Opus 115: Opus
115 (May 18, 2003): AWARD SEASON. The National Cartoonists Society will hold it's annual Reuben
Award banquet at the historic Palace Hotel in San Francisco over the
Memorial Day weekend. The Comics Buyer's Guide is touting its annual
Fan Awards. The Harvey Awards are in the wings, and so are the Eisner
Awards. According to Time.com's Andrew Arnold, "The Eisners
have a reputation as the 'mainstream' awards and the Harveys as the
'altys.'" Who could have any objection to this deluge of awards? Not
I. The more awards, the merrier. And certainly, the more awards, the
less seriously we should contemplate any of them. Arnold recently (April 24) reported
on his experience as one of the operatives of the Eisner Awards whose
task, as a member of a committee, was to pick the nominees for "professionals"
to vote on. Arnold himself confesses some bafflement as to how he
qualifies as "professional" enough to serve on the panel. But if we
consider the other members, he should have no qualms. Of the other
four judges, one was a comic book store owner/operator, one was a
purchasing agent for Diamond, one a web-based comix journalist (like
Arnold-that's two in that category), and only one, Charles Vess,
was an actual comic book creator-that is, a "professional" maker of
comics, a writer or illustrator of them. In Vess's case, both. In
my jaundiced view, only Vess on that panel of "professionals" was,
in fact, a professional. The rest, like me, are mere hangers-on in
the eddying inlets of the "profession." It may be true that only "professionals"
can vote on the Eisners, but they are working from a list cobbled
up by a decidedly "unprofessional" gaggle of comics fans and enthusiasts. The judgement of these professionals
is, like the judgement of human beings everywhere, flawed and idiosyncratic.
Not evil, mind you: just human. Frank Miller's Dark Knight
Strikes Again was dismissed, apparently (according to Arnold),
because it was "the worst Frank Miller book ever." Now there's an
articulate, rational evaluation. In their next breath, the "professionals"
picked several crudely executed works, chiefly, I suspect, because
these efforts were deemed to be "honest," their candor making up for
their lack of "professional" polish. We seem doomed, in these politically
correct egalitarian times, to accept and laud everything, every clumsy
effort-excusing amateurish artwork and storytelling by saying that
it is "honest," brutally honest. Heartfelt, perhaps. Artistic skill
apparently has little to do with whatever criteria these "professionals"
invoke. At least at CBG, no one has any pretentions: there are no
criteria upon which "Fan Favorites" are selected. It's an out-and-out
popularity contest. A pure democracy: votes and nothing but votes.
No criterion. No professionals either, but no one is pretending there
are. REPRINT
REVIEW. The Andrews McMeel winter-spring crop of books
reprinting everyone's favorite comic strips has been sprouting, week
by week, on my desk since February, and now, in a fit of guilt, I'll
bring in the harvest. Zits Supersized (256 8.5x11-inch
paperback pages, $14.95) is one of the treasury series-that is, it
includes the content of the two preceding non-treasury tomes, Zits
Unzipped and Busted!, but this time, the Sundays are in
color (albeit lacking the playful sketchy splash panel, the throwaway
panel for newspapers that choose not to publish the strip at its fullest
dimension). There's also a color introductory sequence, a parody of
"Good Night Moon," describing a "great teen room," which turns out
to be a highly unkempt room. Since this strip about the terrors and
triumphs of being a 15-year-old youth in the American culture appears
in well over a thousand newspapers, it scarcely needs an introduction
here, but I can remind you that it is written by Reuben-winner Jerry
Scott and drawn by Pulitzer-winning editorial cartoonist Jim
Borgman and is one of the most inventive enterprises on the funnies
page. Scott and Borgman continually exploit the nature of their medium,
playing with both timing and visuals, particularly on Sundays when
they have somewhat more room to flail about in. It's always a treat
to see this strip, and I see it every day in my hometown paper; but
I treasure the reprint volumes because they permit me to re-visit
the hilarities of Jeremy's teenage life as perpetrated by the most
imaginative team now producing a syndicated strip. In a May sequence (20th-30th) the strip
will introduce its readers to Locks of Love, a Florida-based national
charity that takes donations of human hair and makes wigs for financially
disadvantaged children who have lost their hair under medical circumstances.
