Grotesque Anatomy
Future Comics: "Tokyopop Who?"
Is it just me or is this
Pulse
interview with Future Comics' Bob Layton really surreal?
Blogs Run Amuck!!
Just as
Matt
Brady speaks out against the dangers of rampant blogging, several
more comic-focused bloggers spring up, as if to cruelly mock the
venerated newshound:
Kevin Melrose,
Rick Geerling, and
Ron Phillips. They're all
fairly new, but they look pretty strong so far. Welcome to the
ever-growing club of those who wouldn't listen to the voices,
guys. (
Links via poking around Grim's Fanboy Rampage!!)
Also added a link to a site I hadn't run across before --
Diverging Comics, whose
Mission
Statement (a site with a Mission Statement? I'm having
flashbacks to bad "brainstorming sessions" for various college
volunteer groups) is to champion the issues of Diversity of Genre,
Comics as Art, Public Perception, and Gender Balance as they pertain to
comics. All issues worth tackling, and a snazzy site design to
boot. (
Link via Thought
Balloons.)
Comics Grab Bag: Around the Dial
While I search for more challengers to pit against
the Manga Stack of Intimidation, here's some other stuff I noticed at various sites:
- Newsarama has an interview
with Eric Powell, writer-artist creator of The Goon.
I've expressed my love for this series before but, thankfully, I'll
spare you the pictures. Check out this book if you're looking for
a good laugh.
- Steve
Rude reports that Dark Horse is still planning to release his Moth
one-shot, and they've also requested four more issues beyond
the special, so that's encouraging. Not so encouraging is news
that the legal issues with Marvel (over the Moth logo being too close
to the logo for the Punisher movie) have yet to be resolved.
- Tokyopop's mature-readers manga Battle
Royale had been delayed due to issues with reproducing the
artwork (so that's what happened), but the third volume should be out
next week (which probably means I won't see it til December, since my
October comics will probably ship before then). This also reminds
me that I have to watch the movie so I can compare Battle Royale
in all
its varied incarnations.
- Broken Frontier is
celebrating its
first anniversary. Site guru Frederik Hautain has lined up
some special features to celebrate the milestone, including the
relaunch of the new-and-improved Showbuzz
section and guest columns from comic pros like Jeph "Superman/Batman"
Loeb and Justin
"21 Down" Gray. BF is also running a fundraiser
to benefit ACTOR, which I thought was a classy touch: Nice to
think of others while celebrating your own success. I'd encourage
everyone to help out if you can.
- James
Sime keeps on pimpin' comics, while Alan
David Doane objects to the whole enterprise on moral grounds.
No word yet on the formation of a "Concerned Comic Citizens Council" to
protest Sime's activities officially.
- Eve
Tushnet has read the first volume of Uzumaki and appears
to be hooked. If you haven't read this top-notch horror manga
yet, what's stopping you? Buy it for yourself as a Halloween
treat. Go on -- you deserve it.
- Franklin
Harris does not love Jeph Loeb's Superman/Batman as much as
Graeme
McMillan does. (If anyone wants to lend me their copies, I'll
volunteer to be the tie-breaker in this dispute. World's Funnest
or Flimsiest? I'll decide!!)
- The insanely-prolific Sean Collins continues his "13 Days of
Halloween" countdown of the 13 scariest movies of all time. I
agree with his pick of, and thoughts on, The
Ring. I know many prefer the Japanese original, Ringu,
but I thought the remake was much more frightening. Jason Adams is
probably right about a big part of one's preference being due to
which version you saw first. How one experiences each film
probably matters, too: Ringu probably would have had
more impact if I hadn't viewed it as a crappy, choppy DivX download on
my computer monitor.
Finally, how did
Dirk
Deppey know that I photoshopped a box of Wheaties to make it look
like Total?
More Measures of Manga
Yesterday's
comparison between manga and American comics led to requests for
some other matchups.
|
12 issues of Shonen Jump vs. 4 Marvel
Essentials
(4 @ $15 = $60)
|
|
12 issues of Shonen Jump vs. 2 Marvel
hardcovers
(2 @ $30 = $60) |
|
12 issues of Shonen Jump vs. 1 bowl of
Total
(100% Daily Value of 12 Vitamins & Minerals)
|
Not pictured: 12 issues of
Shonen Jump vs. 8.6 issues of
The
Comics Journal.
The Weak American Conversion Rate
After the last couple long posts, I figured I'd do something
light. So here's a comparison of what $60 will get you in manga
versus American comics:
Gee, I wonder why young kids are flocking to manga?
(In case you're wondering, that's 12 issues of Viz's
manga anthology
Shonen Jump (with a $4.95 cover price) on the left and 24 issues of
various American comics at $2.50 a pop on the right .)
And Now For Something Completely Same-Sex
Well,
as
promised, Eve Tushnet has organized her thoughts on same-sex
marriage into a more readable form on her blog, so I suppose I'd better
keep
my
promise and address her arguments. First, here are links
to her blog entries on same-sex marriage in order:
I'm not sure I'll address all of Eve's points. In fact, given how
much she's written on this topic, there's no way I can cover her entire
output in one entry. But I will try to hit on
what I consider the major features (and major flaws) of her
position. And even if I don't fully do justice to Eve's thoughts
on this issue, I hope that responding to her writings will at least
allow me to set out my position on SSM, something I haven't tried to do
in writing for quite some time. (Or in other words: Thanks,
Eve: Your blogging serves as motivation to articulate my
own position!)
I suppose I'll start out where Eve ends -- by laying out my own
background and/or biases. Eve, responding to emails asking why
she spends so much time thinking and writing about SSM, reveals that
one reason is because she's
queer
(bisexual) so perhaps people who would otherwise dismiss an opponent of
same-sex marriage will listen to her. Eve also reveals in the
queer
link that she's Catholic and chaste. So going by labels at least,
Eve and I differ on pretty much every score: I'm a straight,
married atheist (although I was raised Catholic, including eleven years
of Catholic school and several years of service as an altar boy).
I'll let the reader decide if these identifications render my position
overly partial.
With that out of the way, I'll turn my attention to Eve's actual
arguments. One of the first things that struck me about Eve's
arguments is that they rely very heavily on what I'd consider
macro-level considerations: How would SSM affect the societal
institution of marriage? Would SSM weaken any of the state's
interests in promoting marriage? Would marriage become a less
effective method for raising children? On the one hand, I can
certainly understand why one would want to focus on the larger societal
ramifications of a change in public policy. On the other hand, it
seems strange that so little attention is given to micro-level
considerations: What about individuals' rights to
self-determination, personal autonomy, and the pursuit of life,
liberty, and happiness? Eve appears to brush aside such concerns
in her post on her basic position: "Americans still think the
debate over same-sex marriage is about gay
people. We still think it's about your best friend who's just
said
she's a lesbian, or your son who's just come out. We still think it's
about whether homosexual acts are sinful. It's not. The
same-sex marriage debate is about
marriage, above all
else." I agree that the SSM debate requires that we spell out
just what it is that we mean by marriage. And I'll gladly agree
that we should be at the point by now where we can assume homosexuality
is not sinful. But I also think the SSM debate is about equal
rights, above all else. True, as Eve states, marriage is itself a
kind of
"special right": Something that, as Eve puts it, "a relationship
earns because of what it gives society." But access to that right
should be granted equally, and denying same-sex couples the right to
marry violates that principle.
The debate over same-sex marriage is about equal rights.
