Showing posts with label Authors: Alan Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Authors: Alan Moore. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Books: Spawn

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Spawn
By Todd McFarlane
2006





Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


If I could I would make it so that as soon as you started reading this review you would hear the chug-chug-chugging of some mid-90s heavy-metal guitars [1]. You know - some Rage Against The Machine maybe or hell: anything off the soundtrack that came out with the 1997 Spawn film [2]: because - well - yeah: Spawn all the way from his name [3] all the way to his garish, chains and red cape outfit [4] is the absolute embodiment of 90s superhero excess: and depending on your tastes - that means that he's like: total the worst thing ever - or the best thing since Pop Tarts [5].

When I saw it sitting on the shelves of Central Library: my first reaction was a stupid grin - I mean - I may as well just admit it and get it out of the way: for a few issues at least [6] I was a teenage Spawn reader. I don't know if this was just somesort of pack instinct or silly gullibility or (maybe) the fact that (at the time) the thought of a superhero from Hell with magical green powers was just the most awesome thing I had ever heard of: but - well - there it is: I'm not proud [7].

Revisiting one of the bastions of my teenage years I was expecting nothing more than a bit of a larky, giggly laugh: like flipping through old photos and marvelling at the way you used to wear your hair. But of course things are never that simple - especially when you get Frank Miller to write your introduction.

I mean: when I first saw his name I was a little shocked: it was (a bit) like seeing Thom Yorke introducing Marilyn Manson (or something: I dunno - maybe make up your own analogy of respected industry figure acting as a host for some cheesy bubblegum nonsense [9]): but then he starts putting things in context and making grand proclamations like: "Spawn in a chunk of comics history and an important one. Spawn is a Boston Tea Party, a loud rude act of defiance against a bad, broken system built on abusing it's finest." Which made me go - oh: wow - ok: yeah: comics history and DC and Marvel screwing over creators and etc - and yeah: I guess it is good that finally someone could create a superhero and own all the rights to it and stuff [10]: but well - that Hunter S. Thompson quote from Fear and Loathing Las Vegas springs to mind [11] while it might have seemed like the start of some Brave New Dawn all the way back in 1992 or whatever: but with over twenty years hindsight - things look a lot less rosey: the bad news is that DC and Marvel still rule the comics market with an iron fist and - well: that market has now shrunk down to almost nothing (or is that just me? I dunno...). Reading the Frank Miller introduction is like looking back at the early stages of a gold rush where - it turned out - there wasn't actually any gold in them there hills: like - it's nice that they were so happy and hopeful - but it's sad that nothing really came of it and that the Boston Tea Partying didn't actually manage to kick-start a revolution after all: and the bad, broken system is still in place today.

Oh well.

On to the comic (which is a bit of a shock after the hallowed tones of the introduction - like - hell: hearing Thom Yorke wax lyrical about the way music can stir the soul and sooth the savage beast: and then having Marilyn Manson come out and do his cover of Tainted Love [12]) and from it's very first lines ("I don't belong. Not here. Not now.") which (is this just me?) reminded me of another popular hit from the early 90s [13] - the whole thing positively reeks of teenage-boy-ness (with that too-much-Lynx smell hanging over every page like a damp cloth): I mean - hell: a hideously scarred outcast that can't communicate his romantic intentions to his beloved: it doesn't take that much for your average hormone-drenched male youth to relate - you know? And with hard boiled dialogue like "Funny how being a walking dead man can screw up your life." existing in the dunderheaded spot between Sin City and - hell - every other superhero comic ever: then - yeah: I can see why it used to appeal to me so much that I paid good money to go and see the movie. All the darkest bits of Batman, Spider-Man and Daredevil all mixed up in a blender and sprinkled with a shot of hell-fire? I mean: reading it now it all seems coldly calculated for the widest possible appeal: but what the hey right? No one is that discerning when they're that young - so what's the harm?

Of course - there are a few things that put it ahead of the curve: one of which I remember appealing to me at the time is that right at the start there's a promise of an expiry date (I'll just say 9999 and leave it at that): I mean - I knew at the time that every superhero comic out there just went on forever and ever and ever: and hell - who wants to be caught in a story that never actually goes anywhere? No thank you: not for me [14]. But Spawn presents itself right from the start as something different as something that seems like it has a finite story to tell: rather than just another never-ending franchise [15].

What else? Well: as you may or may not know: one of the more notable features of Spawn is that for 4 issues (Spawn #8 - #11) Todd McFarlane somehow (my best guess would be: by using loads and loads of money: but whatever) managed to get four of the best comic writers of - like - ever to write a single guest issue of Spawn: Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Dave Sim and Frank Miller (which - in case you didn't realise was like a big deal): it would be like if Marilyn Manson had an album which had songs written by - well: hell - you can fill in the rest: you know.

