Speaking For Zimself: A Conversation With Jhonen Vasquez

Martin "Dr. Toon" Goodman invades the mind of Jhonen Vasquez, the creator of Invader Zim, to discuss Zim, Jhonen's ideas and inspirations, and the ups and downs of producing his first animated series.

Dr. T: As a comic book artist of some renown yourself, talk about some of the artists working on the show. Who -- or what -- has really impressed you?

JV: The character designer, Aaron Alexovitch -- who we found right out of school. He was going to Cal Arts, or some nightmare place, and he took the chance to work on the show. He was going to school so that he could break into some kind of animation business, and he was given the opportunity to work on Zim. He took it, and he worked out. Originally he was going to be a clean-up artist and he's made his way up to head character designer now. I can completely trust in what he's going to do. His style is close enough to mine to where he can actually improve upon the look of the show at this point. That's what it's all about, getting better and better. The color crew is great; those people really pick up on how interesting the color schemes are. They are phenomenal in what they do, and in the amount of time they do it. They get a look out of the show that just makes it stand out. It's a dark but colorful look, like I love. They can reproduce it by this point without me telling them anything; they just do it. It's getting to that point where I can leave the building and not lose my mind over what hideous things are happening to my show. It's cool because these people, they love working on the show. Aside from all the nightmarish hours they put into it, you can tell that they actually enjoy it now, as opposed to just having a job.

Dr. T: Would you try this again, Jhonen? Do you see yourself working on a future animated series?

JV: I would have to shoot myself several times in the face to achieve a certain level of brain damage to agree to it again. Which I was planning on doing, but not to get back into animation. I was just going to shoot myself because I could use the rest! I don't want to get stuck working on children's animation, I don't think. Well, maybe I don't think of it as "stuck," but there are so many other ideas I want to work on that are limited by what I can do on a kids' show. I don't want to just have fun with a creepy kids' show, I want to work on something genuinely creepy. I definitely have to, because I have so many ideas I have to get out of my head before I'm dead -- which could be anytime now.

Dr. T: Did you watch cartoons as a kid? What kind of animation did you watch?

JV: The usual garbage you just can't help but like when you're little, like He-Man. I remember when watching He-Man I thought, "Wow, this is garbage!" because they had, you know, five drawings that they used every episode. Stuff that I really, really loved, I didn't find myself being amazed by. It was more just enjoying it in a sort of cartoon haze, a "sitting there, eating your cereal, watching cartoons" kind of level. There wasn't really any appreciation for how amazing the stuff was until I saw stuff like Akira. I always hated Scooby Doo. I couldn't stand how brown everything was! It was like staring at feces for half an hour. Euuh! I think there's a good thing about the fact that I didn't take a lot of this with me, love for these cartoons I saw while growing up, because I don't put a lot of that into what I do now. I don't derive a lot of inspiration from growing up with this stuff. There's a lot of stuff out there that looks like new episodes of a really old show to me. One or two shows, that's OK, but there are a lot of shows on the American side of things that are so retro, so tired-looking to me. It would be cool to see something done on this side that breaks away from that. There's been a cool response to (Invader Zim) just on that level alone, in that people dig the different look of it.

Dr. T: Jhonen, you give a great interview. Is there anything you have never said in an interview that you want to say now? Let it rip!

JV: Daily, I drink about a garbage bag of baby's blood. How's that?

Dr. T: Uh...please don't let Squee hear about it!

Jhonen Vasquez, 26, currently resides in Los Angeles where he plots future horrors from the dark sanctuary of his drawing table. His comic books have been nominated for several Eisner Awards, are produced by Slave Labor Graphics and are kept continually in print to the delight of fans old and new. Jhonen actually prefers Pillsbury crescent rolls to baby's blood, but you won't find him eating Scooby Snacks anytime soon.

Martin "Dr. Toon" Goodman is a longtime student and fan of animation. He lives in Anderson, Indiana.







Comments


yay! JHONEN V. is my god and slways will b!
mitch lucas (not verified) | Sat, 05/03/2003 - 00:00 | Permalink
i love Jhonen Vasquez!!!!!!! He ROCKS!!!!!!!!!!!!! it is my destiny in life to MEET Him!!!!!!!!
julia bussinger (not verified) | Wed, 04/16/2003 - 00:00 | Permalink
Jhonen, thank you for brightening my gloomy, arduous days with your brilliant and slightly sadistic humor which keeps me rolling on the floor in violent fits of laughter. You are my role model. Will you marry me? *meow* ^_^
kitty beck (not verified) | Fri, 04/11/2003 - 00:00 | Permalink
I love Jhonen yo! I think Invader ZIm and Jhonny the homocidal Maniac is pure eye candy! I will probly never get tired of them!!!
Invader Freak (not verified) | Fri, 02/28/2003 - 01:00 | Permalink
Might I just reitorate what everybody has said so far?... I love Jhonen Vasquez! When I first say "Invador Zim" I said to myself "What is this?" It was one of the best shows I ever saw. Not Just for the animation, but the writing was unique and damn funny. Then after I raved about this show, my friends told me about his book series. I though I was going to die. The library at my school actually had the "Big Wonderful Book of Unspeakible Horrors" collection. I read that thing from cover to cover. Then my friend lent me his JTHM series. I thought I was going to cry. I read all seven in one night, which I don't recomend when your trying to get to sleep and have school the next day, but lets not get into that (man I'm a dork!) Anyway, I really love his work and highly recomend it to everyone who is remotely interested in "Zim"
Alexia Staniotes (not verified) | Sun, 02/09/2003 - 01:00 | Permalink
things I still want answered.... is the way Zim speaks how jhonen envisioned any of his other characters to speak, or was that part of the job he had no influence over? in either case, I always imagined happy noodle boy to sound somewhat like zim does, with varying levels of wierd screams and garbled silliness. another thing I also want to say, is that his style is truly one of a kind, and he's going to find himself a pioneer of a whole new genre of animation and art style, what, with all of his rabid followers, trying desperately to draw in the style which they so adore. I'm not suprised, however, that he liked akira, or any anime for that matter. his characters are highly stretched out, skinny and have large eyes, not to mention are VERY stylized and sharp. Anime tends to bring that same flavor with it. I feel sorry for Vasquez, because he seems to not enjoy his goth fan base, yet that's the largest base he had before Zim came out. If I had a bunch of lunatic goth people sending me fan letters every day, I'd be inclined to cry profusely like a little baby. He takes it all with a grain of salt and a sense of humor. bravo to him.
Ivy Bekket (not verified) | Tue, 01/14/2003 - 01:00 | Permalink
scooby-doo looks like scooby-poo.
arlene schag (not verified) | Sat, 12/14/2002 - 01:00 | Permalink
I LOVE JHONEN VASQEZ.....I´M A FANATIK ...I CANT WRITE IN ENGLISH BECAUSE I´M SPEAK IN SPANISH.....BUT I LOVE HIM AND HE IS THE BEST!
Francisca Zincker (not verified) | Sat, 12/07/2002 - 01:00 | Permalink
jhonen should be world ruler.
austin lilland (not verified) | Thu, 11/28/2002 - 01:00 | Permalink
I LOVE U JHONEN!!!!!!!!!!!
Reena Loire (not verified) | Mon, 11/25/2002 - 01:00 | Permalink

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