Matt Fraction discusses his life, and career trajectory
Sometimes at a press junket it just feels more interesting to ask the subject about her or his own trajectory in contemplation of the circumstances both cultivated and happenstance — that facilitated their work, and to just let them talk to the camera. In this case we have a truncated oral history of sorts from
Matt Fraction, the artist behind Marvels latest
Iron Man, who was also tapped by the films director and more recently
SEGA, for enhanced versions of what hed been laying down on paper.
When I was a kid I used to make comics but I would call them movies you know and I would thread them on the dot matrix printout paper
Behind him the string of lights remind one of said holes, and of moments in time, as it were, as he shares anecdotes: I used to you know with the perforated sides — and tie them to gather with yarn. He also shares an epiphany he had about having to stop writing about writing and instead actually write which reminds me of my favorite scene in the film
The Last Minute, where a dude's imminently Ex-girlfriend blows up on him after hearing one too many bullshit stories about process, in a righteous moment that plays out endlessly through history, but I digress.
Matt says he was incredibly inspired by the resilience on exhibit in a scene from the biopic
Ed Wood and follows this comment with a grateful — in other words earnest re-enactment of the scene in which the legendary auteur misses not a beat in response to a gruff studio heads blunt assessment, already envisioning and pitching his next project. After this very effective impersonation of
Johnny Depp impersonating Ed Wood, Matts tone goes serious and he spaces his words, as he localizes his
point: You know, you have to. I had to find that courage.to suck
He re-visits the point about going from critic to creator, citing two additional elements he viewed as key: I was young enough and had a low enough overhead that I could afford to sort of starve and go hungry and take my time.
Great advice for those looking to not get pulled in by the machine as it were.
Element two in assessing his own hustle is one he cites as far rarer: A creatively satisfying day job helped him get his creative ya-yas while also keeping him from getting particularly desperate and sustaining his vigilance against the kinds of mercenary gigs thatve put the kibosh on many a creative hustle. I said No to a helluva a lot more [offers] than I said yes to, and I pitched stuff that got rejected way more than it was acceptedI think that perseverance paid off, and that the people at
Marvel learned to like my work and that led to one thing, and then the next, and the next, and that led to Iron Man, and then you learn that the director of the film likes your comics and wants to meet with you and talk about the movie, and then the second film, and then the people making the game wanna talk to you about it tooits crazy
He concludes, noting that his is not a life that Could be plotted with a guidance counselor [ED
NOTE: And whose is, really?] You couldnt sit down in a room with an adult and say a,b,c,d,e,f,git makes no linear sense; theres a lot of completely random chance, and a lot of hard work. And you know that expression?
Visions come to prepared spirits? I think I was just doing everything I could to prepare, and got really lucky. I thank my lucky stars every single day.