Draw Timmy? Timmy is in the words of the director who’s going to make a Timmy film a seriously messed up little kid. He thinks he’s the world’s most brilliant detective but he is the dumbest person in the room. And he wears the big scarf all the time. I offset one of the little eyes to the side a little because it makes him look a little nuttier.
But he’s sweet. I think he’s got a good heart, you know? I think he’s got — he’s got a good heart. He has a single mom, you know? I think deep down he wants the whole family to be okay, you know? Thinks he’s going to make a good living being a detective, pay for everything. He won’t say it that way. He’d say it in a very arrogant way, but yeah. But he’s that thing I was talking about — not a smart guy but thinks he’s brilliant. Not a clever guy, thinks he’s super clever. Not a good detective, thinks he’s the world’s greatest detective, you know?
And then he’s got a sidekick that’s a big, giant polar bear — your pen’s dying on me, but I think I can just get through this – that may or may not be real depending on how you read the book. I’ve had people read it convinced that he’s real. I’ve had other people convinced that he’s part of Timmy’s imagination. And I think fairly you can read it either way. My wife had a good theory. My wife’s theory was the polar bear is sort of a manifestation of how hurt Timmy is.
Like when he is — the more you see him, the more Timmy needs this in his life, the more there’s something he’s missing in his life. Does that makes sense? Like he’s sort of a — yeah, sort of like an imaginary friend you created when you were a kid, you know? So anyways, that’s Timmy. That’s the polar bear.