Regular posting at the Tearoom of Despair will be delayed for a couple of days, for boring real life reasons.
In the meantime, I implore anybody who enjoys my rambling on this blog to head on over to Matt Maxwell's Highway 62 Revisted blog and check out his comprehensive, month-long analysis of the original Dawn of the Dead.
Dawn has been one of my top five movies of all time since I first saw it in the early nineties, (the 2004 remake - which isn't that horrible - wouldn't even come close to my top 100), and Maxwell's eye for a nice film still and some razor-sharp analysis covers almost everything I love about this great, great film, while pointing out a lot of things I never noticed.
It's probably the best piece of film criticism/analysis/love that I've seen all year, and I've watched both Room 237 and Mark Cousin's epic 15-hour Story of Film documentary in the past couple of months.
Seriously, check it out. So good.
Normal service will resume on Friday, with a moan about the lack of balls in big superhero films...
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Comics journalism: The lack of the dispassionate
A while back, I talked about an idea I had about the current state of journalism that focuses on the comic book industry and medium – how the moaners and groaners couldn’t see the forest for the trees, and how we’re actually living in a golden age of comic book journalism, with unrivalled access to an extraordinary amount of information and analysis.
I still stand by that theory – there is a phenomenal amount
of information about the comic world, from ultra-local minicomics to mainstream
megaliths, available every day. Straight-up press releases, analysis of sales
figures, daily updates on editorial changes, comment pieces, essays in response
to those comment pieces, timetables for conventions, birthday wishes to beloved
creators, interviews and reviews – it’s all out there, every day, for everybody.
There is an absolute glut of information in the 21st century, and it’s the responsibility of the individual to keep up, to the level they’re comfortable with. You can’t keep up with everything, but you can aggregate, or trust proven gatekeepers. In the world of modern comics, where there are so many talented creators and so many great comics (and just as many bad ones), you still only need to go to half a dozen different websites to get good links and data.
But there are still holes in modern comics journalism, huge and gaping holes, whose absence in still noticeable among the noise. And there is one that bothers me the most
We need more dispassionate observers.
There is an absolute glut of information in the 21st century, and it’s the responsibility of the individual to keep up, to the level they’re comfortable with. You can’t keep up with everything, but you can aggregate, or trust proven gatekeepers. In the world of modern comics, where there are so many talented creators and so many great comics (and just as many bad ones), you still only need to go to half a dozen different websites to get good links and data.
But there are still holes in modern comics journalism, huge and gaping holes, whose absence in still noticeable among the noise. And there is one that bothers me the most
We need more dispassionate observers.
Journalists are supposed to be instant experts on anything, but that doesn’t change the fact that they are often completely personally uninterested in the story they are covering. This can drive people with a personal stake in that issue crazy, but the best journalism is often outside the individual reporter’s sphere of interest.
It’s this outsider’s perspective that is often missing in comic culture. There isn’t enough journalism from professionals who don’t give a shit about comics, but can still report about the issues affecting that medium and industry, without dumbing it down.
Almost all of modern comic journalism comes from a place of passion. We care about comics, so we talk about them. We can't stop talking about them. But there is still great value in a perspective from outside the culture that doesn’t patronise that culture. We could use more of that.
It can’t be me. I’m a professional journalist in my day job,
but there is no way I could talk about comics in some serious way without some kind of passion
creeping in. Even though I have no financial stake in the comic business, and
gain nothing from plugging the things I like, I still desperately want more
people to read, say, Love and Rockets or Judge Dredd, which is why I keep going
on and on and on about them.
(I see all those glazed eyes in the office when I get a new
issue of 2000ad every week and can’t stop talking about how great Dredd is, but
I can’t stop, not ever.)
I have my own prejudices against the big companies, and personal affection for some of the more singular and barmy comic talents. I could never do a straight report on anything Marvel or DC did without bringing some kind of bias into it, not after all they’ve done, not after all the shared history we have together. All I can do is offer up embarrassingly personal blog posts.
I have my own prejudices against the big companies, and personal affection for some of the more singular and barmy comic talents. I could never do a straight report on anything Marvel or DC did without bringing some kind of bias into it, not after all they’ve done, not after all the shared history we have together. All I can do is offer up embarrassingly personal blog posts.
It can’t be any of the recognised comic journalists, because they all have their personal tastes. The internet has blurred this line between personal and professional, (I’m not complaining – again, that’s what this blog is all about), but issues of tastes and ethics are unavoidable.
And if you’re reading this blog and all its comic-related bollocks, it’s probably not you either, because you’re bound to give a shit in some small way.
There are still trace elements of this kind of comics journalism. It does exist. Books like the fascinating Marvel: The Untold Story grab the attention with loads of salacious gossip, but also take a refreshingly detached view of the overall structure of the comic company.
There are still lots of fairly dispassionate pieces on comics in mainstream publications, but these are generally worthless, either stating the obvious, or biting on some kind of PR bait. (Didja know Superman has quit The Daily Planet? Earth shattering!) The best place to find real hard news about the comic book industry are on the business pages.
I'm not just saying that because I used to be a business journalist, I'm saying it because business reporting doesn't give a shit about Wolverine's new costume, or Superman's new job - they only care about the bottom line. Stock prices and market announcements might sound boring, but they're the real story behind the variant covers and mass cancellations.
Mainstream business reporting of the comic industry can be just as facile as any other reporting, but there are also great stories about funny books on the business page.
Of course, business reporting is all about the dollars, and it's the money and perks that pop up in the huge middle ground between cold professional and shameless fan, and the blurring of those lines that can be a real concern.
It's not just comics. In the last few days, the video game journalism had its own shitstorm over the different between fan and professional, and the problems that crop up when freelance journalists don't reveal who is paying a lot of their invoices.
The freelancer might not even know they've made the move from fan to shill, but that's no excuse for a lack of professionalism, and a need to declare all relevent interests, if you ever want to be trusted.
