Todd Nauck
Author of Teen Titans Vol. 05: Life and Death
About the Author
Image credit: Luigi Novi
Works by Todd Nauck
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #43 3 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #39 2 copies
Teen Titans (2003-2011) #32 — Illustrator — 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #36 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #32 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #46 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #49 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #31 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #41 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #48 2 copies
Teen Titans Go!, Vol. 1 #34 2 copies
Wildguard: Casting Call #6 1 copy
Teen Titans (2003-2011) #33 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Teen Titans (2003-2011) #31 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Wildguard: Casting Call #1 1 copy
Wildguard: Casting Call #3 1 copy
Wildguard: Casting Call #4 1 copy
Wildguard: Casting Call #5 1 copy
Wildguard: Casting Call #2 1 copy
Spider-Man: Back in Black 1 copy
Wildguard: Fool's Gold #2 1 copy
DC Comics Presents: Young Justice #2 — Illustrator — 1 copy
Wildguard: Fool's Gold #1 1 copy
Associated Works
Black Panther Book 01: A Nation Under Our Feet Part 01 (2016) — Illustrator — 1,134 copies, 39 reviews
9-11: The World's Finest Comic Book Writers & Artists Tell Stories to Remember (2002) — Illustrator — 256 copies, 1 review
Guardians of the Galaxy Volume 3: Guardians Disassembled (2014) — Illustrator — 151 copies, 4 reviews
The Amazing Spider-Man: The Gauntlet, Vol. 4 - Juggernaut (2010) — Illustrator — 62 copies, 1 review
Peter Porker, the Spectacular Spider-Ham: The Complete Collection, Vol. 2 (2022) — Illustrator — 7 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1971
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- comic book writer
comic book artist - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Texas, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Texas, USA
Members
Reviews
I’ve learned I’ll do anything to avoid writing. Like more research; after enjoying Power Down (see previous post) I pulled out some of my old comics, looking for the ones that I enjoyed the most. One short series–not so old–that stood out in my collection is Wildguard, by Todd Nauck.
The crowd you see on the cover is only part of the cast of contestants in the 6-issue Wildguard: Casting Call miniseries.That’s right, contestants. It seems a mystery-producer decided to found a new show more superteam, one with its own reality show–they’d fight crime with cameras following them around, kind of like Cops. And what better way to start the show than with an American Idol-style contest, the prize being a place on the team roster? Indeed.
Now, I’d never heard of Todd Nauck, and hadn’t been interested in picking up another superhero title at the time, but when I thumbed through the first issue at the store I was hooked. Here’s why.
Todd Nauck played it absolutely straight. He created, from the ground up, a new superhero universe. Not a parody universe, either; highly cinematic, four-color even, it is populated by authentic characters, a whole new crowd of serious superheroes who take themselves absolutely seriously. (Alright, I can’t count Adhesor, or Crimson Phantom Vengeance, or Segmented Man, but those guys wash out early, and the rest are serious superheroes. So, a little parody.)
So it’s a serious setting, and it’s hilarious! After all, we’re talking about a bunch of heroes vying for spots on a reality-show team! Could there be a more pointed comment on our celebrity-obsessed culture? And of course things don’t go according to plan. First a giant robot crashes through the base/studio, then the contestants are attacked by a legion of flying *spoiler.* Mysterious Producer X is revealed to be *spoiler.* But the producers and contestants soldier on, incorporating the various complications into the program, and in the end the winners are *spoiler* *spoiler* *spoiler* *spoiler.* Todd followed up the six issues of Casting Call with a handful of stand-alone issues, but then he got too busy illustrating mainstream comics for Marvel and DC–yes, the Big 2 co-opted him; personally I think they were scared of him.
So why was Wildguard such a hit for me? For one thing you just know that if we really had superheroes they’d be huge public celebrities (in fact I riffed on the idea shamelessly in Wearing the Cape). And it wasn’t just the reality-show team; the Wildverse had a superhero boy-band (Powerplay), an alien hosting a Saturday Night Live-type variety show, at least one magazine dedicated to All Things Superhero, etc.