So what is it about marriage that confers special societal status on
that arrangement above all others? My take on the matter is that
marriage is privileged because it's seen as providing stability, which
in turn benefits the state. The types of stability are varied,
but certain ones stand out in my mind: Married couples are able
to support each other in times of financial difficulty or
hardship. Marriage stabilizes a man's sexual drive by focusing
his efforts and energy on one partner. Finally, for those couples
who chose to start a family, marriage provides a stable framework in
which to raise children.
Eve answers the question a bit differently, but I think there are some
similarities in our approach. Here's Eve's take:
Why do we give marriage more societal honor than we give
these other,
often deeply important, relationships [best friends (which many
women will recognize as the closest relationship they've ever had);
mentors; grandmothers; beloved teachers]? Because we recognize that
marriage has evolved to do more than these other
relationships do for society. These relationships do less (not
nothing, just less) to nurture children; to bind the young to the old;
to corral the often destructive forces of desire into productive and
loving channels; to bring people from youth to adulthood; and to align
the interests of parents and children, rather than forcing tragic
choices between the two. Marriage gets "props" from society because it
does all these things more than any other institution does, or could.
Marriage developed over centuries to meet several specific, fundamental
needs: children's need for a father. A couple's need for a promise of
fidelity (and consequences for breaking that promise). Young people's
need for a transition to manhood or womanhood. And men's (and women's,
but mostly men's) need for a fruitful rather than destructive channel
for sexual desire--a way of uniting eros and responsibility. In other
words, marriage developed to meet the needs of opposite-sex couples.
Why would same-sex couples expect that this institution would meet
their very different needs?
In Eve's view, same-sex marriages would fall short in meeting these
specific, fundamental
needs:
At best, marriage only addresses one need of homosexual couples: sexual
fidelity. Even there, it should be obvious that same-sex couples will
be less likely to insist on physical fidelity than heterosexual
couples. If your man might make babies with someone else, you're more
likely to see the point of restrictions on male sexuality. If you can
get pregnant, you're more likely to see the problems that might result
if the father isn't legally tied to you. So the connection between
sexual fidelity and the institution of marriage is a basic consequence
of the fact that when men and women--but not same-sex couples--have
sex, babies often result. When the institution is no longer responding
to opposite-sex couples' needs, we can expect the emphasis on sexual
fidelity to weaken.
I think one of the reasons SSM scores so low on Eve's scale is because
of the way in which she weights the original measurements.
Because she builds the premise as "children's need for a father" of
course same-sex couples (particularly lesbian ones) will fall
short. But what if the salient detail in marriage isn't
children's need for a father but children's need for two supportive
parents? Just as couples support one another during times of
financial strain, married couples can balance and support each other in
parenting: When one parent is too lenient, the other can be more
of a disciplinarian, regardless of each parent's sex. Simply to
assume that children need a father
seems to beg the question at hand. (To be fair, Eve does return
to the point of children needing fathers later in the section titled "
Heather
Has No Daddy" but I fail to see the force of her position.
Again, she simply seems to posit that children need daddies without
really arguing for it. I suspect that much of her position has to
do with her more general point about humans seeking to be defined in
terms of gender, something I'll try to address later.)
Next on Eve's list is marriage's role in fulfilling a couple's need for
a
promise of
fidelity. Eve grants that same-sex marriage would satisfy this
need for same-sex couples, but, at the same time, she assumes that
same-sex couples will be less likely to insist on physical fidelity
than opposite-sex couples, mainly because pregnancy is not a
possibility when same-sex couples have sex. Although I understand
how pregnancy can play a part in expectations of sexual fidelity, I
fail to see how this neatly resolves the matter. Yes, women have
reasons for wanting to be
married when they are pregnant. But this doesn't mean that
pregnancy will always result in increased demands for physical
fidelity, or that pregnancy is the only factor which can influence
desire for monogamous arrangements. A woman may have gotten
pregnant by
one man but have no desire to marry him; she may chose a spouse other
than the biological father. In fact, legally a woman could
conceive a child with a man other than her husband, but her husband
would still be the presumptive father. In both cases, the woman
may want marriage and the support/stability it brings, but she may not
want to marry the biological father of her child. Further, once
married, a woman may not require physical fidelity from her spouse, so
long as she has the stability provided by marriage. (I'm not
making any claims about the relative likelihood of such scenarios, only
pointing out the logical possibility of divorcing the benefits of
marriage from the act of procreation.)
Coming at the matter from another perspective, I can imagine same-sex
couples insisting on physical fidelity just as strongly as the most
devoted opposite-sex couples. As I see it, the degree to which
any couple demands (and honors) fidelity depends on the beliefs of the
individuals in the relationship. I can imagine same-sex couples
who remain faithful to each other just as much as I can imagine
opposite-sex couples who are lenient on this matter, so long as the
marriage is preserved. But these thought experiments all revolve
around the character of my hypothetical couples. Aren't there any
"real" reasons for homosexual couples to remain faithful? I think
one of the most obvious reasons a same-sex couple (or an opposite-sex
couple, for that matter) would have to insist on martial fidelity would
be the threat of sexually-transmitted diseases. And I'm not
trying
to insinuate that AIDS is a "gay disease" or anything like that.
I just think that this is a factor that would encourage monogamous
couples to remain faithful.
Another important function that marriage serves for Eve is acting as a
marker for a young person's "transition to manhood or womanhood."
Eve doesn't seem to think that same-sex marriages would fulfill this
role, but it's not clear why: Couldn't marriage serve
as a rite of passage into adulthood regardless of one's sexual
orientation? Wouldn't straights and gays alike start assuming all
of those adult responsibilities traditionally (but not essentially)
tied to marriage, such as paying the mortgage, opening shared financial
accounts, and arguing over whose family to visit for the
holidays? I'm guessing that Eve wouldn't dispute these
points. Instead, she would worry that allowing same-sex marriage
would weaken the gender-specific concepts of manhood and
womanhood. But this takes us into Eve's views on gender identity,
and I'd like to postpone that discussion until later.
The final point in marriage's favor according to Eve is "men's (and
women's,
but mostly men's) need for a fruitful rather than destructive channel
for sexual desire--a way of uniting eros and responsibility." By
this I assume she means a way of channeling (mostly) male sexual drive
into a more stable framework than simply having sex with as many
partners as possible. I think similar points can be made here as
made above in the "fidelity" section: Yes, women have reason to
want their mates to stay with them and devote their resources toward
raising their offspring, rather than siring more offspring with other
women. And presumably society breathes a collective sigh of
relief whenever an individual man outgrows his wild "sowing oats" days
and decides to settle down to mow the lawn and fix the faucet.
But wouldn't society also benefit from this "calming" influence of
marriage on its homosexuals?
Well, one of Eve's worries appears to be that the flow of influence
will backfire and non-monogamous (but married) gays will weaken not
only the institution of marriage but straight men's confidence in their
masculinity as well. Let's consider these in order.
First, how would the existence of same-sex marriages where the spouses
sleep around weaken the institution of marriage?
Eve's
answer: "SSM will change the cultural ideals
of what it means to be a good husband. If you tell men that husbands
who sleep around with other men are a-okay, you lose an important
self-image tool (
I won't do this because I want to be a good husband)
that societies have used for centuries to rein in tempted men."
