The relationship between artist and creation is strange. Some may use the analogy of parent and child, while others may use friend, lover, or simply a “thing.” But it’s a difficult relationship no matter what label. What you make is intended for others, yet others may not see what you tried to make. So imagine if you could talk to your creation. Better yet, what if you could travel with them?

Such is the dark, moody, hazy world that is Grant Morrison’s Annihilator. With stunning art by longtime Morrison collaborator Frazer Irving, Annihilator #1 is the surprisingly small and intimate set-up for what is bound to be a grand epic.

Ray Spass (pronounced “space,” as in “outer”) is messed up. He’s a drunk and drug addict that hires prostitutes by the truckload. He was a successful screenwriter in Hollywood that hasn’t quite gotten over an ex-lover. He has a zany look, appropriate for his inner psyche but it’s also kind of absurd, and it’s a look that is difficult to empathize with. Which seems to be the point. It’s one of those shaved heads with the other half of the cranium having full-grown hair. He looks like Shane from The Walking Dead trying to look hip, and it comes off as gross. But Spass is gross anyway.

We meet Spass buying a new house in Los Angeles. It’s a beautiful, modern home but its fucked up past (it has hosted Satanic rituals and has been the site of murders) is what brings Spass to move in. He’s attracted to bad juju, in his words. But he’s also tired. Exhausted. He’s drinking during the day and is snorting coke by the barrel loads. His only friend, if you could call him that, is his white-haired agent in a suit that he’s alienating every time they meet. His agent begs him to shape up, because the studio has given him one last opportunity to write what they want to be their next tentpole franchise. Spass’ current screenplay is good, but not great, and doesn’t have anything past the first act. Spass collapses under the pressure — which turns out to be a pretty horrific illness.

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About that screenplay. It is the titular Annihilator, and it comes from the movie-within-the-story’s physical location: a black hole. Max Nomax is an intergalactic rebel, a kind of a gothic/punk-rock Han Solo. Nomax has been sentenced for a crime — a vague one, but something Morrison himself has promised that we’ll come to know about as the series continues — and is banished to solitary confinement (save for an odd, bug-eyed teddy bear robot and the stasis corpse of “an angel”). Scientists stationed near the black hole went absolutely insane, which just excites the ever-living crap out of Max Nomax.

Nomax tricks his captors to a grisly fate, and just as Max delivers a brief but passionate soliloquy against the never-ending darkness… we’re back to Spass.

It is difficult to understand the framing structure of Annihilator. Throughout the book, Max Nomax and his creator Ray Spass have a parallel adventure, but without spoiling the framing goes out the window when someone shows up where they shouldn’t be. By the last page, it is hard to see what will become of Annihilator‘s storytelling.

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There is plenty to see and mull over right in issue #1, and the hauntingly beautiful art by Irving will warrant at least one look-through just looking at the drawings. Irving’s understanding of colors is masterful. There isn’t merely one color palette all over the book, but rather he uses particular palettes against certain locations. Downtown Los Angeles does not look like the space station above the black hole, but there’s something unifying about their look that prevents visual whiplash. Blues goes against yellows, which reminds me vividly of Eyes Wide Shut, for some reason. Erotic imagery makes for a fascinating sequence in the middle of book #1, a sequence told montage-style seen through drugged eyes. You are almost lulled into a high that makes the transition into the two and a half pages of fucking like a dream. A dream you are harshly woken up from.

I’m excited to see Annihilator all the way through. Issue #1 leaves enough to keep you wanting more, but it failed to establish the proper rules of not only the world but of how it will tell its story. But the story is good! It’s ingenious. It’s Milton and Aligheri and Lovecraft and Easton Ellis and somehow, kinda George Lucas. It’s inventive sci-fi, and I can’t wait to read the next issue.

Geekscape gives Issue #1 a powerful 3.5/5 stars. It’s an amazing premise cut too short and without any clear understanding of the world’s rules. In any case, we’re really looking forward to what’s next.

Looking for more Annihilator? Read our interview with creator Grant Morrison here.

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What’s it like to be pushed to the brink? To stare into your own mortality? To have nothing left, and to make one last Hail Mary pass to prevent your own obscurity? Most importantly, what’s it like to embark on a quest with a living character that you made up?

It must be a hell of a road trip.

Backed by publisher Legendary Comics, Annihilator is the newest book written by Grant Morrison and with art by Frazer Irving. A poignant (and sometimes funny) dark sci-fi adventure about a failed screenwriter embarking on a journey with a living, breathing being crafted by his own deisng Morrison tries to make sense of death and mortality, manifested as a black hole at the center of the universe.