Jeremy's paramour, Sara Toomey, decides to make her life simply by
cutting off her unmanageable hair, and instead of letting her tresses
be swept into the garbage, she donates them to Locks of Love. Since
its founding in 1997, Locks of Love has helped more than 1,000 children
suffering from hair loss due to alopecia areata, an autoimmune codition
that attacks hair follicles and prevents hair from re-growing, severe
burns, radiation treatment, and dermatological conditions that result
in permanent hair loss. And here's the fourth reprint volume
of Get Fuzzy, one of the nation's fastest-growing strips. Featuring
a power-mad Siamese cat named Bucky and a gentle soul of a mixed-breed
dog named Satchel (who wears a wristwatch even though he can't tell
time) and their put-upon master, Rob Wilco, the strip is now in about
325 newspapers. The Get Fuzzy Experience (128 8.5x9-inch
pages in paperback, $10.95) traces the adventures of this unlikely
trio through the saga of Bucky's feud with the ferret next door and
reveals (1) the reasons Rob won't let his pets outside without him
and (2) Bucky's deepest secrets (all contained in his "Hello Kitty"
diary). Like his character, cartoonist Darby Conley is single;
unlike Rob, Conley has no pets because they are forbidden in the Boston
apartment building wherein he dwells. But, he says, "I am a great
'animal watcher,' and I hang out with stray cats and other people's
dogs, not to mention rats in the subway." In other words, Conley has
no excuses for not coming up with humorous situations for his strip;
and, in fact, he needs no excuses. The strip is invariably funny.
Conley grew up on Richard Scarry, Charles Schulz's Peanuts,
and Herge's Tintin, and he always wanted to be a cartoonist. He failed
for awhile, serving as an elementary school teacher instead, but he
remembers the best job of his youth-lifeguard at a swimming pool where
no one ever actually swam so he could draw to his heart's content.
Andrews McMeel has also brought forth
an adjunct publication, a tidy 5x5-inch hardback tome with Conley's
characters exploring what it means to be a cat. Or to encounter one.
Or to be tormented by one. Entitled simply I Would Have Bought
You a Cat, But ..., this gem is intended as a good gift for cat
lovers. Or perhaps as a warning to would-be cat owners. Or for Get
Fuzzy lovers. Just $9.95. Up,
Up, and Oy Vey.
Last summer, we found out the Thing, a super-strong animated mound
of orange bricks, is Jewish. Created as a member of the Fantastic
Four in the Marvel rejuvenation of superhero comics in 1961 by writer
Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby, the Thing was, to Kirby,
always Jewish, just like him-according to the artist's colleagues.
One of Kirby's unpublished drawings depicted his 500-pound boulder-man
in full rabbinical garb. And now, this generation of writers at Marvel
Comics decided to share their in-joke with the world. In the much-discussed
June 2002 issue of the Fantastic Four (No. 56,"Remembrance
of Things Past"), the Thing is in his old Lower East Side 'hood, battling
the evil Powderkeg, and he pauses to pray the traditional "Sh'ma Yisrael"
over an injured bystander. Powderkeg wisecracks: "Funny, you don't
look Jewish." Few comic book characters do, even
though, as Montreal comic book author Mark Shainblum points out, "almost
all the major superheroes of the Golden Age (1938-1950-ish) and the
Silver Age (1958-1972-ish) were created by Jews." Besides Marvel's
Lee (born Leiber) and Kirby (ne Kurtzberg), the list includes Superman
creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, Batman creator
Bob Kane, MAD magazine's William Gaines (whose
father Max was a comic book pioneer, arguably the inventor of the
magazine format), and veteran DC Comics editor Julius Schwartz.
Ditto Will Eisner (The Spirit; Sheena, Queen of the Jungle
and numerous others) who pioneered the graphic novel with A Contract
with God, his illustrated Jewish family saga. Perhaps the most
notorious and acclaimed graphic novel, Art Spielgelman's Maus,
recasts the Holocaust with Nazi cats and Jewish mice Yet, according to an Internet news
source, Marvel chairman emeritus Stan Lee claims he just doesn't get
it. Lee sounded flattered, but flustered,when Radio WNYC recently
called him to talk about the Thing's newly-revealed Semitic heritage.
"You know, I didn't intend for him
to be Jewish," Lee laughed. "No. I never thought for a minute what
[the characters'] religions were." Undaunted, the show's host pressed
on: "How much has Jewishness, do you think, informed the medium" of
comic books? Laughing again, Lee replied: "You know,
I have no idea. I never really thought of it. It is strange when you
mention it that the best-known characters were done by Jewish writers.
I guess that is an odd thought." With that, the living legend signed
off, adding apologetically: "I hope I didn't spoil your whole show." Elsewhere, the irrepressible Lee is
bouncing back into the entertainment business. He has signed with
Endeavor, which will represent the comic book maven's budding production
shingle Pow!Entertainment. Lee-created characters have recently launched
several major film franchises, including "Spider-Man" (which has grossed
more than $800 million worldwide), "X-Men," "Daredevil," and the forthcoming
"The Hulk" and "X-Men 2." In the year since Pow! launched, the company
has set up close to a dozen film and television projects, and it will
soon be moving into the gaming arena. Lee's upcoming "Stripperella,"
an animated series on TNN starring Pamela Anderson, is also a Pow!
production. FUNNYBOOK
FANFARE.
