What I like most about Ex Machina is that it has the guts to have an opinion (even if that opinion does tend towards South Park republican-style "neither position is right, the answer is in the middle" on a large number of issues). Too many political shows try to somehow write about politicians without actually adopting a political stance, which isn't just futile, its disingenuous. Ex Machina takes real issues and has the character have a clear opinion on them, without equivocating. It also handles the impact of the superhero stuff on politics really well (loved the joke about "people blame me for bush being reelected, but that would have happened anyway"). The tackling of 9/11 was incredibly brave.
The pure superhero stuff didn't work quite as well, and at times felt almost out of place. Its like, in the middle of the fascinating west-wing with a twist type stuff, there's a fairly generic murder mystery and unlike the political stuff its not fresh or new.
I used to have a buddy who criticized photo tracing as looking like Tom Goes to the Mayor (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Goes_To_The_Mayor) and to an extent I agree. Its an easy shortcut to realistically rendered people, but there's always something slightly stilted about the people being drawn, like they're posing even in scenes where they're just talking.
Ex Machina doesn't completely manage to avoid this, but it mitigates the problem by consistently using movie-type shots and angles-- extreme closeups or shots from much lower or higher than you would otherwise expect keep it visually engaging. More importantly though, the lighting is excellent. Lighting is something that rarely gets talked about in comics outside of Batman and noir comics, but Ex Machina does a great job of matching tone to time period and event in a way that highlights the exact emotion of the situation. Sepia green for a childhood flashback, TV-blue for a presidential announcement, horror movie purples and blacks underscoring the murder scenes.
The dialogue is excellent, and the characters, especially Mitchell, all feel unique and fleshed out without resorting to stock. Mitchell can seem a little too idealized at times, but the superhero angle is a plausible way for him to have become mayor without hopelessly compromising himself.
All in all I like Ex Machina, but not quite as much as I might have had he chosen to just eschew the murder/conspiracy/where are his powers from angle and instead focused more on the politics.
Monday, October 29, 2007
Monday, October 22, 2007
Alex Ross' work is hit or miss for me. He's obviously an extremely skilled painter, which in certain comics can be a problem- much of what goes on with superheroes suffers rather than benefits from a high degree of visual realism. I know he favors classic icons like Superman, but for every panel where he evokes heroism, truth, justice and the american way all rendered in glorious oil, there's one where he essentially just highlights the absurdity of a grown man in spandex.
I think he's at his best when he's pushed to experiment, allowed to get inventive rather than simply hearken back to the silver age. Given a work with genuine emotional depth and realism and imagistic challenges worthy of his abilities, Ross can do incredible things.
Uncle Sam is an incredible thing. A strange blend of MTV's the Maxx ("crazy" homeless protagonist interacting with ostensibly fictional figures) and A People's History of the United States, it could very easily have been pedantic, trite, or pointlessly bizarre. Indians, slavery, racism, yadda yadda yadda. What sets Uncle Sam apart are its script, which has great fun with. The blend of Watchmen style visual experimentation and extreme realism of detail and style was probably the only way that this story could have been told, given that it is simultaneously about madness and fantasy and gazing unflinchingly into reality.
Kristen Bell is on Heroes, which for anyone who knows her, is really really good news. She played Veronica Mars, the titular character of the most underappreciated show of the last decade.
I think he's at his best when he's pushed to experiment, allowed to get inventive rather than simply hearken back to the silver age. Given a work with genuine emotional depth and realism and imagistic challenges worthy of his abilities, Ross can do incredible things.
Uncle Sam is an incredible thing. A strange blend of MTV's the Maxx ("crazy" homeless protagonist interacting with ostensibly fictional figures) and A People's History of the United States, it could very easily have been pedantic, trite, or pointlessly bizarre. Indians, slavery, racism, yadda yadda yadda. What sets Uncle Sam apart are its script, which has great fun with. The blend of Watchmen style visual experimentation and extreme realism of detail and style was probably the only way that this story could have been told, given that it is simultaneously about madness and fantasy and gazing unflinchingly into reality.
Kristen Bell is on Heroes, which for anyone who knows her, is really really good news. She played Veronica Mars, the titular character of the most underappreciated show of the last decade.
Monday, October 15, 2007
I had a lot of trouble finding a copy of City of Glass, and ended up just reading it in a reading room at the library, which was a shame because after reading it I wanted to take it home and absorb it and really get to think about it. I liked it very much. I've read about Paul Auster (though not actually read him), and I would be very interested to see his representation of this story, because after reading it as a comic I can't imagine it any other way.
Dave Mazzuchelli's art was familiar to me from Batman Year One, and I was pleased to see him again employing the noirish clarity he used in that book- his work isn't just dark and gritty, its stark, focused, unmistakable. In Batman it lent a dose of reality to the work, and here it grounds it, so that even as the story spirals out of sanity the visual touchstones make sure we never lose it. There were so many points where he employed visual suggestions that would have been impossible, not only in any other medium, but in any other style. For example, when he speaks of the city as the labrynth, the lines faze effortlessly from city to maze in a way that is only possible because the city was being portrayed in clear, cartoonish simplicity in the first place.
The story itself recalled some of the Manhattan in the 70's wierdness of Donald Barthelme. The "characters meet the author" trope is a common one- Grant Morrison, Stranger than Fiction and Cerebus have all made use of it. But by adapting the story the dynamic is shifted slightly, characters are no longer meeting their creator, but their inspiration, the creator once removed.
Stillman's monologue was incredible, visual trickery that was absolutely essential to the text. I couldn't imagine it any other way.