This answer bothers me for several reasons. One, I don't think
straight guys need to see gay guys engaging in adultery to get the idea
about cheating on their wives. I think straight guys have pretty
much figured out the concept of cheating, even without gay guys to show
them how. In fact, married men cheating on their wives is a
fairly constant staple not only in fact but in fiction as well. I
still remember being introduced to the concept of unhappy marriages by
watching old Hitchcock films, and there cheating wasn't even the worst
that could happen when a husband lost interest in his wife.
Two, I'm not sure why Eve seems to presume that SSM will tell men that
it's OK to sleep around. Although the same-sex marriage debate is
a topic that interests me, I'll admit that lately I haven't been
following
it that closely. Perhaps I missed the part where gays stated they
want the right to marriage "but without all that stuff about
monogamy and fidelity." Perhaps I'm reading Eve uncharitably
here, but her arguments seem to paint
same-sex couples in a bad light while opposite-sex couples come across
as as basically good but struggling to resist the evil forces
threatening to tear them
apart. I think the truth of the matter would be considerably
more complicated than that. I think both types of couples would
end up representing the range from wonderful relationships to horrible
failures, with all the messed-up but sticking-at-it marriages in
between.
I think Eve may be worrying that more radical camps within the GLBT
community may push for more expansive definitions of what marriage
is. Perhaps there are activists arguing that gays should not wed
themselves to a "straight" concept like monogamous marriages.
Even if this were true, so what? Heterosexual couples went
through periods of sexual experimentation in the Sixties and Seventies
(key parties, wife swapping, "open" marriages, etc.) but marriage as an
institution survived these "threats."
As
Eve notes, monogamy and fidelity are becoming "hip" again. I
think marriage would be able to withstand the challenges its new
members might bring to the concept.
Moving on to Eve's concern that seeing homosexuals marry will queer
straight men on the whole concept of marriage, we finally begin to
touch on Eve's theories of gender identity.
As
Eve sees it, the problem is that "[s]ame-sex marriage is
unisex" so "[m]arrying a woman is significantly less proof of one's
manhood
when a woman can do it!" How exactly this would work is
unclear. Reading it, I pictured grade-school children on the
playground squealing in disgust, "Ewww! I'm not marrying a girl
if
a girl can do it! That's so
gay!!" And perhaps
young children would react in such a manner to news that
same-sex couples could marry, but hopefully the passage of time might
allow for the eventual maturation of such an opinion.
Actually, I'm probably being unfair. I think I can see what Eve
is trying to get at; it's just that it strikes me as so crude that I
have a hard time holding it my mind in order to respond to it
seriously. I'll attempt to set out why Eve's position (as I
understand it, which may be part of the problem right there) rubs me
the wrong way:
- It's patronizing to men. Men need to have their
narrow concepts of masculinity protected from outside
threats/influences? Please. If anything, men need help in
expanding their concepts of masculinity so they're not so rigid.
(Not to be flippant, but it actually occurs to me that "Gay Culture" is
doing a lot on this front. For all its possible faults, Queer
Eye for the Straight Guy at least seems to be teaching straight
guys that it's okay to know something about fashion, cuisine, and
culture.)
- It assumes that men get married as a mark of manhood.
I understand that the concepts Eve is discussing are probably meant to
work on a somewhat subconscious level, but even when I plum the depths
of my psyche I find no evidence to support this claim. I can
honestly say that when I thought about getting married, proving my
manhood never entered into it. (That came on the wedding night. [Sorry,
couldn't resist -- bad joke, I know.]) And in all the talks
I've had with other male friends who have contemplated marriage, I've
never heard them indicate anything that sounded anywhere close to a
desire to achieve manhood. Adulthood, yes, but nothing specific
to their concepts of themselves as men.
- It assumes that men avoid activities open to women.
If this were true, men would have abandoned the professions of law and
medicine once they were opened to women. But those professions
still maintain their prestige, even though they're no longer "male
only." If men were only attracted to marriage because it was a
symbol of something exclusively male (which I don't see how it could
have ever been, since most men would probably view the relevant act as
"marrying" not "marrying a woman"), then they probably weren't very
good candidates for marriage in the first place.
- It assumes that gender identity is something that should take
precedence over couples' happiness and self-determination.
Even if we granted that allowing SSM might weaken traditional markers
of
manhood/masculinity to some unknown degree, I don't think this would be
a strong argument against same-sex marriage. I think couples'
right to determine their future together would trump such a
vague, nebulous concern. To argue otherwise seems reminiscent of
opposition to interracial marriage: "It will dilute racial
identity!" Sure, one's sense of racial and gender identity are
important, but they are also adaptive and flexible. I don't think
either type of identity needs to be frozen in order to have
value. In fact, stagnation is probably the opposite course one
would want to take in order to promote healthy concepts of gender and
racial identity.
Honestly, I find it a bit surprising that someone like Eve -- whose
identity as a gay, chaste Catholic opposed to SSM is pretty
non-traditional -- seems to favor such rigid, standardized concepts of
identity. I would think she'd have an appreciation for the
endlessly possible permutations of identity. And I'm not sure
how advocating greater flexibility in identities equates to "
fewer
role models and ideals." Wouldn't such an advocate be
offering
more role models, not fewer? Eve seems to think
that
more possibilities will lead to
more confusion
on the part of married couples looking for guidance on how they're
supposed to act. See
this
entry, for example, where she rails against Michael Kinsley for
suggesting that married people "set their own rules" regarding children
and finances: "How could anyone look at marriage in America today
and think it needs to become
more ad hoc,
more centered
on the individual contracting adults and not on the children and the
wider society,
more do-it-yourself?" I can sympathize
with the concern to an extent: Even something as mundane as
choosing a digital camera can feel overwhelming when presented with a
multitude of options. But I guess that if I had to choose, I
think it's better if people are able to pick the marital methods and
models that work for them rather than forcing everyone into the same
"one size fits all" structure, ignoring individual needs or
preferences. I know married couples who have individual financial
accounts (checking, savings, credit cards, etc.) and while it may seem
strange to
me, if it works for them...
Oh, god -- there's so much more: So much more to address; so much
more to write. But this is already getting so long that I fear no
one will read through it all. I'll end by tossing out a couple
points I wanted to make but didn't get to yet:
- I'm not sure why Eve seems to assume that same-sex couples who
want to
get married know in advance that they're not going to be faithful to
each other. I mean, it's not like gays are pressured into
marriage or do it because "I dunno, it seems like the right thing to
do, like something I have to do if I want to be a grown-up."
Sure, I can imagine some couples agreeing to do it primarily for the
benefits. But opposite-sex couples abuse marriage for benefits
(such as green cards, to name one example) and I don't see efforts to
close off heterosexual marriage. If we only focused on the
absolute worst-case scenarios, I think any form of marriage
would come
out looking pretty bad. But I think we have to have to assume
that most people will go into marriage at least intending to make an
honest go of it.
- I don't think same-sex parenting would be as deleterious toward
child-rearing as Eve seems to think it would be. I think it's
more important that children have two loving parents to support each
other as they raise the kids; I don't think it's crucial to ensure that
the parents represent both sexes. But even if studies were to
show that children did better with opposite-sex parents, I don't think
this would decide the matter against SSM. Imagine if studies were
to show that children do better when one parent stays home
full-time. Perhaps there are even historical studies showing that
children's development was negatively impacted when women began to
enter the workplace in full force. If this were true (and I'm
sure there are already studies out there making such claims), should
wives be expected to stay home as full-time mothers? I don't
think an entire group or class can be punished for such social
developments. (And, yes, I view the withholding of life options
such as a career or marriage as a form of punishment.) If
anything, society has to work together to solve the problem (children
doing poorly according to certain measures) without reversing any civil
rights advancements made.
