Dreamwave Productions: Difference between revisions

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However, most of the controversy surrounding ''Dreamwave'' eventually became public in its closing days, when it became apparent that the company had been neglecting its payroll obligations. When a list of the company's debts surfaced online, it became apparent that ''Dreamwave''s liabilities exceeded CAN$1 M. Most telling was that two of the very few items on the list marked "secured" were Pat and Roger's [[BMW]]s. Several artists, including Figueroa and Guidi, having previously remained genial on the matter, came forward and aired their grievances, which as of April 2005, included having to pay [[FedEx]] for shipping work for which they never received compensation. As the company failed, Pat Lee maintained ownership of his [[Porsche]] sports car and acquired a luxurious apartment in Canada.
However, most of the controversy surrounding ''Dreamwave'' eventually became public in its closing days, when it became apparent that the company had been neglecting its payroll obligations. When a list of the company's debts surfaced online, it became apparent that ''Dreamwave''s liabilities exceeded CAN$1 M. Most telling was that two of the very few items on the list marked "secured" were Pat and Roger's [[BMW]]s. Several artists, including Figueroa and Guidi, having previously remained genial on the matter, came forward and aired their grievances, which as of April 2005, included having to pay [[FedEx]] for shipping work for which they never received compensation. As the company failed, Pat Lee maintained ownership of his [[Porsche]] sports car and acquired a luxurious apartment in Canada.


Though the 'Dreamwave' style of art is often revered throughout the Transformers fanbase, there are a few who point out its faults- namely the 'Dreamwave style' as well as its hype of being highly detailed. The 'Dreamwave' style is often criticised for making many of the transformers seem too bulky, with some fans insisting that they offer a 'marshmallow' type of feel to the robots. Fans who often claim that there is one, distinct 'Dreamwave style' are often pointed out to be incorrect, as every artist- though made to draw their Transformers as bulky mechanoids- offer widely different interpretations of certain characters (For example, Pat Lee's War Within Optimus Prime differs to that of Don Figouera's). The often quoted 'detail' of Dreamwave can also be inconsistant, depending on the artist's style and technique, which still shows through in the artwork, despite the best efforts to bring some form of uniformity from Pat Lee (For example, Andrew Wildman's style remains the same, yet the Dreamwave water-colour influences colouring allows it to blend with other artists.)
Though the 'Dreamwave' style of art is often revered throughout the Transformers fanbase, there are a few who point out its faults- namely the 'Dreamwave style' as well as its hype of being highly detailed. The 'Dreamwave' style is often criticised for making many of the transformers seem too bulky, with some fans insisting that they offer a 'marshmallow' type of feel to the robots. Fans who often claim that there is one, distinct 'Dreamwave style' are often pointed out to be incorrect, as every artist- though made to draw their Transformers as bulky mechanoids- offer widely different interpretations of certain characters (For example, Pat Lee's War Within Optimus Prime differs to that of Don Figouera's). The often quoted 'detail' of Dreamwave can also be inconsistant, depending on the artist's style and technique, which still shows through in the artwork, despite the best efforts to bring some form of uniformity from Pat Lee (For example, Andrew Wildman's style remains the same, yet the Dreamwave water-colour influenced colouring allows it to blend with other artists.)


== Relaunch ==
== Relaunch ==

Revision as of 17:45, 21 May 2006

Dreamwave Productions is a Canadian art design studio and comic book publisher, best known for their multiple Transformers comic book series. After bankruptcy in 2005 it was purchased by Canadian entrepreneur Christian Dery with plans to relaunch its core properties (excluding former licenses such as Transformers).

History

In 1996, brothers Pat and Roger Lee founded Dreamwave Productions in Toronto, Canada, as an imprint under Image Comics and published their first miniseries, Darkminds. Pat Lee, a self-trained graphic artist having only a high-school education, maintained artistic control while his older brother managed the business's operations. They quickly made their manga-influenced style a trademark, merging the look of an animated film with sequential art.

In 2002, Dreamwave spun off from Image and became an independent publishing company after acquiring the license for the popular Hasbro toyline Transformers. The first miniseries, based on the classic Transformers "G1" characters and featuring art by Pat Lee and writing by Chris Sarracini was the top-selling book on the sales charts for its entire run. More series followed, expanding their G1 stories to shape a brand new universe, covering the current Transformers: Armada toyline. Famed Transformers scribe Simon Furman came on board to produce Transformers: The War Within, a series detailing previously-undocumented aspects of the Transformers' past. Many artistic members of the fan community, such as Don Figueroa and Guido Guidi, were hired by the company, entering the professional world of comics via their hobby.

Three years later, signs of trouble began to appear when G1 writers James McDonough and Adam Patyk left the company over pay disputes. Despite plans for their replacement, it was subsequently announced that Dreamwave had gone out of business. They cited "the shrinking comic book market combined with a weak U.S. dollar" as the cause of the closure on January 4 2005, although a month of rumours and speculation had all but made this a forgone conclusion amongst readers. The final Dreamwave comic was published in December 2004, leaving incomplete both limited series and multiple ongoing storylines.

