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AN INTERVIEW WITH THE
SHIELD'S JOHN ROZUM Keeping THE HANGMAN at Bay: Talking to John Rozum
by Rik Offenberger
- Originally published on Newsarama July 15, 2009 |
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We continue our in depth look at DC's new Red Circle line with John
Rozum and his take on the Hangman which will be appearin as a
co-feature in The
Web, which debuts in September.
Newsarama: You have been working at DC for a long time, on
everything from Xombi to Scooby
Doo. How did you break in?
John Rozum: I began at Marvel, purely by accident back in
the very late 1980s, through Dwayne McDuffie, who was an assistant
editor there at the time. When Dwayne asked me to write Xombi for
Milestone in the mid 1990s, that opened a lot of doors for me. I
encountered a lot of people working in the comics industry who liked
the work I was doing on Xombi.
Some were editors such as Joan Hilty, Joey Cavalieri, and Heidi
MacDonald, who provided much of the work I’ve done at DC.
NRAMA: How did you get the job on Hangman?
JR: Another project I was supposed to be writing for Rachel
Gluckstern fell through at the last minute, and she offered me The
Hangman as a
replacement. It’s actually a good match since both projects have
some overlapping elements. I’d already been ruminating on a lot of
the things that I ended up incorporating into The
Hangman especially
those pertaining to immortality. The fact that I’m accustomed to
telling complete stories in such a short amount of pages on the
various Cartoon Network titles I write was a plus.
NRAMA: Had you been a fan of the Hangman prior to getting
the assignment?
JR: Aside from having seen some of the covers from Special
Comics and the
like, I did not know much about the character prior to taking on
this project. This was probably for the best since the character had
been stripped down, streamlined, and restructured by Joe Stracynski.
With no real familiarity with the original character I was not
conflicted with trying to make the new character mesh with any
affection I might have had for the old.
NRAMA: Rachel Gluckstern is your editor on the series, what
did she tell you she wanted from the series?
JR: Rachel Gluckstern and I talked about it quite a bit
before I began, and continue to do so. She’s a really good editor,
and has provided a lot of good ideas and really done a great job of
getting me started on this.
NRAMA: Joe Stracynski said he left a "bible" for writers of
the ongoing series. What type of notes did Joe Stracynski leave for
you as the incoming writer?
JR: Beyond his 2-page bible, most of which appeared in the
issue he wrote, not too much. I essentially took what he did and
used that as a starting point and began developing new ideas and
creating a mythology for the Hangman which will eventually explain
the source of his powers and his place in the Universe.
NRAMA: Originally the Hangman was a caped crime fighter
with no super powers, fighting crime to avenge the death of his
brother. It appears that in the new Red Circle, the Web stole
Hangman's origin. Is there anything retained from the Golden Age
Hangman?
JR: Probably not too much. I plan to revisit certain
elements, such as his projecting a gallows to announce his arrival,
but that may not be a regular feature. Other things will come back,
such as some of the villains including the Ugly Man and the Jackal.
These characters will retain more of t heir core essence than the
Hangman did, but these will not be slavish reproductions of the
original villains either. These are new characters as well, adapted
to fit the needs of the new series, though they will share some
physical characteristics and some behavioral traits with the
original characters.
Having said that, I don’t think that fans of the original characters
will be outraged by any of the changes. The changes were made in a
manner respectful to, both, the original characters, and to their
fans. I think the fans will find them true in spirit to the original
characters. I think they will also be intrigued by the new version
of the Hangman, and pleased by his new powers. I would say that, at
least with the Hangman, the approach is not dissimilar to how Golden
Age characters such as the Flash and Green Lantern were revived in
the Silver Age; the names were the same and there was some
similarity of powers and costume elements, so that there was a link
between them, but the characters themselves were all new and catered
to a new era.
NRAMA: The Hangman has been around since the Civil War. Has
he moved along with the times, or is he culturally out of place with
the other characters?
JR: He’s made every effort to not stand out, and to change
with the times. Obviously, some social changes were probably more
difficult for him to cope with than others, but he’s lived through
all of the years between the 1830s and the present. He’s not simply
a displaced visitor from another time. His home is not filled with
relics of the past, though he does have some paintings and such
which connect him to his time living in the American West of the
mid-19th Century.