Sadly for whatever reasons [16] the only two stories that appear here are the Alan Moore one and the Frank Miller (strangely tho - although Frank Miller gets credit for his story - I couldn't find Alan Moore's name anywhere in the entire book: which is a little strange - and I had to google the name of the story "In Heaven (Everything is Fine)" just to make sure it was him [17]) and - hell - even if you don't feel like you have any interest in the adventures of Spawn: I would still recommend you trying out the Alan Moore story: it's like an expanded edition of one of his Future Shock stories that he used to write for 2000AD (The Frank Miller story? Meh. That's less good: but then it doesn't really seem like he's really trying that hard - but I guess it's more him bending his approach to Spawn rather than Alan Moore who bends Spawns to meet him).

But yeah: as for the rest: I mean - if you've ever seen Todd McFarlane's artwork anywhere - then you should know what to expect: everyone stands around posing - and there's loads of finickity little details hanging around the place: but the feeling it tends to leave you with is the same one you get after you eat a Big Mac: I mean - yeah: it's kinda tasty: but it's not particularly nourishing - you know?

And - of course: it's doing it's best to keep you hooked: so there's not much closure at the end: just another cliffhanger to try and keep you coming back: although if you don't know your Image Universe that well (like me) then it's not that much of a hook (I thought it was the introduction of a new character - but instead it's someone that you're already supposed to know: oh well).

In conclusion: SPAWN. You already know if you're gonna like it or not - so what more can I say?

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[1] Like a Myspace page or something: in fact - YES: if I could somehow write this whole thing so that it came up like a Myspace page: that would be absolutely perfect (oh well).

[2] "Spawn: The Album was released in July 1997 and brought together popular rock bands at the time including Metallica, Korn, Slayer, Marilyn Manson and Silverchair with well known DJs and electronic producers such as The Crystal Method, Roni Size, and The Prodigy." So - yeah - something like that.

[3] According to lastfm there's more than one band who go by the name “Spawn.” (a 90s alternative rock band from Buffalo, NY (I mean - obviously) a German straight-edge band, a happy ska-punk band from the Netherlands, a brutal Death Metal band from Germany, a hip-hop MC and a metal band from The Netherlands also from the 90’s). frankly I'm surprised that there aren't more: although I guess that most people would associate Spawn with Frogs rather than Hell - but whatever.

[4] Which - to Todd McFarlane's credit - is delivered a stinging put -down by one of the ever-present TV presenters (who I would say act as Spawn's Greek Chorus - if saying so didn't make me sound like a English literature paper): I thought I wrote it down somewhere - (because it made me chuckle when I read it) - but now I can't find it: oh well - you'll know it when you see it.

[5] Which - ok - were invented in 1964: but for some reason (to me) seem like a 1990s thing. Whatever.

[6] Ok - so maybe more than a few issues: in fact - reading through this Volume a hell of a lot of it seemed very familiar -so I think that I might have got a good 12 issues in before I dropped out (or did they stop publishing them in the UK? I dunno - one of the two anyway....).

[7] In fact - I mean: while we're admitting stuff - I guess I should also 'fess up that on the week it was released me and my sister walked down the Brighton seafront to go to a evening showing of the (aforementioned) Spawn feature film (directed by Mark A.Z. Dippé and starring Michael Jai White: both of whom (according to their wikipedia entries at least) hold up Spawn as their career highlights: so - erm - yes): which - strange (and as sad) as it may seem: is kinda one of my happiest memories from my teenage years: not so much for the film (which I can barely remember [8]) but for the heart-to-heart me and my sister had walking there and back (moral of the story I'd say is that - even if your life is full of trashy junk entertainment: it's still possible to build some pretty beautiful moments round the side of them: or something...).

[8] Ok - fine: I can't remember a single frame. Hell - maybe I fell asleep when I was watching it or something?

[9] And just to be clear: I don't have a problem with cheesy bubblegum nonsense: I just normally expect it to be treated as such. (And of course (as every comic fan should already know) - Frank Miller is - well - gonzo enough (especially in recent years) that I guess I shouldn't be surprised by anything he does: but - you know: the introduction (according to the notes) was written back in the 1990s back when he was still (relatively) sane and known for stuff like Sin City (which is good) rather than stuff like Holy Terror (which is not good)).

[10] Although it should be pointed out that reason that Todd McFarlane could do this is because he did Spider-Man for Marvel and got loads of mainstream love and a massive cult following which he then brought with him when he jumped ship: it's like Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails and whoever selling their albums with a "pay what you like" system: it works for them because they already have a fan-base in place - but for anyone just starting out with superhero comics or making music or whatever - well (massive understatement) - it's a lot harder.

[11] You know the one: "And that, I think, was the handle—that sense of inevitable victory over the forces of Old and Evil. Not in any mean or military sense; we didn't need that. Our energy would simply prevail. There was no point in fighting—on our side or theirs. We had all the momentum; we were riding the crest of a high and beautiful wave.… So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water mark—that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back."

[12] I told you that you should come up with your own analogy because now it looks like this is the one we're stuck with.

[13] Hell - if they ever get around to making another Spawn film: I reckon they should use it as the theme song ("I want a perfect body / I want a perfect soul" etc).