Meanwhile, Morrisoncon - a comic convention largely built around the personailty of Grant Morrison - offers up discount rates for anybody who generates a bit of media around the event. This not only deters real reporters - who would never, ever pay anything to cover a story - the kind who could generate a proper perspective on the thing, but also created a lot of white noise: bland panel transcripts and endless essays about how the people who went were a bit weird, but not that weird.
The real story - about the attempt to craft a new comic convention market with high-end aims centred around a cult of personality - was hard to find.
The dispassionate observer wouldn't solve all these problems, and would still get a lot of things wrong. And I really don't have that many ideas about getting the attention of that kind of journalist in the first place.
But it would be good for all comics if there was a bit more professionalism in reporting, or we won't be able to trust anybody and the noise could become overwhelming.
(Addendumb: And yeah, it is pretty funny that Superman is giving up on the Daily Planet, just as I'm saying this. But if Clark Kent's forays into journalistic idealism are handled with the same clumsiness other superhero comics have shown when they try to portray the media, it's likely to be just as pointless. Or as painful as comic book writers' attempts to write straight editorial content. If I was Clark Kent or Ben Urich's sub, I'd throw most of their copy back in their face if they tried to do the stories you occasionally see in comic books - all those awful intros...)
But it would be good for all comics if there was a bit more professionalism in reporting, or we won't be able to trust anybody and the noise could become overwhelming.
(Addendumb: And yeah, it is pretty funny that Superman is giving up on the Daily Planet, just as I'm saying this. But if Clark Kent's forays into journalistic idealism are handled with the same clumsiness other superhero comics have shown when they try to portray the media, it's likely to be just as pointless. Or as painful as comic book writers' attempts to write straight editorial content. If I was Clark Kent or Ben Urich's sub, I'd throw most of their copy back in their face if they tried to do the stories you occasionally see in comic books - all those awful intros...)
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Another Big Book of Bolland
For reasons both boring and intangible, I
just wasn’t feeling the love at this year’s Armageddon geek convention in Auckland, so I didn’t hang around when I rocked up on Saturday morning. I
didn’t bother going to hear any of the guests speak, or watch the films they
play in the giant auditorium, or even sit around and shoot the shit with the
local comic talent.
Instead, I just waltzed in, bought up a small mountain of various back issues, and waltzed out again in less than an hour. I was just all about the comics. I got some good stuff in that pile – the John Smith/Sean Phillips issue of Hellblazer that I’ve been after forever, a random splattering of recent Mark Millar comics that I missed, more Lobo, some of that weird Gerber/Colan Phantom Zone mini and a bunch of noble women’s lib issues of Wonder Woman.
(My favourite part of the Phantom Zone comic so far is the very first sentence: 'PERRY WHITE IS A NEWSPAPER OF THE OLD SCHOOL.')
Bolland’s art is instantly appealing, but it can take some effort to really describe that appeal. After all, a lot of his work can be clumsily staged or awkward, and as the artist himself points out, there are some things he is just rubbish at drawing. He can’t do a very good horse, (although he’s been known to do a good monkey or two).
He can never quite capture the kinetic energy of early action artists like Kubert or Gil Kane, his work stiff and still, no matter how many of those tiny jiggling lines he uses for shuddering movement.
Despite ongoing experimentations with shading and colourful depth, Bolland’s art can also look incredibly flat, sometimes reducing action shots to nonsensical posing. Characters can also feel divorced from their background, something that has only got worse as photoshopped layers crept into his work.
While his evolution as an artist has been slow and minimal – a Bolland cover from 1982 is obviously the same artist behind a 2012 cover – he has refined that surprisingly thick line over the decades. And he has never been afraid of a little experimentation, even as he relies on skills that were honed thirty years ago.
There are other aspects, other than that sharp line, that make Bolland’s art such a damn pleasure to look at – the fine detail that has no more embellishment than necessary, his innovative use of colour, and willingness to try new things. He can’t hide his own affection for things like big monsters and swooping superheroes, and that glee comes through in any cover that features something like that.
And while his art can be iconic and grand and majestic, it can also been bloody funny, with a thick sense of dark Black British humour behind his open art. It’s what makes him the definitive Joker artist – he captures the malevolent mirth of the character like few others. Eyes of evil, a grin of absurdity and a chin so sharp you could cut your hand on it.
Instead, I just waltzed in, bought up a small mountain of various back issues, and waltzed out again in less than an hour. I was just all about the comics. I got some good stuff in that pile – the John Smith/Sean Phillips issue of Hellblazer that I’ve been after forever, a random splattering of recent Mark Millar comics that I missed, more Lobo, some of that weird Gerber/Colan Phantom Zone mini and a bunch of noble women’s lib issues of Wonder Woman.
(My favourite part of the Phantom Zone comic so far is the very first sentence: 'PERRY WHITE IS A NEWSPAPER OF THE OLD SCHOOL.')
But the real score was a book I didn’t even
know existed, until I saw it on one of the tables, going for a mind-numbingly
cheap forty bucks. There was no hesitation. I had to have it. I had to have one
of these:
In a display of laser-accurate gift-giving,
my lovely wife gave me Image Comics’ The Art of Brian Bolland one Christmas,
after I’d jealously moaned about the fact that pal Nik had a copy, and I didn’t.
But this new book that I found at the convention – and devoured in less than a
day - was just focused on his endlessly gorgeous DC comic covers, and was just
as immediately indispensable.
Hundred and hundreds of pages of Brian
Bolland art? Showcasing all sorts of clear surrealist nightmares, pure
superhero popcorn and the odd grotesque creature, all in that perfect Bolland
line? How could I resist? How could anybody resist?
We take Bolland for granted now, after
hundreds of comic covers, and too-few comic stories. It’s easy to forget there
was a time when Bolland was the shiny new kid on the block, blowing out stodgy
bad habits of the seventies with his fresh line.
After the stuttering efforts of artists
like Barry Smith, Bolland was the first of the British comic new wave of the
eighties – selling his first cover to DC in 1979 and swiftly finding an
appreciative audience for his clean art. So open and shiny, with a consistency
with his anatomy that makes every cover instantly inviting.
