Art: Rock Baker & Jeff Austin |
All Pulp: Tell us a little about yourself and your pulp interests.
Art: Rock Baker & Jeff Austin |
AP: You’re providing pencils for the Return of the Monsters Halloween event book, Domino Lady Vs. The Mummy. What can we expect from this titanic throw down?
Art: Rock Baker |
I also want to take a second and note that the key to making all this work is that I have Jeff Austin doing the inks. He has to be the best inker in the business, and I'm blessed to have him as a partner on this book!
AP: Domino Lady Vs. The Mummy has a pulp hero battling a classic monster, a combination that even though done in some regards hasn't ever really been done the way Moonstone is doing it with the Return of the Monster event. What do these genres have in common and how do they differ in ways that complement each other?
Art: Rock Baker & Jeff Austin |
Art: Rock Baker |
RB: Most obviously, this one is female, where most classic mummies are male. More importantly, she's smart. Most mummies in stories like this function as classic zombies, they shamble around and do the bidding of another. They're usually the foot soldier of a high priest. This mummy, on the other hand, is the brains of the operation. That's a fairly fresh take when one considers the more famous Lon Chaney-type mummies we've seen. (To be fair, Karloff's Im-ho-tep was such a creature, but again he was male.)
AP: What appeals to you about pulp heroes battling classic monsters? What was it that excited you about visually pitting the Domino Lady against a mummy?
Art: Rock Baker & Jeff Austin |
Drawing a female mummy was a nice challenge. I wanted to make her a powerful monster, as she is in the script, yet I also wanted her to not be too monstrous. In her time, I'm sure this woman was a very beautiful girl. That became my hook. She's got a nice figure, loaded down with jewelry, has plenty of poise and grace one might expect from Egyptian royalty. Mostly, she's aged around the eyes, where her supernatural power is focused. Between her supernatural ways and the embalming procedures developed by the ancient Egyptians, she should retain an echo of her former beauty.
AP: What, if any, existing pulp, monster, or comic book characters would you like to try your hand at drawing?
Return of the Monsters Covers By Dan Brereton |
Art: Rock Baker |
RB: He watches a lot of movies. Motion pictures have always been my main area of interest. My library currently contains 1900+ titles that I've collected or taped from television. I encourage people to donate their VHS tapes to me rather than just throw them out, which would be a waste. I once wrote and edited a monster magazine, among other things involving genre films.
AP: Where can readers learn more about you and your work?
RB: My blog can be found here: http://rock-baker.blogspot.com/ (I should be posting a lot of artwork there in addition to movie reviews.) I can also be found on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/bakercartoons
AP: Any upcoming projects you would like to mention?
RB: It's hard to keep track sometimes. I try to get an assignment finished as quickly as possible and move onto the next thing on the list. I sometimes forget what I've drawn until it suddenly comes out a few months later! This Moonstone project is one of the big ones, for sure, and I'm looking forward to seeing it in print! I'm also pretty happy about the continuing adventures of my own character Dinosaur Girl, in the pages of AC Comics!
AP: Thanks, Rock.
RB: Thank you very much! It has been an honor!
Domino Lady vs. the Mummy is solicited in August Previews for an October in store release.