NRAMA: Even though he is a participant in the world around
him, because he’s stopped aging as a thirty-something year old man
and not a twenty-something year old man, he remains just outside of
culture enough to have been more of an observer than a participant.
Physically, he’s always too old to participate in the culture of
youth as it is being shaped and formed, like someone’s parent trying
to make sense of the music, or pop culture of their children. He has
an odd time connecting with people on this level conversationally. A
lot o f people bond over childhood nostalgia; tv shows we watched,
games we played, toys we had, but since Dickering’s childhood was in
the 1830s, he has nothing to relate to. He didn’t spend his
childhood watching Hanna-Barbera cartoons or playing with G.I. Joes
or ‘Star Wars’ action figures. Instead, he takes his knowledge of
past decades and turns it into a hobby, an interest, so that he can
connect with people on a level that he’s comfortable with, without
it making him seem too strange.
JR: What makes his life most difficult, in any time period,
is having to adjust his life to accommodate his automatic
transformations into the Hangman at sunset and back into Robert
Dickering at sunrise. He has some issues with being human, yet apart
from humanity, and a reluctance to become close to anyone, even
though Dickering is a friendly, emotive, and romantically inclined
individual.
NRAMA: The Hangman is a supernatural character, does he
crossover with the other magic based characters in the DCU or is the
"Red Circle" separate?
JR: For now, I’m keeping the Hangman in his own little
corner of the DCU by himself. At some point he’ll no doubt meet some
of the other supernatural characters in the DC Universe, as well as
some of the non-supernatural costumed crime fighters. There are a
number of DC’s characters who lived in the 19th and early 20th
Centuries that I’d like to pair him with. In fact we’ll see him with
one such character, briefly, in the second issue. Beyond this brief
scene it will be a while before we see further team-ups. I think
it’s better initially to allow readers to get to know this
unfamiliar character on his own terms before we start loading the
book with guest stars.
As for the other Red Circle characters, Rachel Gluckstern has
initiated an effort for us to keep each other informed on what we
are doing and where we are going so that we can intersect, keep off
of each others toes, and build up a little pocket world within the
DCU. At this stage, I think we’re all still trying to get our heads
around what we are doing with our individual characters and not
quite ready to start overlapping our stories. I’m sure that will
start happening once we all feel more comfortable with what we are
doing.
NRAMA: The Hangman travels the Earth, saving the lives of
innocents and hastening the deaths of the guilty. How is he
different from the Spectre?
JR: That was one of the first questions I had, and the
answers were something I had to work out, so it’s something that
will be addressed in the series. There are numerous differences, but
in a nutshell, the Hangman always offers retribution first. He uses
his powers to scare those he sees as being on a path to damnation
into giving up their evil ways and going straight. In some cases
this is enough. For others, if they don’t heed his one and only
warning...it’s something you’ll be able to witness first hand early
in the series. Unlike the Spectre, the Hangman’s other half, Robert
Dickering, has a life of his own, and none of the powers of the
Hangman. Unlike other characters with that dichotomy where they
transform into another identity driven, or cursed, with a task to
perform, Dickering is also under that same curse. Just as the
Hangman must go out and aid the innocent and punish the guilty,
Dickering must labor all day saving the innocent as well. His life
is one of constant toil towards the needs of others with little or
no time for his own needs. The wear of this is constant, and the way
he reacts to it changes over time, too.
NRAMA: What do you have planed for the Hangman long term?
JR: I don’t want to give away too much, but there are three
areas that attracted me to the project and where I’ll be emphasizing
my efforts.
NRAMA: The first is the human element. What does it mean
for Robert Dickering to be someone who will never die, and who is
forced to divide his life with a supernatural aspect that he
transforms into every night.
JR: The second thing is the backstory. The story of Robert
Dickering begins in the 1830s, and for the Hangman it’s 1864, so
there are about a century and a half of stories to fill in and I’m
really looking forward to doing that. A lot of changes took place in
that period of time, and it will be a lot of fun to see how both
Dickering and the Hangman find a way to fit in to all of those time
periods.
Finally, I’ve created a mythology that explains the source of the
Hangman’s powers, and how the Hangman fits into the world. I’m
really looking forward to slowly revealing this mythology as the
series progresses.
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