Cover Story goes all the way back to the
early days, followed by more than 200 pages of art. A lot of it has been seen,
time and time again, like The Killing Joke cover, or some of his Wonder Woman
poses, but there are also tonnes of Batman covers I’d never seen before and
various Curt Swan homages that had achieved a limited release.
It’s a gorgeous book, full of gorgeous art.
That’s certainly worth forty bucks.
The new book also comes with Bolland’s own
thoughts about his art, with the artist writing about his own art in an open
and breezy manner. He can be harsh and self-deprecating at times, but he’s also
unashamedly proud of certain pieces. He discusses his little tricks for making
colours pop, and why he will never be Joe Kubert, and why he disapproves of variant covers.
He is also an unashamed gossip,
name-dropping all over the show. (His Ditko encounter is a terrific little
story of awkwardness in the presence of greatness, with a killer punchline.)
But he’s also extremely complimentary to his fellow artists whose work he
follows or enjoys.
His commentary is particularly interesting
around the turn of the century, when he started getting heavily into
photoshopping his comics. His earliest digital efforts, especially on late
Invisibles covers, have already dated far more than his earliest work, which
has a simplicity that never go out of fashion. But even if he goes overboard
with strange new textures and a series of blurred layers, Bolland explains his
reasoning in the captions, and it is clear that all the mis-steps were just
part of an evolving style.
But what is it about that style? What is it
about Bolland that makes his art so divine?
Bolland’s art is instantly appealing, but it can take some effort to really describe that appeal. After all, a lot of his work can be clumsily staged or awkward, and as the artist himself points out, there are some things he is just rubbish at drawing. He can’t do a very good horse, (although he’s been known to do a good monkey or two).
He can never quite capture the kinetic energy of early action artists like Kubert or Gil Kane, his work stiff and still, no matter how many of those tiny jiggling lines he uses for shuddering movement.
Despite ongoing experimentations with shading and colourful depth, Bolland’s art can also look incredibly flat, sometimes reducing action shots to nonsensical posing. Characters can also feel divorced from their background, something that has only got worse as photoshopped layers crept into his work.
And yet, it’s also easy enough to sum up the appeal in
one simple thing – it’s that Bolland line. That crisp, sharp and timeless
Bolland line. His efforts at painting have invariably been unsatisfying because
they cover that gorgeous line, and it’s been strong enough to survive the leap
from the paper page to a digital arena with minimal real change.
While his evolution as an artist has been slow and minimal – a Bolland cover from 1982 is obviously the same artist behind a 2012 cover – he has refined that surprisingly thick line over the decades. And he has never been afraid of a little experimentation, even as he relies on skills that were honed thirty years ago.
There are other aspects, other than that sharp line, that make Bolland’s art such a damn pleasure to look at – the fine detail that has no more embellishment than necessary, his innovative use of colour, and willingness to try new things. He can’t hide his own affection for things like big monsters and swooping superheroes, and that glee comes through in any cover that features something like that.
And while his art can be iconic and grand and majestic, it can also been bloody funny, with a thick sense of dark Black British humour behind his open art. It’s what makes him the definitive Joker artist – he captures the malevolent mirth of the character like few others. Eyes of evil, a grin of absurdity and a chin so sharp you could cut your hand on it.
His humour is everywhere in his art – goofy expressions
and surreal madness caught in his cold eye. His characters are often entangled
in bizarre situations and complete ontological breakdowns. Reality unravels,
over and over again, but his Batman is always firm in the middle of that
craziness, (with the weirdest hint of a smile, just the slightest smirk
possible).
Friday, October 19, 2012
Batman/Grendel II: Anti-hate
I’m digging deep into my big bag of
hypocrisy today, because after all that moaning in the last post about haters,
I have to admit I greatly enjoyed reading the Hooded Utilitarian’s Anniversary of Hate.
Mainly because I agree with a lot of the stuff they are having a good moan about, and the writers often articulated problems with these comics that I could never put into words. It’s also cute to see people ripping into things like Watchmen and Sandman as if they’re sacred cows that have never been taken down a peg or two. (Hell, people have been doing that for so long – for decades – that I actually find it sweetly nostalgic when somebody says Watchmen ain’t all that.)
As Wagner evolves - almost visibly on the pages of this comic - so the characters in his story have also grown from the first showdown between the devil and the bat. Grendel has taken the darkest of paths, and boiled down to something cold, hard and remorseless, while Batman has not lost sight of his own humanity, and by holding on to things like compassion and innocence, he never goes too far over to the dark side.
Back in that Hooded Ulitariran post, Jason argued that Batman/Grendel II might not be the worst comic in the world, but that it held a special place of hate in his heart, because he was gutted at the loss of a cartooning voice he cherished, and "too angry at the imposter that strolled in and tried to take his place".
It does represent a point when Wagner was moving away from his earlier style, but his new, looser line is just as beautiful, and far more energetic. That alone makes Batman/Grendel II one of my favourite action comics of the past 20 years.
And while he has been mired in comfortable licensed comics for a while, the spark of innovation and experimentation is still there bubbling away - his Grendel: Black, White and Red comics from the past decade have been fascinating, even the stories that are outright failures are still interesting, and still full of a comic creator trying to do something new, trying to reach for something better.
Mainly because I agree with a lot of the stuff they are having a good moan about, and the writers often articulated problems with these comics that I could never put into words. It’s also cute to see people ripping into things like Watchmen and Sandman as if they’re sacred cows that have never been taken down a peg or two. (Hell, people have been doing that for so long – for decades – that I actually find it sweetly nostalgic when somebody says Watchmen ain’t all that.)
There were plenty I didn’t agree with, but
I can always appreciate another point of view, even if I think they’re wrong. But
there was one I couldn’t let lie, one I just have to disagree with.
Jason is wrong. Batman/Grendel II is
fucking ace.
There is a nagging sense of wasted
opportunity in Matt Wagner’s career over the past ten years. He has been happily
working in the world of licensed comics for some time, cranking out Green
Hornet and Zorro comics for the past couple of years.
While these comics are invariably okay,
they’re little more than that. Usually hampered with sub-par styleless artwork,
they are painfully average comics, and a world away from the complexity and
experimentation of his earlier works.
