Ectokid

Ectokid

Ectokid #1 (Sept. 1993). Cover art by Steve Skroce
Publication information
Publisher Razorline (Marvel Comics)
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date September 1993 - May 1994
Number of issues 9
Creative team
Writer(s) James Robinson
Lana Wachowski
Lilly Wachowski (uncredited)
Penciller(s) Steve Skroce
Inker(s) Bob Dvorak
Letterer(s) Gaspar Saladino
Colorist(s) John Kalisz
Creator(s) Clive Barker
Editor(s) Marcus McLaurin

Ectokid is a fantasy comic book series published by Marvel Comics' Razorline imprint that ran from 1993 to 1994. Created by filmmaker and horror/fantasy novelist Clive Barker as one of the imprint's four interconnected series, it starred teenaged Dexter Mungo, the child of a mortal and a ghost, who is able to see and interact with the dangerous, interdimensional Ectosphere.

Publication history

Ectokid was one of Clive Barker's four Razorline titles, all set in the newly introduced "Barkerverse". Razorline published a preview comic in July 1993 called "First Cut", which covered the four titles, each one having a written introduction by Barker, a short prequel comic strip, and a description by the series writer (in the case of Ectokid, written by Wachowski).

The main series ran for nine issues (cover-dated Sept. 1993 – May 1994) before being discontinued with the rest of the Razorline titles. All art was by penciller Steve Skroce and inker Bob Dvorak. The first three issues were written by James Robinson, with issue #3 set up as a cliffhanger and joint credit given to Lana Wachowski (credited as Larry Wachowski), future co-creator of The Matrix film trilogy, who then wrote the remaining six issues.[1] Although uncredited, Wachowski's sister Lilly co-wrote with her.[2]

The final Razorline release was the one-shot Ektokid Unleashed (Oct. 1994), written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning, with artwork by penciler Hector Gomez and inker John Strangeland. It included a prose short story by Elaine Lee about another Razorline character, Saint Sinner.[3][4]

Fictional character biography

Ectokid is about 14-year-old Dexter Mungo, whose father was a ghost. Dex, as he is called, sees the world as it normally is through his right eye, but through his left he can see into the Ectosphere, a dimension similar to Earth but with a number of crucial differences. All the regular-Earth buildings are in the same places, but have a crusted and coral-covered appearance, and this world is populated by creatures and races out of myths, legends, and nightmares.

As Barker described, "Ectokid, which is perhaps the second weirdest of the bunch, is a kind of dream story for the 15-year-old that's still alive to me — the tale of an adolescent who lives in two worlds and has access to a whole other sphere of reality".[5]

Other media

A game based on the series, called Ectosphere, was planned during the initial run of the comic, though never produced.[6][7] After the cancellation of Razorline, Barker sold the television and film rights to Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures. The film was set to have Barker, Don Murphy, and Nickelodeon's Albie Hecht and Julia Pistor as producers, Joe Daley as executive producer, and Karen Rosenfelt overseeing development at Paramount. Barker would also act as executive producer of the television show, with Daley and Murphy as producers. Talking to Daily Variety, Barker explained that his aim was to create "a franchisable world" for the studio, "of great, transcendent beauty; one that reconfigures people's expectations of what ghosts are, of what comes after death."[8]

References

  1. Ectokid at the Grand Comics Database
  2. Ojumu, Akin (May 18, 2003). "Brothers Grim". The Guardian. UK. Archived from the original on December 31, 2010.
  3. Ectokid Unleashed #1 at The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators. ("Features" link) Archived from the original on October 23, 2015.
  4. Hyperkind Unleashed #1 at the Grand Comics Database.
  5. Barker, Clive, in Russo, Tom (July 1993). "Razorline". Marvel Age (126). Quote excerpted in "Interviews, Part Two". Clive Barker (official site). Archived from the original on June 28, 2010.
  6. "Other Media". The Official Clive Barker Website.
  7. Van Scott, Miriam (2015). The Encyclopedia of Hell. Macmillan. p. 29.
  8. Brodesser, Claude; Dunkley, Cathy (August 12, 2001). "Par, Nick take 'Kid' for ride". Daily Variety.

External links

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