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Brian
Azzarello Gets Animated
100 Bullets writer
takes on Batman: Gotham Knight
One of the most sought-after writers in comics today,
Brian Azzarello is one of the six acclaimed scribes to pen
a segment within “Batman Gotham Knight,” the third
in the ongoing series of DC Universe animated original PG-13
movies.
Unlike many of his past works, Azzarello’s
segment – entitled “Working Though Pain”
– takes a decidedly non-violent direction. The segment,
which falls chronologically as the fifth of the six segments,
explores an early chapter of Bruce Wayne’s training
as a mysterious and exotic Indian woman named Cassandra
introduces Batman to techniques that would help him to conquer
the physical and spiritual consequences of what he does.
Azzarello achieved widespread notoriety
– and garnered multiple Eisner Awards – for
“100 Bullets,” a collaboration with artist Eduardo
Risso which was published by Vertigo for DC Comics. He has
continually broken new ground with offerings like Vertigo’s
“Jonny Double,” “Hellblazer” and
“Loveless” series. Azzarello is no stranger
to Batman, having written for the character in “Broken
City,” “Batman/Deathblow: After the Fire,”
within the “Batman Gotham Knights” series and
in “Lex Luthor: Man of Steel.”
A Chicago resident, Azzarello will travel
across town to join fellow “Batman Gotham Knight”
writers Alan Burnett and Josh Olson, along with producer Bruce
Timm, for the film’s world premiere at Wizard World
Chicago in late June. "Batman Gotham Knight" will
arrive July 8, 2008 on DVD and Blu-Ray disc, and will also
be available that day On Demand via digital cable and for
download through broadband sites. The film is produced as
a collaboration between DC Comics, Warner Premiere, Warner
Home Video and Warner Bros. Animation.
Azzarello took time away from his Mac
Power Book to discuss “Batman Gotham Knight,”
the character of Batman, the motivations of a writer, and
a little cooking, too.
Gary Miereanu: For
starters, what was your overall impression of “Batman
Gotham Knight,” and were you pleased with your segment?
Brian Azzarello: I liked
the film – it’s a very interesting take on the
Batman character. It holds together cohesively, yet each
episode is strikingly different. And I loved (my segment)
– it’s great. I really liked the animation.
It was fascinating seeing my words moving around. When I
write, I see it in print – I don’t see it moving.
So it was fun and it was a good experience.
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| This
kind of looks like Christian Bale in Empire
of the Sun... |
Gary
Miereanu: How
did you find the translation from your written page to the
vision of the Japanese director and artists?
Brian Azzarello: I was
surprised how seamless the translation was. I definitely
got what I wrote. The hospital scene is almost exactly the
way I thought of it, while the fight scenes – that’s
where the animators really put their “wow” into
it. But I expected that. Usually that’s where the
animators just go crazy.
Gary
Miereanu: Were
there any particular visuals that struck you within your
segment?
Brian Azzarello: Seeing
wounded Batman – now that struck me. I enjoy wounded
Batman. It humanizes him. It showed a true physical struggle,
and that’s something you can relate to. And the character
Cassandra was a bit hotter than I thought she’d be
… but that’s okay.
Gary
Miereanu: When
you’re writing for comics – and now for animation
– do you put fairly detailed direction between the
dialogue, or is it more of a collaborative process for you
and the artist/animator?
Brian Azzarello: I wrote
the script and then I handed it off, and that’s pretty
much the same relationship I have in comics. I really trust
my collaborators, and I try to leave them plenty of room
so they can bring their strengths to the work. I think that
happened in this film, and definitely for my segment –
the animation is just amazing. Really amazing.
I have more of an affinity for the stage
than I do for the screen, so I’m very conscious of
the dialogue. And because I’ve always worked with
collaborators, I tend to leave the visuals up to them –
on purpose. It’s my belief that if I get the dialogue
right, and the artist understands what motivates the characters
and what they’re saying, then the visuals will come.
Gary
Miereanu: You’re
fairly particular about the projects you accept. How’d
you get involved with this film, and what made you say yes?
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| Bruce
Wayne or Brent Sienna? |
Brian Azzarello: Gregory
Noveck of DC Comics talked to my agent, then I had a conference
call to discuss the story. They explained the film to me
in broad strokes, and asked me to come up with an idea.
