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Nimona

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Nimona
Nimona cover.jpg
Cover of the print edition
Author(s)Noelle Stevenson
Current status/scheduleConcluded
Publisher(s)Print: HarperCollins
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Science fantasy
Comedy-drama
Thriller

Nimona is a fantasy webcomic by the American comics writer and artist Noelle Stevenson. Stevenson started Nimona while a student at Maryland Institute College of Art.[1] The webcomic began publication in June 2012[2] and doubled as Stevenson's senior thesis.[3] Nimona was published as a graphic novel by HarperCollins in 2015. The comic has won an Eisner Award,[4] a Cybils Award,[5] and a Cartoonist Studio Prize.[6] It was adapted into an audiobook in 2016. An animated feature film adaptation, produced by Blue Sky Studios, was announced in 2015[7] and was scheduled to be released on January 14, 2022,[8] but was cancelled after Disney announced that it would shut down Blue Sky.[9]

Synopsis[]

Nimona is set in a world that combines medieval and futuristic settings, mixing magic and mad science. Ballister Blackheart is a former knight turned low-grade villain whose evil plots are routinely foiled by his nemesis, Sir Ambrosius Goldenloin of the Institution of Law Enforcement and Heroics. The two men once were friends – or perhaps more – but they fell out and Ballister lost an arm in a fight with Goldenloin and now has a mechanical arm.[2][10] Ballister was ejected from the Institution because of his lost arm and became a villain.[11]

The titular character Nimona is a teenage shapeshifter who breaks into Ballister’s lair and anoints herself as his sidekick. Ballister is a mastermind but is reluctant to kill and carefully follows his own moral code,[3] which frustrates Nimona, who is smart, but also conniving and needlessly violent.[10] While the initial chapters follow Nimona and Ballister's adventures and growing friendship, eventually Nimona’s bloodlust puts her and Ballister into conflict with Goldenloin. The Institute wants Nimona killed and instructs Goldenloin to do it, while Ballister wants to protect Nimona and bring down the corrupt organization, and Nimona has her own vengeful plans.[2]

When asked to describe their work "in as boring a way as possible", Noelle Stevenson described Nimona as: "man's new assistant doesn't care for his ex-boyfriend."[12]

Conception and development[]

In a course as Maryland Institute College of Art, Stevenson received an assignment to create a new character, and revisited an idea from high school of a female shapeshifter. According to Stevenson, they combined this character with a Joan of Arc-inspired character that they were drawing at the time to create Nimona.[1] They were inspired to create Nimona's look based on their own experiences with cosplay: Stevenson preferred cosplaying as male characters rather than female characters, and wanted "to do a costume that people who weren't interested in looking particularly buxom or sensual might want to dress as."[13][14] Other characters and a story followed as Stevenson revisited the concept several times over their junior year, and later received approval for the comic to be their senior thesis.[1]

Publication[]

Stevenson initially published Nimona online on Tumblr.[1][13][15] The comic began as a collection of one- and two-page comics. Stevenson says that they "had no idea what Nimona was when I started it" and that it was experimental, but that they knew very early how it would end.[16] Shortly after posting the first few pages, an agent reached out to them, and while Stevenson was still at school they learned their agent had sold Nimona to the publisher HarperCollins.[1]

The webcomic ran from June 2012 to September 2014.[2] Stevenson said that completing Nimona was both satisfying and "a little sad."[16] HarperCollins published the completed comic as a young adult graphic novel in May 2015.[1][17][18]

Reception[]

Awards[]

Nimona has been well received. It has won an Eisner Award,[4] a Cybils Award,[5] and a Cartoonist Studio Prize.[6] It has also been nominated for another Eisner Award and a National Book Award.[19][20] The hardcover collection of Nimona became a New York Times bestseller.[21]

Year Category Institution or publication Result Notes Ref.
2016 Best Graphic Album—Reprint Eisner Awards Won Reprint by Harper Teen [4]
2015 Young Adult Graphic Novels Cybils Award Won [5]
2015 Best Digital/Webcomic Eisner Awards Nominated [19][4]
2015 Young People's Literature National Book Awards Nominated Stevenson, at 23, was possibly the youngest NBA nominee in any category this year. [22][1][20]
2012 Best Web Comic Cartoonist Studio Prize Won [6]

Reviews[]

