>>150848589
>3) the writing
Similar to the art, the writer needs to be working closely with the artist, ideally they be one and the same person.
Consider Scott Pilgrim. The writer is also the artist. But lets imagine for a moment that it wasn't.
Imagine you were the writer of Scott Pilgrim, and you are looking to employ an artist to draw your comic.
How would you direct them? What information would you have to give to them for them to be able to produce Scott Pilgrim as it is in actuality?
You could have to explain the entire story to them, and you would have to get them personally invested in the characters. Every panel would have to be carried by a whole lecture on the characters, their emotions, their thoughts, because that's the kind of art that Scott Pilgrim has, the simplistic art style is deceptively primitive, but it is not, it is subtle and the expressions cary significance.

The writing IS the art, it is not separate. In comics you tell the story through the art. It is not a picture book, it is a comic.
I haven't even spoken about the actual content of the writing, but simply the terrible flawed approach to it that is so ubiquitous in comics.
You would never write a piece of music that tells a story by having the story and the music be separate, they must be one unity.