I spoke to the prolific writer about the inspiration of his new series, its art direction and why writing can be “quite sexy.”

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You’re finishing up the Multiversity and now you’re back to original stories. What’s it like to do original content instead of tentpole characters like Superman?

Grant: Well, I like to do the DC Universe stuff and the Marvel stuff, I’ve mostly done DC. I like to do it because it’s kind of like entering a very specific world with very specific rules and heroes and heroines … but I kind of recently wanted to get back to writing about real things, y’know? About real experiences and people I’ve met. The new books like Annihilator and Nameless coming out from Image later this year are a lot more about that.

What can you tell me about Annihilator? I understand it’s about a failed screenwriter embarking on a journey. Can you elaborate a little more?

Grant: Yeah, that’s a very barebones description! [laughs] Definitely. It’s about a character called Ray Spass who is basically, not so much “down and out,” but he’s kind of alienated people that he loves. He’s fallen out with everyone and he has a final chance to create a new screenplay for a tentpole franchise for a big studio. And that movie is called “Annihilator.” And it’s about a character called Max Nomax, who has been the kind of ultimate rebel in the galaxy. The artist, the creator, the lover, the escape artist. And Nomax has been sentenced… to a space station orbiting around a black hole at the center of our galaxy, the “Great Annihilator,” for some unspecified crime which we’ll learn about as the series progresses.

Sounds exhilarating! What’s the inspiration for the story? I get a kind of Dante Aligheri-type of vibe, a character going on an ethereal journey. What was the idea behind Annihilator?

Grant: The story is actually very material. The whole story is about the material and the way how it contrasts very vividly with the world of illusion. So Max Nomax is certainly, I think you’re right, quite a satanic character. We took the archetype of the neurotic boy inside the black clad, high-cheek bone young man … and we took it all the way back to Milton’s Satan and built it up again [for it] to become Max Nomax. And connected him to lots of pop culture anti-hero figures like Fantômas from the early French pulp novels through things like Diabolik, the criminal of the Italian comics of the 1970s, which were about these weird anti-heroes. So that’s the kind of guy. We were trying to bring him back to life and sort of say, “Here’s Max Nomax.”

The life of a writer is terrifying, no doubt, it’s a quest on its own. But you’ve conquered that journey! In 2006 you were named the #2 Favorite Comic Book Writer by Comic Book Resources.

Grant: Yeah! Number two! Number two! [laughs]

But because of that, are you referring to at all to the struggles you’ve experienced as a screenwriter in Annihilator?

Grant: Sure, I said before I’ve worked in Hollywood for quite a long time and I’ve done a whole bunch of studio screenplays and been paid quite handsomely. But not one of them has been made. And you pour so much soul into them. Because in Hollywood there are so many drafts, the work can become quite beautiful by the end of it. If the drafts are done well then it becomes really great, but if they’re not done well it falls apart.

But I have seen work that have been turned into shining gems, some of them are my favorite stuff and they have not been filmed. And I’ll probably die before they’re ever filmed. So basically, yeah, this is about that. Sometimes you can pour your heart and soul into something that never gets made in Hollywood. In comics you kind of get to do what you want when you put out your ideas, which is why I love them so much.

There’s also no budget so there’s no limit to what you can do.

Grant: Yeah. It costs an awful lot for a movie or a TV show, but for a comic not so much. Also you can experiment and try things.

You’ve worked with artist Frazer Irving many times. What was it about his style that you wanted for Annihilator?

Grant: I actually wrote the story for him. After we worked on Batman and Klarion the Witch Boy at DC, which was a kind of young adult god. A Harry Potter for Puritans. So I kind of figured he was the one to do this ultimate, romantic, dark — you know, it’s [about] orbiting a black hole. So I thought Frazer was the best, and also because he works with light, I mean his work is so beautiful, he colors everything himself and it’s all done with light. I mean, what is most exciting is not only does he capture the kind of “haunted house” atmosphere, but is his versatility. He’s never been there, but he captures the orange-pitch of chemical light of Los Angeles so amazingly. And it almost becomes a character itself, you know the quality of light. It was written for him and I think it surpasses his previous work.

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I think he did a fantastic job too! I’ll have to read the rest of the book to see if it surpasses his past work, but I can’t wait to read it. Finally, what is it ultimately that you want to tell with Annihilator? I can’t help but think you’re writing this as kind of a warning for aspiring writers. Kind of like, “Hey, this is what writing is like, and it’s dangerous!” 

