet Irk. With the assistance of his malfunctioning robot GIR, Zim repeatedly tries (and fails) to execute his dastardly plan to conquer Earth, all while masquerading as an average elementary school student.

The Art of Invader Zim is the definitive history of both the fan-favorite series and Enter the Florpus. A fully authorized, all-access compendium of never-before-published production art, storyboards, behind-the-scenes photos, and ephemera, the book will feature exclusive, interviews with Vasquez and other key crewmembers that reveal the origins, art, and imagination behind one of Nickelodeon’s most beloved turn-of-the-millennium series.


Imprint: Abrams Books
Publication Date: July 28, 2020
Price: $35.00
Trim Size: 10 x 9
Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds
ISBN: 978-1-4197-3460-1
EAN: 9781419734601
Page Count: 240
Format: Hardcover
Rights: World/All

The Art of Invader Zim is available for pre-order now on abramsbooks.com and at Amazon.com.

The Art of Invader Zim was originally slated for release in September 2019 (as DOOM DOOM DOOM: The Art of Invader Zim), but was pushed back until now.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chris McDonnell has served as author and designer for Adventure Time: The Art of Ooo, Steven Universe: Art & Origins, and BoJack Horseman: The Art Before the Horse. McDonnell also designed books on Ralph Bakshi, Wonder Woman, and more. He lives in Philadelphia.

From SYFY WIRE:

THE ART OF INVADER ZIM PROBES UNMADE EPISODES FOR THE TAQUITO-LOVING NICK SERIES


Credit: Nickelodeon

Why was there bacon in the soap?! SYFY WIRE has your exclusive first look at The Art of Invader Zim, hot off the Irken presses. Going on sale from Abrams Books later this month, it's a comprehensive (and DOOM!-filled) history of one of the strangest cartoons Nickelodeon ever greenlit.

Traveling to the network's animation studio in Burbank, California, author Chris McDonnell (BoJack Horseman: The Art Before the Horse) was given the job of covering the show's two seasons, as well as its recent Netflix film, Enter the Florpus.

"This was a unique project, in that the show was close to 20-years-old when I started producing this book," McDonnell tells SYFY WIRE. "They have archives at Nickelodeon Animation and some kind people working there. They have a director of the archives and people there assisting. They carted out boxes and boxes, gave me a little area to dig, and I went for it. "Then the rest of my days were archive research interspersed with in-person interviews with artists, who were on the series and also on the new made-for-TV movie."


Credit: Abrams Books//Nickelodeon


Credit: Abrams Books//Nickelodeon

Each chapter is packed with goodies like concept art, character breakdowns, episode directories, and insights from series creator Jhonen Vasquez.

"I was able to spend multiple interviews, with Jhonen and one of the most fun parts was just letting the phone record and have him, and maybe one or two of his fellow artists, just reminiscing about their time on the series," McDonnell recounts. "I was able to add a question here or there to move along with the interview, but they were largely able to just laugh and reminisce about the production and how wild and difficult it was."

As an added bonus, the book explores episode ideas that were never fully realized due to the show's premature cancellation in 2002. Below, you can check out some character designs for an unmade episode called "The Trial," which would have found Zim (voiced by Richard Horvitz) on the verge of being erased from existence. Ironically, that description sounds like an analogy for the series itself being cut short before its time.

"Jhonen shares some of his thoughts here and there about how Zim never really felt like it fit in and how it was always a surprise that they were allowed to go on and exist for as long as they did," McDonnell says.


Credit: Abrams Books/Nickelodeon

To prepare for writing the book, McDonnell watched all 27 episodes of Zim (plus the pilot and movie), taking high-res screenshots along the way.

"It was a cruel irony that the show was broadcast in standard definition," he adds. "It’s really exciting to see this artwork blown up on the page for fans to pore over. All the tubes, all the Irken technology, all the ridiculous contraptions and disgusting, part machine, part spinal column, part pulsating brain sack. Every page has something really fascinating to look at if you are an artist. And if you’re a fan of Zim, all the better, because you get to see the artwork in a clarity that you never did when it was in standard definition."

The premise of a bumbling alien trying to conquer Earth with his insane, taquito-munching robot companion, GIR (Rikki Simons), is an inherently funny one. But in the hands of Vasquez and his team of fellow artists/animators, it became a veritable breeding ground for grotesquely jarring imagery with roots in "horror films, science fiction, and bizarre thinking about the near future, being that it was the early days of the internet," McDonnell reveals.


