Opus 81: Opus
81: NEWS&COMMENT
(February 27, 2002). A statuesque Prince Valiant will soon be
standing, life-sized, in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia. The city council
approved the 6-foot monument thanks to Brian Kane's recent biography
of Valiant's creator, Hal Foster (see Opus
77 for a review). Cal Johnson, owner of Strange Adventures bookshop
in the Canadian city, and some other literate citizens took the biography
to a council meeting and pointed out that Foster, who grew up in Halifax,
could trace his family history in Nova Scotia to the 18th century, to
Lord Halifax and the province's Governor Edward Cornwallis. "It was
the family history that convinced them," Kane told me. "It proved Foster's
lineage. Had we done just a straight art book it probably wouldn't have
had the same impact because the lawyer for the group used quotes from
the book in his presentation." (For more about Hal Foster's place in
the history of the medium, consult a book of mine, The Art of the
Funnies; for a preview, click here.) The Boondocks' Aaron McGruder
joined such luminaries as singer Janet Jackson, the late Secretary of
Commerce Ron Brown, activist Dick Gregory, singer/activist Harry Belfonte,
and CNNewsman Bernard Shaw as a recipient of the NAACP Chairman's Award
on February 23 during the taping of the 33rd annual NAACP Image Awards
ceremony. The tape will air on Fox on Friday, March 1. The Award is
bestowed for distinguished service and dignified representation of people
of color. Said Julian Bond, NAACP Chairman: "Aaron McGruder's
sharp artist's pen combines the biting tradition of Thomas Nast
with the political sensibilities and humor of Ollie Harrington;
he skewers the powerful from Presidents to rap stars. At a young age,
he has joined a tiny band of social satirists who use the medium of
the cartoon to make us wonder and think. The NAACP is honored to salute
him." McGruder's misanthropic hero, Huey
Freeman, often speaks out on racial issues and doesn't hesitate to slam
into African-American icons, too-most frequently, BET (Black Entertainment
Television). One thing is certain: McGruder wasn't overwhelmed by NAACP's
honor. During the week the award ceremony took place, Huey was lobbying
NAACP in the strip to add to its roster of awards one for "the most
embarrassing black person" and another for "the most ignorant black
person." In the strip for February 23, the day of the ceremony, Bond
writes Huey, telling him his suggestions are "ridiculous" and that "something
may be wrong with you." But when Condoleezza Rice gets an award,
Huey thinks at first that NAACP has accepted his suggestion for a Most
Embarrassing Black Person award; then he finds out she received one
of the prestigious Image Awards and is appalled: "I wonder if Pat
Buchanan is getting a lifetime achievement award," he shouts in
exasperation. Naturally, not everyone thinks McGruder
is God's Gift to Interracial Harmony. On January 26, the Washington
Post published a letter from a reader that began: "I cannot imagine
what Martin Luther King Jr. would say if he were alive and read The
Boondocks comic strip that ran on Monday [Martin L. King Day]....
a strip that referred to 'hating outside the box' and 'challenging the
reader to expand his or her hate horizons.' Since when is racism funny?
Where is your sense of responsible journalism? ... I know that this
comic strip offends readers. What are you trying to promote?" Well.
Anyhoo, I'm glad the NAACP hasn't forgotten about Harrington. Disney is in the toils of a law suit
over rights to A.A. Milne's Winnie the Pooh. Apparently, 'way
back in 1930, Stephen Slesinger (which has subsequently become Inc.
in Florida) acquired American merchandising rights from Milne. Disney,
which first licensed Pooh and Company in 1961, maintains that Slesinger's
rights include only such things as toys, pajamas, pillowcases, and the
like-not movies and videos and tv and comic books. Slesinger, naturally,
disagrees, claiming a piece of the Disney Empire's Pooh Pfiefdom. The
case has been dragging on for a decade or more, and my guess is that,
despite interim rulings in favor of the Slesinger family, Disney will
eventually prevail. After all, they get the U.S. Congress to extend
the life of a copyright every time Mickey Mouse gets close to
public domain; surely they can twist a little Florida company around
their corporate finger. Another reason I mention this contest here is
because of the odor of Enron that has arisen around the case:
according to the National Post, Disney has destroyed thousands
of pages of documents that might have favored Slesinger. Gee, what a
surprise: all these giant corporations have the integrity of a bed of
oysters.... NBC announced that it will begin airing
commercials for liquor this year, the first time booze will be touted
on tv in fifty years. But the ads extolling drunkenness will be shown
only after 9 p.m. Eastern time; after that, it is assumed, the kids
will be nestled all snug in their beds instead of watching the tube.