After all, his Grendel and Mage comics took epic
storytelling in strange new directions, Grendel constantly evolving into
weirder incarnations, while Mage got more laidback as it took on the secret myths of the
universe at the speed of life.
Decades after they were first unleashed,
neither story is quite done. Mage has to wait until Wagner feels the itch again before the final part of the story can be told, and
he’s shown few signs of scratching that itch in the past few years. His entire
Grendel saga is a goddamned masterpiece, a vast and sprawling examination of
power, and evil, and will, and there was a new Grendel story a couple of years
ago and there could be a new Grendel story tomorrow.
The constant evolution of Grendel was its
greatest strength. Why not have more Grendels after Hunter Rose? Why couldn’t a
hyper-personality infect an entire culture, to the point where it becomes a
symbol of military honour? Why not?
The art – in all the various Grendel series
- was often jagged and ragged, and while some of it has dated horribly, it is
compulsively stylised. Wagner would draw the odd story, and usually had some
kind of new quirk in his warm, flowing style. He would shamelessly steal ideas
from Kurtzman, but hey - if you’re going to be influenced by anybody, you could do
much worse than Harvey.
This was all in the eighties, where
literary aspirations were all the rage, and Wagner crafted a complex work, with
dense prose and breathtaking storytelling experimentation, crafting stories
about sounds in a silent medium, or squeezing the ultimate number of panels
onto a page.
Wagner’s own evolution from young &
keen to old & safe has been a slow one, but there is still the feeling of a
sharp turn somewhere in his career, somewhere where his work got more
simplistic. Less complex. Easier.
Somewhere around the second Batman/Grendel
crossover.
The first Batman/Grendel comic had all
those lofty literary ambitions and was well received, the second had Grendel
Prime smashing his foot through a bridge and is often cited at the moment that
Matt Wagner lost his mojo.
The plot of the second comic was not as
intentionally complex as the first – there were none of the duelling narratives
or storytelling shuffles or pages and pages of cursive text in the second comic, but it’s unfair to say
the story is more simplistic. It’s more streamlined. More efficient.
Batman/Grendel II has several long,
sprawling action scenes, and features a main character whose idea of reasonable
discourse is a shotgun to the face. But it’s still packed full of incident.
There is time travel, and laser swords, and moments where strong men stand up
to stronger bullies. A major part of Grendel Prime’s life – his further
adventures with Susan Verhagen – are covered in a couple of tiny panels. There
is all sorts of crazy super-science going on, and crazy occult shenanigans with
a True Idol
The comic is more cartooney and more
ridiculous than anything Wagner had really done up to that point, but it was also
very fast paced, shooting through the story at speed. For a Grendel comic, it
was possible to get through it in record time (which also doesn’t win it any
favours with readers who measure quality in the amount of time it takes to read
a book).
Wagner didn’t just suddenly dumb it down
for the Bat-franchise, he was changing as an artist. An apparent embarrassment
at his own youthful verboseness saw Wagner strip it all away for the War Child
series, several years before Devil’s Bones. No extraneous prose, lots of
action, letting the silent panel speak as loudly as a fake diary entry.
War Child had the wonderfully open art of
Pat McGreal, but the best Grendel comics were always the ones drawn by Wagner
himself, and this is where Batman/Grendel II also stands as a major signpost in
Wagner’s career – one where he really started to adopt a far looser line.
At this point, Wagner’s softness becomes
scratchier. While still incredibly polished and styalised, there are wild and
open strokes of art. It’s not as formal, a little less starch in his style.
And it’s perfect for the non-stop momentum
and mayhem created when Grendel Prime meets Bruce Wayne. Wagner’s characters
are actually affected by things like weight and gravity, but still fly through
the air with grace and poise.
Grendel had already mined a rich vein of experimentation
in Devil Quest – the story that led up to this. It had some astonishing use of
colour, and twisted the eight-page narrative into new and strange shapes.
Batman/Grendel II had little of that. It was all straightforward. Purposeful.
Directed.
Just like Grendel Prime.
While Hunter Rose is a fascinating
character, the whole
tortured-genius-striking-back-at-the-world-after-losing-his-lover thing is a little
adolescent. He remains a terrific character who haunts Wagner, but my favourite
Grendel character was always the Prime.
He’s more machine than man, reduced to a
brain in an iron body by this point. But he’s not just a mindless Terminator
rip-off – there are weird complexities beneath those blank white eyes.
He’s an errant knight who is utterly useless
unless he’s on some kind of quest, an immortal man who is not afraid of death,
somebody who shows no remorse and no regret over killing anybody who gets in
his way, but doesn’t go out of his way to deal with anybody else. He is the ultimate perfection of
Grendel, a creature of such will and strength that it can’t be stopped.
Bats could just about hold his own against
Hunter Rose, but he didn’t stand a chance against Grendel Prime. All he does is
slow him down, or prevent him from casually massacring millions. It’s notable
that Batman does defeat Prime with some ultra-tech, but loses him when his body
demands sleep.
And yet – there are faults in the Ultimate Devil.
Moments where Prime is stopped in his tracks by somebody willing to sacrifice
themselves for somebody else. He doesn’t get it, doesn’t understand why
somebody would do that.
This all culminates in Robin showing up at
the climax of Batman/Grendel II, a symbol of relative innocence in a dark world.
It’s Prime’s blind spot, the one thing he can't comprehend, and that's why he ultimately fails in his Devil's Quest.
As Wagner evolves - almost visibly on the pages of this comic - so the characters in his story have also grown from the first showdown between the devil and the bat. Grendel has taken the darkest of paths, and boiled down to something cold, hard and remorseless, while Batman has not lost sight of his own humanity, and by holding on to things like compassion and innocence, he never goes too far over to the dark side.
Back in that Hooded Ulitariran post, Jason argued that Batman/Grendel II might not be the worst comic in the world, but that it held a special place of hate in his heart, because he was gutted at the loss of a cartooning voice he cherished, and "too angry at the imposter that strolled in and tried to take his place".
