Description
You are purchasing the item pictured, framed. Priority mail, tracking and $50 insurance is included with purchase. Item will be bagged to protect from dust, packed in packing peanuts and boxed. Just open box and hang it on the wall…makes a perfect gift!
Master painter Glenn Fabry had already been creating Hellblazer covers for two-and-a-half years, racking up a 1995 Eisner Award for Best Cover Artist, when he lent his talents to the covers of Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon’s new Vertigo title, a violent supernatural-themed, postmodern Western called Preacher. Such outre subject matter being right up Fabry’s street, he would up painting the cover for every regular and spin-off issue of the series from 1995 to its 2000 conclusion. Fabry’s cover for the first issue sets the tone, with possessed man of God Jesse Custer looming over the burning ruins of his small-town Texas church, hands clasped in prayer, flashing what Ennis called his “last-man-on-Earth-you-wanna-fuck-with smile.” Fabry’s gift for mining beauty out of the grotesque would be put to good use on many subsequent Preacher covers. “Fabry is a sick, sick genius and I thank God for his work every time I see it.” – Joe Kelly. “I had this theory about painting at the time, that I’d keep on improving for six or seven months then hit a kind of plateau, and then more improvements would start occurring and my artwork would gradually spiral upwards after another six months, and so on. I thought that this one would be one of many new pieces that I would be happy with, since the last five or six Hellblazers were a bit stale. It didn’t actually work out like that- after this it was like, one good one, one crap one for a while. I still put in all the effort I could on every piece, but the end results were variable. I think I was suffering from creative burnout, a sort of visual writer’s block.”- Glenn Fabry. Preacher is a comic book series created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon, published by the American comic book label Vertigo (an imprint of DC Comics), with painted covers by Glenn Fabry. The series consists of 75 issues in total—66 regular, monthly issues, five one-shot specials and a four-issue Preacher: Saint of Killers limited series. Preacher tells the story of Jesse Custer, a preacher in the small Texas town of Annville. Custer was accidentally possessed by the supernatural creature named Genesis in an incident which killed his entire congregation and flattened his church. Genesis, the product of the unauthorized, unnatural coupling of an angel and a demon, is an infant with no sense of individual will. However, as it is composed of both pure goodness and pure evil, it might have enough power to rival that of God Himself. In other words, Jesse Custer, bonded to Genesis, may have become the most powerful being in the whole of living existence. Custer, driven by a strong sense of right and wrong, goes on a journey across the United States attempting to (literally) find God, who abandoned Heaven the moment Genesis was born. He also begins to discover the truth about his new powers. They allow him, when he wills it, to command the obedience of those who hear and comprehend his words. He is joined by his old girlfriend Tulip O’Hare, as well as a hard-drinking Irish vampire named Cassidy. During the course of their journeys, the three encounter enemies and obstacles both sacred and profane, including: the Saint of Killers, an invincible, quick-drawing, perfect-aiming, come-lately Angel of Death answering only to “He who sits on the throne”; a disfigured suicide attempt survivor turned rock-star named Arseface; a serial-killer called the ‘Reaver-Cleaver’; The Grail, a secret organization controlling the governments of the world and protecting the bloodline of Jesus; Herr Starr, ostensible Allfather of the Grail, a megalomaniac with a penchant for prostitutes, who wishes to use Custer for his own ends; several fallen angels; and Jesse’s own redneck ‘family’ — particularly his nasty Cajun grandmother, her mighty bodyguard Jody, and the ‘animal-loving’ T.C. Preacher draws on movies, particularly Westerns, for many of its stylistic elements. For example: an apparition of John Wayne is a recurring character and serves as a sort of spiritual guide or conscience for Custer; Monument Valley and The Alamo serve as backdrops to various legs of the journey; for a time, Jesse acts as the sheriff of a small town in Texas, and must protect the inhabitants from harm; the image of the Saint of Killers, a reformed bounty hunter-turned-killer-once-more in the tradition of Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven character, William Munny, is a nod to the classic Western notion of nemesis, straight and true and terrible. Garth Ennis, feeling Preacher would translate perfectly as a film, sold the film rights to Electric Entertainment. Rachel Talalay was hired to direct, with Ennis writing the script. Rupert Harvey and Tom Astor were set as producers. By May 1998, Ennis completed three drafts of the script, based largely on the Gone to Texas story arc. The filmmakers found it difficult financing Preacher because investors found the idea religiously controversial. Ennis approached Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier to help finance the film under their View Askew Productions banner. Ennis, Smith and Mosier pitched Preacher to Bob Weinstein at Miramax Films. Weinstein was confused by the characterization of Jesse Custer. Miramax also did not want to share the box office gross with Electric Entertainment, ultimately dropping the pitch. By May 2000, Smith and Mosier were still attached to produce with Talalay directing, but Smith did not know the status of Preacher, feeling it would languish in development hell. By then, Storm Entertainment, a UK-based production company known for their work on independent films, joined the production with Electric Entertainment. In September 2001, the two companies announced Preacher had been greenlighted to commence pre-production, with filming to begin in November and Talaly still directing Ennis’ script. The production and start dates were pushed back because of financial issues of the $25 million projected budget. James Marsden was cast in the lead role as Jesse Custer sometime in 2002. He explained, “It was something I never knew anything about, but once I got my hands on the comic books, I was blown away by it.” In a March 2004 interview, Marsden said the filmmakers were hoping for filming to start the following August. With the full-length film adaptation eventually abandoned with budgetary concerns, HBO announced in November 2006 that they commissioned Mark Steven Johnson and Howard Deutch to produce a television pilot. Johnson was to write with Deutch directing. Impressed with Johnson’s pilot script, HBO had him write the series bible for the first season. Johnson originally planned “to turn each comic book issue into a single episode” on a shot-for-shot basis. “I gave HBO the comics, and I said, ‘Every issue is an hour’. Garth Ennis said ‘You don’t have to be so beholden to the comic’. And I’m like, ‘No, no, no. It’s got to be like the comic’.” Johnson also wanted to make sure that one-shots were included as well. Johnson changed his position, citing new storylines conceived by Ennis. “Well, there would be nothing new to add if we did that, so Garth Ennis and I have been creating new stories for the series,” he said. “I love the book so much and I was telling Garth that he has to make the stories we are coming up with as comics because I want to see them.” By August 2008, new studio executives at HBO decided to abandon the idea, finding it too stylistically dark and religiously controversial. Columbia Pictures then purchased the film rights in October 2008 with Sam Mendes directing. Neal H. Moritz and Jason Netter are producing the film. The previous scripts written by Ennis will not be used. On November 16, 2013, it was announced that AMC will be shooting a pilot for Preacher. On November 18, 2013, BleedingCool confirmed that Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg developed the series pilot, and that it will be distributed by Sony Pictures Television. Glenn Fabry is an Eisner Award-winning British comics artist known for his detailed, realistic work in both ink and painted colour. In 1991 he took over painting the covers of Hellblazer, then written by Garth Ennis. He has continued his association with Ennis, painting the covers for his Vertigo series Preacher, and drawing Ennis-written stories in The Authority and Thor. In 2003 he drew a story in Neil Gaiman’s Sandman anthology Endless Nights, and in 2005 worked on the comics adaptation of Gaiman’s TV series/novel Neverwhere with writer Mike Carey.
>PAN>Frame is shrinkwrapped until time of purchase. Ships boxed with packing peanuts.
THE PERFECT GIFT!
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