Brent Willis
What do you think has sustained Funtime Comics as a collective over such a long period of time?
The workshops: I don't think I'm the authority on this, but the fact our monthly workshops have continued for over 20 years has to be a key reason. It has been mentioned before that Christchurch's geography has made the workshops accessible. I mean Christchurch really is a small city that covers a smaller physical area unlike the sprawl of Auckland.
The Editor: The Editor has been the heart and soul behind Funtime. Isaac has done an incredible job running Funtime, as did his predecessor Darren Schroeder. At the detriment, the editor has had to carry a great weight on their shoulders, instead of the load being distributed. I suppose this is common in any non-for-profit or community groups. Recently Funtime as the Christchurch Comics Collective has strengthened. The infamous Tony Scanlan took over from Isaac to run our monthly workshops from the New Brighton Art Gallery. And fresh blood has been attracted to the workshops - Uni art students are great recruits. Isaac of has moved his focus onto the website as mentioned, and of course I'm taking on the print side of the operation. For the first time each facet of Funtime is being carried by a different person instead on being purely reliant on one. Isaac is a web developer, so it makes sense he focuses there, while likewise I'm in the design and print industry.
It might be a bit early to ask but will you be looking at a regular print publishing schedule?
I'm looking at an issue every nine months. Six months would be a push, where as nine gives a bit more time between issues and totals two issues every 18 months instead being pushed out to one issue per year. I would love to make the issues more regular. We will see how well issue 27 sells first, as the next issue is funded by the sales from the previous. The amount of art being contributed dictates the release of each issue. But as we move away from ongoing arcs to self contained stories should help curve this.
Armageddons are a great target to work towards. There is discussion in the community that perhaps Armageddon's aren't the draw card for local comics as they once were, and that Zine fests are the place to be. Well I'm out of touch with the Zine community so I'll focus on the pulp culture expo for now. I witnessed first hand how well Faction sold at two Armageddon's, copies were flying off the table, so Damon's onto a winner there! Make a quality product that has an incredible cover with gorgeous art inside will draw in customers who have not heard of the comic before. We can only give it a go right?
The Funtime site seems to be up and running after a period of dormancy, can we expect more material from previous editions appearing online?
Yes, Isaac has been heartily working behind the scenes to update the website. I'm not sure where he found the time, perhaps down the couch? The plan is to digitalise the backlog of Funtime Comics, but no doubt with 26 issues, plus extras and 23 years of comics under the belt this may take a while. This is a great way to preserve New Zealand comics, and make comics available that have been long out of print for future audiences.
You can check out the website at http://funtime.comics.org.nz
Lastly, may I add I never expected to begin networking with New Zealand comic artists. But stepping into the print editor role is allowing me to connect with the greater community, and allows me to contribute my own skills. I'm excited about the upcoming issue and where Funtime may go in it's third decade of New Zealand comics history. I've got my eyes on our milestone issue 30!