Brendan McCarthy is a British artist and designer who has worked for comic books, film and television.[1][2] He co-wrote the film Mad Max: Fury Road. He is the brother of Jim McCarthy.[3]
British artist and designer
For other people named Brendan McCarthy, see Brendan McCarthy (disambiguation).
Brendan McCarthy was born in London. As a boy McCarthy soon began drawing his own home-made comics.[citation needed] After leaving Chelsea Art College in London, where he studied film and Fine Art Painting, McCarthy decided to become a full-time artist. He created the independent comic book Sometime Stories with art college pal Brett Ewins.[4][5] His first paid commercial work was a one-page strip Electrick Hoax in the British weekly music paper Sounds with another art-school escapee, writer Peter Milligan, in 1978. McCarthy held a solo exhibition of paintings, drawings and collages at the Car Breaker Gallery[6] in London, a squat in Ladbroke Grove's Republic of Frestonia.[7]
Comics
McCarthy started working for 2000 AD, including runs on Judge Dredd, as wekk as creating Sooner or Later and post-apocalyptic surfing story Freakwave with Peter Milligan. In 1983 McCarthy collaborated with Milligan and Brett Ewins on Strange Days, an anthology title published by Eclipse Comics. He also drew a two-issue series featuring his alternative "media-brat superhero" Paradax from the anthology.
Over the next few years he worked for the 2000 AD spin off titles Crisis and Revolver. For Revolver, McCarthy drew Rogan Gosh (later compiled into a single edition by the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics). For Crisis, he drew Skin. Both books were created with and written by Peter Milligan. Skin proved to be highly controversial, with Crisis refusing to release the story and their printers refusing to print it due to claims of it being "morbidly obscene".[citation needed] The story was eventually being released by Kevin Eastman's Tundra Publishing in 1992.
He designed the characters for Grant Morrison's Zenith strip which started in 1987,[8] Doom Patrol (creating Danny The Street) and on Morrison and Mark Millar's Marvel series Skrull Kill Krew.[9] He also produced covers and character designs for Pete Milligan's revamp of Shade, the Changing Man. In 2006, his work was featured in the final issue of DC Comics' Solo.[10] His comic had new takes on characters such as The Flash, Batman, and Johnny Sorrow and he considers the single issue to be one of his best works.[citation needed]
In 2009, Brendan was commissioned by Marvel Comics to create a new take on Doctor Strange. The mini-series was ultimately published as Spider-Man: Fever in April 2010.[11][12] Brendan returned to 2000 AD in 2010 on a Judge Dredd story with Al Ewing, spoofing Dr Who, and with whom he created a popular new story, The Zaucer of Zilk,[13][14] which he has described as a cross between Harry Potter and Aladdin Sane: "A glammatronic phantasmagoria."[15] The series debuted in March 2012. It was reprinted by IDW in a new format with both issues quickly selling out. Zaucer of Zilk appeared in many "best of the year" lists.
In 2013 he published The Best of Milligan & McCarthy, a brand new collection of his most famous comic works co-created with Peter Milligan, through Dark Horse Comics.[16] McCarthy wrote and drew a graphic novel titled Dream Gang for the publisher that was released in July 2016.[citation needed] A collection of his classic Judge Dredd stories from over 35 years of work was collected by IDW in hardcover and released in January 2017.[citation needed] Brendan completed artwork on a new Chopper strip for Rebellion Publishing in 2018 and a sequel to The Zaucer of Zilk, published in 2020 in 2000AD. His new strip, Nakka of the S.T.A.R.S., was published in 2021.
Film and television
Beginning in the seventies McCarthy has worked extensively in TV, producing designs for an ultimately unmade Dan Dare live-action television series, as well as storyboards for the Arabian animated TV series New Babylon and Jim Henson'sThe Storyteller. He was as designer on the films Highlander, the first live-action Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film, Lost in Space and The Borrowers. He was also hired by Saturday Night Live producer Lorne Michaels to write and design visual gags to the film Coneheads.
McCarthy spent much of the remainder of the 1990s working in film and television, most notably as the production designer of the international hit CGI animated science fiction TV series ReBoot and as the character creator for War Planets. He was then asked to co-write and design Mad Max: Fury Road with director George Miller after meeting in Hollywood. The film was shot in 2012, with McCarthy visiting the set in Namibia.[17] It was released in 2015, with the final film receiving many "best of the year" awards including six Oscars.[18] It was McCarthy's first Hollywood screenplay, and he was the original Production Designer on the movie.His comic Freakwave was, in part, inspired by Miller's Mad Max 2. The pair also created and co-wrote the forthcoming new CGI animated feature called Fur Brigade.
Bibliography
Interior comic work includes:
Sometime Stories #1 (of 2 produced) (script and art, with Brett Ewins, Broglia Press, 1977)
Sounds: "The Electrick Hoax" (script and art, with Peter Milligan, Spotlight Publications, 1977–1978)
2000 AD (anthology, IPC Media/Fleetway/Rebellion):
Tharg's Future Shocks:
"Robot Repairs" (with Robert Flynn and Brett Ewins, in #37–38, 1977)
"Stasis" (with Charles Swift and Brett Ewins, in #54, 1978)
"The English/Phlondrutian Phrase Book" (with Alan Moore, in #214, 1981)
"Sixty Hours that Shook the World" (as R. Jones, with Peter Milligan, in #391, 1984)
"Bad Maxwell!" (as J. Roberts, with Peter Milligan, in #402, 1985)
"Do You Copy?" (with Peter Milligan, in Sci-Fi Special '85, 1985)
"Encounter: The Day of the Phoenix" (text story by Oniano, with Brett Ewins, in #56, 1978)
Walter the Wobot (with Gary Rice, in #82, 84–85 and Judge Dredd Annual '81, 1978–1980)
Bishop, David (2007) Thrill-Power Overload. Rebellion, 260 pages, ISBN1-905437-22-6
Windsor, John (8 April 2001). "Justice for Dredd". The Observer. Retrieved 7 March 2011. Bad Company was launched as a comic in 1988 by Ewins, Milligan and Jim McCarthy, brother of Brendan, a Dredd artist
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