The notion of a "family hour" for television has always flown in the
face of fact: 9 p.m. EST is 8 p.m. CST, where tv programs are simulcast,
and so that means kids go to bed an hour earlier in Central Standard
Time? Why? Why should children in the midwest be sleepier than children
in New York? Just another example, I ween, of the rampant provincialism
of the New York-Washington axis. (Yes, axis-axis, axis, axis! Talk about
your evil.) It took Olympics officialdom a week,
but they finally made it right, awarding gold medals to the Canadian
duo, Jamie Sale and David Pelletier. But it could easily
have gone the way of all Olympian fiascos. The International Skating
Union seemed poised to skim as lightly as possible over the icey issue
with polite but vague promises of future reforms in the judging criteria,
but Jacques Rogge, the new, tough-minded president of the International
Olympic Committee, had other ideas. According to Time, it was
Rogge who persuaded the ISU to rectify the situation now, this week,
by giving a second set of gold medals. Seems the best solution to me.
And it bodes better for the future, too. Sean Connery has been signed
to play Allan Quatermain in the 20th Century Fox production of "League
of Extraordinary Gentlemen." So another Alan Moore concoction
makes it to the silver screen, but, apart from doing a "period piece
X-men," what is the thematic function of telling a story that lumps
together a small flock of Victorian leading men? Allusion should serve
some literary purpose beyond populating a cast.... Garfield is
giving up on his private jet. Cartoonist Jim Davis bought a 10-passenger
Dassault Falcon 20F-5 in 1987 when he needed to commute from Muncie,
Indiana, PAWS headquarters, to New York on syndicate business and to
Los Angeles on tv business, but now, Davis commutes via Internet, so
the airplane is up for sale, asking price, $7.6 million.... FOUR-COLOR
RAMBLING.
In Alan Moore's Tom Strong's Terrific Tales No. 2, we
meet the co-creation of Steve No-relation Moore and Arthur
Adam, Jonni Future, an extraordinarily well-upholstered
young woman who wears an impossible costume. This battle garb is impossible
on at least two counts. First, the headgear is impossible to wear. It
appears to be forged of some sort of metal and has a vaguely birdy appearance-feathers
and wings. The latter Viking appendages arise on each side from a scollop
at the edge of the helmet which, by fitting over the wearer's ears,
secures it to the head. But I can't imagine anyone actually putting
this thing on and wearing it. The aperture for the ears is simply too
cute for practicality: even the slight thickness of the metal would
make the wearer's ears stick out like jug handles. And, with the metal
edge resting on the ear, the ear would hurt. Ask anyone who wears spectacles.
Moreover, the helmet would be so precariously balanced on skull and
ears that the wearer would not have freedom of movement; she couldn't
move her head without risking the cap's falling off. How could you do
battle under these circumstances? But we should, perhaps, be thankful
that Adams did not compound the impossibility: in an earlier sketch
of the costume, he experimented, as revealed in the ABC Sketchbook,
with ear-wings that were three times the size of the present impossibilities. The other impossibilities of the costume
have less to do with what is physically possible than what is purely
tactical. The costume has armor for the shoulders, wrists, and legs
from the knees down. The shoulder plates also descend, so to speak,
over Jonni's breasts, protecting the upper portions thereof. The rest
of the raiment is diaphanous or skin-tight but thoroughly unsuitable
for going into battle. From the waist down, Jonni wears skin-tight pants;
so tight that the cleavage between her buttocks is clearly seen. Well,
maybe that's okay: freedom of movement dictates design, I 'spect. From
the waist up, she wears a see-through blouse with a neckline that plunges
to the navel. Even Jonni, whom we watch, voyeuristically, as she dons
this garment for the first time, wonders about her shirt: "Shouldn't
this blouse fasten up somehow?" she asks as she attempts, vainly, to
close the neckline's gap over her bountiful bosom by pulling the parted
halves of the garment to the center. "Not really," says her attendant,
a talking leopard named Jermaal. Spectacular thought this vision of
femininity may be as a pin-up, her costume scarcely protects her. The
most vulnerable portion of the anatomy, the warrior's torso, neck to
waist, is entirely exposed to whatever damage her foe may care to inflict.
Perhaps the design is cannier than I suspect. Maybe it's not all titillation.
