Want a nice, frank conversation? Corner Greg Rucka and pick a subject. He is anything but restrained, speaking freely and constantly exuding the kind of creative flashpoint from which arises his fascinating array of benchmark characters.
“Batman Gotham Knight,” the third film in the ongoing series of DC Universe animated original PG-13 movies, 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.
Rucka will make the trek from his Portland, Oregon home to Wizard World Chicago this June to attend the world premiere of “Batman Gotham Knight” and participate on the post-premiere panel. With Rucka joining producer Bruce Timm and fellow BGK writers Alan Burnett and Brian Azzarello on the panel (and quite possibly a few yet-to-be-announced special guests), it promises to be an extremely entertaining evening.
Rucka has already built an astonishing career, complete with his share of Eisner Awards for works like “Whiteout: Melt” and “Gotham Central: Half a Life.” His characters, most notably bodyguard Atticus Kodiak and “Queen & Country” series protagonist Tara Chace, have drawn a legion of fans into his literary wake. He’s written for some of DC Comics’ best-known characters, including Superman and Wonder Woman. Inspired by his graphic novel of the same name, “Whiteout” will come to theaters as a major motion picture later this fall with Kate Beckinsale in the lead role.
But Batman is the subject today – and Rucka is happy to share his thoughts. For his segment, entitled “Crossfire,” Rucka brings to animated life the detectives familiar to fans of his “Gotham Central” comics – highlighted by the starring role of Crispus Allen. In the segment, which is the second chapter of the six-part film, the Gotham City police don’t trust the mysterious Dark Knight – until they get a first-hand experience of his power and integrity while both detectives and super hero are under fire.
If you want to read a great Greg Rucka biography, or two, go to his website –
www.gregrucka.com. It’s worth the trip. What you won’t read there is the following Q&A... and if you like that, there’s even more interesting information, images, shout-outs and a brand new widget at the film’s official website:
www.BATMANGOTHAMKNIGHT.com...
Question:
As this is your first time writing for animation, how did you feel about the translation of your words to the screen?
Greg Rucka answers:
It was dynamite, especially the final sequences of my segment. It was almost exactly what I was going for. What was really cool was to hear Kevin Conroy say stuff that I typed. I’ve written some screen stuff before, but I haven’t written Batman for the screen before. That’s cool on one level. But I love those Alan Burnett-Bruce Timm-Paul Dini animated series – I thought it was revolutionary – and Kevin was central to that.
Question:
As this film is produced in an anime-style, does the look of your segment come close to the way you envisioned that world?
Greg Rucka answers:
I try not to set my expectations to high or have any preconceived notions, because everything has to go through so many hands of creation. “Batman Begins” did such a great job of building Gotham that that was the Gotham that I was writing. In that sense, it is the city as I imagined it.
My biggest gripe is the pacing of the dialogue – I think I heard everything a lot crisper in my head. Like during this one conversation between the two main cops, I was trying to achieve the unique relationship between partners, and the familiarity that comes when they spend hours at a time talking in their car. Instead it was very heavy and argumentative.
But the flipside is that I really like the segment, and the film itself is brilliantly done. In a way, this is just like writing a comic in that it’s an entirely collaborative process. But trying to always be open to that collaboration and what it’s going to bring is a hard part of the job.
Question:
Were there any particular visuals that struck you within your segment?
Greg Rucka answers:
The image of Batman coming through flaming wreckage was pretty much exactly as I wanted it. I really was trying to get the psychological impact of seeing this man, who maybe isn’t a man if you don’t know, coming through the flames – literally a walking, talking, burning bush, standing and staring the villain down. If somebody was staring me down from the middle of flames, they could have anything they want. I think the animators executed that really well.
I also really like this moment when you’re in the squad room and you see the Batman silhouette through the dusted glass – because that was an image that I clearly had in my mind when I wrote it. You see what the detectives are seeing – not the Batman, but a shadow of the Batman. That visually goes to the trust issues.
Question:
Was there anything you definitely wanted to incorporate into your segment?
Greg Rucka answers:
I wanted that revolutionary moment for Crispus Allen, that moment of understanding of exactly what Batman is in the context of Gotham. I won’t give away any spoilers, but in that moment, that came across really well, too.
Ultimately, getting to use Cris was just great. And it was especially neat seeing Cris get picked up in some of the other pieces I didn’t write. In my 10 years of working for DC, there aren’t a whole slew of characters that I created that have been given legs and moved into the wider world. So just seeing Cris in three other segments was kind of a hoot.
Question:
How were you approached and what made you say yes?
Greg Rucka answers:
It was pretty much a no-brainer for me. It’s Batman, it’s animated … if you’ve gotten to write Batman before, then you know – it’s a thrill. It’s really, really fun. Plus, I was asked to bring that Gotham Central segment to this film, and that appealed to me on so many levels – particularly to my ego, in the sense that I love that element in that universe.
That approach really gives the everyman element – the view from the street. Most of the time in comics, and even in animation, we’re with the guy in the suit. And you forget what that guy in the suit looks like to everyone else.
Question:
How was the writing process for an animated film different than for comics?
Greg Rucka answers:
When you script comics, you can’t script action – you can only script a moment of action. Writing for film or television or animation or live-action changes that. You can write a sentence that says “running across the road” and they’ll actually run across the road. That’s the most obvious mechanical element. When you write a comic strip, I tend to be very controlling of what the camera is doing. When you’re writing for film, whatever the format, that’s not really your job. That’s the director’s job. So it becomes a task of conveying what information has to be seen – what the viewer must know – and hopefully the director gets it.
Question:
What were you setting out to accomplish in your segment in terms of balancing the theme of trust with all the action?
Greg Rucka answers:
The action element is easier to accomplish because you know there’s going to be a gun battle – I described some specifics, but I’m not going to script out the action beat by beat by beat. That would take 40 pages for 20 seconds of screen time. But the trust issue influences the writing at every level. My overriding thought was this: Gotham has no t