Verotik | |
Foundation: | 1994 |
Founder: | Glenn Danzig |
Key People: | Valarie Jones, Steven Wardlaw, Hart D. Fisher |
Location: | Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Industry: | Publishing |
Products: | Comic books |
Verotik is an American comic book company founded by heavy metal/horror punk musician Glenn Danzig.[1] The comics are aimed toward adult readers as they often contain imagery of a sexual and/or violent nature.
The company's two longest-running titles were Verotika (15 issues) and Satanika vols. 1 & 2 (total of 13 issues). Verotik was known for producing variant "chase covers" for some of its titles: expensive adult-only variants depicting nudity. The company was most active in the period 1994–2001, and has not released many new comics since 2009.
Notable creators associated with Verotik include Simon Bisley, Jae Lee, Tim Vigil, Liam Sharp, Martin Emond, Drew Posada, Jason Pearson, Shelby Robertson, Hart D. Fisher, Joe Chiodo, and Duke Mighten.
Since childhood, Glenn Danzig had been an avid comic book collector with frustrated aspirations of being a comic book writer and artist. His fascination with horror was expressed through his music and comic books, and in August 1994 he founded Verotik[2] (the name Verotik is a portmanteau created by Danzig from the words "violent" and "erotic").[3]
The company was originally led by editor-in-chief Valarie Jones of the New Comics Group. Jones left at the end of 1995, succeeded by Steven Wardlaw. Writer/self-publisher Hart D. Fisher worked as an editor at Verotik in 1994–1995.[4]
In addition to its line of original erotic horror titles, Verotik also reprinted some Golden Age comics in the period 1994–1998. They also were the first U.S. publisher to translate and publish Go Nagai's Devilman.
Verotik published Edward Lee's novel Header in 1995; the book was later adapted into a feature film.
The Verotik title Grub Girl, also by Edward Lee, was developed into a pornographic film of the same name in 2006, starring Brittney Skye and Eva Angelina.[5] The movie was directed by Craven Moorehead, who would later go on to direct Danzig's music video for "Crawl Across Your Killing Floor". The soundtrack features a remix of the Danzig song "Unspeakable". Glenn Danzig is working on a movie adaptation of the Verotik title Ge Rouge, which he will also direct.[6]
In 2019, Cleopatra Entertainment released Verotika, an anthology horror film written, directed, and scored by Danzig which was based on the company's Verotika anthology.
In 1994, when Verotik published a title with Phantom Lady reprints, AC Comics (which had earlier published Phantom Lady reprints) sued the company for trademark infringement.[7]
In 1996, Oklahoma City-based retailer Planet Comics was accused of "trafficking in obscene materials" because of selling copies of the publisher's Verotika anthology issue #4:[8]