- Regarding the taming of the male (or female) sexual drive:
I think this only ever works if the individual in question choses and
commits to it. In general, I dislike the
question/concept of "But if I get married, how do I know I'll stay in
love with that person forever?" Because you don't know
-- that's
looking at it all wrong, in my opinion. Loving someone for the
rest of your life isn't some passive thing that happens to you --
something you can seek out and find if you only look hard enough.
It's something you actively work at -- something you decide to do and
follow through on. Or at least that's my take on it. (And
this might be an area where Eve and I agree, assuming I'm reading her
comments on the
transformative power of promise-making in marriage correctly.
I just
think (unlike Eve) that society should extend the opportunity to engage
in this transformative power to same-sex couples.)
In closing, I think that Eve is right to wonder about the difficulties
extending marriage to same-sex couples might raise for society.
It's certainly wise when changing public policy to think about the
impact to society at large. I just happen to think that none of
the difficulties Eve raises are insurmountable deal-breakers. I
understand that the uncertainty surrounding such changes can be
unsettling. I don't think we should be blind to
such complexities, but I don't think we should let our worries blind us
either.
Loading The Canon
About a week ago I wrote an entry
discussing
Steve Higgins' call for a Comic Book Canon. Since then, Steve
has gone on to take a stab at putting together
his
list of recommended classics (not a permalink). I haven't
made any progress in assembling a list of my own, but a couple readers
did point out several resources that might prove helpful:
Sequential Tart's Recommended
Reading Lists;
Friends
of Lulu's Recommended Reading Lists;
Comics Worth
Reading's List of...Comics Worth Reading; and the
Artbomb site (thanks to
Jason Kimble and Johanna Draper Carlson for the links). One book
that seems to pop up on almost everyone's list is
Watchmen.
In fact,
Eve
Tushnet suggests
Watchmen is worthy of inclusion in "not
solely the comics canon, which is boringly obvious, but the ultimate
canon where all art forms converge." I guess if there's one book
that's sure to make everyone's
list, it would be
Watchmen, right? Well, maybe
not. I recently stumbled upon
this
review of the comic book classic from Steven Berg.
Unlike most comic readers, Steven does not appear to be an unqualified
fan of
Moore's work (Steven does like
League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen considerably more than
Watchmen, and
From Hell even more
than that, so it's not as though Steven is a simple
Moore basher, either).
Although I count myself
among the legion of
Watchmen fans, I
thought Steven raised some
interesting points, so I'll reproduce his "bullet-list review" (yes!
bullet points!!) and respond to his criticisms in
bold.
I've reproduced the
main body of Steven's criticism below, but I've touched up some
misspellings (it's Dr.
Manhattan, not
Manhatten) and
I've
replaced all
nongendered
pronouns with their more traditional counterparts:
- What's up with that pirate comic? First of all, it sucks. Second
of all, it's totally thematically redundant with the main story of Watchmen. It adds nothing that I can see.
OK, it
answers the question, "What comics would people read if superheroes
actually existed?" But we didn't need an entire lame comic story about
zombie pirates written in overwrought purple language to answer that
question.
I thought the pirate comic was pretty good, even taken in its
own right. Not to say that it's great literature, but it certainly
works as a moralistic tale in the vein of old EC horror comics or Twilight
Zone episodes.
I also think the pirate comic contributes to the larger
narrative. First, as Steven said, it answers the question of what
comics might be popular if
superheroes really existed. Second, I believe the pirate
comic adds a bit of complexity to the main storyline. As I read
it, the survivor in the
pirate comic is meant as a rough parallel for Veidt: Someone who
is so wrapped up in his fear of some future horror that he kills his
fellow man in order to save him. As Veidt says to Manhattan at
the end, he dreams of himself as that survivor, swimming out to meet
the pirate ship. Although Veidt protests that he makes himself feel
every death, Veidt has set himself off from humanity by putting himself
above (outside) human morality.
Another interesting complexity that the pirate comic adds, in my
opinion, is the suggestion that Veidt's slaughter of millions was
unnecessary. For if the parallel holds, Veidt's
plan to save humanity was just as superfluous as the survivor's plan to
"save" his
town. In both cases, the threats seemed inescapable. But in
the pirate comic, the threat never came to pass. Perhaps the war
between the U.S. and USSR, which seemed so inevitable, would never have
happened even if Veidt had not intervened.
- Sally Jupiter was a slutty pin-up action girl who was raped and
then had an affair with her rapist. Excuse me, Mr. Moore, could we get
some nuance in here? (I'm probably being unfair. Not all the characters
were as flat as Sally Jupiter, and anyway I'm probably forgetting some
minor roundness in Sally's character. Actually, it's not Sally Jupiter
as an individual character that bothers me, but Moore's tendency to use
sexual abuse as facile characterization. It's also evident in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. It
would
be evident in From Hell, but I'm
willing to
give Moore some slack there because, hey, it's about a
prostitute-murdering crazy Freemason -- it sort of has to involve lots
of sexual abuse stuff.)
This part disturbed me as well, but I don't know if that's a
weakness
on the book's part. I think we're supposed to be upset by the
idea that Sally would have a willing, consensual affair with Blake
after being assaulted by him years before. Sally herself
confesses that she felt ashamed about the affair when confronted by her
daughter's knowledge of events. I think the point Moore was
shooting for was the one that Laurie expresses to her mother:
"People's lives take them strange places. They do strange
things." Although Sally's actions are less than ideal (I
seriously doubt Moore intended to offer up the character as a role
model worthy of emulation), I think her character does capture how
basically good or decent people can make decisions that strike
observers (and themselves) as bad.
I think a distinction has to be drawn between something being
objectionable considered absolutely and something being bad
writing. Often times fictional characters do things that you may
want to rail against, but that doesn't mean that the overall work is
flawed, just that real-life people often are and that gets reflected
back in fiction.
Regarding the charge that Moore tends to subject characters (especially
female characters) to sexual abuse in his stories, I'd
have to re-examine more of his works to address that point. I do
remember being disturbed by the treatment of Evie at the hands of V
when I read V for Vendetta, but that abuse (and it was abuse,
in my opinion, despite V's defense of it and Evie's eventual acceptance
of it) wasn't sexual, and it did serve the story, even if I found it
extremely objectionable.
- Actually, I thought Watchmen
was
pretty good for the first 11 chapters. Then Veidt's plan is revealed.
OK, I'm willing to believe that Veidt is crazy enough and has the
resources to put this plan in motion. However...
I can understand how a work's ending can retroactively ruin the
entire work, especially when the work's ending is essential to
understanding what was going on in the earlier plot. But I
disagree that everything falls apart at the end of Watchmen, as
I'll argue in what follows...
- As far as I can tell, Moore expects us to believe this is
actually a sort of viable plan. Uh huh.
- Like the nations of the Earth are going to just drop the Cold
War and start working together to stop the extraterrestrial threat?
Un-fucking-likely, sez I. Even if you could convince every nation that
it's not just some crazy trick the US is pulling, or something like
that, and you could convince them the best way to deal with the threat
is to create a peaceful world alliance, it'd take some serious
diplomacy to get such an alliance together and coordinated.
