Patchwork Earth Purposeful Solipsism, Nostalgic Ephemera

31May/100

Turnabout Insomnia

The Mrs. and I were up long past dawn wrapping up the final case in the Phoenix Wright trilogy. I'll... probably... do a write-up on the series at some point, for somewhere, if only to justify our obsession as research. But I'm up at this hour now, unable to sleep, so I'm finally able to catch up with a few things after the long break while I was out of town. I'll have some real content to speak of later this week, hopefully--if nothing else, the next comics column goes up Tuesday morning--but let's start by cleaning out my tab list:

It's been a really strange couple of months, and things haven't gone according to plan at all, but I am sincerely praying that the rough patch has passed. We'll see.

18May/100

My Bags are Packed, Etc…

It's always nice when really smart people have nice things to say about you--both Dirk and Jog paid me very kind compliments today (re: the return of the Comics Column), particularly given that the final product found its way online riddled with my typos and lazy grammar mistakes. Thanks to both of you.

***

Speaking of Moore and Morrison, as that column continued to do, I just saw this post, which reaffirms some of the things I've said in the column thus far. Between this recent column and the earlier Gurren Lagann review, I've leaned on that Moore/Morrison thing a little hard lately, and I'm hoping to go someplace else in future columns. Morrison shows up a bit more than I planned in the next two installments, but it was a little unavoidable based on format--beyond those, I want to get a little further away before I'm permanently branded as an advocate of the same half-dozen comic people. The next column is in my editor's hands and the next is underway, but beyond that I'm not sure exactly where I want to go next.

***

I'm going out of town for a week--not sure if I'll be updating, even if the column's next installment goes up at the House in my absence (and I'm not sure exactly what the timetable on that is going to be). I'll be working on some reviews and things offline while I'm gone, but I might not be heard from until my return. That said, best way to reach me if necessary will probably be Twitter (see the sidebar). Let's meet back here next week, under the old oak tree.

17May/100

The Comics Column Returns

Just in time, before I'm out of state for a week, my sort-of-lauded, mostly-ignored Comics Column at The House Next Door (care of Slant Magazine) returns, with essentially a continuation of my previous column--

Comics Column #5b: The Fragrance of Nostalgia

In which much hay is made out of two failed comic book movies, one from Hollywood and one from Japan.

"The argument over the importance of "authorial intent" has been waging since long before I was born, but it pales in the face of the idea this story represents: the narrative that we write ourselves about the art we experience or consume will override even the literal facts about that work.

[A cynic (like myself, unsurprisingly) could relate this to what feels like a growing resistance to empiricism in this country, one that feels culturally damaging. But this isn't an article about that, it's an article about my pithy response to comic book adaptation.]"

I've already sent the next column in, so it shouldn't be all that long before it drops, either. I can't promise they'll all be so regular, but not adhering to the original format is helping somewhat.

17May/100

Hey, cartoonists–

FACT:

If you aren't trying to be this good every day:

...Then get the fuck out, because we don't need you.

Krigstein, "Master Race" (h/t Joe Bloke)

13May/100

Review – Batman: Dark Knight, Dark City

You know, I held off as long as I could with The Unwritten. Other people have spoken out against the book, and opinion has dropped quickly on the title since its launch, and there have been some serious flaws--the first arc was a mishmash of character introductions and both of the following arcs would get things going only to turn around and massacre all of the characters except for the book's lethargic protagonist--but there was the germ of a solid idea in there and occasional grasps further up the ladder. Unfortunately, the most recent issue is where I get off the train.

The plot point of the current arc revolves around a fake novel released in the "Tommy Taylor" series, and the publisher admits in the latest issue that the fake is poorly written cobbled together from stolen ideas, including from J.K. Rowling, and the real author of "Tommy Taylor" would never stoop so low. Except that "Tommy Taylor" is an unabashed pastiche of Rowling. That Tommy Taylor and Harry Potter are basically the same character works fine for the conceit of the series, but only if Rowling doesn't exist in the book's world, which until now seemed to be the case. But to say that Harry Potter exists in this world and the Tommy Taylor series is the exact same material, but written better and for longer, leading to an even more rabid fanbase, with no acknowledgement of their similarity--it shows a lack of self-awareness that I honestly thought writer Mike Carey was above. A shame.

Anyway, a real review:

***

Batman: Dark Knight, Dark City (Batman # 452-454) - Peter Milligan/ Kieron Dwyer

This old Batman arc has been talked up quite a bit lately, as it serves as direct influence and prologue for Morrison's current Batman saga (along with the divisive Starlin/Wrightson Batman: The Cult and Morrison's own Batman: Gothic - actually, Dark Knight, Dark City has never been collected, and it would fit well in a bound volume with Gothic, as they share similar ideas and conceits). It's a pretty well-liked series--even Tucker made a point of telling me on Twitter that he thought it was pretty rad when he read it.

And there's plenty to recommend it: the premise is a solid one, that there is a demon ("Barbathos") whose invocation cursed the fledgling Gotham City in the eighteenth century, leading to Gotham's blight of madness today, and also that the demon, as personified by Gotham City, created Batman as a means to free itself. That's some solid stuff right there, and the demon possessing Riddler as a means of getting Batman to go through the ritual that will free him is also a nice touch--could this be retconned as the reason that Riddler started taking the venom drug, to deal with his possession? Does the chronology work for that?