Wearing the Cape is different; superheroes in the Wildverse come with all sorts of origins–there are classic superheroes, aliens, androids, sorceresses, fairy sorceresses, pixie-dwarfs (you read that right), and in the course of the comics the team encounters threats from outer space and fantasy worlds. WtC, on the other hand, has one origin for all superheroes (the mysterious Event), and if some might think they’re wizards, gods, vampires, etc., the public just goes along with it. But as in Wildguard, some heroes are in it for the fame. And some are jerks, too. Gaining superpowers and putting on a cape and mask doesn’t make them any less human, or make them immune to the consequences when they screw up. Wildguard was one of the comics that showed me a good superhero story was a human story. show less
The crowd you see on the cover is only part of the cast of contestants in the 6-issue Wildguard: Casting Call miniseries.That’s right, contestants. It seems a mystery-producer decided to found a new show more superteam, one with its own reality show–they’d fight crime with cameras following them around, kind of like Cops. And what better way to start the show than with an American Idol-style contest, the prize being a place on the team roster? Indeed.
Now, I’d never heard of Todd Nauck, and hadn’t been interested in picking up another superhero title at the time, but when I thumbed through the first issue at the store I was hooked. Here’s why.
Todd Nauck played it absolutely straight. He created, from the ground up, a new superhero universe. Not a parody universe, either; highly cinematic, four-color even, it is populated by authentic characters, a whole new crowd of serious superheroes who take themselves absolutely seriously. (Alright, I can’t count Adhesor, or Crimson Phantom Vengeance, or Segmented Man, but those guys wash out early, and the rest are serious superheroes. So, a little parody.)
So it’s a serious setting, and it’s hilarious! After all, we’re talking about a bunch of heroes vying for spots on a reality-show team! Could there be a more pointed comment on our celebrity-obsessed culture? And of course things don’t go according to plan. First a giant robot crashes through the base/studio, then the contestants are attacked by a legion of flying *spoiler.* Mysterious Producer X is revealed to be *spoiler.* But the producers and contestants soldier on, incorporating the various complications into the program, and in the end the winners are *spoiler* *spoiler* *spoiler* *spoiler.* Todd followed up the six issues of Casting Call with a handful of stand-alone issues, but then he got too busy illustrating mainstream comics for Marvel and DC–yes, the Big 2 co-opted him; personally I think they were scared of him.
So why was Wildguard such a hit for me? For one thing you just know that if we really had superheroes they’d be huge public celebrities (in fact I riffed on the idea shamelessly in Wearing the Cape). And it wasn’t just the reality-show team; the Wildverse had a superhero boy-band (Powerplay), an alien hosting a Saturday Night Live-type variety show, at least one magazine dedicated to All Things Superhero, etc.
Wearing the Cape is different; superheroes in the Wildverse come with all sorts of origins–there are classic superheroes, aliens, androids, sorceresses, fairy sorceresses, pixie-dwarfs (you read that right), and in the course of the comics the team encounters threats from outer space and fantasy worlds. WtC, on the other hand, has one origin for all superheroes (the mysterious Event), and if some might think they’re wizards, gods, vampires, etc., the public just goes along with it. But as in Wildguard, some heroes are in it for the fame. And some are jerks, too. Gaining superpowers and putting on a cape and mask doesn’t make them any less human, or make them immune to the consequences when they screw up. Wildguard was one of the comics that showed me a good superhero story was a human story. show less
Still not my favorite comics of the series....the first few issues are silly fun, but that's it. But the later issues in this volume show what the series will grow to be...silly fun mixed with deadly seriousness. It's a mix that works quite well and allows these characters to begin to develop.
I've always loved Todd Nauck's art, and his writing isn't bad either. This isn't a terribly original idea, but it's well executed and fun.
A bunch of one-shot Spidey stories, nearly all long on the humor, especially the title story, which is a real hoot. There's one fairly poignant one with the minor crimefighter Jackpot in an afterlife bar, waiting to go on to her next stop after death. And the one that portrays how Peter Parker and Harry Osborn became friends is pretty touching, too, But this is mostly a pretty lighthearted group of good stories.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 45
- Also by
- 21
- Members
- 400
- Popularity
- #60,684
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 18
- Languages
- 2