I agree with Steven here: This is the weakest part
of Watchmen for me as well. But we have the benefit
of post-9/11
events to aid our analysis. September 11th
showed us that just because other nations may be sympathetic toward
the U.S. in
times of tragedy doesn't mean those nations will abandon their own
interests or aspirations, or trust us in all matters (or that the U.S.
will act any more multilaterally). And there will probably always
be some fringe
elements who would suspect the U.S. of perpetrating any horrific
act on its own citizens. Looking at the events in Watchmen,
it seems
plausible that the USSR might be so shocked by the horror that befell
New York that they would withdraw their troops from Afghanistan out of
sympathy. (I can also see how a nation might use such an
opportunity to press its advantage against an opponent. Which
outcome is more probable is anyone's guess but probably depends on
knowing much more about the situation at hand). But it does seem
unlikely that one isolated event (no matter how horrific) would
suddenly cause two nations with long-standing conflicts to become best
friends forever. In Moore's defense, however, I'm not sure just
how
long-term he intended us
to view the peace on display at the book's end. For one thing,
the threat
of Rorschach's journal being discovered
is the final scene in the book–the implication being that Veidt's
plan will be exposed after all. Even if we discount this (as most
people living in the Watchmen-world probably would were it ever
published), I don't know if anything in the story requires us to assume
that Moore saw this plan as viable. Although we see signs of what
appears to be a peaceful, Russian-influenced U.S. in the last few pages
(a "Burgers 'n' Borscht" fast-food joint; a sign advertising a
screening of Tarkovsky's The
Sacrifice (another nice thematic touch by Moore); a "One World,
One Accord" poster), for all we know, these may be isolated
occurrences, and may all be attempts by Veidt to manipulate the public
(like the "Millennium" billboard also on display, replacing the
now-retired "Nostalgia" campaign). And even though Veidt says he
now wants to "help [Earth] toward Utopia," there's no guarantee that
he'll be successful in his efforts. Consider the example Veidt
offers to demonstrate the brilliant "lateral thinking" of his idol,
Alexander of Macedonia: Alexander didn't succeed in untying the
Gordian
knot; he only succeeded in destroying the problem. If the point
of the Gordian
knot was to untie it, Alexander was a failure, not a success.
Similarly, although Veidt may have
eliminated the immediate problem facing him (the US-USSR tensions in
Afghanistan), he didn't learn anything about "untying the knot"
(establishing lasting peace).
- And by the time it's coordinated, somebody's going to have
figured out Veidt was behind it all along, and that's the end of the
alliance. If crazy fuck Rorschach managed to figure everything out, the
CIA and
the KGB
and whatever other intelligence organizations are going to have it
figured out it about 5 minutes.
Perhaps, but Rorschach is also somewhat of
an...unconventional thinker, so maybe not.
- Related to the above point, Moore has Dan Dreiberg and Laurie
Juspeczyk, after a few minutes of horror, decide they should let Veidt
get away with it all because they apparently think the plan will work.
I don't really see Dan and Laurie being stupid and/or crazy enough to
think the plan will work. I think the point is that there are no
heroes, so Moore has to have Dan and Laurie sacrificing their heroic
ideals and all that, but they should have come up with a way to make
that
point that doesn't make them look like incredible idiots.
I didn't read it as Dan and Laurie necessarily agreeing that
Veidt's
plan would
work (although, as Moore depicted events, Veidt's plan did appear to be
working, at least for the moment). I saw it more as Dan and
Laurie acquiescing to Dr. Manhattan's observation that exposing Veidt's
plot would serve no practical purpose at that point. True, Laurie
and Dan utter overwrought lines such as "Jesus, he was right. All
we did was fail to stop him saving Earth." and "How...how can humans
make decisions like this? We're damned if we stay quiet, Earth's
damned if we don't." But I'd chalk this up to both characters
being overcome with emotion and exhaustion at that point (if you
want an "in-story" explanation).
- Anyway, what's up with this stuff about there being no heroes?
Lots of people do heroic things in real life, so why can't there be
heroes in superheroland? I'm not bitter or cynical enough to appreciate
Watchmen's thematic content.
Although most of the "superheroes" are less than perfectly
heroic, I still think Moore depicts them as trying to do
good/right. Or at least most of the human ones–Dr. Manhattan
seems too far removed from humanity to be considered heroic, and the
Comedian seems too amoral. Even Ozymandias acts in a manner
motivated by what he considers to be right (viewed from a utilitarian
perspective). Further, the scene where Malcolm (the psychiatrist
who treated Rorschach) attempts to intervene in the fight between two
women always struck me as heroic/uplifting. Although his faith in
an objective moral order and higher meaning has been shaken, and
although his estranged wife begs (orders) him not to get involved,
Malcolm soldiers on: "Gloria, please. I have to. In a
world like this... I mean, it's all we can do, try to help each
other. It's all that means anything." Although the
worldview in Watchmen might appear cracked, I don't think it's broken
beyond all hope.
- Dr. Manhattan's murder of Rorschach was despicable plotting on
Moore's part. Up to that point, I thought Dr. Manhattan was about the
only sympathetic character for me in the entire story (on the surface
he's the least human character, but really he strikes me as the most
human in depth, since he's not based on shallow caricatures like the
rest -- "slutty rape victim," "megalomaniacal supervillain," "costume
fetishist," "psychotic vigilante," blah blah blah). Then -- why?
Couldn't Dr. Manhattan just erase their memories or something? It's not
like Dr. Manhattan's powers are limited by anything other than plot
necessity, so Moore must have had some reason for turning Dr. Manhattan
into a cold-blooded killer. What was it?
Well, Dr. Manhattan was already depicted as a cold-blooded
killer earlier in the book (in chapter four he's shown blowing up a
villain's head and the narrative caption reads "The morality of my
activities escapes me.") Plus, Jon cheats on Janey with the
younger Laurie, so it's not as though his motivations were
traditionally moral. In fact, throughout the story, Jon only
seems to respond to logical considerations, not moral ones. As
for why he killed Rorschach rather than somehow else incapacitating
him, perhaps it was because Manhattan still viewed human life in the
abstract: Although he had come to admire life as "the
thermodynamic miracle," there was no indication that particular human
lives meant very much to him. He had already grown distant from
Laurie (his relationships–like his clothing–seemed to be artifacts
that he shed along with his humanity). Perhaps Moore had
Manhattan kill Rorschach to drive home the point that
Manhattan–with the power to create
life as well as destroy it–had become more god than man.
Is this a mark of a classic–to be generating commentary and
controversy years after it was written? Or are we only proving
Jess
Lemon's point for her? ("Find something new to analyze to death,
you blasted
fanboys!") I'll have to find something else–something recent–to
pore over...
Marvel's New Year's Resolution: More Crap
Marvel has finally released their solicitation info for comics coming
out in
January
2004. Comments:
- Regarding this solicitation for X-Statix #18: "When a
mysterious CD gives new meaning to the term 'killer track' — leaving
its listeners dead — it's up to the X-Statix to figure out why!"
Because to the RIAA, nothing is too extreme if it discourages
file-sharing?
- Avengers #77 features "new costumes"? Already? Didn't
Coipel (who is still the regular Avengers artist as far as I
know) just redesign most of the characters' costumes a couple issues ago?
- Interesting that the solicitation for Hulk #66 has a
spoiler that
you need to highlight to read, at least in Toon Zone's version of the
solicit. Wonder
how they'll get around that
in the Previews catalog—include a pair of those "decoder" glasses in
the mag? Or maybe they'll just run it without the spoiler
warning, as Comics
Continuum has.
- Checking in with Captain Marvel, now at #18: Yep,
Marv's
still crazy.
