4 Kids Walk Into A Bank is a "classic tale of child bank robbers"

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

The term 'Juvenile Delinquents' has gotten a new definition with a new comic book limited series starring a group of children committing the heist of their (young) lives.

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

4 Kids Walk Into a Bank takes the crime fiction chestnut of a bank heist and gives it a Stand By Me-style twist by placing four pre-teens in charge of the crime. 

This comic book series was created by writer Matthew Rosenberg and artist Tyler Boss; two friends who began as co-workers at New York City's Forbidden Planet comic book store and have now become rising stars in the world of comics creating themselves.

Back in 2016, Newsarama spoke to them in advance of the series' release. With the four-issue series now out in collected edition and now in development as a feature film, Newsarama revisited our 2016 interview with the duo conducted before the series was released.

Newsarama: Matt, Tyler, how would you describe 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank?

Matthew Rosenberg: 4 Kids is a classic tale of child bank robbers. It's either a really dark comedy or a pretty funny crime book depending on what you want. It's basically whatever you want it to be.

Tyler Boss: It's is a 'coming of age' story framed inside of the crime genre, with all the tropes that includes, with a bend towards dark comedy. 

Nrama: And just who are the four children?

Rosenberg: The four children in question are brilliant and painfully shy Walter, the sweet and uncomfortably tall Stretch, the oblivious and painfully obnoxious Berger, and our leader Paige. Paige is smart and fierce, sweet, and a little overly imaginative.

Boss: Paige is sort of a rough and tumble badass who is the sun the other three orbit.

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

Rosenberg: Together they are the type of best friends you assume you will have forever, but rarely do. They like to get lost in each other's imaginations and urge each other on to make bad decisions. Those relationships can be very sweet or incredibly tragic.

Nrama: If you had to compare yourself to one of them, who would it be?

Boss: I would want to be Paige because everyone should want to be Paige, but I'm probably Stretch minus a few inches he has on me. He's definitely the closest character to myself as a kid. Awkward and picked on but not really doing anything to curve his nerdiness. Plus he shares his sandwiches, which is the greatest kindness anyone can show.  

Rosenberg: I love to imagine I am Paige. But I think anyone who knows me well knows that I am probably a Berger. I definitely curse too much.

Nrama: This has a blend of children's stories like Where The Red Fern Grows and Goonies, but with some slacker crime twist like Dog Day Afternoon and Reservoir Dogs. How'd this idea for 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank come about?

Rosenberg: Initially I just wanted to do a comedy book with Tyler, but comedy is super hard to write. I can make myself laugh, Tyler laughs at like 25% of the jokes, and with everyone else that percentage just goes down. So our comedy book had to sort of lean on the crime angle a little harder than I initially thought. Obviously we love the films of people like Sidney Lumet and Quentin Tarantino, but really it was about covering our asses in case nobody laughs at the jokes. 

Boss: The initial idea was completely Matt. He told me about it and after we decided to work on it together was when I started having any involvement with helping make it. Matt and I have a pretty consistent back and forth about what's working and what's not. Early on Matt came up with the opening Dungeons & Dragons scene, which ends up informing a lot of the jokes later.

He almost cut it because he thought it would be too weird to have our clearly-labeled crime comic open with a two page of a dragon. I told him I loved it and that we should keep it and he leaned into that idea of weirdness… of playing with reader expectations. In that same vein, I wouldn't have been able to come up with the surface style of the comic if it wasn't for Matt's constant pushing for more panels and different ways of communicating pieces of the story. 

Rosenberg: As for the actual concept? Children committing crimes is fun so we made a book about it. With my last book, We Can Never Go Home, I really wanted to examine my feelings on violence as entertainment and how violence affects people's lives in big and small ways. So that was kind of a bummer and I wanted to see a bunch of kids do dumb stuff. Hence 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank.

Nrama: The title is simple, but infectious and matter-of-fact. Was it always the title? How did it come about?

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

Rosenberg: We had another title that nobody liked, then Tyler and I fought about a new title for a really long title.

Boss: The working title was 'Help Save the Youth of America' which ended up being the chapter title to an issue of We Can Never Go Home. Matt and I had a lot of back and forth about it and considered way too many Clash songs as possibilities

Rosenberg: Finally I emailed him what I call a 'fuck you' title - something to signal that I had given up - and he went for it.

Boss: Matt said 'what about 4 Kids Walk into a Bank?' which made me laugh so we stuck with that reaction. 

Rosenberg: So now our book has a pretty obnoxious title that I think fits it really well. 

I am a fan of long titles anyway, so this one works. But mostly I like it because it sets the bar really high for us. If our books were called 'Caper' or 'Heist' we could really phone it in and people wouldn't be that surprised. But when your title is as obnoxious as ours, people expect it to try and be a good book. And we are trying.

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

Nrama: So how did you two connect to do 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank?

Rosenberg: Tyler and I worked together for a while in a comic shop. He was the super-talented guy who was under-appreciated and I was the other guy. I would always bug him about stuff and ask his opinion on stories and artists. Tyler understands art and storytelling in ways that kind of astounds me, so I was always picking his brain.

Boss: I actually distinctly remember the day Matt sort of accidentally pitched me on the book.  We worked together at Forbidden Planet in New York City and had always wanted to do something together but never found the right fit. So one day we're standing in the aisles and Matt was rattling off these different stories ideas he had and I was suggesting artists he could try reaching out to for them. If I'm remembering this correctly there was three that he told me about, the first two being what ended up becoming We Can Never Go Home and Our Work Fills the Pews.

(Image credit: Tyler Boss (Black Mask Studios))

So we sort of shot back and forth who we thought would be a good fit for those books for a bit before Matt said 'Oh I also have this weird sort of crime story too.' To which I was immediately interested in being an avid crime fan. So I asked him what it was about and he sort of sheepishly said 'children?' And that was sort of it. 

He ran down the basic outline of the series in a sentence or two and the style and tone he wanted to do it in and I rudely cut him off and said 'Cool I'll do that one.'

Rosenberg: It's one of those things that I feel incredibly lucky about because Tyler really made the book something I care about and I owe him for that.

Chris Arrant

Chris Arrant covered comic book news for Newsarama from 2003 to 2022 (and as editor/senior editor from 2015 to 2022) and has also written for USA Today, Life, Entertainment Weekly, Publisher's Weekly, Marvel Entertainment, TOKYOPOP, AdHouse Books, Cartoon Brew, Bleeding Cool, Comic Shop News, and CBR. He is the author of the book Modern: Masters Cliff Chiang, co-authored Art of Spider-Man Classic, and contributed to Dark Horse/Bedside Press' anthology Pros and (Comic) Cons. He has acted as a judge for the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards, the Harvey Awards, and the Stan Lee Awards. Chris is a member of the American Library Association's Graphic Novel & Comics Round Table. (He/him)