I chose to focus more on Bruce Wayne, and they liked my
pitch.
As always happens, they needed the script
yesterday, and I was I was on my way to Europe at the time.
All I can tell you is that the hotel room in Barcelona was
pretty nice, but I can’t tell you much about the city.
Gary
Miereanu: You
were quoted in a UGO article as saying “Hollywood
is nowhere I aspire to be” … and yet, here you
are. What happened?
Brian Azzarello: Well,
the production may be in Hollywood, but I’m in Chicago
– and I’m going to stay here. Is that semantics?
I’m not sure. I enjoy doing the work, and I really
liked writing for this project – I’d like to
do it again. And I know there are people that would kill
to work in Hollywood. I’m just not one of those people.
I’ll do it, I have done it, but the
project has to be right. I’ve been asked to write
a lot of things that I’ve declined mainly because
the projects didn’t interest me. If I were just writing
to pull a paycheck, there’s a lot of other things
I could be doing.
Gary
Miereanu: What’s
your motivation for writing?
Brian Azzarello: If I have
a story, if I have something to say, that’s my motivation.
For this film, I had something to say about Bruce Wayne
as a character, what his motivations are. That there’s
something dark and wrong about what drives him. Batman is
a super hero and he does good. But I think the Bruce Wayne
part of the character’s motivation is slightly twisted.
Bruce’s motivations don’t come
from a good place. He’s angry and, in that revenge
is really his goal, he’s a dishonest character. That’s
why he has to wear a mask. He’s doing good, but he’s
not doing all the right things for all the right reasons.
That plays into this story. It should be
a story about non-violence, but that’s the lesson
that Bruce doesn’t learn. On the surface, Bruce is
on a spiritual journey, but his spirit was corrupted when
his parents were killed. And it’s not something that
I think he’s even interested in fixing.
Gary
Miereanu: How
much research was involved in scripting a story set in India
that focuses on the mind-over-matter theme of conquering
your pain from within?
Brian Azzarello: I spent
a lot of time surfing (the Internet) – it’s
a wonder how we all have libraries at our fingerprints these
days. I needed to do research on India, and I gathered a
lot of information on pain management. What I learned is
that a lot of pain management practitioners are con men.
Gary
Miereanu: You’ve
had some notable experience working on Batman – can
you compare the differences in working on this Batman tale
vs. “Batman/Deathblow: After the Fire” and “Broken
City” or the “Batman: Gotham Knights”
comics?
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| You've
got to keep your center in Hollywood... |
Brian Azzarello: Every
time I approach Batman, I like to come from a different
angle. In Deathblow, I saw him as a James Bond-type but
on an urban level. For Broken City, he was the bitter private
eye. On this project, I guess he’s lying to himself.
He’s not intentionally conning Cassandra, but he does
ultimately con her. He wants to learn what she knows, but
he doesn’t want to know it for the reasons she teaches
it. She finally figures out that he’s doing it for
the wrong reason, but it isn’t until the end –
and it’s not until then that even he understands that
he’s been lying to himself.
Gary
Miereanu: What
are you reading these days?
Brian Azzarello: I have
a stack of books – The Crime Writer by Gregg Hurwitz;
one of Jason Starr’s novels; and then I’ve got
Mario Batali’s Italian Grill cookbook. I actually
read a lot of cookbooks – I grew up around cooking,
and cooking really relaxes me. Nine times out of 10, I’m
cooking something Italian, but the weather is turning, so
my grill has been fired up a lot lately. I love barbeque
– it’s great to cook something for 8-10 hours.
That’s such an American way of cooking, but I try
to bring a lot of Mediterranean influences into that.
Gary
Miereanu: So
if you could hand-pick your next achievement, what would
it be – win another Eisner, write the next Batman,
or have your own show on Food Network?
Brian
Azzarello: Well, having my own cooking show sounds
like no work at all. Winning another Eisner would be nice.
But
I think I’d have to pick writing the next Batman –
that would be the biggest challenge for me. As a freelancer,
if you’re not challenging yourself, nobody is. Every
day I have to paint myself into a corner and then write
my way out of it.
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