Aug 10, 2025

Image Days

Excerpts from an interview focused on the Spawn/WildC.A.T.S. crossover published by Image with art by Scott Clark in January 1996. The interview - which also involved Todd McFarlane and Jim Lee - was included in Overstreet's FAN n.6, released in November 1995. 
Alan Moore: [...] I think I'm in danger of becoming the Image Crossover King! It followed from doing the Badrock/Violator crossover. It was figured that since I had written Spawn, and I had shown that l could handle the WildC.A.T.S in the 30 pages that exist of the 1963 80 Page Giant Annual which is still in limbo and waiting to materialize, that my name was pulled out of the hat on that one. It sounded like a fun idea, and I went for it. I actually wrote it before they asked me to write WildC.A.T.S. In some ways I wish I'd done a few issues of the regular book before doing the crossover, because I would have brought the nuances of the characters out a bit more sharply. Not that there’s anything wrong with the Spawn/WildC.A.T.S crossover, but I hadn't quite gotten the handle on the characters that I have now.
As with all of the Image work, I've been trying to find my way into a milieu which is not entirely second nature to me. When I was writing superhero books before, I was writing for an older audience, a smaller audience. So consequently, I missed out upon some comics development over the past six or seven years, because my interests have been elsewhere.
It‘s quite strange to plunge headlong into this hyper-kinetic “Imageworld," where there’s two or three panels a page, where the pace of the story is an awful lot faster, where there's constant kinetic action.What I want to do, is take that basic formula, which is an unusual one for me, and just add a few elements that make it more like something of mine. lt‘s a delicate piece of cookery, but I’m starting to feel like I'm getting results.
With the plot, I've taken a recurring comic book theme, the idea of the dystopian superhero future.With this one, there’s a future world where Spawn has become awful. This Spawn has killed the demon-god which holds him in thrall in the regular Spawn books, and thus receives unlimited power, rather than the limited power which currently hampers him. As a result of this, he’s become the total ruler of America, which has become a massive feudal state under this omnipotent Spawn. So this is the future that the present day WildC.A.T.S have to go into to help their counter-parts, who are in a pretty sorry state. They live in this literal Hell-on-Earth that America has become. [...] 
They're going to kill Spawn before he can become this demon, the Ipsissimus. The name is one of the magical grades in traditional magic theory, the highest grade of all. So if you become the Ipsissimus, you're just slightly ahead of God. [...]
There’s a journey through this world, and a final confrontation with the Ipsissimus, and a little bit of stuff that ties up the time-paradox threads that run through it. So l hope it's entertaining.

[...] The thing that was the most interesting for me, that l had the most fun with, was playing with possible alternative futures for some of the image characters.We get to see references to image characters and what they are doing in this future that would probably tantalize me if l was thirteen. I've seen stories in the past,"imaginary stories,“ where they'll suddenly refer to some other character. In Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns, for example, the sudden appearance of Green Arrow was a real thrill for me. it connected up with childhood memories about the character that put him in a new context. In the course of Spawn/WildC.A.T.S, we get a couple of guest appearances, and walk ons. Gen 13 turn up in the third issue, but they're all very different. It’s all very amusing. There's some of my sense of humor in there which is dark and nasty some of the time.
[...] The artwork that I've seen is absolutely stunning! It's really stylized. It's taken me awhile to become familiar with the Image artist because I have been out of the mainstream for a while, but I'm surprised by the level of quality. The nearest thing that I can remember to it is from the start of my career when I was working for 2000 A.D. and it was a wonderful period where it seemed like every artist they had was a Kevin O’Neill or a Brian Bolland or a Dave Gibbons. As a writer, you felt spoiled. 
I've got some of the same feeling working for Image, because there’s such a joy of drawing. It's got a youthful enthusiasm that you can't buy.They're not aimed at me, as an audience.They're not aimed at a 40 year old, quasi-intellectual, they're aimed at a 14 year old male audience, that's fair enough. But they sure do have a lot of energy! It‘s just a matter of channeling that energy into the right kind of vehicles, and that’s what I'm trying to do. [...] 
 
[Talking about writing WildC.A.T.S regular series]It's a great deal of fun, because I got to create a couple of them. It's always more involving to work with your own characters. It's an incredible break between From Hell, and my novel and all of the heavy and serious stuff like that. It's like a sorbet between courses. And a sorbet's not an insubstantial thing. There's an art to it.  

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