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==Criticism and controversy==
==Criticism and controversy==
===Art style===
===Art style===
[[Image:Patleehowtodrawoptimus.jpg|left|250px|thumb|1) Draw a circle. 2) Draw Optimus Prime. 3) Give him scraplets. 4) Give him leprosy. 5) ???? 6) PROFIT.]]
[[Image:Patleehowtodrawoptimus.jpg|left|250px|thumb|1) Draw a circle. 2) Draw Optimus Prime. 3) Give him scraplets. 4) Give him leprosy.]]
Pat Lee's artwork has often been the target of criticism among fans. While he was initially praised by many fans for his "manga-like" drawing style (which is heavily inspired by the character designs and visual cues used by [[Studio Ox]]), others criticized his tendency for exaggerated proportions, emphasis on rounded robot body parts, making the characters look "inflated" and marshmallow-like, hands reaching out to the reader [http://www.shortpacked.com/d/20050831.html "as if you just stole his purse"], a general lack of sequential storytelling skills and the overall look of his human characters (see "[[dull surprise]]" for more on ''that''). Even his critics often admitted that his work for covers and posters was better than his actual comic book interior artwork; however, that would change soon when even his cover artwork saw a severe decline in quality starting with the [[War and Peace|second ''Generation 1'' limited series]]. The introduction of [[Don Figueroa|other]] [[Guido Guidi|artists]] who would draw Transformers characters in a similar style, while avoiding many of the problems Lee was criticized for, would further shift the public opinion against Lee's artwork.
Pat Lee's artwork has often been the target of criticism among fans. While he was initially praised by many fans for his "manga-like" drawing style (which is heavily inspired by the character designs and visual cues used by [[Studio Ox]]), others criticized his tendency for exaggerated proportions, emphasis on rounded robot body parts, making the characters look "inflated" and marshmallow-like, hands reaching out to the reader [http://www.shortpacked.com/d/20050831.html "as if you just stole his purse"], a general lack of sequential storytelling skills and the overall look of his human characters (see "[[dull surprise]]" for more on ''that''). Even his critics often admitted that his work for covers and posters was better than his actual comic book interior artwork; however, that would change soon when even his cover artwork saw a severe decline in quality starting with the [[War and Peace|second ''Generation 1'' limited series]]. The introduction of [[Don Figueroa|other]] [[Guido Guidi|artists]] who would draw Transformers characters in a similar style, while avoiding many of the problems Lee was criticized for, would further shift the public opinion against Lee's artwork.



Revision as of 18:51, 20 December 2009

This article is about Pat Lee, the superstar comic book artist. For the uncredited artist who actually draws all his stuff for negligible pay, see Alex Milne.
Strength and Honor.[1]

Patrick C.K. "Pat" Lee (ミチヤメノテヒ フナナ Michiyamenotehi Funana) is a Canadian artist. He was the president of Dreamwave Productions and drew some of their Transformers comics, until most of his employees noticed he wasn't paying them. Subsequently, he was also the president of Dream Engine until all its employees noticed he wasn't paying them either. After that, he founded his own company, Pat Lee Productions, which appears to be defunct as well now. He's currently the "director" of a Hong Kong-based company named DeepSky Pictures.

Known titles, aliases and nicknames: The Transman,[2] Superstar Artist[3], Mr. Talented[4]


Over my dead body.

Simon Furman on if Pat Lee will do work for IDW, BotCon 2008


History

Before the Transformers

Chillingly prophetic.

Pat Lee was born in Montreal on June 28, 1975[5], and raised in Toronto. At the age of 16 (or 17)[6], right after graduating from high school, Lee was eager to find a job as a "proffesional" (sic) in the comic book industry[6], sending over 150 pages of sample artworks to Marvel and DC. Unfortunately for Lee, both publishers realized what a shoddy artist he was. Unfortunately for the rest of the world, however, Lee eventually managed to catch the attention of infamous Image Comic co-founder Rob Liefeld at a Toronto convention in 1994, who would hire Lee (now aged 19) to work as a penciller on various titles for Liefeld's Image studio Extreme Studios. After that, Pat Lee would also work for Jim Lee's Image studio Wildstorm Productions, as well as accepting work-for-hire assignments from Marvel (who had now apparently changed their mind regarding his artwork).