Maybe the idea is that no enemy on the battlefield would want to inflict
any damage on this udderly pendulous landscape. So Jonni is as safe
encased in diaphanous silk as she would be ensconced in a tank. Incidentally,
her costume is based upon the costume worn by the original Johnny Future.
In the ABC Sketchbook, he wears exactly the same garment, even
to the plunging neckline, which, in his case, reveals not global amplitude
but a hairy chest. Jonni adorns the cover of Terrific
Tales No. 2, too. But almost a third of the book (11 of the 36 pages,
counting covers) is devoted to advertisements. Jonni and her bodacious
rack also appear on the cover of the current issue of Comic Book
Artist, No. 17, in which Adams is extensively interviewed by editor
Jon B. Cooke. In the cover incarnation, Jonni appears to be carrying
Adams' head in a jar. Her pose defies anatomy, though. In fact, her
anatomy defies anatomy. I'm reminded of what Playboy cartoon
editor Michelle Urry once said to me about Vargas, whose
female figures became more and more exaggerated as time when on, assuming
poses that were physically impossible: "He forgot where the tits went,"
she said. Illustrating the interview are numerous
delectable and copiously detailed Adams renderings, and from these,
we conclude, correctly, that he is as interested in gorillas as he is
in curvaceous humans. He invented Monkeyman and O'Brien at the prompting
of Erik Larsen and realized, as soon as he'd conjured up the
duo, that "Oh, my God-I just made up Angel and the Ape!" From the early
samplings of O'Brien drawings, we can see that Adams' female anatomy
gets more and more magnificent in the chest as time goes on. O'Brien's
proportions were, at first, realistic; Jonni's are not. Which brings us, willy nilly, to the
9th issue of Codename: Knockout, a title that makes blatant reference
to the well-rounded heroine whose embonpoint is displayed throughout
the book. The cover of this book is customarily another occasion for
exhibition of feminine curves: a succession of talented pin-up creators
have depicted the toothsome Angela in fetching poses that have nothing
to do with the story inside. For this issue, Tomas Giorello and
Alex Sinclair have achieved a stunning example of a new pin-up
genre in which the artistic purpose is to depict both the ta-ta's and
the derriere of the subject in the same image, imparting to "T&A"
a visual bond as closely linked as the alphabetical one. This objective
can be accomplished only by twisting the woman's body into a fleshy
pretzel: usually, the buttocks dominate the near foreground while the
bosom is revealed by giving the torso a wrenching torque to the extreme
right or left. This title has offered a generous sampling of this genre
in previous numbers, but the Giorello-Sinclair effort, bursting with
amplitude, is doubtless the champion of the lot. But it's the interior
work of penciller Amanda Conner and inker Jimmy Palmiotti
that sets me free: Conner's slightly amped version of the so-called
animated style is enhanced by Palmiotti's boldly inked outlines, deploying
an undulating line of grace and fluidity. The best interior art this
book has seen. Meanwhile, Robert Rodi continues to provide plots
that tantalize and dialogue that snaps with wit. The current Birds of Prey, No.
38, inked by Andrew Pepoy, is another instance of crisply inked
art. And penciller James Fry is another of the butt-and-bosom
school, supplying several examples of anatomical impossibility: you
can't, really, combine an upshot of the rear-end with a simultaneous
downshot of the upper story unless you dismember the body or ignore
its structure. This issue's other affront to common sense is in the
story. Black Canary encounters a foe who is accidentally infected with
"the next generation of artificial intelligence," namely, "nanites,
billions of self-replicating microscopic machines" that coat his body
in a seamless swarm. Oracle, seeing all this on her monitor, cautions
Canary: "Stay away from him, Dinah! Don't let him touch you!" Presumably,
she'd be infected with the same plague. Ah, but then, two panels down
the page, Canary kicks the guy in the jaw! So she touches him, right?
So why wouldn't those billions of nanites leap, flea-like, to her bod?
Dunno. Incidentally-while we're all wrought
up here by female anatomy-Newsquirks goes a long way towards
explaining our preoccupation with the mammary features thereof. According
to Ms. Gillian Bentley of University College London, women's
breasts are larger than those of other primates but not in order to
attract mates. No, human female breasts are larger to prevent babies
from suffocating as the human face became flatter. Bentley points out
that human infants have lost the protruding jaws and lips that let chimpanzees
suckle safely from a flat breast. So it's all about nutrition, dummy.