As Dreamwave's website was shut down, a new site, Dreamengine, registered by Roger Lee, was launched.

Controversy

One of the most common complaints about Dreamwave productions had to do with the nature of the series sets of their comics. Most of their series were a single story arc 6-8 issues long. When that story arc was finished, it would start anew, sometimes with the same characters in a different situation in time. Exemplars are Warlands: Altregis and Warlands: Age of Ice.

Though this might be said to have become a standard practice in the comic book industry, Pat Lee, whose signature art work predominated almost all of Dreamwave's comics, would draw the first several issues of the series generating large amounts of hype by means of the branding slogan 'Pat Lee drawn'. Lee would subsequently abandon the series several issues before its conclusion to begin another project, leaving the series in control of another artist and digital colourist who could not necessarily match the quality of Lee's visuals. The generated hype would eventually collapse and the series would become reduced to mediocrity. This even occurred with his most successful series Warlands: Age of Ice, and Transformers.

However, most of the controversy surrounding Dreamwave eventually became public in its closing days, when it became apparent that the company had been neglecting its payroll obligations. When a list of the company's debts surfaced online, it became apparent that Dreamwaves liabilities exceeded CAN$1 M. Most telling was that two of the very few items on the list marked "secured" were Pat and Roger's BMWs. Several artists, including Figueroa and Guidi, having previously remained genial on the matter, came forward and aired their grievances, which as of April 2005, included having to pay FedEx for shipping work for which they never received compensation. As the company failed, Pat Lee maintained ownership of his Porsche sports car and acquired a luxurious apartment in Canada.

Though the 'Dreamwave' style of art is often revered throughout the Transformers fanbase, there are a few who point out its faults- namely the 'Dreamwave style' as well as its hype of being highly detailed. The 'Dreamwave' style is often criticised for making many of the transformers seem too bulky, with some fans insisting that they offer a 'marshmallow' type of feel to the robots. Fans who often claim that there is one, distinct 'Dreamwave style' are often pointed out to be incorrect, as every artist- though made to draw their Transformers as bulky mechanoids- offer widely different interpretations of certain characters (For example, Pat Lee's War Within Optimus Prime differs to that of Don Figouera's). The often quoted 'detail' of Dreamwave can also be inconsistant, depending on the artist's style and technique, which still shows through in the artwork, despite the best efforts to bring some form of uniformity from Pat Lee (For example, Andrew Wildman's style remains the same, yet the Dreamwave water-colour influenced colouring allows it to blend with other artists.)

Relaunch

On August 2 2005 Christian Dery purchased all of the companies assets in a bankruptcy auction. Dery stated he had intended to enter into comic book publishing and the opportunity to begin with "a catalogue of such strong existing titles was too good to pass up." The Transformers license and similar third-party properties were not included, but along with all marks and logos the purchase included Warlands, Neon Cyber, Shidima, Fate of the Blade, Garden of Blades, Limbo City, Arkanium, Necrowar, Dark Minds, Capsoul, and Sandscape properties. Now holder of the "Dreamwave" trademark, Dery intends to relaunch the properties under the Dreamwave Entertainment label in 2006. Several former Dreamwave Productions employees and creators are participating to this new venture.

List of Dreamwave comics

Mini-series

  • Fate of the Blade
  • Arkanium
  • Sandscape
  • Shidima
  • Banished Knights
  • NecroWar
  • Neon Cyber
  • Echo
  • Darkminds Volume 1: Paradox
  • Darkminds Volume 2
  • Darkminds Volume 3: Macropolis
  • Devil May Cry
  • Megaman
  • Transformers: Generation 1
  • Transformers: Generation 1 volume II: War and Peace
  • Transformers: The War Within
  • Transformers: The War Within volume II: The Dark Ages
  • Transformers: The War Within volume III: The Age of Wrath (cancelled after issue #3)
  • Transformers: Micromasters
  • Transformers/G.I.Joe
  • Transformers/G.I.Joe II: Divided Front (cancelled after issue #1)
  • Transformers: More than meets the eye (character profile series)
  • Transformers: Summer Special (was to be an irregular mini-series, only one issue was published)
  • Warlands Volume 1a: Darklyte
  • Warlands Volume 1b: Atrelegis (Disputedly, volume 2)
  • Warlands Volume 2: Age of Ice (Disputedly, volume 3)
  • Warlands Special Three Stories
  • Warlands: Warlords Chronicles, Volume 1
  • Warlands Volume 3: Dark Tide Rising (6 issues)
  • Xevoz

Ongoing series

  • Transformers: Generation 1 (cancelled after issue #10)
  • Transformers: Armada, later Transformers: Energon (cancelled after issue #30)
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (cancelled after issue #7)
  • Duel Masters (cancelled after issue #8)