In 1996, Pat and his brother Roger decided to start their own studio within Image Comics, Dreamwave Productions, with Pat acting as the company's president. With Dreamwave, Lee would continue accepting contractual work for other publishers (such as the four-issue limited series Wolverine/Punisher: Revelation for Marvel), but also started to publish his own blatantly plagiarized originally created titles such as Darkminds and Warlands. Collaborations with various magazines and advertising campaigns helped to further advance Dreamwave's reputation. Initially, the "hook" for Dreamwave's financial success was Pat's drawing style, which many readers viewed as "manga-like" (although readers of actual manga had a different opinion on this matter).

Transformers by Dreamwave

In 2001, Pat and Dreamwave submitted a contribution for a feature named "Big 80s" that was published in issue #111 of Wizard: The Comics Magazine, depicting Pat's own take on one of his favorite properties from his childhood days, the Transformers. Proving to be a huge hit among fans, Hasbro would consider the general art style a benchmark when they were offering the license for a new Transformers comic later that year.[7] Unsurprisingly, it was Dreamwave themselves who finally acquired said license, commemorating this as a turning point in the history of their company by officially cutting all ties with Image and becoming an independent publisher on their own.

Why do Pat Lee's Transformers look like they're about to take a poop?

In addition to providing the art for various adverts, posters and covers, Pat would draw the first two Generation 1 limited series, Vol. 1 (aka "Prime Directive") and Vol. 2: War and Peace. Subsequently, he would concentrate on controlling Dreamwave as its president and spend more time on his biggest hobby, fast cars, assigning art jobs to other artists (many of them hired directly out of the fandom) instead. Lee's only other major contribution in terms of art would ultimately be some of the character profiles published in the eight-issue More Than Meets The Eye limited series.

Despite having dominated Diamond's sales charts for several subsequent months with the Transformers, Dreamwave eventually ended up in dire financial circumstances. Coinciding with rumors of unpaid freelancers, Pat Lee started to accept contractual work for Marvel and DC again, such as issues of House of M or Superman/Batman. Dreamwave eventually declared bankruptcy on January 4, 2005, blaming the weak Canadian Dollar and other scapegoats for the company's failure.[8]

After Dreamwave

With Dream Engine, Lee would work on various projects such as an X-Men/Fantastic Four crossover for Marvel, issues for the Batman/Superman series for DC and a relaunch of Cyberforce for Top Cow, another Image studio.

Eventually, Pat Lee parted ways with Dream Engine again and started his new enterprise, Pat Lee Productions. It seems he eventually realized he wasn't paying himself either, since the company's website is no longer working.[9] He now works for DeepSky Pictures.[10] Pat Lee is currently residing in Hong Kong.

Return to official Transformers work

In mid-2008, three and a half years since the collapse of Dreamwave, Lee was commissioned to do a series of illustrations for Hasbro Hong Kong to use for promotional purposes as part of their appearance at Ani-Con 2008.[11] Let's hope that art stays in Hong Kong.

In spite of the movie having been out for about a year, he couldn't even be bothered to look up recent art and stills and drew Megatron with his unused concept art head.

Published Transformers works with Pat Lee credit

Comics

With the revelation of Alex Milne ghosting for Pat Lee on Top Cow's Cyberforce, artist Edwin Garcia being credited for "backgrounds" on the Generation 1 titles and at least one of his covers actually being done by a ghost artist, it's uncertain how much of the art credited to Pat Lee has actually been his work at all.

Various artworks originally created by Lee for the covers of the first Generation 1 limited series were also used by both Hasbro and Takara for their Commemorative Series and Transformers Collection series of reissues. Following the demise of Dreamwave, Hasbro would also continue to use cover artwork drawn by Lee for promotional images and various pieces of merchandise, such as a Transformers Monopoly board game. The reason for this is simply because the art has already been paid for, and is therefore cheaper to use for Hasbro than newly solicited artwork.

Packaging art

Alternators

The packaging artwork for Alternators Smokescreen was also used for the profile card of Takara's Binaltech counterpart.