But I guess I knew that. Instructive though all this might be
about anatomy and other imagineerings, we encountered a couple of genuinely
educational efforts elsewhere last week. In Christopher P. Reilly's
The Comical Tragedy of Punch and Judy, for instance, writer Reilly
and artist Darron Laessig retell the original story that has
animated British sidewalk glove-puppet shows since the 17th century.
Punch, a name and character derived from Italian commedia dell-arte's
Pulchinella (meaning "pullet" or "chicken"), is an irascible autocrat
who, when he doesn't get his way, resorts to a handy club to beat his
opposition into submission. Or, in the case of his neighbor, Mr. Scaramouch,
to behead the offender. In a succession of encounters, Punch's violence
escalates rapidly as he beats his wife, Judy, and then throws their
wailing baby out of the window. The comedic appeal of these antics
may be illusive, but the children who made up the traditional audience
for the shows apparently shrieked with delight at the puppet's outrageous
belligerences, each accompanied by Punch's self-congratulatory pronouncement,
"That's the way to do it." Called to account after a parade of these
brutal hilarities, Punch manages to trick the hangman into hanging himself.
And then, in the last act, Punch takes nihilism to new heights when
he meets the devil himself. And kills him. With that, Punch becomes
a hero rather than a thug. But whether his ascension excuses his previous
viciousness is another matter, something debated by generations of scholars
seeking import in the nonsense of the play. Infantile nihilism is probably
the best explanation: the children who rejoiced at Punch's brutalities
were surely indulging in an unconscious rebellion against the authority
of the adult world, and Punch's victory over the devil excused the kids
for their secret wishes by sanctifying them. And since the unconscious
fantasies of our infancy haunt us all our lives, the appeal of the Punch
and Judy show extends into adulthood. With the puppet show and its anarchic
glee as background, it's easy to see why the founders of Britain's legendary
humor magazine chose Punch for its title. (And the name prompts
me to wonder, as I often have in the past, whether the expression "punchline"
derives from the magazine. Probably not. But it pleases me to think
it does.) Laessig's visual interpretation of
the traditional tale is a quirky delight. His character designs are
exaggerative caricatures as wooden in expression as the glove-puppets
who inspired them, and his stark settings, often drenched in solid black,
reinforce an aura of abstracted reality. But I don't want to let loose of Punch
just yet. The Reilly-Laessig enterprise prompted me to unearth a tiny
tome entitled The Last Days of Mr. Punch by D.H. Myers (McCall,
1971). Myers impersonates Punch for the latter's autobiographical purposes
and also quotes extensively from Henry Mayhew's London Labour and
the London Poor (1861) an interview with a "Punchman" (the fella
whose hands are in the glove puppets). The Punchman tells us that it
was the first British Punchman, Piccini, who, "emboldened by rum," permitted
Punch to win over the Devil; until then (1790), the Devil carted Punch
off in the last act. The Punchman is persuaded that the
"Punch and Judy" show he does is high art of the sort that endures.
"Punch's name is writ in the annuals of history," he says, "and handed
down as long as grass grows and water runs-for when grass ceases to
grow, you know, and water ceases to run, this world will be no utility;
that's moral." The grass and water image reminds me of similar quotations
attributed to Native Americans, which proves, I suppose, that they were
all Punch fans. "Punch is an opera," the Punchman continues,
"an huproar, we calls it-and the most pleasing and most interesting
of all as was ever produced. Punch never was beat, and never will be,
being the oldest performance for many hundred years, and now handed
down to posterity. There's a fine moral in it, too. The killing of the
Devil makes it one of the most moral plays as is, for it stops Satan's
career of life, and then we can all do as we likes afterwards." Punch, or the philosophy of Punch,
is still with us. H.L. Mencken trots him out in an essay on "Newspaper
Morals" in 1914. As a young practitioner of the drama critic's black
arts, Mencken asked a more experienced hand for advice. "The main idea," that worthy expounded,
"is to be interesting." That's how you get readers to read what you
write, he explains. "The only way to make them read you is to give them
something exciting. Knock somebody in the head every day-if not an actor,
then the author, and if not the author, then the manager. Make it hearty!