I have applauded the intellectual honesty and moral fortitude of Marvel's
Truth and Kyle Baker's interpretation thereof (in Opus
113). But with the Rawhide Kid, Marvel stubbed its four-color
toe. No. 5, the last in the "Slap Leather" mini-series featuring the
title character as a gay caballero, has on its cover a Scott Campbell
drawing of a horse rearing up that is, without a doubt, the greatest
horse drawing in all comics. Facial expression, musculature definition-the
whole thing, every rippling detail. Beautifully done. But Ron Zimmerman's
story, finally unraveled herein, is an unmitigated travesty. In what must be the medium's clumsiest
plotting, the story circles around a town sheriff who, although ill-equipped
for the task, tries to maintain the peace. No gun-slinger, he nonetheless
hesitates not a whit when it is necessary to face down the bad guys-who,
being better at gunplay than the sheriff, always whip him. The sheriff's
son, witnessing this humiliation time after time in four issues of
the series, accuses his father of being a coward despite the obvious
evidence to the contrary. The Kid arrives in time's nick every
once in a while and eventually agrees to help the sheriff rid the
town of the marauding baddies. So he does-assisted by the all-thumbs-and-elbows
sheriff. And when it's all over, the sheriff's kid fawns all over
his father, saying that he was wrong and that he now thinks his dad
is the bravest man ever. There's absolutely no development in
the story that would account for the kid's sudden change of heart.
None. And when the kid says he loves his father not because he killed
a man but because he "tried not to," one must wonder whether Zimmerman
reads his own stories while typing them. Nowhere in this sequence
does the father make any statement that suggests that he "tried not
to" kill a man. Mostly, in fact, he tries to kill the chief hoodlum
as hard as he can. Veteran graphic genius John Severin
illustrates this tale, and for the most part, he displays his usual
consumate skill in rendering the Old West. Occasionally, however,
I think he slips in a signal that he doesn't think much of the story.
In one issue, for example, he draws a panel that is largely vacant
of imagery because he depicts the characters just from the eyes up.
In No. 5, one panel is mostly a picture of a cowboy hat, viewed from
behind. Scarcely a scintillating visual. Both of these instances serve
the story, but they also are conspicuously out-of-kilter when compared
to Severin's usual masterful storytelling. So I suspect these subtle
maneuvers are his way of flippin' the bird to Zimmerman's script. As for the homosexual theme that inspired
so much comment when the series was announced last winter, it is mostly
not there. Every cover has carried the incendiary notice-"Parental
Advisory EXPLICIT Content"-but that's just window dressing. There
is nothing explicit about the Rawhide Kid's presumed sexual orientation.
No sodomy on display at all, in other words. In fact, homosexuality isn't even mentioned.
Instead, we have the characterization of the Kid as a sometimes swishy
cowboy and dialogue that commits every cruel gay life style cliche
in the lexicon of popular culture, a simpering chorus of jokes of
questionable taste. Although one might suppose, given the message
implicit in Truth, that Marvel intended to treat homosexuality
respectfully, perhaps even suggesting that heroism isn't a purely
masculine trait, that gays can be heroic, too. But Zimmerman handily
sabotaged that plan, if it ever existed. His treatise here can do
little except perpetuate the stereotypes. He turned what could have
been a cautionary tale into a Mad magazine prank, and a misfiring
one at that. The series could be highly amusing
comedy for hordes of entirely unbiased but knowledgeable readers.
I can imagine many gays laughing at the cliches (they are extreme)
and getting a kick out of watching the Rawhide Kid unhorse homophobic
prejudice with every utterance and action, most of which are performed
in the light-hearted manner of a good James Bond flick. Alas, our
world is not beset by hordes of entirely unbiased but knowledgeable
readers, and as a result, the story of the Rawhide Kid's gaiety is
as likely to confirm prejudice as it is to thrive as wholesome hilarity
in a humane society. I'm sure we haven't heard the last
of the Rawhide Kid. Given the success of the promotional stunt this
series was, Marvel will doubtless produce another Rawhide Kid mini-series
in the near future, one that denies that the Kid is gay. But I don't think they should let Zimmerman
do it until he can demonstrate that he reads what he writes. They
could give him a quiz after he turns his script in, I suppose. But
whatever else they do (or don't), they should be sure to get Campbell
to draw more horses. THOUGHT
FOR THE WEEK.
Dave Letterman said it best: "We've got to teach these Iraqis how
to behave. For examle, you can't just go looting and rioting in the
streets-unless your team wins a championship." Until then, you can stay 'tooned by
clicking here, a simple gesture
that will magically transport you to the Front Page of this Website,
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