Credit: Abrams Books/Nickelodeon


Credit: Abrams Books/Nickelodeon

What really struck McDonnell as memorable during the research process was how interviewees would recall a certain sense of "swagger that they were on this cool show that was doing things differently." That was due to the fact that "they were given a unique amount of artistic freedom," even if it was within a certain set of network parameters.

"They were working really hard to make this show look the way it looks on a TV budget and schedule," he says. "The result was that the show has an incredible amount of visual flavor to it. If you analyze an episode, you’ll see how many different dynamic shots there are. One after another, they don’t reuse similar angles and shots often. It’s actually kind of going against the recommended process on television animation because anytime you can reuse a setup and an angle, you’re saving time and effort … There's just an evident bravado that was across the board on the team; just an exuberance they put into everything on the show."


Here are some storyboards of Dib (Andy Berman) from the pilot. The son of the eccentric Professor Membrane (Rodger Bumpass), Dib constantly tries to prove to the world that his bizarre classmate, Zim, is an alien.


Credit: Abrams Books/Nickelodeon


Credit: Abrams Books/Nickelodeon

Netflix revival Enter the Florpus (released last August) was still being made while the art book was coming together, but McDonnell did get to speak with key members of production like art director Jenny Goldberg, supervising producer Breehn Burns, storyboard director Jake Wyatt, and producers Joann Estoesta and Angela Leung.

"The artists share their approach to extending this short format cast of characters that are ideal for just short episodes," he explains. "How do [you] extrapolate that into a feature film? Especially characters who are resistant to having character arcs or development or emotional range? They talk about their theories on how they approached that, which is pretty interesting."


Credit: Abrams Books

Despite a 17-year gap between cancellation and the Netflix premiere, Enter the Florpus proved that Invader Zim was still popular with fans; case in point: the movie holds a rare 100 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. Nick has yet to announce any future plans for the IP, but if it does, Vasquez will be ready, a fact that is optimistically reflected in the book.

"The book does end on a somewhat hopeful note that Jhonen is full of stories. [Him] generally describing his insatiable creation," McDonnell teases. "As long as Jhonen is around spewing these ideas, there’s always gonna be Zim in one form or another. It’s really open-ended."

Featuring a foreword written by Steven Universe creator Rebecca Sugar, The Art of Invader Zim goes on sale Tuesday, July 28. You can pre-order a copy here.

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From Nerdist:

Get an Exclusive Look Inside THE ART OF INVADER ZIM

Audiences fell in love with Invader Zim when the animated series debuted on Nickelodeon back in 2001. Jhonen Vasquez created the sci-fi show featuring an alien named Zim who came to Earth intending to conquer the human race. Nickelodeon canceled Invader Zim part of the way through season two, but even though the series contains relatively few episodes, it achieved cult status. Fans supported the critically acclaimed cartoon long after it went off the air. And now those fans get a treat with The Art of Invader Zim by Chris McDonnell.

The Art of Invader Zim serves as an oral and visual history for the short-lived, yet beloved, show. It was a weird and terrific series, and it’s a treat to go behind the scenes for a plethora of material that’s never been published before. Production art, storyboards, photos, ephemera—readers will find it all. The book covers the original series and the 2019 Netflix original Invader Zim: Enter the Florpus. Readers will also enjoy interviews with cast and crew from Invader Zim.

The book isn’t out quite yet, but you can get a peek at what’s ahead now. Nerdist is pleased to share six exclusive spreads from The Art of Invader Zim. This tease only makes us crave more, and we think you’ll have the same reaction.


A key animation drawing from the [pilot] episode with notes on the movement.


Gir turnarounds, expressions, a model sheet, and various special pose models and stills.


Monsters from the previous spread and more are named on the Halloween Monster Name Quick Reference sheet above, a fascinating production artifact unto itself from the episode “Halloween Spectacular of Spooky Doom”


Kyle Menke created the above three action maps for the episodes “Dark Harvest” (EP4B), “Walk of Doom” (EP3B), and “NanoZim” (EP2B) Kyle Menke [storyboard artist]: “I drew these before I would storyboard an action sequence. They helped me to plot out the beats and understand the environment as well as figure out the best camera angles. I would also show these to Steve [Ressel] and Jhonen before I did my thumbnails to see if they had any additional ideas or gags.”

The Art of Invader Zim will be available wherever you buy books on July 28, 2020. You can pre-order it now.

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More Nick: 'Invader Zim' Scripts Get The Medium-Sized Book Treatment!

Originally published: Monday, May 25, 2020.
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