- The Incorrigible Hulk one-shot is by Peter Bagge, so I
will be
buying this.
- Ultimate Six #6 (of 7): "Now 7 big issues!" Or as I prefer
to look at it: "Yes, we know it would make more sense if a mini-series
featuring a team called the Sinister Six lasted only six issues,
but hotshot writer Brian Michael Bendis doesn't know how to rein in a
story, and we don't know how to rein him in!"
- Ultimate Spider-Man #52: "It's an Ultimate 'Cat' fight
when Black
Cat & Elektra
face off, with Spider-Man caught in the middle ... (we should all be so
lucky)!" Ugh. And people give anime a hard time for
indulging in fanservice...
- I love how Marvel's covers continue to have absolutely
nothing whatsoever to do
with the content inside. Case in point: Amazing
Spider-Man #503, whose story is decidedly mystical ("In the
aftermath
of the inter-dimensional rift caused by Spider-Man & Doctor
Strange's battle with Dormammu, a sorceress of limitless power is set
free from years of captivity — and sets forth on a quest through
Manhattan to properly thank the one responsible for it — Spider-Man!"),
features this inappropriately street-level cover:
Because nothing says "inter-dimensional mystical adventure" like a
generic cover of Spider-Man webbing up some
nameless young punks with guns.
- Interesting copy for 1602 #6: "Doctor Strange goes
to the
moon!" I don't know whether to make a Honeymooners joke
or wonder
if Gaiman thought he was writing a children's book again ("And Doom ran
away with the spoon!")
- And Marvel has taken a different tack than I expected with the Essential
Punisher TPB, reprinting most of the Punisher's
early
appearances in other titles and ending on the five-issue mini-series
from the Eighties by Steven Grant and Mike Zeck. Here's the full
solicitation:
ESSENTIAL PUNISHER VOL. 1 TPB
Written by Gerry Conway, Archie Goodwin, Len Wein, Marv Wolfman,
Frank Miller, Bill Mantlo, Steven Grant & Mike W. Barr
Illustrated by: Ross Andru, Tony DeZuniga, Keith Pollard, Frank
Miller, Al Milgrom, Greg LaRocque, Mike Zeck & Frank Springer
Cover by Gil Kane
When the mob killed his family, Frank Castle went to war. But before he
became the scourge of the underworld, the Punisher set his sights on a
certain world-famous wall-crawler. In time for next summer's THE
PUNISHER big-screen adventure, Marvel presents the vengeance-seeking
vigilante's earliest appearances in the pages of AMAZING SPIDER-MAN,
CAPTAIN AMERICA, DAREDEVIL and more. Collects in black & white
format AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #129, #134-135, #161-162, #174-175, #201-202
& ANNUAL #15, GIANT-SIZE SPIDER-MAN #4, MARVEL PREVIEW PRESENTS #2,
MARVEL SUPER ACTION #1, CAPTAIN AMERICA #241, DAREDEVIL #182-184,
SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #81-83 & PUNISHER #1-5!
January 21 :: 568 pages :: B&W :: Marvel PSR :: $14.99
I may actually consider getting this. I'm such a schmuck for
nostalgia.
EDIT: In case anyone was wondering, like me, what the heck
MARVEL PREVIEW PRESENTS #2 and MARVEL SUPER ACTION #1 are, here are the
covers courtesy of
Mile High
Comics:
According to
this site,
the Punisher stories in these mags were reprinted in something called
Classic
Punisher back in 1989.
Return of the Patron Saint of Grotesque Anatomy
Now I know how late-night comics must have felt when Schwarzenegger
announced he was joining the recall race for California's
governorship. From today's
Lying
in the Gutters:
I also hear that Rob Liefeld is to take full creative reins
on a new
"X-Force" title, as Marvel outsource the entire creative and editorial
responsibilities on the book to him. Liefeld will also be responsible
for producing a range of one-shots and mini-series associated with the
project. Expect the return of a number of his New Mutants and X-Force
characters. Liefeld declined to comment.
Yeah, because the last time Marvel outsourced a comic to Liefeld
that went swimmingly. Either way this is great news for me:
Either Liefeld will make excuses for missed deadlines, thereby
providing material for mockery; or Liefeld will produce actual artwork,
thereby providing material for mockery:
Grotesque genius.
Mainstream Magazine Mentions of Comics
The latest
Entertainment Weekly (#735, October 31, 2003) has a
review of
Mythology, the Alex Ross art book. It gets an
A.
(
ADD
also reviewed the book and gave it a grade of
4.5/5.)
And I forgot to mention this earlier, so I might as well do so
now: The October 20, 2003 issue of
The New Yorker (the
"Making Movies" issue) refers to two Marvel movies,
The Punisher
and
Hulk.
The Punisher is mentioned in an article
on stunts ("The Art of the Crash") and the scene in which the Punisher's family is killed before his eyes is dissected in detail. The character of the Punisher
is described as "the darkest character in the moral universe of Marvel
Comics" and "a gun-toting vigilante superhero" whose simple philosophy
is "'I kill only those who deserve killing.'"
Hulk is
discussed in an article about how writing credits are arbitrated for
movies ("Credit Grab"). Two earlier, rejected plotlines are
mentioned: "The earlier plotlines ranged from having Bruce
Banner, the Hulk's mild-mannered alter ego, hang out with a delinquent
teen-age sidekick in Las Vegas to having him undergo experiments for a
mission to Mars."
No Adrienne Barbeau??
Guess it's time to start stockpiling lame blurbs and bad puns to mock
the more-than-likely flop known as
Man-Thing:
- "Whoever Knows Crappy F/X Bombs at the Box Office's
Touch"
- "Audiences Want No-Thing to do with Man-Thing"
- "Man-Thing Giant-Size...Flop, That Is"
- "Muck This"
Also fun: Anticipating the inevitable odd-sounding quotes, such
as this one from Artisan Entertainment Executive Vice President Patrick
Gunn: "We feel this film impressively introduces MAN-THING
in a manner that will really thrill the viewing public.”
[Need Cute Alliterative Title Using Letter M]
Saw this article over on Folio thanks to
Dirk
Deppey's link: It's a piece titled
"Mighty
Manga Mags" and it looks at how manga magazines are doing here in
the U.S. The main focus is on Viz's
Shonen Jump, but it
also mentions Gutsoon's
Raijin Comics and the possibility that
Del Ray may be looking at launching a manga mag. A couple things
that raised questions in my mind:
- I didn't understand how these figures for Shonen Jump
jibe: "Its publisher, VIZ, is guaranteeing a circulation of
150,000 by 2004" and "VIZ plans to print 1 million issues a month by
2005....double the 500,000 for Shonen Jump in September." Why is
Viz's estimate for circulation in 2004 350,000 lower than the print run
for September? Was the 2004 circulation goal misprinted? (I
seem to remember that Shonen Jump
launched with numbers near 300,000, so "circulation of 150,000 by
2004" would be quite a disappointment in my mind.)
- I wonder how Gutsoon's collected editions are selling. I
had no idea the numbers for Raijin Comics were so low (assuming
the
article's circulation estimate of 15,000 is correct). I thought
Gutsoon had signed some distribution deals to get the magazine (and
books) into different markets, but I'm not sure how successful those
arrangements have been. I haven't seen Gutsoon graphic novels in
any of the local bookstores when I've looked, but I always find plenty
of
collections from Viz (and Tokyopop, of course). I hope Gutsoon is
doing OK, if only for the selfish reason that I want to continue
reading Slam Dunk in collected form.
