Pat Lee is back at Dynamite

13 Comments POSTED ON Apr 15 2010 AT 3:04 pm BY The Beat

WidowWarrior01 cov A Pat Lee is back at Dynamite
Pat Lee, a popular artist best known for his stint on the Transformers (and unfortunately for the failure of his publishing company Dreamwave) has returned to comics with a series for Dynamite, WIDOW WARRIORS, it was announced at today’s Diamond Retailer Summit in Chicago. PR below:


Pat Lee, the creator who revitalized The Transformers, makes his return to comic books with Widow Warriors!  Written by Lloyd Chao and drawn by Pat Lee, Widow Warriors is a full color series that will be released by Dynamite Entertainment!  Based on the popular Chinese legend Women Warriors of the Yang Family, Widow Warriors takes place during the reign of Emperor Song Ren Zhong  (AD 1022-1064), a powerful barbarian tribe invaded the western territories of the Chinese Empire.  A brave clan of generals, the Yang, and their men fought bravely, but were massacred by the invaders.  Unable to convince the Emperor to send reinforcements, the widows of the family, also trained warriors, took it upon themselves, journeying west on a perilous mission to avenge the deaths of their loved ones and save a nation.

WW01 pg03 04 tm Pat Lee is back at Dynamite

“I was pretty thrilled to be able to collaborate with a Chinese and international team on Widow Warriors, my first comic series after several years,” says Pat Lee.  ”The original story is so rich with historical characters that it was a real challenge to filter it down into an American comic format.   I wanted to blend my comic style with the richness we find in historic Asian art and culture, and we are pretty happy with the end result.  We are going to turn Widow Warriors into a film next, and I think a lot of the panels already have a cinematic feel to them.”

”Pat has grown as an artist, and we’re proud to be working with him on this project.  Looking at the art, you can see the depth he’s added since the beginning of his career.  We’re proud to be working with Pat on this project, and hope that this is the first of many projects together.” states Dynamite President Nick Barrucci.

At an early age of 16, Pat Lee began his career in the comic book industry right after graduating in high school by sending over 150 pages of sample artworks to Marvel and DC editors with no success. It took nearly a year before he finally caught the attention of Image co-founder Rob Liefeld at a Toronto convention in 1994. Four months later, he was hired by Image Comics and went off to train at Extreme Studios. There, he learned an invaluable skill: speed.  Lee worked on various titles such as Bloodpool, Extreme Sacrifice, Black Flag, Glory, Darkchylde, Avengeblade, Extreme Prelude, and Prophet.  Soon after, he was hired in Wildstorm Productions to work on Jim Lee’s WildC.A.T.S., Allegra and Whilce Portacio’s Wetworks. His career in comic books led him to work in Marvel Comics with a Wolverine/Punisher mini-series entitled Revelation.  Pat and his brother Roger Lee founded Dreamwave Productions. The two secured comic licenses for the popular toy line Transformers, which Lee would illustrate.  His work on Transformers brought newfound attention on the Transformers property, making way for the incredible success it would eventually achieve on film.

Your Comments

13 Comments so far

  1. Continuing the biography:

    “Then, a combination of shady ethics and poor company management turned the company into a massive sinkhole. Sensing the end was near, Lee transfered as many assets of the company as he could to his parents. He lied to the artists working for him that they would eventually be paid, then declared the company bankrupt. He never paid anyone and this led to severe financial hardship for many of them.”

    “To this day Lee has never expressed even an iota of remorse about his awful behaviour or financially damaging a number of people whom he called ‘friends’.”

    “Lee’s most recent work in comics was taking credit for the illustrations of another artist on the Image relaunch of Cyberforce. When the artist came forward and exposed that Lee was penciling a little under 5% of the pages he was receiving credit for, the Lee had no comment and went into hiding for 2 or 3 years.”

    “It is frankly shocking that he has returned to comics.”

  2. MrColinP says:

    Please get hired by DDP, please get hired by DDP…

  3. Alan Coil says:

    Thank you, Mr. Butcher.

  4. demoncat says:

    can not believe after all the people he screwed with dreamwave that Dynamite is actully wanting to work with Pat lee. hope they have it in the contract that some of the money he makes off it goes towards his debt but doubt ful it will happen.

  5. Larkin says:

    I know they said Pat Lee is the artist, but who is drawing it?

    Ba-dum-bum!

  6. Yeah, actually I think Pat Lee is “best known” as a guy who hired ghosts to do his work and then didn’t pay them, not as “a popular artist”.

  7. Nurf? says:

    And somewhere Nick Simmons has read this story and is thinking “there is hope for me yet”, because the people in the industry are so retarded that all is forgotten in a year or two.

    Sickening.

  8. michael says:

    wow, I never knew of all this about Pat and Dreamwave…thanks guys! O.O

  9. Josye says:

    Thanks Pat for the thieving Transformers years. IDW seems to have one uppped you on that one though.

  10. hugh g. says:

    Nice job, Chris. Better luck next time, Beat. (Or is this going to be labeled simply a case of “Don’t shoot the messenger,” or worse — “Don’t shoot the shill, cuz the shill tried to play the sorta-ironic-shill card with a cop-out line like ‘PR below’”?)

  11. Chaussure Gucci, voil¨¤ qui explique ment le protocole lequel se trouve rr rrtre california fin p california Fashion Week londonienne, lorsque ces moddes ont confirm fill Todd Lynn, Temperley, Aquascutum Michael van der Pork et ainsi que les Louise Gray, au sein du Milan serve assister not casting add Gucci.


Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. The unwelcome return of Pat Lee to comics « The Joe Shuster Awards - 15. Apr, 2010

    [...] Heidi McDonald and Rich Johnston have posted articles on the subject and the quote from above is from Christopher Butcher’s reply to the story on the Beat: Continuing the biography: [...]

  2. Sequential | Canadian Comics News & Culture - 16. Apr, 2010

    [...] [1] [2] [3] [...]

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