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The Walking Dead Comic Book Scene That Haunts Robert Kirkman

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For several decades, Charlie Adlard has been providing magnificent artwork for a number of worthwhile comic books, including “White Death,” “Savage,” “Judge Dredd,” “Batman: Gotham Knights,” and “The X-Files.” While his body of work is nothing short of impressive, his efforts on “The Walking Dead” have arguably been some of his overall best. Despite the fact that it’s mostly nightmare-inducing visuals that have even haunted Robert Kirkman and when it comes to creating such heinously entertaining art, the well-renowned artist has a method to his madness, which includes a shockingly difficult dilemma.

Over the years, Adlard has diligently depicted several of the zombie comic book franchise’s more gruesome and tragic affairs. Whether it’s Lori’s haunting death or Michonne’s infamous torture scene, “The Walking Dead” illustrator isn’t afraid to admit that drawing the disturbing panels isn’t even the toughest ordeal. The first brush with the material and the pre-visualization process are the most daunting aspects of drawing the darkest parts of “The Walking Dead” for Adlard, and surprisingly enough, once he’s endured the nightmare, portraying the mayhem on paper is the easy part.

“The funny thing for me is that thinking about it is the hard part, reading it in the script,” Adlard said in an interview with Bookspotcentral.com. “By the time I draw it, it’s just marks on paper. I’ve deconstructed it by then. I wouldn’t say it was emotionless. I’m not sitting there like some robot, but I’m just in the zone, and it’s pen and ink, that’s all it is. I’m not physically smearing pig’s entrails on the art.” 



For several decades, Charlie Adlard has been providing magnificent artwork for a number of worthwhile comic books, including “White Death,” “Savage,” “Judge Dredd,” “Batman: Gotham Knights,” and “The X-Files.” While his body of work is nothing short of impressive, his efforts on “The Walking Dead” have arguably been some of his overall best. Despite the fact that it’s mostly nightmare-inducing visuals that have even haunted Robert Kirkman and when it comes to creating such heinously entertaining art, the well-renowned artist has a method to his madness, which includes a shockingly difficult dilemma.

Over the years, Adlard has diligently depicted several of the zombie comic book franchise’s more gruesome and tragic affairs. Whether it’s Lori’s haunting death or Michonne’s infamous torture scene, “The Walking Dead” illustrator isn’t afraid to admit that drawing the disturbing panels isn’t even the toughest ordeal. The first brush with the material and the pre-visualization process are the most daunting aspects of drawing the darkest parts of “The Walking Dead” for Adlard, and surprisingly enough, once he’s endured the nightmare, portraying the mayhem on paper is the easy part.

“The funny thing for me is that thinking about it is the hard part, reading it in the script,” Adlard said in an interview with Bookspotcentral.com. “By the time I draw it, it’s just marks on paper. I’ve deconstructed it by then. I wouldn’t say it was emotionless. I’m not sitting there like some robot, but I’m just in the zone, and it’s pen and ink, that’s all it is. I’m not physically smearing pig’s entrails on the art.” 

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