- I was disappointed to see no mention of Dark Horse's Super
Manga
Blast! in the article. I have a personal fondness for the
anthology, since it was what turned me on to manga in a major
way. I've since dropped it (and other manga anthologies) in favor
of the collected editions of the series I really enjoy (Club 9
and What's Michael? from SMB; Slam Dunk and
maybe City Hunter from Raijin), but I still think SMB
deserves some props, since it's been around a couple years
longer than the more recent upstarts. Maybe the "flipped" format
keeps SMB from being hip enough to rate a mention.
Shawn
Fumo also shares his thoughts on the short piece. Shawn is
particularly impressed with news that Viz has signed a distribution
deal
with Scholastic's book club (the article isn't clear on whether the
deal is just for
Shonen Jump, the
Shonen Jump
collections of select series, or Viz books in general). And even
though it really has
nothing to do with the topic, here are some old reviews I wrote for
early issues of
Shonen Jump and
Raijin Comics over at
Anime
News Network.
Mreow! Catty!!
Ladies and gentlemen, the
real costume Halle Berry will be
wearing in her upcoming
Catwoman movie:
Marvel Comics for January 2004
Marvel's solicitations for January 2004 still aren't up at any of the
usual sites, but Diamond has uploaded its
new
order forms for Jan. 2004 (warning: big-ass text file). Here's the Marvel section (minus
the backlist):
AVENGERS #77 (Note Price)
$0.50
AVENGERS #78 $2.25
ULTIMATES #13 (RES) (Note Price)
$3.50
ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #2 $2.25
FANTASTIC FOUR #509 (#80) $2.25
INCREDIBLE HULK #65 $2.25
INCREDIBLE HULK #66 $2.25
STARTLING STORIES INCORRIGIBLE HULK ONE SHOT #1
$2.99
SILVER SURFER #5 $2.25
HULK NIGHTMERICA #5 (Of 6) (RES)
$2.99
CAPTAIN MARVEL #18 $2.99
CAPTAIN MARVEL #19 $2.99
HAWKEYE #4 $2.99
THANOS #4 $2.99
THANOS #5 $2.99
CRIMSON DYNAMO #6 $2.50
THOR #73 $2.99
IRON MAN #76 $2.99
ULTIMATE SIX #6 (Of 7) $2.25
ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #52 $2.25
SPIDER-GIRL #68 $2.99
SPIDER-GIRL #69 $2.99
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #503 (#62) $2.25
SPIDER-MAN UNLIMITED #1 $2.99
SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN #9 $2.25
SPIDER-MAN DOC OCTOPUS OUT OF REACH #3 (Of 5)
$2.99
SPIDER-MAN AND DR OCTOPUS NEGATIVE EXPOSURE #4 (Of 5)
$2.99
NEW X-MEN #151 $2.25
NEW X-MEN #152 $2.25
ULTIMATE X-MEN #41 $2.25
UNCANNY X-MEN #437 $2.25
UNCANNY X-MEN #438 $2.25
NYX #4 $2.99
X-STATIX #18 $2.99
X-TREME X-MEN #40 $2.99
X-TREME X-MEN #41 $2.99
EXILES #40 $2.99
EXILES #41 $2.99
WOLVERINE #10 $2.25
WEAPON X #19 $2.99
DAREDEVIL #56 $2.99
ELEKTRA #31 $2.99
ELEKTRA #32 $2.99
MARVEL 1602 #6 (Of 8) $3.50
CAPTAIN AMERICA #22 $2.99
HULK GRAY #5 (Of 6) $3.50
ANT-MAN #2 (Of 4) (MR) $2.99
SUPREME POWER #6 (MR) $2.99
PUNISHER MAX #1 (MR) $2.99
PUNISHER MAX #2 (MR) $2.99
DEATHLOK DETOUR #1 (Of 4) (MR)
$2.99
DEATHLOK DETOUR #2 (Of 4) (MR)
$2.99
RUNAWAYS #10 $2.99
MYSTIQUE #10 $2.99
EMMA FROST #7 $2.50
VENOM #10 (Note Price) $2.99
NEW MUTANTS #10 (Note Price) $2.99
INHUMANS #9 $2.99
INHUMANS #10 $2.99
SENTINEL #11 $2.99
NAMOR #11 $2.99
HUMAN TORCH #9 $2.99
BORN HC (MR) $17.99
PUNISHER VOL 3 HC $24.99
ESSENTIAL PUNISHER VOL 1 TP $14.99
UNCANNY X-MEN VOL 4 THE DRACO TP
$15.99
ULTIMATE X-MEN VOL 7 BLOCKBUSTER TP
$12.99
X-TREME X-MEN VOL 6 INTIFADA TP
$16.99
EXILES VOL 6 FANTASTIC VOYAGE TP
$17.99
SPIDER-MAN LEGENDS VOL 3 TODD MCFARLANE BOOK 3 TP
$24.99
CAPTAIN AMERICA VOL 4 CAPTAIN AMERICA LIVES AGAIN TP
$12.99
ELEKTRA VOL 3 RELENTLESS TP $14.95
EARTH X VOL 5 PARADISE X BOOK 2 TP (RES)
$29.99
MARVEL MASTERWORKS FANTASTIC FOUR VOL 5 2ND ED HC
$49.99
MARVEL MASTERWORKS SUB-MARINER VOL 1 2ND ED HC
$49.99
MARVEL MASTERWORKS UNCANNY X-MEN VOL 2 2ND ED HC
$39.99
Stuff that catches my eye:
- A 50-cent issue of Avengers? Guess the 25-cent
promo comics lost too much money, huh?
- If I remember correctly, INCORRIGIBLE HULK is a one-shot by Peter
Bagge (much like his Megalomaniacal Spider-Man). If so,
I'll be picking this up.
- Any guesses as to what the ESSENTIAL PUNISHER vol. 1 will
reprint? The original mini-series and subsequent ongoing from the
80s? If so, I wonder if they'll throw in the Punisher's earlier
appearances from Amazing Spider-Man.
Is It Really Time For A Nineties Revival Already?
Finally,
Sandman
done right.
Bill Jemas, Senior Citizen
Mark
Millar steps up to defend friend and former boss Bill Jemas from
the trolls on the Newsarama board. It's a sentiment I can
certainly respect, and I do get sick of fanboys attacking Jemas for
everything they dislike about Marvel (or NuMarvel or M*rv*l or however
the Jemas era at Marvel is designated). But this line really
irked
me:
Bill...co-wrote the Spider-Man title that formed the basis
of the
800,000,000 dollar movie
Bill Jemas co-wrote
Amazing Fantasy #15?
Small Press Short Bus?
Quote of The Week: "The problem isn't that the bookstore
market is being held to some Olympian standard of sales, but that in
the Direct Market, anything that doesn't feature superheroes or hard
genre trappings is held down to a Special Olympian standard." -
Dirk
Deppey, discussing the relative merits of the bookstore market and
the Direct Market with retailer Brian Hibbs.
CrossGen: All Infinite Things Must Come To An End
Bill Rosemann,
recently
promoted from Director of Marketing & Communications to Senior
Vice President of Publishing, addressed (among other topics) the
cancellation of most of CrossGen's "Sigilverse" titles, which includes
all of the titles from the company's initial lauch (
Meridian,
Mystic,
Scion,
Sigil, and the previously-cancelled
The First).