A reviewer for io9 called Nimona one of the "Best New and Short Webcomics of 2012", commenting that its "light, sketchy style" helped to set up the comic's tone, and compared it favorably to The Venture Bros.[10][23] Nimona was rated as the best webcomic of 2014 by Paste Magazine.[24] In a 2020 article for CNN's Underscored, Daniel Toy described Nimona as a "modern fantasy epic" that will "delight teen readers."[25] A columnist for The Mary Sue said that Nimona and comics like it "promote alternate perspectives on gender".[26] Reviewing the German-language print version of Nimona in 2016, a writer for Spiegel Online described the webcomic as "entertaining" through its "wonderfully" staged and colored action scenes.[27]

A writer for Comic Book Resources compared Stevenson's artwork to that of Kate Beaton, Eleanor Davis and Faith Erin Hicks.[3] A reviewer for Tor.com said of the art, "Stevenson’s artistic style is VERY unique and VERY quirky, and I mean that with the highest praise... The first two chapters of Nimona are pretty clunky, but in a twee rather than off-putting way. By the third chapter they start to take some real chances with her art, and by chapter five it’s an absolute joy to look at."[2] Additionally, Emma Patton in the Children's Book and Media Review journal described Nimona as intentionally featuring the "cliches of good vs. evil stories" in order to expose the triteness of the clitches themselves, and noted that one of the most important themes is identity.[28]

In April 2020, Iain A. MacInnes, a scholar who focuses on U.S. popular culture and youth culture, stated that Nimona, the upcoming Lord of the Rings TV series and the video game, Godfall bring "different varieties of medieval aesthetics to modern audiences across the globe."[29]

Academic analysis[]

Associate Professor Mihaela Precup considered that mainstream publications which reviewed the comic did not note "any of the queer references," which she described as an "important part in the book’s positioning of monstrosity," and highlighted what she called a "subversive potential of a specific kind of queer cuteness." Precup also stated that the queerness of Nimona is "mostly hinted at through linguistic markers" and noted in her fashion choices as well, while describing Nimona as a "cute monster girl" and saying that the book shows that violence is located in "institutions that control and persecute."[30]

Molly Clare Barnewitz produced her Master of Arts thesis on animal and other non-normative bodies in queer comics, focusing on Nimona and On Loving Women. Barnewitz said that "Nimona depicts the threat posed by fluid and non-normative identities to heteronormative hegemonic institutions, ultimately demanding that the binary systems that persecute queerness be abolished." Barnewitz said that the comic "attack[s] exclusionary systems that place queerness as the ultimate other". She described Nimona as an example of the possibility of "reading comics through a queer lens," while noting that the story "evokes traditions of fairy tale and cyborg science fiction," focuses on shifting identity of Nimona and Ballister as they fight the over-controlling Institute, and says it breaks down "socially constructed binaries."[11]

Associate Professor James J. Donahue, in a paper in The Oxford Handbook of Comic Book Studies, said that "Stevenson has used her graphic novels to demonstrate the fluidity of identity construction for a young-adult audience", that it "present[s] empowering moments... [that] are always grounded in the celebration of community." He adds: "...these genres often encourage reading practices based on the acceptance of social norms. In response, Stevenson’s work engages in a form of disruption aimed at challenging normative reading practices, be they literary or social, opening up safe spaces for her readers’ own efforts at coming to terms with their identities."[31]

Heather Wright wrote a Master of Arts thesis on a broader topic, examining the "transformative power of queer world building and intervention" by using children's cartoons like The Legend of Korra, Steven Universe, and Nimona, how this functions, and can be adapted. She argued that the actions by Ballister and Nimona against the Institution "foreground the potential, and process, for undermining institutions." She also states that Stevenson suggests that a way to "take back power" is to disrupt institutions and the conditioning they engender through "fluidity." This is reflected, Wright argues, in Nimona's "original" form being "fluid, unsettled and indefinable," and hence, a construction, like gender, with Wright relating this to Judith Butler's theories about gender. She concludes that Nimona stated that "the blurring of boundaries," especially when it comes to institutions, bodies, and motivations, allows for "hegemonic ideologies and institutions" to be undermined.[32]

Adaptations[]

Audiobook[]

In August 2016, Stevenson published an audiobook version of Nimona through Audible. The audiobook features voicework by Rebecca Soler, Jonathan Davis, Marc Thompson, January LaVoy, Natalie Gold, Peter Bradbury, and David Pittu, has a runtime of two hours and seventeen minutes, and is unabridged.[21]

Cancelled film[]