Grant: There is a bit of that, writing is really dangerous but it’s also quite sexy and exciting. It’s the way we make meaning. And ultimately, the story of Annihilator is that the notion of orbiting that black hole. And the black hole is death or mortality, but around that central idea that we’re all gonna die, we create so much meaning. We make stories, we make movies, or paintings, and we try to explain that black hole. And the black hole swallows everything and we try to explain it. That’s what it’s about. I was trying to say something quite ominous about how I see mortality and death, but in a funny way. I try to keep emphasizing that it’s funny. [laughs] Anyone trying to talk about mortality and death just seems morbid.

Annihilator is out on store shelves today, September 9!

Briefly: All the way back in July of last year, Legendary Comics debuted the awesome cover art for Grant Morrison and Frazer Irving’s Annihilator.

Since then, we haven’t heard too much about the project… until today, when Legendary announced the book’s release date, and debuted its first interior art.

Issue one (of six) of Annihilator will span 40 pages and release on September 4th, 2014, while Legendary’s original A Town Called Dragon by Judd Winick (Batman, Green Lantern) and Geoff Shaw will begin its five-issue run on September 24th.

Here’s the synopsis for Annihilator:

Hellraising screenwriter Ray Spass has one last chance to restore himself to former glory as he struggles to write a new studio tent-pole movie, Annihilator. The film centers around the adventures of Max Nomax, a sci-fi anti-hero caught in an epic struggle against the authoritarian artificial life form Vada and it’s chief assassin, Jet Makro.

 

But when Max Nomax appears in real-life, Ray thinks it’s a side effect of the brain tumor he was recently diagnosed with. Despite all logic, Nomax is real, having escaped from an impossible prison with no memory. Ray’s tumor is the key—it contains all Nomax’s adventures, downloaded into Ray’s head before Nomax escaped.

 

Ray needs to finish his screenplay in order to get the information out of his head and shrink the tumor. Nomax needs Ray to finish his screenplay so he can remember who he is, what ultimate crime he has committed, how to defeat Vada and save the universe from annihilation – if the unstoppable Jet Makro doesn’t reach Nomax and Ray first.

Take a look at the first interior art from the book below, and let us know if you’ll be picking it up when it hits stores in September!

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Legendary Comics today revealed Frazer Irving’s first cover for Grant Morrison’s Annihilator.

The anticipated book is still without a release date (which should be forthcoming), but based on the awesome concept, let alone the team behind it, I’m already beyond sold on Annihilator.

Take a look at the first issue’s cover below (as well as the book’s synopsis), and let us know if you’re looking forward to it!

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Hellraising screenwriter Ray Spass has one last chance to restore himself to former glory as he struggles to write a new studio tent-pole movie, Annihilator. The film centers around the adventures of Max Nomax, a sci-fi anti-hero caught in an epic struggle against the authoritarian artificial life form Vada and it’s chief assassin, Jet Makro.

But when Max Nomax appears in real-life, Ray thinks it’s a side effect of the brain tumor he was recently diagnosed with. Despite all logic, Nomax is real, having escaped from an impossible prison with no memory. Ray’s tumor is the key—it contains all Nomax’s adventures, downloaded into Ray’s head before Nomax escaped.

Ray needs to finish his screenplay in order to get the information out of his head and shrink the tumor. Nomax needs Ray to finish his screenplay so he can remember who he is, what ultimate crime he has committed, how to defeat Vada and save the universe from annihilation – if the unstoppable Jet Makro doesn’t reach Nomax and Ray first.

Sure, its a character you’re probably not familiar with yet, but it’s Stan Lee!

 

Magic Storm Entertainment has revealed that Barry Josephson will produc Stan Lee’s Annihilator. Josephson has quite the filmography behind him, including Men in Black, The Fifth Element, The Professional, and many, many more. Magic Store Entertainment CEO Eric Mika is sounding very positive about the partnership, stating that “Barry is the perfect partner at every level to produce a film of this magnitude that targets a global market, including mainland China.”

 

The script has been written by Dan Gilroy (The Bourne Legacy, Real Steel).

 

Annihilator tells the story of a young Chinese expatriate, Ming, who must choose between remaining in prison or enlist in a secret US super soldier program.  The program uses targeted genetic enhancements from various animal species.  Ming chooses to undergo this nearly fatal procedure and through his extreme resolve, gained as a result of his family’s tradition of practicing Qijong and martial arts, he survives. Now, armed with remarkable abilities, he must confront a former rival with his own set of enhanced faculties. Our reluctant hero is forced not only to face his personal demons, but also to defeat the villain who will destroy everything that he knows and loves.

 

Little else is known about the project at this time; no director has been announced, nor have any cast members signed on. We’ll let you know when they do!

 

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And of course, we love Stan Lee around here…