Commemorative Series

The artwork for Hoist, Inferno, Grapple, Rodimus Prime and Dirge was done specifically for these reissues; the rest was recycled from covers of Dreamwave's first Generation 1 limited series.

Transformers Collection

None of these artworks were created specifically for these reissues, but were instead recycled from old promotional posters or covers of Dreamwave's first Generation 1 limited series.

Other

  • Hasbro Hong Kong Ani-Con 2008 Movie Commemorative boxset certificate

Criticism and controversy

Art style

1) Draw a circle. 2) Draw Optimus Prime. 3) Give him scraplets. 4) Give him leprosy.

Pat Lee's artwork has often been the target of criticism among fans. While he was initially praised by many fans for his "manga-like" drawing style (which is heavily inspired by the character designs and visual cues used by Studio Ox), others criticized his tendency for exaggerated proportions, emphasis on rounded robot body parts, making the characters look "inflated" and marshmallow-like, hands reaching out to the reader "as if you just stole his purse", a general lack of sequential storytelling skills and the overall look of his human characters (see "dull surprise" for more on that). Even his critics often admitted that his work for covers and posters was better than his actual comic book interior artwork; however, that would change soon when even his cover artwork saw a severe decline in quality starting with the second Generation 1 limited series. The introduction of other artists who would draw Transformers characters in a similar style, while avoiding many of the problems Lee was criticized for, would further shift the public opinion against Lee's artwork.

When you're being compared to Rob Liefeld, maybe it's time to quit[12]

Lee's response to that was enforcing an internal "house style" that would force other artists to follow Pat Lee's own style more closely. Don Figueroa confirmed in an interview having received such requests from Dreamwave art director Rob Ruffolo, a guideline which Figueroa declined.[13] Fellow artist Guido Guidi confirmed having received similar requests.[14] Ruffolo himself also later confirmed the existence of an internal "house style", without specifically referring to Lee.[15]

Even though many fans preferred other artists over Pat Lee, official Dreamwave press releases and solicitations would often titulate the company's president as a "superstar artist".[16]

Business practices

The demise of Dreamwave didn't come overnight. The first rumors of freelancers not getting paid date back as far as October of 2003.[17] Following the closure of Dreamwave, former freelance writers Adam Patyk and James McDonough reiterated their claims that Dreamwave (not explicitly referring to Lee himself) had stopped paying them even before declaring bankruptcy. They had then filed a lawsuit against their former employer, and when that became public, they had allegedly also heard from other Dreamwave employees and freelancers who were supposedly also complaining about not being paid anymore.[18]

Aside from Patyk and McDonough, no other former Dreamwave employees or freelancers were nearly as explicit on the issue. Artist Don Figueroa only stated that Dreamwave was "getting really behind with the check" and pointed out that he "was also assured everything was cool" when he met Pat Lee in person only a month prior to the closing of Dreamwave.[13] The latter complaint was also repeated by writer Simon Furman.[19] Likewise, artist Guido Guidi merely accused Dreamwave of a lack of "[g]ood communication", and even revealed an ambivalent attitude towards Pat Lee and his brother Roger.[14] Artist James Raiz, meanwhile, claimed that he was "one of the very few who came out of Dreamwave with all [his] money.[20]

Prior to declaring bankruptcy, Pat and his brother Roger had spent four months secretly transferring most of Dreamwave's assets to a new company named Dream Engine, whose website domain was registered to Roger's name.[21] In addition, it would turn out that Lee had made sure to transfer ownership of his formerly company-owned Porsche to himself before giving up Dreamwave,[22] and had spent half a million Canadian dollars on a new luxury apartment even before the Dreamwave bankruptcy.[23] The overall amount of Dreamwave's debt was far over a million dollars.[24]

In addition, Guido Guidi and Don Figueroa later confirmed that they were additionally charged by FedEx for having shipped artwork to Dreamwave prior to the company's closure.[25]

Pat Lee himself gave several interviews following the closing of Dreamwave, presenting himself as a victim of circumstance while completely dodging the issue of unpaid creators and the existence of Dream Engine.[26][18][27]

While working with Dream Engine, Pat Lee spent a significant amount of the company's funds on the campaign of his girlfriend Aimee Chan, who would eventually win the title of Miss Hong Kong in 2006. This ultimately resulted in Pat being asked by Dream Engine and his brother Roger to leave the company.[28] In the fall of 2007, Aimee Chan changed her status on her alive not dead social networking page[29] to "single". Oops!

