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Published: 2013-01-05 20:12:31 +0000 UTC; Views: 11572; Favourites: 38; Downloads: 100
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Description
A comic book panel where the offscreen supervillain has some defiant superpowerd youths right where he wants them...Related content
Comments: 9
chloroguy [2013-01-15 21:56:54 +0000 UTC]
Assuming Kid Destructo is vulnerable to attacks to his face and head, Scatterbrain could always use chloroform or sleeping gas on him.
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SepentineDream In reply to chloroguy [2013-01-16 16:45:48 +0000 UTC]
Now that's a damn good idea if I ever head one. Yeah, I need to think of ways for the villains to take down Kid Destructo and put him in peril, and gas and chloro attacks would do nicely.
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chloroguy [2013-01-15 04:21:27 +0000 UTC]
Scatterbrain's talents as a contortionist must come in very handy in helping him overpower his opponents, or at least in allowing him to pin them down long enough for his psionic abilities to control their minds. A neat twist, in more ways than one.
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SepentineDream In reply to chloroguy [2013-01-15 05:39:59 +0000 UTC]
Well, my idea was that Kid Destructo wears a futuristic nano-suit that makes him virtutally invulnerable. So the only way he can be defeated is if a villain with mind control powers takes him over (which no doubt happens frequently in my pretend comic series). Scatterbrain would kind of be his dark equal in that regard. But of course the do-gooder heroes would have techological and mental tricks to prevent themselves from falling under his influence. And in that case, Scatterbrain would just use his finely-honed wiry physique to kick the crud out of 'em. Hence the excellent contortionist skills.
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miokace1 [2013-01-07 19:50:45 +0000 UTC]
I had ever dreamt in the past about a boy being hypnotized and forced to contort. Thanks to hypnosis, the kid became very flexible and could make strange figures. His body and mind were completely under the hypnotist's control. He was a mindless plaything, an obedient doll. So seeing your nice work, I thought immediatly about it.
The quality of your work is always better. Thanks to share this with us
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SepentineDream In reply to miokace1 [2013-01-07 23:56:31 +0000 UTC]
I think we might be sharing the same dreams. Yeah, I loved the idea of a very flexible boy desperately trying to fight his induction. He can contort his body to move away, but his head is stuck staring at the screen like an anchor or a dead weight. Once I found the position in one of the Poser presets, the scene came to me quite quickly. I'm actually working on another scene with the same figures which has more of a 'robotic drone' theme to it, and I hope it'll all come together soon for me.
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miokace1 In reply to SepentineDream [2013-01-08 20:47:18 +0000 UTC]
That's a good new!
I'm sure I'll like it
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Nemper [2013-01-07 05:14:47 +0000 UTC]
This brings back memories of the time I spent with an interpretive dance troupe in the back room of a condemned disco in East Berlin in 1981, in another dimension. I like it. It is well composed and garishly colored.
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SepentineDream In reply to Nemper [2013-01-07 14:34:23 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, I think he's either doing the East Berlin spider walk dance or the kid's just a big fan of the Exorcist movies. Can't decide which! But the garish filters I applied and the grain was my attempt to add a little grit on top of the Poser render so the image didn't seem so shiny and plasticy (?). I figured there's probably countless hypnosis scenes of doomed people staring at screens out there, so I might as well find ways to keep it interesting.
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