It does represent a point when Wagner was moving away from his earlier style, but his new, looser line is just as beautiful, and far more energetic. That alone makes Batman/Grendel II one of my favourite action comics of the past 20 years.
And while he has been mired in comfortable licensed comics for a while, the spark of innovation and experimentation is still there bubbling away - his Grendel: Black, White and Red comics from the past decade have been fascinating, even the stories that are outright failures are still interesting, and still full of a comic creator trying to do something new, trying to reach for something better.
It might be some time before there is another Grendel comic, not least a Grendel Prime story. But if Wagner does ever check back with Grendel,
I’ll be along with the ride, giving the devil his due.
Monday, October 15, 2012
Poor George: Love and hate in nerd culture
Fanboy indignation can be pretty fucking
funny sometimes, but there are limits, and I found mine again halfway through The
People Vs George Lucas.
Nerd culture gets itself all worked up over the strangest things, and the results can be entertaining. So I thought I’d give the documentary a go when I saw it at the local DVD store for a dollar. While the astonishing new theories it put forward – that the new Star Wars films have been a bit shit and the remixing of the old films has been a crime against art – are neither astonishing or new, it looked like it could be funny.
Nerd culture gets itself all worked up over the strangest things, and the results can be entertaining. So I thought I’d give the documentary a go when I saw it at the local DVD store for a dollar. While the astonishing new theories it put forward – that the new Star Wars films have been a bit shit and the remixing of the old films has been a crime against art – are neither astonishing or new, it looked like it could be funny.
Because it can be funny to see somebody
splutter and vent in rage about something that isn’t really that important. It
can be funny to see somebody lose their shit over something that isn't worth it.
I lasted about 40 minutes into The People
Vs George Lucas, because it wasn’t funny anymore. It was just boring.
I gave up on the documentary once people
with terrible facial hair started singing a song about how George Lucas raped
their childhood, because that particular analogy has gone from smirking to irritating to offensive in
record time. (Although I do love the South Park episode
where Lucas and Speilberg do actually physically rape Indiana Jones, partly because it’s genuinely
disturbing, just as you think that cartoon can’t shock you anymore, and mainly
because Butters gets the last word, and doesn’t see what all the fuss was
about).
Look, I love Star Wars as much as the next
thirty-something guy. I was obsessed with the movies when I was eight years old
too, and it’s a love that will never die. It was worrying to see the
cack-handed changes made to the original films when they were released in the
late 1990s, but the films were still slightly magical and still incredible fun.
(It’s notable that The Empire Strikes Back was the one that needed the least
‘fixing’ and was still the most impressive, proving that new effects had nothing on
the old movies.)
And I didn’t even mind the prequels that
much. They were needlessly complicated, featured an inexplicable loss of mojo
from John Williams, thuddingly dull at points, and the simplicity of the space
action scenes were always way over-cooked – too many asteroids floating through
the space, or too many spaceships to keep track off, flying apart in a million
little pixels.
But Lucas still knew there was inherent
drama in vehicles travelling at insanely high speeds and people hanging on for
their lives over the abyss, and there was plenty of that too.
Unbelievably, in between all the
interminable senate meetings and painfully clumsy slapstick, there were moments
of pure joy, sometimes only a couple of seconds long, where it all came
together.
It’s there in Obi-wan’s feint in the fight
against Darth Maul, and Padme’s glorious costumes, and the fantastic editing in
the pod race sequence. There can be a long, unbearable scene where Anakin
leaves his mother, carrying all the weight and conviction of a fairground ride,
and then there will be six seconds of sublimely shot light sabre action in the
desert.
I was 24 when the Phantom Menace came out,
and it was the first time I really felt out of step with nerd culture. The
films weren’t great, but they weren’t the Worst Thing Ever. (That’s still Curse
of the Cannibal Confederates, folks…).
I did used to get angry about the stupidshit all the time, but the new Star Wars film? It was okay. Shrug. Whatever. Order
another beer.
There is so much absolutism in the geek
world. Everything has to be the very greatest, or the very worst, which
sniffily avoids the fact that most of the movies and comics and TV shows lie
somewhere in the middle.
Where it exactly lies in the strata depends
partly on quality, and mainly on personal taste. I would happily put O Lucky
Man at the very top of my list, but understand that most people would rank it a
fair bit lower. The Star Wars prequels were somewhere in the middle. Better
than the Transformers films. Not as good as originals. Somewhere in there.
I’m sure most people probably feel the same
way – it’s not just a complete coincidence that the use of the word ‘meh’ took
off around the same time as the new films. The standard reaction seems to be
that they were a bit shit, and that kids are stupid because they do actually
think Jar Jar is funny.
But the ones who cared passionately – the
zealots – were always the ones to feel most betrayed, most personally
affronted, and slowly the narrative became ‘George has fucked us’.
The same thing is happening in comic book
culture, every day. Some people get so angry about Before Watchmen they give up
on comics altogether, others take an off-hand comment in an interview with a
creator as a direct personal slight.
Some people seem shocked to see
corporations act like corporations, when they’ve been doing it forever, or they
are knocked down when a writer or artist says something they don’t happen to
agree with, forgetting the fact that comic creators are actual human beings, who
don’t always act coherently, or honourably, or unselfishly.
I could go out now on the internet, and
easily find a dozen nasty complaints about the current state of the DC
universe, or how Bendis’ Avengers is just talktalktalk, or how incoherent the
new Morrison comic is, and there can be some real anger there. Real hate.
I remain as baffled – and kinda exhausted –
by all of it as I ever was. And I still think it’s a bit funny sometimes. But
not as often as I used to.
And hey, the rage isn’t just confined to
nerd culture. In my day job, I get hate-filled emails from members of the
public on an hourly basis, telling me I’ve done something that was a personal
affront to their sensibilities. (I got a pretty thick skin for that kind of
thing, but also have the self-confidence to know that these moaners don’t know
what the fuck they’re talking about.)
There is rage on the commuter bus in the
morning, anger at the local sports ground, and real hatred on busy city roads.
It doesn’t actually spark up into actual violence all that often – we’re not
living in the Middle Ages anymore – but it’s there in everyday life.
