I always have real difficulty settling on one answer when people ask me what my favourite comic is, and I even have an extraordinary amount of trouble when I get asked who my favourite superhero is. But if somebody asks me what my favourite single issue of all time is, there is really only one answer.
It was published in late 1988, which makes it nearly 25 years old, (although I didn’t actually get around to reading it until three or four years later). It’s a Jaime-heavy affair, with four complete short stories from him in the issue, although Beto compensates for the lack of pages by producing one of his best comics ever.
Both of the brothers were between bigger
storylines – Jaime was in a long and fruitful interlude period between the more
structured Death of Speedy and Wigwam Bam, while Beto had just floored
everybody with the stunning Human Diastrophism, and was about to hit with the
one-two punch of Poison River and Love & Rockets X.
In this period between these Important
Works, the brothers Hernandez crafted touching little stories of life, love and
art – stories that, all these years later are still funny, moving and alive.
Beto’s sole contribution to #28 is his
Frida Khalo comic – a 12-page biography that is both informative and haunting.
I know there are at least three people who
will scowl heavily at me if they catch me using the j-word, but it’s the
juxtaposition of the art and words that takes a straightforward story (of a
fairly extraordinary life) and makes it a transceendelty beautiful.
There are no speech balloons in this comic,
just caption boxes telling the factual account of the life of Frida Khalo,
using the tone of the dispassionate scholar to recall her tragedies and
triumphs.
But the art – which Beto apparently just
made up as he went along, with little planning or forethought – is staggering,
a dark-humoured and surreal remix of Frida’s art through his own head. Beto has
Tonantzin wander through, portrays real-life events as if they are
half-forgotten dreams and represents the lady herself represented as a graceful
deer, brought down by savage hunters.
In any other comic, Frida would be the
undisputed masterpiece. Although it still arguably is, Jaime’s work in this one
issue is just as stunning and worthy of recognition.
It’s just four little stories, none longer
than six pages, but everything that makes Jaime’s work so appealing is on
display in this one comic. There is the humour of good mates, and the tragedy
of lost chances, and the beauty of just hanging out.
The comic is bookended by two funny and beautiful stories by Bizarro Xaime No 1, and both still make me laugh. Boxer, Bikini or Brief has Ray slowly
and inevitably losing his shit at the art board, Danita’s poise when posing and
Maggie’s tremendous ideas about her own posing. Lar Dog: Boy’s Night Out #1398
has more than a hint of melancholy – the idea that for some people, getting really
fucked up every night and getting into fights is as good as it’s ever going to
get – but still cracks me up: the way the model assumes Lar Dog is coming on to
her when he honestly couldn’t give a shit, or “He must have had at least
eighty-nine beers tonight”.
And, just for more laffs, there is also some
Li’l Ray, and Jaime’s kid stories are always odd and adorable.
And, of course, issue number twenty-eight
has also got Tear it Up, Terry Downe, which is still my favourite four pages in
the extremely rich history of L&R.
Thirty-six panels, and not a single bit of
space wasted. A staccato story that streches over a decade or so, and never feels rushed or cramped, with Jaime capturing perfect moments of love and despair and confusion and more love.
It's short, but remarkably efficient. It sums up all the beautiful complexities of Jaime's work, as it shows the life story of one of his characters - a staggeringly gorgeous and totally stuck-up woman - in all its infinite complexity, unearthing silent motivations that explain severe actions.
It also showcases Jaime's wonderful way with words - one of my my very first internet aliases was 'Stevie Teevee' - and features his art just as Jaime perfected his art style, all heavy blacks and gorgeous lips floating in space.
It was also a magnificent reference work - #28 was the first proper issue of L&R I ever bought, and figuring out the relationships between Maggie and Hopey and Terry and Del fuckin' Chimney was made a whole lot easier with this short story, even if there are still hidden depths to these characters that are still being hinted at in Jaime's current comics.
So yeah - it’s a personal thing. I love this comic because it's a brilliant comic, but also because I fell in love with it at one of the most brilliant times in my life. There is a
very faint tomato sauce stain on the panel of Terry and Hopey in the bath,
which has been there ever since me and a girl named Lisa were sitting on the
grass at Timaru's Maori Park Pool, eating hotdogs and reading comics in the wonderful summer of
92/93.
The Hernandez Brothers have been at the top of their game for 30 years, producing scores of brilliant stories. Their latest work is every bit as good as their older stuff and, as ever, I'm desperately keen to read the next issue of Love and Rockets.
But no matter how good the new stuff is, there is always a place in my comic-lovin' heart for L&R #28. It’s the perfect comic. Who could ask for more?
Great call. I started L&R with #26, which was hard going - the end of Diastrophism and the start of Valley of the Polar Bears, neither of which were great jumping-on points.
ReplyDeleteBut of course there was enough there to keep me coming back, and #28 was definitely where it all fell into place and I knew I wanted to, and could, navigate and understand these evidently complex and self-assured works. What I love L&R for most is not patronising me or cutting me any slack as a new reader.
Dear Bob
ReplyDeleteGreat post; you have reminded me what a superb comic book this is. I got my L&R comics way up on a shelf above the tv and now, damn you, I'm going to have to clamber up there and risk breaking my neck to read this masterpiece again. The Lar Dog story particularly sticks in my memory, a story soaked on blood and booze, the squalor of Lar Dog's domestic life, his dead marriage and his wife's eyes sequestered behind her glasses.
You may even have inspired me to read Gilberto's story about Frida Kahlo. I have to confess, all through the years I have routinely left his pages unread.
Thank you for sharing your favourite comic. Although I reckon if I'd been sitting on the grass with a girl named Lisa at Timaru's Maori Park Pool reading comics, whatever I was reading would have become my favourite comic.
Great choice. One of the early L&R letters columns described Los Bros Hernandez as "cruel" because they "make me fall in love with ink and paper."
ReplyDelete