There is a lovely little moment in the last issue of Jeff Smith’s fairly challenging Rasl comic, where the main character nonchalantly explains what the comic’s title actually means.
It’s an answer to a question that had been
there ever since Smith first announced the project, but one that hadn’t been
asked in some time. The way the moment is handled is pretty clumsy and just a
bit tossed off, but it’s also a charming and sentimental part in the middle
of a violent and dangerous climax.
Which sums up a lot of the comic’s appeal –
the story doesn’t quite work and the deliberate confusion often stops it dead,
but it’s still a hell of a ride, with little doses of brilliance.
And it’s definitely not Bone. Smith’s epic
fantasy comic is so good, it is going to overshadow everything Smith ever does
for the rest of his life, but at least he’s been trying something new over the
past couple of years.
Rasl does have a lot of superficial
similarities to Bone – a devotion to a single moment in the pacing that gives
individual scenes a lot of power, and that goofy ‘n’ gooey black and white art.
Bone’s grand plot started heading up its
own arse in the last third of the run, but was overall a tight story. In
contrast, Rasl is all over the show, bouncing around inside its own narrative over its short 15-issue run.
Events skip back and forth and there are flashbacks inside flashbacks (and with the first four pages of the whole
series starting at the very end of the story means almost the whole comic is
actually a flashback.)
There is a large and slightly flabby
section in the middle of the series where the backstory dump – combined with a
detailed history of Mr Nikola Tesla – can leave the reader wondering what the
hell is going on, or where things are going. Reading the series as each new
issue came out could also cause frustration, as the long gap between each issue
made it hard to keep up as it was.
(Full disclosure: After getting the first
couple of issues, I somehow missed the next three, and I only tracked down the
last missing one a week before the final issue came out, so my own initial
reading of the non-linear narrative is even more jumbled up than the usual.)
There is nothing wrong with a bit of
complexity, or the odd unanswered question. You don’t need the Secret Origin of
the slack-jawed girl, or know the exact moment when Rasl figured out who Uma
actually was. The science itself is impossible enough to be comic-book
plausible, and that’s all the information you need. All the fun is in figuring
out where the hell you’re going now.
And besides – it’s not that complicated.
The story mainly takes place on two different worlds, over a fairly short
period of time, with less than a dozen main characters, and it’s actually fairly
easy to keep track of which world things are happening on, (just see who is still alive
or what Bob Dylan’s name is).
And it’s fun – lots of sex and violence and
Tesla. I have a particular fondness for stories about the Philadelphia
Experiment, and SCIENCE GONE MAD, and Rasl certainly delivers on that score.
It’s also easy to follow because the story
is illustrated by a seasoned and proven comic artist like Jeff Smith, and his
slick and distinctive style is – as always – the best and worst thing in his
comic.
Smith’s animation background still
saturates every page he draws, usually to great effect. Everything flows so
smoothly and his pages have a strong beat to them that make each sequence an
easy joy to read.
Everything is all clear, all laid out in the
open, with only the most necessary lines. This clarity becomes particularly
effective in Rasl’s action sequences, and there are quite a few of them. They have a
heft and movement that so much modern comic art doesn’t have. A punch might get
thrown across six panels, but it lands like a motherfucker.
The clean art is also paradoxically perfect
for the moments where it all breaks down – when something really strange
happens in the story, and there are a few of those too. Time bends and snaps,
perceptions of reality go mad mental crazy, up is down, black is white and your
place in the universe is not assured.
The clearness of Smith’s line gives these
moments of extreme oddness a strange grounding in reality, which just makes
them so much stronger. When science breaks down, reality goes with it, but need
a control subject, and can find that normality is Smith’s clear line.
It’s arguable that Smith’s style only
really works for stories full of wide-eyed wonder, and certainly not anything
that was really and truly dark Unfortunately, there are moments in Rasl that
prove this point: parts where the main character is acting all tough and cool,
but it doesn’t work - because he looks like a big baby.
The gigantic heads Smith gives his lead
characters is obviously a stylistic choice, because there are loads of
periphery characters with normal-sized melons. It’s just the way Smith likes to
draw people, and there is a certain charm to it, but not when you’ve got the hero staring
down the bad guys with nerves of steel and a big bonce. It just does not work.
(Although there is one notable exception –
the main villainous guy, whose face is so elongated – like a lizard – yet never
really commented on in the story. His own evil has deformed his features, and
he’s like a brutally ugly henchman from an old gangster flick. It’s kinda
marvellous.)
Because despite all these faults, Rasl is
still funny, clever, fast-paced and a bit crazy. Like a lot of almost-brilliant
comics, it doesn’t reach the heights it’s going for, but at least it’s reaching
for them.
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