I guess I just see a lot more of it in nerd
culture, because I’m happily wallowing in that culture every day. But there is
so much anger at so many silly things, like a new comic book, or Star
Wars, that it inevitably sours the whole mix.
Because the love of a good story or geek experience
is no match for the real thing.
I love comic books more than any
other medium. Overall, I like ‘em more than the movies, and more than TV, and
more than music. There is something about the blend of words and pictures, and
the ability to do absolutely anything with them, that really sings to me.
But there isn’t a single comic that means more
to me than things in real life - things like the love for my wife, for my friends, for my family. There is nothing in comics that gets me as angry as I feel when I see or hear of some great injustice in the real world.
These nerd things are entertainments, that
can move us and make us laugh and make us angry, but they’re still just
entertainments. Art can reach across the centuries and
speak to me, but it’s nothing to the feeling of comfort and love I get when my
wife takes my hand. Art can touch me inside the soul, and remind me of something
sublime in my own life, but that doesn’t compare to her smile, or when I make
her laugh.
While comics can remind me of the feelings I have
when I see an old friend for the first time in ages, there is no comparison to the actual meeting. When I read a comic book I don't like, I don't worry about it, but I do worry about the way our society can be callously indifferent to suffering. There are things to be angry about in this world, and the Phantom Menace just ain't one of them.
There is only so much sneering I can take, and a little perspective is always welcome. It's only a fucking movie.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Dredd: The Movie (2012)
Judge Dredd is one of my absolute favourite
comics of all time. I can’t say it enough and now I’m saying it again, twice in one week. It’s smarter and denser and more exciting than anything else I ever
read in 35 years of reading comics.
The new film ain’t bad either.
The helmet doesn't come off.
The new film ain’t bad either.
Here’s a dozen reasons why:
1.
Got tone
There are moments where the 2012 Dredd
movie looks nothing like the comic – its design and look often bears little resemblance
to the stuff seen in 2000ad every week. But it does have one crucial thing in
common with the source material – its tone.
It’s the way the story is a bit crazy and
silly, but treated deadly seriously, producing deadpan humour and genuine
tension. Anything could happen in a Dredd story, and usually does, but the main
character always stands strong in the middle of the chaos.
There are dark laughs and groaning puns in
both comic and movie. But it’s also terribly grim, and incredibly violent.
2.
This could be the past
In fact, the tone is so right, it’s
actually possible to reconcile the movie with comic continuity. This could be
the same Judge Dredd who wiped out East-Meg One, or keeps putting Judge Death
back in his bottle.
After all, Dredd was on the streets for
twenty years before he debuted in 2000ad #2, and this could take place anywhere
within the gap. Even Anderson’s age matches up. I got a real kick out of that.
3. Another
unique look
The major difference between movie and
comic, and one the filmmakers managed quite nicely, is the look of Mega-City
One. Things like the Judge uniform are surprisingly faithful – while still
looking a whole lot more practical – but the city, with its vast spread of
low-level housing, punctuated by spaced-out super-high rise blocks, is nothing
like the comic’s dense, ultra-high future housing.
But it doesn’t matter. I actually got into
a debate over the look of Mega City-One at the local comic shop the other week
– another customer was adamant that the look of the movie city was all wrong,
because it wasn’t “his” Mega-City One.
This is a ridiculous argument, because
there is no such thing as a definite Mega-City One in Judge Dredd. Much of the
visual appeal of the comic over the years was that it was a rigid formula that
demanded crazy stylistic interpretation. A McMahon Dredd looked nothing like a
Bolland Dredd, but each vision was just as iconic.
The city was a bit more fixed, and still
owes its look to those very first Dredd stories, but the crazy architecture has
been radically interpreted by dozens of idiosyncratic artists.
In this bold tradition, the wide open space
of the movie city, with a limited number of vast blocks that are only just
starting to stab the sky, is perfectly valid, and a tasty blend of the crazy
future shock of the comic and the real world we all live in now.
4.
Tight
While there is no nostalgic fondness for
the look of the city, there is some in the storytelling. Like the comic, the
movie doesn’t screw around. It’s efficient storytelling that gets straight to
the drokkin’ point, with a script that is just slightly smarter than it looks,
as off-hand moments in montages turn out to have direct plot ramifications.
It thunders along on a wave of grim
seriousness, punctuated by brutal bursts of violence, with few moments of calm,
and captures the rhythm of a Dredd story, something recognisable in any medium.
It is unfortunate that the idea for this
first Dredd reboot film has already been done incredibly well in the past year,
with The Raid sharing the same plot. But plot isn’t story, and while both films
share a basic framework, they’re telling completely different stories
(especially when The Raid veers into the territory of family melodrama).
5.
Don’t forget to have a laugh
Besides, The Raid doesn’t have a character
like Dredd, who shows pain and suffering with a slightly-more clenched jaw, and
is a source for much of the film’s dark humour. From his ironic dispatching of
perps, to the parts where he gets laughs from pointing out the blindingly
obvious in an almost disinterested monotone.
There is grossly black humour in Dredd –
seeing somebody’s head hit the ground after a 200-floor fall in ultra-bright
light and ultra slow-motion, from beneath, is just horrible enough to be
hilarious – but the real laughs in the deadpan of Dredd. He faces certain death
with a resigned sigh, and kills 30 men without breaking a sweat, This
efficiency, this no-bullshit approach, is always good for a laugh or two.
6. Pretending
to be somebody else
For the beauty of the deadpan, the new
Dredd film got the right kind of performances, which don’t go for cheap laughs
and histrionics.
Often when an actor is cast in a film based on a comic,
they take it as a license to go completely over the top, with a broad
performance designed to grab everybody’s attention. This attitude reached its
nadir with the widely ridiculed Batman And Robin movie, but has continued through
the years – check out Nick Nolte literally chewing up the scenary in his teeth
in Ang Lee’s Hulk. It has slipped out of fashion – Christopher Nolan’s Batman
films are wonderfully repressed, and after the goggle-eyes of Tobey Maguire,
Andrew Garfield’s Spider-Man is so laid back, he’ll end up with a bald spot on the back of his skull.