In June 2015, 20th Century Animation acquired the rights for an animated feature film adaptation, with Patrick Osborne set to direct it and Marc Haimes set to write the script.[7][33] The film was to be produced by Blue Sky Studios.[34] In June 2017, Fox scheduled Nimona to be released on February 14, 2020.[15][35] The film was set to be the first use of Conduit by those who work at Blue Sky Studios, a system that allows artists to "find, track, version and quality control their work."[36]

In May 2019, after Disney's acquisition of Fox, the film was delayed to March 5, 2021.[37] In November 2019, the film was delayed again to January 14, 2022.[8][38][39][40][41] Through 2020 there was word that the film would be released in 2022;[42][43][44][45] Noelle Stevenson stated in June 2020 that the film was still happening,[46] and said the same in an August 2020 podcast.[47] In August of that same year, Den of Geek reported that the animated film was still scheduled to be released in 2022, but gave no further details, with Deadline reporting the same in October.[48][49]

However, in February 2021, Deadline reported that the film adaptation was cancelled due to the shutdown of Blue Sky Studios.[9] Following the announcement, Stevenson said it was a "sad day" and that they wished the best for everyone who worked at Blue Sky Studios,[50] while Osborne said he was "truly heartbroken" that the studio was closing its doors.[51] Webcomics commenter Gary Tyrrell criticized the decision, saying, "[Disney] could have allowed a very different kind of young heroine... I mourn for those who would have found a vision of themselves in an animated version".[52] Sources told CBR that the film was "75% complete".[53] Anonymous staffers at Blue Sky interviewed by Business Insider bemoaned the cancellation of the film, calling it "heartbreaking," arguing that the film "didn't look like anything else in the animated world," and saying that they believe it will never "be completed and released."[54] One staffer revealed that before being cancelled, the film was "on track" to be finished by October 2021. A few staffers confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the film had an "I love you" scene between Blackheart and Goldenloin.[55] In March 2021, it was reported that the unfinished film was being shopped around to other studios to be completed. It was also revealed that Chloë Grace Moretz and Riz Ahmed were to have voiced Nimona and Blackheart, respectively.[56] Later that same month, a former animator at Blue Sky, Rick Fournier, stated that the studio was "very very close" to getting the film finished, but that they "found out it simply was not doable."[57]

In June 2021, Mey Rude, a writer for Out, said she still held out "hope that this film…will find its way back to life somehow."[58]

See also[]

References[]

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  2. ^ a b c d e Brown, Alex (January 28, 2015). "Pull List: Nimona". Tor.com. Archived from the original on April 26, 2020. Retrieved September 28, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Thompson, Kelly (November 5, 2012). "She Has No Head! – "I'm a shark"". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
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  46. ^ Ostertag, Molly; Stevenson, Noelle (June 9, 2020). "We're doing a charity stream for BLM on 6/9 at 5pm PST - send donations and requests here!". Twitch (service). Amazon. Archived from the original on June 11, 2020. Retrieved June 11, 2020. From 3:15:57 to 3:16:46 in the video, Noelle says, "I can't say much about it, but I can tell you, its still happening, its exciting, and its gonna blow your mind, um yeah, hang in there, its coming. Its really cool. There was a lot of unrest in Fox getting merged with Disney for a while. Its so cool that...I remember when Disney released their slate for that year and it was like Untitled Star Wars project, Untitled Disney like animated film, Untitled Pixar film, and then there's like Nimona in the middle of it. It was so cool. So, yeah, its still happening and you're gonna love it."
  47. ^ Wecht, Brian; Gray, Leighton; Stevenson, Noelle (August 14, 2020). "Episode 26: The Pudding Cup of My Brain (feat. Noelle Stevenson)". YouTube channel for Leighton Night with Brian Wecht podcast. Archived from the original on August 15, 2020. Retrieved August 15, 2020. See 52:19-55:36 in this video for her words about the movie.
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  50. ^ Stevenson, Noelle (February 10, 2021). "Sad day. Thanks for the well wishes, and sending so much love to everyone at Blue Sky. Forever grateful for all the care and joy you poured into Nimona [Red heart]". Twitter. Archived from the original on February 10, 2021. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
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  57. ^ Fournier, Rick [@Project813] (March 20, 2021). "Yes I have. Believe me when I say the people in charge tried and were very very close to saving the film. Yesterday we found out it simply wasn't doable. I know all of us Blue Sky'ers appreciate the support.