Failure to give proper credit

During the Dreamwave days, several artists confirmed that Pat Lee had only been drawing the robot characters, leaving the backgrounds entirely to (credited) assistants such as Edwin Garcia.

In 2007, it would turn out that Lee's personal involvement in his girlfriend's beauty pageant campaign had resulted in him being unable to meet deadlines for issues of Top Cow's Cyberforce series. As a consequence, Pat had asked Alex Milne to draw those issues in his stead. After a few issues, what little credit was initially given to Milne was dropped entirely, with Pat submitting the artwork under his own name instead, paying Milne merely a fragment of the money Top Cow was paying him.[30] In addition, Lee later asked Milne to draw artwork for DC's Superman/Batman #34 as well, again giving his underpaid ghost artist no credit.[31] Eventually, Top Cow found out, resulting in Pat Lee not paying Milne at all for over 20 pages of artwork.[32]

In late 2008, former Dreamwave editor Matt Moylan confirmed that the Silver Snail exclusive variant cover for Dreamwave's Generation One (ongoing) issue 1 that had been credited to Pat Lee had actually been drawn by a ghost artist as well.[33]

Attempts at cover-up

In March and April of 2008, a newly registered Wikipedia user repeatedly tried to remove any reference to the controversies surrounding Pat Lee in his own article, instead replacing them with more PR-friendly resume details.[34][35] (The critical content in the Wikipedia article was later purged for other reasons, but not reverted to the blatant self-advertising Pat's own version was.)

Trivia

  • Before the launch of Dreamwave's Transformers comic books, Pat expressed a certain level of ignorance with regard to the brand's history. For example, he claimed that, in retrospect, the Transformers cartoon was so amazing that it was only a matter of time before the toys were made.[36] In the same interview, he also admitted liking Generation 1 Sideswipe, whom he considers a "wicked character", regretting that he "died" in the movie.[36]
  • During Dreamwave's heyday, Dreamwave press releases would constantly titulate the company's president as a "superstar artist", even after the company had started hiring various other artists, including Don Figueroa, most of whom would prove to be vastly more popular among fans than Lee.
Those fancy Japanese characters look AWESOME. Too bad I can't read them.
  • Fans discovered an old personal website Pat had set up prior to the big breakthrough with Dreamwave.[37] In retrospect, many of the quotes and graphics featured on the site would prove to be either hilariously ironic or frighteningly prophetic, such as a promotional image depicting Pat, his brother Roger and then-Dreamwave exec Alvin Lee walking away from a nuclear explosion (see Image:Dreamwave.jpg); or a header graphic that features his name, "Patrick Lee", replaced by random Katakana characters (ミチヤメノテヒ フナナ), which read "Michiyamenotehi Funana". Soon, this would become his new nickname among fans, used exclusively in a mocking manner.
    • The cause for this is almost certainly a character-replacement Katakana font (WordPerfect TrueType Japanese to be exact), as used by someone who has no damn clue how Katakana works, never mind an ability to read it.
      • If Pat Lee had any damn clue how to transliterate, the Katakana would be パトリック リー (Patorikku Rī).
  • Pat Lee once set a hill on fire.[37]
  • After the launch of Dream Engine, Lee's resume at the company's website claimed that he was responsible for relaunching "X-Men, Batman and more", thereby implying that those franchises had long lingered in a near-dead state until Superstar Funana blessed them with his divine reanimating powers.[38]
  • All of the above is absolutely true. We're not kidding.

Memorable quotes by and about Pat Lee

It is a mistake to suppose that men succeed through success; they much oftener succeed through failures.

—Pat Lee[39]

If he ever wants out of comics, Pat Lee's got a heck of a career as an auto mechanic.

Wizard Magazine[40]

I remember working with Pat Lee and how kind of disappointed I was to find how little of the art was actually him. He gave me an original art page of Armada, and there’s so little art on it!