Make it hot! That is Rule No. 1 of American psychology-and of English,
too, but more especially of American. You must give a good show to get
a crowd, and a good show means one with slaughter in it." Punch knew. "That's the way to do it,"
as he was forever intoning. Newspapermen ever since Mencken, and
for a long time before, have perpetuated the principle. And they continue
to do so. All in high moral dudgeon. Most recently, they've taken unto
themselves credit for righting the wrong of the pairs skating competition
during the Olympics. If it hadn't been for tv news keeping the feet
of officialdom to the fire, claim the newsies, the Canadians would never
have been awarded the gold medals they deserved. Probably true. But in heaping garlands
of laurel on themselves, the newsfolk conveniently ignore all the other
stories they've overlooked or botched, stories the coverage of which
might have averted civic disaster had the news media not been too busy
with, say, Gary Condit to cover the early signs of Enron's coming collapse,
or with Monica Lewinsky to devote the sort of attention to the Pope's
visit to Cuba (which occurred just as the Monica scandal was breaking)
that might have helped foment Castro's downfall. Examples of this sort
of maladroitness are legion, which accounts for the eagerness of the
news media to give themselves credit on the rare occasions that they
deserve it. Before my errant attention span wavers
too furiously afield, here's a recent issue of Linda Medley's
Castle Waiting, No. 12 to be exact-the one that marks her return
last summer to self-publishing as Olio. Herein, we discover that Toddy
wants to sell the mill and Rob wants to buy. I've been a fan of Medley's
careful art style for some years now even though I'm not a passionate
reader of this title. Visually, Castle Waiting is elegant. But
the story's focus on everyday medieval life and its assorted viscisitudes,
none very earth-shaking, has yet to engage me. That's more my fault
than Medley's, I'd say: my taste is coarser and less refined than hers,
and so the kitchen routines at the convent or the castle don't keep
me a-goin' even when it's a nog log they're making and the nog is slightly
intoxicating. Medley's storytelling skills are well-honed,
however, and she not only delineates her milieu with clarity and authenticity
but paces the episodic story expertly, deploying the resources of the
medium for emotional impact. And in No. 12, she provides a prose essay
on the inside covers in honor of April Fool's Day. She tells us about
Sir Percival, one of the Knights of Arthur's Roundtable, who came within
an ace of achieving the Holy Grail. Percival, Medley says, comes
from "parsi-fal," meaning "pure fool." And it is Percival's foolishness,
his dunderheaded self-absorption, that prevents him from attaining his
heart's desire. I didn't know that, and I've been wandering around the
Arthurian Legend for years. Thanks, Linda: I love tidbits like this. And now, to return to nihilism, let
us pause, briefly, to consider Frank Miller's latest Batman enterprise
while it is in midflight. I've encountered some disparaging remarks
about the quality of the artwork recently, and I beg to differ. (I am
also working on a Dark Horse project involving Miller's Sin City series,
so my opinions may be highly suspect.) Without the final chapter before
us, it's clearly premature to form any over-all verdict about Dark
Knight Strikes Again, but some of the thematic underpinnings of
Miller's tale suggest directions. Once again, it seems he has divided
the world's superheroes into two camps: the oppressors and the resisters.
A champion of law and order, Superman is on the side of the establishment,
hence, of the oppressors. Batman, as a denizen of the night whose relationship
to the minions of the law is shadowy, is essentially an outlaw, a rebel:
his nearly ungovernable passion for righting wrongs and punishing criminals
is so powerful that, in obeying its impulses, he must go outside the
law. He cannot await its orderly machinations. He, therefore, resists
the dictates of the establishment, and that pits him against Superman.
By extension, Batman champions the
individual as opposed to the group. Individual freedom as opposed to
social order. In Freudian terms, the Id vs. Superego. Or creativity
vs. conformity. Art vs. Commerce? The first two chapters in Miller's
story resonate with echoes of these themes. In Miller's construct, superheroes,
following Superman's example, fought the wrong enemy while the real
foe of humanity wreaked quiet havoc and grew strong, dismantling protections
for individual aspirations while building a fortress of governmental
regulation to nurture its mercantile ambitions and its desire for power.
The echoes of an Enron event are eerie, but the story was written before
we knew anything specific about such monstrous deceptions. Miller was
simply working from attitude outward. His prescience, however, is uncanny
and awful. As for the conclusion of the tale,
Batman seems to be threatening to take the "information" age to the
next level-where superheroes will come out into the open, leaving secret
identities behind. And what will happen then? What about the secret
kingdom of the establishment? Stay 'tooned. Throughout this venture, Miller sprinkles
vignettes of superhero comedy, mustering the roster of wasted heroes
in their futile endeavors-the Question, the Flash, Jon Jonzz, Captain
Marvel, Ralph Dibny, and, my favorite so far, Plastic Man in the guise
of a muscle car. Volume 2 of the 3-volume series begins with the Sunday
morning gasbags fulminating on tv-George Will, Cokie Roberts, Chris
Matthews, Ted Kopple, George Stephanopolis, Robert Novak. And, later,
is that Jenette Kahn? Probably not, but.... Those who find Miller's drawings crude
are missing the function of the artwork in this undertaking. They expect
the kind of figure-drawing that has animated superhero comics since
the beginning. But Miller is aiming for something else here. One does
not attack convention with convention. The artwork here embodies the
screaming raw emotion that animates Miller's assault on received wisdom.