I found these two bits from the interview amusing:
BILL ROSEMANN: First, since the launch of CrossGen, Mark
Alessi and the
creators repeatedly talked about how each of the series, while they
would last longer than a four-to-six-issue miniseries, were, in fact,
finite stories.
ROSEMANN: The intention for each of these titles to last indefinitely
was sincere -- just as it is with any publisher who launches an ongoing
title.
While I realize the two statements aren't outright contradictions, they
still struck me as incongruous: "We'd sincerely hoped we could
milk these series indefinitely, even if the stories we actually had to
tell were limited."
DC's New Year's Resolution: Stay The Course
DC's
solicitations for January 2004 are up. Not much that excites
me.
New Frontier and
Superman: Secret Identity
were projects that
sounded interesting when they were first announced (which seems like
years ago), but now I'm thinking that I'll (all together now) "wait for
the trade." About the only new project that catches my eye is the
Vertigo romance mini-series,
My
Faith In Frankie. In terms of my usual stuff, the 200th
issue of
Wonder Woman sounds nice:
I'm enjoying Greg Rucka's run so far, and I like that DC is working in
a couple shorter tales reflecting the history of the character.
And the description for
H-E-R-O #12 sounds promising, but I
also realize that it could easily devolve into an exercise in the very
exploitative trends it claims to be parodying ("This manly man is now
an electrifying, beautiful babe, complete with a revealing costume and
the figure to fill it.").
In terms of stuff I
used to get, I
certainly picked the right time to drop
JSA:
Writer Geoff Johns has thrilled fans and critics alike with
his
groundbreaking work on JSA (featuring art by Don Kramer & Keith
Champagne) and HAWKMAN (featuring art by Rags Morales & Michael
Bair), mixing the high adventure of classic comics with a modern
cutting edge. Now, these two titles come together to shake these
hallowed characters to their very core in a 6-part weekly crossover
running through JSA #56-58 and HAWKMAN #23-#25: “Black Reign!”
A six-part weekly crossover with
Hawkman? Ugh.
So
glad I decided to
drop
JSA with this month's order.
And, damn, Tomer Hanuka can design a cover:
Are Zombies The New Ninjas Monkeys Pirates?
What is it with zombie comics lately?
Lone,
Walking
Dead, several recent issues of
Metal Hurlant.
All have featured plots with human surviviors forced to deal with
zombies in post-apocalyptic futures. Is it something to do with a
general
sense of unease?
First-Ever AC/GA Crossover!
Steve
Higgins calls for the establishment of a Comic Book Canon in his
most recent "Advocating Comics" column (not a permanent link, so search
through the
archives
if the link turns up some different topic by the time you click
it). I was going to respond with my thoughts on Steve's column on
his message board, but I figured since Steve namechecked me in his
column (but not my blog, the bastard), it was only fair that I return
the favor here. Plus, I promised him a crossover before I read
his article. [Gratuitous Aside: I was tickled at the way
Steve described me in his piece as "former reviewer for Broken Frontier
and fellow comics advocate." While these are both fine and true
descriptions, I wondered if people might read this and come away with
the impression that Steve and I first met while on staff at BF.
If I recall correctly, our association goes back a little further than
that: I believe I first met Steve on the old DC message boards
where he and I would argue over which series was better–DOOM PATROL
or POWER COMPANY. Eventually we
both
lost,
but we continue to disagree on other topics on other boards to this
day.]
Although Steve's column was apparently inspired by
my
disagreeing with his word choice in an
earlier
column, I do agree with Steve's general point about establishing "a
literary canon of sorts for the graphic narrative." I know some
people bristle at the term 'canon' but I've always understood the
concept in the sense of "a group of literary works that are generally
accepted as representing a field." For me the important qualifier
is "generally." I think there will always be disagreements about
what works are
most representative of a given class, but I do
think it's worthwhile nonetheless to have a shared frame of reference
one can point out to people interested in learning more about a medium
(or genre, or author, or whatever the topic in focus happens to
be). When I dabbled in Film Studies back in college, for example,
I was glad to cover "the classics," even if I'd already seen them or
ended up thinking they were terribly boring. By looking
critically at important films, I gained an appreciation for why
particular films were considered essential, and I learned the basics of
film criticism in the process.
Another issue that surfaces when trying to piece together a canon is
that certain works can appear problematic from a modern
perspective. Mark Twain's
Huckleberry Finn is a perennial
target for charges of racism, for example, yet most courses in American
Literature leave it in the canon. Personally, I think works that
are historically important should be acknowledged as such, even if they
are controversial for various reasons. Just because something is
included in the canon doesn't mean it's a flawless work or worthy of
moral
approbation. In Film Studies, both
Birth of a Nation
and
Triumph
of the Will were shown, mainly for their historical and
technical significance, but the discussion also covered why the films
were reprehensible. So important comics such as
Action Comics
#1 and
Detective Comics #27 could be included in the Comic Book
Canon and still acknowledged as "
dumber
than a bag of hammers."
If we agree that a shared frame of reference can be a useful thing to
have, then the task turns to setting out just how large that frame
should be. Not everything can be included, of course, and this is
where disagreements inevitably spring up: Why was such-and-such a
work included? Why
wasn't such-and-such a work
included? Because there's no way to satisfy everyone with one
list, I think it's important to view the lists as starting points, both
in terms of a starting point which can lead enthusiasts to discover new
works and in terms of a starting point for discussions about the
criteria behind the lists. ("Why does this list leave off
European or Japanese comics?" "Well, we wanted to limit the scope
of our overview to North American comics, but that isn't to suggest
that there aren't worthwhile comics from those regions." "Oh,
OK.")
So, what works would I nominate for inclusion in the Comic Book
Canon? I haven't even started to think about that yet.
There's
a
thread in Steve's forum taking suggestions about what should be
considered "Essential Works of Sequential Art," and Steve has promised
to reveal his picks in next week's column. I'll mull over it
myself, but I consider myself pretty bad at coming up with lists like
this. It's a cop-out, but I'd probably like to start by looking
at other people's lists (and then criticizing their picks in true
blogger fashion), and even then I can only think of one serious attempt
to establish a list of canonical comics,
The Comic Journal's list
of Top 100 English-Language Comics of the Century (and
the accompanying
lists that fed the final list). Does anyone else know
of other attempts to list some of the best comics ever? (Anyone
who suggests any of
Wizard's endless "Top 100 X-Men Comics of
All Time!!" rankings will be dealt with appropriately.)
Things Looking Grimmer, But In A Good Way
Damn, more competition in the comics blogosphere.
I mean, how about a nice warm welcome for longtime comic book reader,
10-month-old
columnist,
first-time blogger, Graeme McMillan, whose new comics blog
Fanboy Rampage! just
debuted this week. Looks like it's going to be focused on Graeme
surfing various comic book sites and message boards, then reporting
back with his special blend of cynicism and love. Or as he puts
it, "I read comics websites so that you don't have to." (One
suggestion, Graeme: Add a
comments
feature as soon as possible!)
Fun Facts about Mr. McMillan:
- Favorite Creators: Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch
- Most Eagerly-Awaited Comic: (tie) ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR,
Chuck Austen's upcoming run on ACTION COMICS
- Plus: Writes with an accent.
Also added some other links to the right, including:
Franklin Harris,
Joey Valdez, and
Laura "Tegan" Gjovaag.
And I've rearranged Johnny Bacardi to be listed under his real name,
David Allen Jones.
My apologies for taking so long to add these great sites to my blogroll.
CONTRACTUALLY OBLIGATORY BANNERS