Dredd follows that trend, and there is remarkably little shouting
or screaming in the new film. Lena Headey, who has already proven she can play an
exceedingly unlikeable woman in Game Of Thrones, barely raises her voice as she
orders men to be skinned alive, or locks down the whole block, trapping tens of
thousands of people, and wanders around the film as if she genuinely doesn't care what happens.
Meanwhile, Wood Harris is carted around like a fool for most of the running time, but hardly utters a word (and while his Avon in The Wire was squintingly cool, Harris is no stranger to scene chewing, as seen in Southland Tales). Oliva Thirlby is also a terrific Anderson, mainly because she never tries to oversell her discomfort at the violence and hatred she encounters. It’s just always there, while she pushes herself on to get the job done.
Meanwhile, Wood Harris is carted around like a fool for most of the running time, but hardly utters a word (and while his Avon in The Wire was squintingly cool, Harris is no stranger to scene chewing, as seen in Southland Tales). Oliva Thirlby is also a terrific Anderson, mainly because she never tries to oversell her discomfort at the violence and hatred she encounters. It’s just always there, while she pushes herself on to get the job done.
Dredd is a pretty goofy film, but these surprisingly subtle performances,
right across the board, sell the reality of this world. And like everything
else in Mega-City One, nobody does it better than Dredd himself.
7. He is the law
Despite bearing an uncanny resemblance to my brother-in-law, Karl Urban is one of the few Kiwi actors to escape the immense gravity of local soap opera Shortland Street, talented and charming enough to forge a career outside New Zealand (along with fellow Bourne actor Martin Csokas and Boba Fett's dad).
He is a terrific Doctor McCoy (where excessive eye rolling is allowed), and with a strong brow and laser stare, he can play the toughest of tough guys rather well.
Of course, he never gets the chance to use that brow or stare in Dredd, because he's acting with a bucket on his head. A gutsy move for any actor, Urban overcomes the difficulty with a quietly expressive chin, and a voice and demeanor that is more Eastwood than Schwarzenegger, snarling out Dredd's iconic lines, rather than bellowing them out.
Like Tom Hardy's Bane in the last Batman film, whose performace was all about pained eyes and an outrageously beautiful villain voice, Urban plays Dredd as a snarled whisper and a clenched jaw - severe teeth-gritting for moments of extraordinary pain, a slightly looser jawline of satisfaction when justice is delivered.
Benath that faceless helmet, Urban sells the toughness and authority of Dredd. It can't have been easy.
Despite bearing an uncanny resemblance to my brother-in-law, Karl Urban is one of the few Kiwi actors to escape the immense gravity of local soap opera Shortland Street, talented and charming enough to forge a career outside New Zealand (along with fellow Bourne actor Martin Csokas and Boba Fett's dad).
He is a terrific Doctor McCoy (where excessive eye rolling is allowed), and with a strong brow and laser stare, he can play the toughest of tough guys rather well.
Of course, he never gets the chance to use that brow or stare in Dredd, because he's acting with a bucket on his head. A gutsy move for any actor, Urban overcomes the difficulty with a quietly expressive chin, and a voice and demeanor that is more Eastwood than Schwarzenegger, snarling out Dredd's iconic lines, rather than bellowing them out.
Like Tom Hardy's Bane in the last Batman film, whose performace was all about pained eyes and an outrageously beautiful villain voice, Urban plays Dredd as a snarled whisper and a clenched jaw - severe teeth-gritting for moments of extraordinary pain, a slightly looser jawline of satisfaction when justice is delivered.
Benath that faceless helmet, Urban sells the toughness and authority of Dredd. It can't have been easy.
8.
Sloooooo-moooooo
The use of Slo-mo is little more than a gimmick, but it does
work, largely because it isn’t really overused, and because it offers a little light and beauty in the dirty world of Mega-City One.
9. Boom boom boom
Like the acting, and the special visual effects, the music is something that belongs solely to the film,. something the comic never had. And it's a cracker of a soundtrack from Paul Leonard-Morgan - sparse and thumping.
Like the acting, and the special visual effects, the music is something that belongs solely to the film,. something the comic never had. And it's a cracker of a soundtrack from Paul Leonard-Morgan - sparse and thumping.
The music of Dredd's world is a low, persistent throb of menace, pulsating into a beat as the action picks up. Despite John Carpenter's best efforts over the past four years, electronic music is still rarely used that well in big action films, but it certainly fits Dredd's bleak world far better than the usual orchestral mush. Moody electronic music can get the blood pumping in a way more traditional music can't. (See also The
Chemical Brothers’ soundtrack for Hanna, which was easily the second best thing about that film,
after Eric Bana’s outrageous accent).
The score for Dredd can sometimes be a bit obvious, but that's just because it fits the world of Mega-City One so well - it's no surprise that Geoff Barrow's Dredd-inspired Drokk concept album sounds awfully similar to a lot of Leonard-Morgan's stuff. Nobody is ripping anybody else off, it's just the perfect accompaniment. The perfect vibe for this world.
The score for Dredd can sometimes be a bit obvious, but that's just because it fits the world of Mega-City One so well - it's no surprise that Geoff Barrow's Dredd-inspired Drokk concept album sounds awfully similar to a lot of Leonard-Morgan's stuff. Nobody is ripping anybody else off, it's just the perfect accompaniment. The perfect vibe for this world.
10.
The helmet doesn’t come off
This isn’t just fanboy pandering. Dredd’s
facelessness is vital. The helmet doesn’t come off.
He’s the implacable face of authority, with
no sign of humanity in his eyes. But he’s also an utterly ego-less man,
dedicated to the law and nothing else. You take away the helmet, you see doubt
in his eyes, and you see personality. Dredd would never show either.
The helmet doesn't come off.
11. Sour times
To be brutally honest, expectations were lowered for the new film, so it wasn't hard to exceed them. (And as I've already pointed out this week, unfesibly high expectations invariably backfire.) The first Judge Dredd film left such a bad taste in the mouth that it managed to taint another cinematic crack at the character, almost two decades later, but it doesn't actually take that much to wash it away.