Dave Mazzuchelli's art was familiar to me from Batman Year One, and I was pleased to see him again employing the noirish clarity he used in that book- his work isn't just dark and gritty, its stark, focused, unmistakable. In Batman it lent a dose of reality to the work, and here it grounds it, so that even as the story spirals out of sanity the visual touchstones make sure we never lose it. There were so many points where he employed visual suggestions that would have been impossible, not only in any other medium, but in any other style. For example, when he speaks of the city as the labrynth, the lines faze effortlessly from city to maze in a way that is only possible because the city was being portrayed in clear, cartoonish simplicity in the first place.
The story itself recalled some of the Manhattan in the 70's wierdness of Donald Barthelme. The "characters meet the author" trope is a common one- Grant Morrison, Stranger than Fiction and Cerebus have all made use of it. But by adapting the story the dynamic is shifted slightly, characters are no longer meeting their creator, but their inspiration, the creator once removed.
Stillman's monologue was incredible, visual trickery that was absolutely essential to the text. I couldn't imagine it any other way.
Monday, October 8, 2007
I loved loved loved Persepolis. Wow. I had steered clear of it despite widespread praise due to my own preconceived notions of what it would be out (growing up female in Iran= story of overwhelming oppresion, veils, etc. etc.) Instead of a downtrodden look at a people with no rights, I got a refreshing look at one family's unwillingness to relinquish their right to dignity, free thought or fun. That was what I liked best abut it. In spite of everything, for the most part it was upbeat, happy. The characters weren't just noble, they were down to earth and literate and relatable. It was a view of life in Iran that you rarely see these days. The protagonist is great- her glamorization of torture and martyrdom giving way to an overwhelming sense of anger and melancholy rang very true, as did her chosen methods of rebellion (clothes and music). It was very funny at many points to, as in her myriad exaggerated stories.
The art was incredible It reminded me of epileptic, another brilliant comic out of France, with initially simplistic and cartoony art becoming increasingly stylized and fantastical. This is the second autobiographical story of oppresion told in extremely cartoony images. Like Maus, the visuals lend a fairytale like atmosphere to an otherwise painfully realistic story. The scene of the cars driving in huge stylized candlelike flames was haunting, as was the last panel.
Still working on my comic-lots of interesting developing ideas I'll show you tomorrow.
The art was incredible It reminded me of epileptic, another brilliant comic out of France, with initially simplistic and cartoony art becoming increasingly stylized and fantastical. This is the second autobiographical story of oppresion told in extremely cartoony images. Like Maus, the visuals lend a fairytale like atmosphere to an otherwise painfully realistic story. The scene of the cars driving in huge stylized candlelike flames was haunting, as was the last panel.
Still working on my comic-lots of interesting developing ideas I'll show you tomorrow.
Monday, October 1, 2007
I already posted some about Bone and Making Comics- I didn't have much time this week to go over Bone again, but I did go back and look at Making Comics some more. I really like the section on word/picture combinations- McCloud is brilliant at coming up with examples of how they can be used differently (as in the "intersecting" panel where the dialogue reads "My God, Walter, you have changed" and the picture is of 2 women talking). In fact, I think the execution of the book was almost more enjoyable than the theory, there were so many little jokes embedded in it (like when Dumbledore asks Gandalf for his autograph in the character section) and it really goes to show that critics and theorists who neglect to make their works enjoyable and readable in favor of dry pontificating are missing out.
Elsewhere in comics and related stuff:
All-star Batman and Robin has officially gotten old. Frank Miller's satirical take on the ultra hardass Batman he created was funny and fresh at first, but a year and a half and 7 issues later its still the same stupid joke. We get it. Batman is a dick. He's sadistic and he talks like a pissed off high school gym teacher with a fetish for the word "goddamn". Miller needs to stop falling back on the excuse that its satire and recognize that even a parody needs to be halfway inventive to be worth anyone's time.
Grant Morrison's Club of Heroes mystery ends quite satisfyingly, complete with red-herrings and actual detective work by Batman. Between this and Paul Dini's Detective, Batman is doing more actual mystery solving than he's done in years.
the Justice League movie is greenlit...with the Babe director at the helm, and Tom Wellin and Jessica Biel in talks to play Superman and Wonderwoman, plus someone besides Bale as Batman. Ugh. A good justice league movie would be a dream come true, but I suspect this will be anything but.
Heroes remains totally sweet.
As for my own comic, I was thinking of a Harry Potter style parody, only instead of a school for wizards, its a school for supervillains, with a young protagonist who really wants to be the most powerful dark lord in the world.
Elsewhere in comics and related stuff:
All-star Batman and Robin has officially gotten old. Frank Miller's satirical take on the ultra hardass Batman he created was funny and fresh at first, but a year and a half and 7 issues later its still the same stupid joke. We get it. Batman is a dick. He's sadistic and he talks like a pissed off high school gym teacher with a fetish for the word "goddamn". Miller needs to stop falling back on the excuse that its satire and recognize that even a parody needs to be halfway inventive to be worth anyone's time.
Grant Morrison's Club of Heroes mystery ends quite satisfyingly, complete with red-herrings and actual detective work by Batman. Between this and Paul Dini's Detective, Batman is doing more actual mystery solving than he's done in years.
the Justice League movie is greenlit...with the Babe director at the helm, and Tom Wellin and Jessica Biel in talks to play Superman and Wonderwoman, plus someone besides Bale as Batman. Ugh. A good justice league movie would be a dream come true, but I suspect this will be anything but.
Heroes remains totally sweet.
As for my own comic, I was thinking of a Harry Potter style parody, only instead of a school for wizards, its a school for supervillains, with a young protagonist who really wants to be the most powerful dark lord in the world.
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