Milligan makes some missteps, however, which detract from the story's now-classic status. That Barbatos makes Riddler into a more bloodthirsty villain is fine, and it seems like it's fed into Morrison's current thesis--we're leading up to, one would think, a final confrontation with Barbathos via Simon Hurt, representing the reason for the poisonous darkening of Batman stories (cf Batman #666 via Seven Soldiers & Final Crisis)--but it's not established until the second of the three issues. In the first issue, Riddler's casual amorality comes off less like a mystery than a mishandling of the character that is explained after the fact, when Milligan is clearly smarter than that. Also, the literary reference motif he uses falls flat: In Cold Blood, The Trial, Seduction of the Innocent, The Crying of Lot 49, and A Clockwork Orange are all referenced in ways that feel out of place--the Pynchon one may be the worst offender, since it muddies the themes that Milligan seems to be getting at. More petty complaints come with John Costanza's lettering--there are overlapping sources of narration here, and in differentiating them, he uses an overly-muddy handwriting for the eighteenth-century diary and an oddly formal typeface for the demon/city. Also, in the classic "connecting dots on a map" bit, one of the dots appears to be in the wrong place in one panel, so that the pattern gets temporarily confused.

That said, what's fascinating going back to the story now is how fully prescient it seems to be. The Barbathos ritual is all about washing in blood, threatening babies, and battling zombies--2010 superhero decadence in microcosm. What Milligan does, of course, is make a point about the whole thing being out of character, out of tone, and poisonous, something Morrison is still trying to get across twenty years later. There's a distinct impression that Milligan, though, can't quite take the whole thing seriously to begin with, given the black humor that pervades (zombie robots, the bit where Batman almost can't brake the Batmobile fast enough to avoid running over a baby, and Dwyer has one panel with a Batarang held out in a phallic way which I hope is coincidence).

The similarities between the story and Gothic are notable, as well, and they came out in the same year. Both posit that Batman was formed by something from the underworld and despite his noble aims carries something of the avatar of evil. What's interesting, though, is that each ends the story differently--in Morrison's story, Batman casts the whole thing away and on some level denies the metaphysics of what he's gone through, and given the fact that some part of Gothic exists as a response to Arkham Asylum, which went so far (or too far) in the other direction, that makes sense. But Milligan's Batman largely just resigns himself to what may be true, deeming it unimportant in the face of his obsession. It's probably a more accurate take on the character for that, and I wonder somewhat if Morrison agreed, given the denial or acceptance of mystery is a large part of what fueled the whole "Black Casebook" bit and thus the core of Morrison's "incorporate it all" take on Batman in his current run.

***

Also: I recently put up a comics newspost on Mediaelites, regarding the Pat Lee thing and the webcomics app embarrassment and such--the permalink is here--but the site appears to be wacky as all Hell right now, and links aren't working right. Hopefully it'll get cleared up soon, but I'm not sure what's going on there.

6May/100

New: Comic-Con: Comic-Free?

Over at Mediaelites, I took a quick glance at the San Diego
Comic-Con nonsense
with my trademark brand of pessimism:

The only problem seems to be the second half of that name. Comic-Con just sounds so… nerdy. At least, that’s how Comic-Con International seems to view it, as their efforts to push the comic book content out in favor of that fat Hollywood cash seem less subtle than ever.

"Shit sucks, film at eleven," that's my journalistic credo.

6May/100

All right, actually, just one more…

I always get itchy posting a lot of links in a row, but after pointing to those two articles, I'd be remiss in not pointing out just one more: Chris Sims over at ComicsAlliance came in swinging today with this one: The Racial Politics of Regressive Storytelling--a look at how superhero comics, DC in particular (Geoff Johns in even further particular), in resetting the status quo to 1978, are whitewashing the superhero genre.

A favorite bit here:

By itself, in the isolated, insular world of comics, this makes perfect sense: If the characters of the '30s and '40s existed on a separate Earth from the characters of the '50s, then it makes perfect sense that characters created later would have existed on still another Earth. But the subtext here -- no matter how unintentional it is -- is that these newer characters don't belong in the DC Universe. They need to be somewhere else while the real characters, the ones who, by coincidence, aren't black or Italian or have Latino parents, have their real adventures.

It's the unintentional building of a cosmic-scale meta-textual ghetto.

Go, take a look. And for "fun," count off in the comments thread before someone outs themselves as ignorant - it, thankfully, takes a bit longer than usual, but not all that long.

6May/100

I am superfluous

There are times when you look at what everyone else is doing, and wonder what the point is in trying to keep up. I highly recommend you check out these two articles to see what some great critics are up to:

  • Matt Zoller Seitz, founder of The House Next Door, drops by Salon to point out that superhero films have proven themselves to be creatively bankrupt exercises that, as a genre, don't even aspire to as much as superhero comics.
  • Over at The Comics Journal, Rob Clough takes a look at the Hicksville rerelease, including how retrospectively it seems to chart the trajctory of Horrocks's career, and also reminding us why the book is a modern classic.

I'm working on a handful of stuff over here, but things are going slowly. More hopefully soon.

5May/100

I’m over at Mediaelites

Someone else was crazy enough to let me do the occasional piece for them! Over at Mediaelites, I have a quick note on the current status of the Marvel and DC legal battles. Go check it out! Thanks to all the guys over there for letting me through the doors.

While I'm here...

...I don't have anything to add, I just wanted to share that picture with you. Make your own comment. (h/t to Comicsalliance)

1May/100

How this past week has felt