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GULLY THOUGHTS
By David Rondinelli
Mario Gully might be best known as the creator of
the Ant series, which revolves around a young girl’s life
that has been faced with much turmoil. She escapes from the day-to
day hassles by writing about an alter-ego fantasy in her journal
in which she re-imagines herself as an adult version of herself
that fights crime under the guise of a fire red ant.
Much like the complicated life of his main character,
Mario Gully has faced many struggles
when it has come to getting Ant on the shelves. Gully would soon
get the chance when he
sent his work into Image Comics. At the time, Gully had tried before
to get his work
published by them, but he met several rejections before the current
publisher, Erick Larsen, took over.
“I always liked Image from its launch in 92.
So one way or another I have always lurked around that company.
I sent Ant to Image once I had the first issue done. It was in 2002.
Jim Valentino was the publisher then and he turned the book down
flat. That was a hard blow. Well, a couple years later once Erik
Larsen took over as publisher I tried him. Keep in mind that Arcana
Studios picked the book up and we sold out of issue 1 in 9 days.
Once issue 3 came out, I sent it to Erik and he turned me down too.
I just kept trying and he’s seen my progress. I finally won
the guy over and he brought me aboard,” Gully said.
Gully had his dream come true and while at Image,
he completed 11 issues of Ant. However,
he noted how things soon began to take a turn that Gully wasn’t
completely prepared for.
“Keeping it real, things changed once I stopped
kissing ass. I got tired of second guessing my abilities, while
trying to conform my art and writing to what I thought Erik and
whoever wanted. Once I got sick of it and did my own thing, things
started [to change]. Erik even told me in an e-mail once that I
wrote ‘too urban’ or something of that nature. Can you
believe that!? If I would have set my standards at the door, things
would have gone much better for me. The problem is that once people
give you advice and you take it, they expect you to feel that way
even though they will never say it. I was that guy that Erik Larsen
brought in and wanted to mold. He says all the time how he helped
me and got me guest stars like
Spawn and Savage Dragon in my book and all that. Once I starting
growing up and being a man, we had friction. If Erik sends me an
e-mail disrespecting me now, I just send him one back, but that
wasn’t always the case,” Gully said.
Gully goes on to explain that the atmosphere had
started to change as well. He felt that communication was limited
and some of the other creators were not accepting on a business
or personal level.
“Honestly, when I was doing great, things
were great. The guys in the office were really
wonderful around seven issues in. But once I started falling behind
and books started to drop in number, they got funny. Yeah, it was
my fault that my books were late, but they didn’t communicate
well with me. I turn[ed] in a book a week late and they said ‘Mario,
we are not going to solicit a book for 2 months. You need time to
catch up.’ So that means that I won’t get paid for 180
days! Image pays back end that means that you get paid once Diamond
Distributors pays them, and that’s 60 days after the book
hits the comic shop. That’s tough if comics are your only
source of income. They did things like that, which made me feel
uneasy about making a living in comics. I never felt accepted by
other creators there. I really consider myself a team player. I
would never talk bad about a member of my team. Not to the public
anyway. I held Image and the creators high. Well, let’s just
say that I feel like a fool now, because I feel like there is a
lot of animosity from other guys. They believe in there heart that
they are more ‘qualified’ to be considered creators
at Image. They were legit ‘writers’ and ‘artists’
that either wrote books for Marvel or took some damn art lesson
somewhere. So when the nigga that invented a black character with
a big ass got the same attention, they didn’t like it. That’s
my take on it. It’s funny; Ant outsold most of the Indy books
out there. I'm talking, The Savage Dragon, Sam and Twitch, Fear
Agent, Lion Tigers and Bears and the list goes on,” Gully
said.
Gully went on to comment that he spent time trying
to reach a solution with Image; however,
he didn’t agree with a lot of the steps that were suggested
to him.
To read the rest of this story cop UVC's Feb
2008 issue, on selected comic book shops now!
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