—Simon Furman[41]

If Pat had been some faceless bureaucrat it maybe wouldn’t now seem such an acute betrayal, but he looked me square in the eye and said everything’s hunky-dory. That’s what still, even now, burns.

—Simon Furman[42]

Probably the richest guy I know.

—Don Figueroa [43]

A guy that really knows how to pitch himself.

—Guido Guidi[44]

Cars are expensive.

—Guido Guidi[45]

Can we get our money?

—Adam Patyk[46]

Some of the shapes and lines are a little misshapen. When you draw your lines, sketch them out in layout mode, and try to get as accurate as possible before making any final lines.

—Pat Lee, not practicing what he preaches. [47]

To anyone who wants to break into comics- learn to love drawing backgrounds and study technical work, never have an ego, and treat your fans with respect!

—Pat Lee, still not practicing what he preaches. [48]

See also

References

  1. PatLeeArt at deviantART
  2. Dreamwave press release
  3. The infamous "Dreamwave adds Transformers' creators" press release
  4. Rosanne Wong about Pat Lee painting a mural on her apartment wall
  5. Pat Lee's own biography on his old Angelfire website
  6. 6.0 6.1 Pat Lee using an old Wizard article about himself as a reason to ponder about he got into the comic book industry
  7. Lying in the Gutters confirming that other publishers were interested in the Transformers license
  8. Dreamwave's final press release
  9. Pat Lee Productions website, no longer functioning
  10. DeepSky Pictures website with Pat Lee profile
  11. Pat Lee showcases his illustrations for Hasbro on his blog.
  12. Shortpacked!
  13. 13.0 13.1 Interview with Don Figueroa
  14. 14.0 14.1 Interview with Guido Guidi
  15. Interview with Rob Ruffolo
  16. The infamous "Dreamwave Adds Transformers Creators" press release
  17. Lying in the Gutters reporting on early rumors of Dreamwave artists not getting paid
  18. 18.0 18.1 Interview with writers Adam Patyk and James McDonough
  19. Interview with Simon Furman
  20. Interview with James Raiz
  21. Lying in the Gutters discovering the existence of Dream Engine
  22. Lying in the Gutters reporting on the Pat Lee Porsche story
  23. Lying in the Gutters reporting on Pat Lee's new apartment
  24. Lying in the Gutters' list of Dreamwave's creditors
  25. Archived TFW2005 thread with Guido Guidi and Don Figueroa confirming the FedEx story
  26. Archived Wizard interview with Pat Lee
  27. Jazma Online interview with Pat Lee, April 2006
  28. Lying in the Gutters reporting on Pat Lee's involvement with Aimee Chan
  29. http://www.alivenotdead.com/aimeechan/details.html
  30. Lying in the Gutters reporting on Alex Milne ghosting for Pat Lee
  31. Lying in the Gutters reporting on Alex Milne ghosting for Pat Lee even more
  32. Interview with Alex Milne on DeviantArt
  33. Matt Moylan confirming that the Silver Snail exclusive G1 vol. 3 #1 cover had been drawn by a ghost artist too.
  34. Contributions by Wikipedia user "Hyrocomics"
  35. Contributions by IP 209.70.200.95
  36. 36.0 36.1 Interview with animefringe.com
  37. 37.0 37.1 Infrarred [sic] Pat Lee's Angelfire homepage
  38. Pat's resume at the now defunct Dreamengine website.
  39. Jazma Online Interview
  40. Verbatim quote from a butt-kissing advert article published in an issue of Wizard Magazine.
  41. Talking about memorable experiences, http://idwpublishing.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?p=42871#42871
  42. Online interview talking about the collapse of Dreamwave
  43. Word Association with the name "Pat Lee" from an interview with TransFans.co.uk
  44. Word Association with the name "Pat Lee" from an interview with TransFans.co.uk
  45. Word Association with the name "Dreamwave" from an interview with TransFans.co.uk
  46. Patyk's response to the question "If you could talk to Pat directly right now, what would you ask of him?" in an interview with Newsarama.
  47. Quote from Pat Lee's "How to draw Mecha" article from Wizard #118, July 2001.
  48. Parting words from Pat Lee in "Extreme Scenes" from Extreme Comics.