The new Dredd film isn't perfect - it's fairly unoriginal and sometimes a little too serious for its own good. But it is still a hugely entertaining and almost smart sci-fi action film. That's far more than Stallone ever managed.
12. Credit where credit is due
Right at the moment the film ends, and the
credits come crashing in, the first names you see are the names of the creators
of Judge Dredd – John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra. See, Avengers? It’s not that
hard.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
'Yeah, that's it': Dante, Dredd and disappointment
(#2 in a two-issue limited series)
Nikolai Dante ended – for the most part – like it was supposed to, with the Russian Rogue finally vanquishing all of his worst enemies. There were terrible sacrifices (it’s still the only comic to make me cry over a piece of dead computer hardware) but there were also moments of heroism and compassion that ultimately saved the day.
There is no final fate for Nikolai Dante. He just
walks away from his own story.
Nikolai Dante ended – for the most part – like it was supposed to, with the Russian Rogue finally vanquishing all of his worst enemies. There were terrible sacrifices (it’s still the only comic to make me cry over a piece of dead computer hardware) but there were also moments of heroism and compassion that ultimately saved the day.
This was always to be expected, since a
15-year action-filled saga was unlikely to end in despair and misery. But what
then? After freeing the world from tyranny, would Dante go out in his
prophesised blaze of glory, or would he rule an empire in a new and just age?
Well, neither, as it turned out. Instead
the story ends with two men playing Russian Roulette, with the winner wandering
out into the world, wondering what he’s going to do next.
And that’s it.
With its sexy and swaggering take on the
typical 2000ad killing machine, Nikolai Dante was the one strip that got me
reading the comic again after a decade-long break (with Dredd also contributing
a lot to that homecoming.) I fell for it hard.
Created by Robbie Morrison and Simon
Fraser, with able assistance from the great John Burns, Nikolai Dante has
undoubtedly been one of my favourite comics in the past decade. It was funnier
and openly sillier than the usual things you saw in 2000ad, but it could also crank
up the emotional intensity, while still finding room for the misadventures of a
rogue on a flying robot horse.
There were massive shifts in tone that
still felt organic, with the light tales of a gentleman thief and his
sci-fi shenanigans slowly shifting into a deeply dark war story, before
becoming something else that was a weird combination of both, before leading to
the expected grand finale in the past couple of years.
But when that grand finale was done, and
there was only epilogue, the final fate of the comic strip’s title character
was still unknown. And while there was certainly a lot of closure in those
final pages, I just didn’t think Sympathy For The Devil, that last story, would
turn out the way it did. And like Dredd, my first reaction was one of
disappointment.
Again, like the disappointment I felt when
I got to the end of Day of Chaos in Judge Dredd, this was almost all my own
fault. After all the Dante comics of the past decade, I was genuinely hoping
for some kind of Happily Ever After, but also ready for something a lot more
tragic.
To get something that doesn’t really fit
into either category – to get an ending that was so open-ended, after all that
– was a more than a bit disconcerting.
And yet… What other ending could there have
been for this comic?
After all, the appeal of Dante was always
that he didn’t quite do what was expected of him. He shamelessly stabbed his
most vicious foes in the back instead of taking them head on, and literally ran away from
offers of ultimate power.
So when it was all done, and he’d raised
his army of thieves & whores and brought down a terrible tyranny, Dante was
never going to be happy with the reins of ultimate power, and was just as
unlikely to throw his life away.
The need to burn out, rather than fade
away, is a fairly adolescent one, and after all he had been through - all the
war and death and family melodramas - Dante was too old for that shit.
(Besides, Morrison takes piss out of the
idea that Dante is going to bleed to death heroically pretty early on in
Sympathy For The Devil, with another Great Swordsman suddenly appearing, only
to be despatched almost instantly, just like all the other Dead Great Swordsmen
who crossed blades with Nikolai.)
And he can’t be the Tsar, because he was
just so unsuitable for that type of role, and the last conversation he has with
the previous ruler convinces him that he couldn’t handle that burden, and he
does not have the required cruelty to keep the peace.
He’s brought down an empire, but he is not
the man to rule it. He is the Tsar of All The Russias for just the briefest of
moments, before he walks away.
Even with an intense bout of Russian Roulette, in which Dante actually chooses to put the gun to his head, it certainly wasn’t what I was expected
from the final Dante story, and there was some disappointment when I did get
through the last five episodes in one go. This ending certainly wasn’t as
pessimistic as the climax to the latest Dredd mega-series in the pages of the
same issues, but I was – like Dredd – left wondering: ‘Is that it?’
But then I went back and read the past six
months of Dante stories, and it did feel like a more natural ending. It was more
obvious that there wasn’t be anything close to a fairy tale ending.
This last story is drenched in the main
character’s own uncertainty over his own ability to rule - the only time he
laughs is when he dives out a window to escape a wall of bureaucracy, and swings
across the city on some handy flagpoles. Even the love of his life – the fabulous
Jena Markov, can feel it, and isn’t surprised when he doesn’t show for the
wedding
I’m damned if I know what sort of ending I
was expecting, but the more I think about it, and the more I consider it, this
feels more and more like the only ending it could have ever had.
The first reaction to a comic story can be
a vital one – instantly crystallising an opinion that won’t ever be shaken. But
there are plenty of other comics that can be initially impressive, only to
appear more problematic as time and thought go by.
And there can be comics that initially
appear lackluster, or weak, or disappointing, only to later reveal themselves
to be anything but, and that’s been my experience with these Dredd and Dante
endings.
Any initial disappointment I felt while overdosing
on thrillpower in a London café has been almost completely replaced for a sneaky admiration for
both endings.
After all, they didn’t give me what I expected, and that’s a good thing – sometimes the best thing a story can do. To complain too much about that just feels childish.
Not giving me what I wanted? Yeah. That's it, all right.
After all, they didn’t give me what I expected, and that’s a good thing – sometimes the best thing a story can do. To complain too much about that just feels childish.
Not giving me what I wanted? Yeah. That's it, all right.