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Brian K. Vaughan [1976-0] American
Rank: 102
Writer, Comic book writer


Brian K. Vaughan is an American comic book and television writer, best known for the comic book series Y: The Last Man, Ex Machina, Runaways, Pride of Baghdad, and Saga.

Imagination, Cool



QuoteTagsRank
I like animal sidekicks. They seem to be a pretty cool trope of post-apocalyptic fiction - just because if you're going to have this lone protagonist, they're going to need someone to talk to. Dogs are overused, and cats are dumb. So that leaves monkeys. Cool
101
I sort of jumped out of movies and into the lifeboat of comics. I loved it right away. It was the opposite of film school. Whatever was in my imagination could end up in the finished product. There were just no limitations. Imagination
102
After 9/11, I knew I wanted to write about power and identity and the way Americans on all sides of the political spectrum often mythologize our leaders, which are themes that the superhero genre has always handled really well.
103
Having children changes you forever, as a writer and as a human being. I hope it's for the better on both counts, but I guess we'll see.
104
Fantasy/science-fiction stories have been around almost as long as each genre, but every hybrid now lives in the shadow of 'Star Wars.'
105
I start with something that makes me angry or confused, and then I write about it. It's a form of self-help.
106
Comics brought me to the dance. It'll always be my first loyalty.
107
I'm totally open to it being a movie or a television series or whatever, but truthfully, if no one wants to do it right, I'm also happy for 'Ex Machina' to only ever exist as a comic book.
108
When I wrote 'Runaways,' I was a naive kid who thought that all parents were evil. Now that I'm a wise old man with children of my own, I am certain that all parents are evil.
109
In film, you have the luxury of accomplishing what you need in 24 frames every second. Comics, you only have five or six panels a page to do that.
110
That was the appealing thing about comics: There literally is no budget in comics. You're only limited by your imagination. Imagination
111
All writing is the same: It's just making up lies until it starts to sound like the truth. That's what I do.
112
I guess my journey with comics began with stuff like Spider-Man and Batman. I started off with mainstream superhero stuff, which I've never abandoned.
113
I've always seen 'Y' as an unconventional romance between a boy and his protector. It was always about the last boy on Earth becoming the last man on Earth, and the women who made that possible.
114
I think there is a possible future where maybe we do just take a hard turn away from the Internet and we do start valuing our privacy again.
115
I never want readers to be comfortable, to feel like we're in a comedy or a drama. Life is never just one of those things. Life is a balance of all those things.
116
By the time you have your protagonist attempting to assassinate the Pope, you've sort of signaled that everything is on the table.
117
There's always that relief you feel when you're working on your own series that you can actually make it to your planned ending and that your audience will still be there to support you - and that your publisher will still exist.
118
I was only ever part of 'Lost' - a very small part of an extremely talented writers' room, where as a writer, it's sort of your job to sublimate your ego and work in the service of the show and the show's voice.
119
I don't think I have discipline when it comes to anything.
120
It's cool because I think 'Ex Machina' is a little bit under the radar, which is always when I do my best work - when I feel like no one's paying attention.
121
Even though I was trained in play writing and screenwriting, when I sat down to write a comic book for the first time, Alan Moore was first and foremost in my mind.
122
I was embarrassingly well-versed in Marvel lore, so it was pretty easy to slip into that world. But really, already, by the time I'd started writing superhero comics, my dream was really to be writing my own characters.
123
I never liked working on editorial-driven comics. I just didn't see what was the point. They don't pay well enough for me to write other people's ideas.
124
I am a big theater fan. It's mostly just being pretentious, I think, and trying to look smart.
125
I wanted to write a story about a future where everyone has a secret identity, in part because the Internet no longer exists.
126
Print and digital comics will always coexist.
201
For a lot of arcane shipping reasons, new comics, even digital ones, have a long history of only being released on Wednesdays.
202
Because it's in and about New York City, I knew 'Ex Machina' was going to have to continually mix the mundane and the fantastic.
203
I never like to talk about my own politics, but whether you're left, right or center, the 2008 race was definitely good drama.
204
I don't think anything connects with an audience as deeply as a long-form serialized drama, and much as I love television, I've always found a good ongoing comics series to be much more immersive.
205
There are probably writers who are much more visual than I am and some who are less. I like to think of myself as a happy medium.
206
It's interesting - I think superheroes get much more unfair derision. There are so many good superhero books being done. Science fiction is almost more reputable, I guess, at least a step up from poor superheroes.
207
I love doing research. I'm a film-school geek.
208
The biggest inspiration for everything I do is, of course, my wife, playwright Ruth McKee.
209
I grew up with a sister I was very close with and a mom who was a powerful influence on my life. I was always close with women.
210
As much as I'm enjoying stuff out here in Hollywood, I will always think of myself as a comic-book writer who does film and television, not a film and TV writer who occasionally does comics.
211
I love other movies that have been made since, but I think more than any comic book movie, 'Superman' just totally seemed to capture superheroes in ways that others have not.
212
Fans of my books have just been supremely nice.
213
Not many people read my stuff, but I really like the ones that do.
214
I remember when I was a kid and I would go to the comic-book store, I would have no idea what was going on in that month's issues. Sometimes I wouldn't even know what comics were coming out until I walked into the store.
215
My parents grew up during the space race, and I think they imagined the future would be us living on moon bases and everyone has rocket shoes.
216

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