He is not drawing to depict action; he is drawing to express emotion.
The crudenesses, the lapses in symmetry and in anatomical realism-all
bespeak rage, raw almost uncontrollable rage. The lines are not drawn.
The ink is not laid down smoothly, routinely, in the methodical manner
of the artist. Instead, the clots and gouges of the linework suggest
that Miller is working with a blunt instrument. An instrument of destruction,
not construction. Beating away at a hated object. Scraping away as if
with a dull chisel. Gouging, cutting, battering. Seldom in funnybooks
has technique been so emblematic of feeling, so wedded to purpose. And for more about Miller's place in
the history of funnybooks, check my book, The Art of the Comic Book;
for a preview, click here. PITHY
PRONOUNCEMENTS.
Eustace Tilley, the monocled dandy invented by cartoonist Rea Irvin,
is back in all his pristine (not to say prissy) glory on the cover of
The New Yorker's end-of-February anniversary issue, where he
has been for almost all of the 77 anniversaries of Harold Ross's magazine,
missing only a few during Tina Brown's reign as editor and buzz-meister
in the 1990s. In the same issue, we learn that an exhibition of New
Yorker cover art will be traveling the country from sea to shining
sea but stopping nowhere inbeween: San Francisco, Miami, Los Angeles,
and New York are cited as show venues, but nothing in the great middle
of the country. No Chicago, St. Louis, Denver. Apparently only on the
coasts are people sophisticated enough to understand New Yorker
humor. Conjures up recollection of Saul Steinberg's notorious
March 1976 cover for the magazine, the one that depicts the entire continent
west of the Hudson River as consisting of Kansas City, Las Vegas, and
Los Angeles, then the Pacific Ocean and Japan, China and Russia in the
remote distance. Like I said: they're a parochial lot on Manhattan Island....
Prompted by Greg Rucka's work on a recent Batman title, I picked
up a couple issues of his Queen & Country and encountered
his now-familiar terse and intense narrative style; the current artistic
team, Brian Hurtt on pencils and Christine Norrie on inks,
is more agile than Steve Rolston, whose linework was a little
stolid but still quite suited to Rucka's storytelling manner.... Mark
Laming's pictures inked by John Stokes in American Century
No. 11 remind me of Al McWilliams-full of meticulous detailing, annoyingly
fussed over, it seems to me; so realistic do they attempt to be that
it's difficult to tell one character from another, and since this issue
is my introduction to the series, I'm completely lost: neither pictures
nor words catch me up to what's going on.... In the Amazing Spider-Man
No. 38, we watch Peter Parker and Aunt May bare each other's souls in
a cover-to-cover talkfest unusual in superhero comics; just as Peter
has always assumed the blame for Uncle Ben's death, so does Ben's wife,
who had an argument with her husband, driving him from the house for
relief, and while he was out, he was killed. Colorist Dan Kemp mutes
the visuals by casting an appropriately light blue-gray pall over John
Romita Jr.'s pictures. But when did Peter break his nose? I coulda
missed it, not being a regular Spidey reader; or is this just one of
Romita's artistic tropes? ... Two-thirds of the way through Dark
Horse's Superman/Tarzan: Sons of the Jungle, I'm hooked by Carlos
Megila's angular drawing style. Pleasing though it is to watch,
his tendency to whittle his pictures into abstract imagery sometimes
makes it difficult to recognize what's going on, exactly: in one place
in No. 2 of the 3-issue series, I'm not sure but what the jungle-born
Superman isn't missing a leg altogether. One of Megila's narrative devices,
however, is tantalizing: he isolates certain key images in an otherwise
panoramic or full-page picture, drawing a border around them to focus
our attention on the aspect of the action they incarnate. An intriguing
touch with dramatic potential. The concluding issue, No. 3 in this trilogy,
should hit the stands in March.... Until then, metaphors be with you. To find out about Harv's books, click here. |
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