[14] The only other comic that I used to buy every week at that time was 2000AD: and seeing how that was an anthology - it seemed less like something that was trying to cheat you with never-ending formulations on the same basic concept and more like something that had actual stories with beginnings, middles and ends (well - most of the time): and hell - even Judge Dredd got older each year: which just seemed like - I dunno: a much fairer way to treat your readership (or maybe that's just me?).

[15] But - oops (reading the wikipedia page): it turns out that was a lie: "On January 12, 2011, issue #200 completely sold out within that single day. This marks the bicentennial issue of the series and features an all-star creative lineup, including Greg Capullo, David Finch, Michael Golden, Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Marc Silvestri, Danny Miki, and Ashley Wood all contributing to the anniversary issue. A second printing was released on February 9, 2011. Despite its remarkable sales, it has endured terrible reception from fans and reviewers alike." (oh dear).

[16] Most probably in Neil Gaiman's case legal ones (see here, here and here for more information if that's what turns you on).

[17] I mean - even tho he does a pretty good Todd McFarlane impression and is only coasting on 10% of his usual 5000 horsepower ways: just from the jump in quality and the power of the ideas: you can still obviously tell that it's someone different at the controls (for whatever reason I'm reminded of that line from The Simpsons: "You wouldn't believe the celebrities who did cameos! Dustin Hoffman, Michael Jackson. Of course, they didn't use their real names, but you could tell it was them.") 

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Links: Comics Alliance Article: ComicsAlliance Reviews Todd McFarlane's 'Spawn' Year One, Part 1: QuestionsPart 2: Justice & PaybackPart Three: WritertownPart 4: 'Flashback'

Further reading: Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City, RoninHeavy LiquidElephantmenThe Life and Times of Martha Washington in the Twenty-First CenturyThe Complete Future ShocksProphet.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Books: Top 10: The Forty-Niners

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Top 10: The Forty-Niners
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Gene Ha and Art Lyon

2005




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


I want to say this in the thing I wrote for Top 10: but what the hey - maybe it'll be better if I say it here (or not? I dunno): but the thing that I finally realised makes Top 10 such a big, fat, fun read is that more than any other comic out there - hell - more than any other anything out there (unless I'm missing something obvious? Am I missing something obvious?) is that it's the only thing to ever really capture a sense of proper (I don't know what you want to call it): Multiculturalism? Diversity? Big City Life? I mean - yeah - obvious there are other books out there that do pretty well with giving you a flavor of what it's like existing in a space with a million other people (at least [1]) - Transmetropolitan springs to mind as a book which does a pretty good job at that - but even that is hampered by the fact that if you want to set up a subculture in the reader's mind - well: you need to take the time to describe it: which means that there's an upper limit of how many different subcultures you can describe (unless you wanna write 2666 or something [2]) which means that most descriptions of teeming metropolises (or "metropoli"?) tend to be a little - well - flat. Being that they're mainly about Group 1 who are like this and Group 2 who are like this (and - if you're really lucky - Group 3 - who are like this): but then - there's only so much information you can fit into one book - right?

Well - Top 10 skips (no wait - make that: gambols) over this problem by using the entire history of superheroes (and fantasy (and assorted science-fiction stuff) plus whatever else falls across Alan Moore's mind) to create a place where on of the background of pretty much every single panel there's a reference to something or the other - thus forgoing the need to describe which group goes where and what exactly they're about. Instead the sense created is kinda like what it feels like walking down a city street in real life (only - accentuated because (oh well) - we don't live in a world where everyone is a superhero [3]): you know what those people are, and what that guy in the sawn off Metallica T-Shirt is about: but what the hell is that group of people over there about? Oh well - you'll never know.

Is this making sense?

Sorry - actually - let me start again for those of you who have no idea what the hell I'm talking about (Top 10? Alan Moore?? Comic books???)

Top 10: it's a two volume series about life in a city called Neopolis [4] where everyone has super-powers. It's great. I can't believe you haven't read it already. Top 10: The Forty-Niners is a prequel (with almost exactly the same creative team - although they've swapped Zander Cannon for Art Lyon which gives the whole book a much - I dunno - deeper feel? Less garish - more sepia and faded - which makes sense seeing how - you know - it's set about 50 years in the past) that came out a few years later and is set all the way back in 1949: when Neopolis is more like an idea than an actual fully functioning city and everyone is basically just making things up as they go along.

That kinda Multiculturalism / Diversity / Big City Life stuff is still going on - but it's nowhere near the frantic hustling and bustling of the later books: rather everyone is a bit more cautious and a lot more timid when it comes to - well - everything. It's a brave new world although everyone is kinda of unsure about their place within it - which I guess is kinda the point of the Forty-Niners. I mean - I don't want to get too English Literature student on you and start pointing out what the story is really about [6]: but practically every character in this book is struggling (in one way or another) with who they're supposed to be and who they really are: between their public image and (well: as cheesy as it might sound) their secret identity: and trying to decide if they want to fit the shapes the world has cut out for them. What's interesting about this is that in the original Top 10 books no one really has this type of problem: if you're a devil worshipper like John "King Peacock" Corbeau or just an all around bad-ass like Jackie "Jack Phantom" Kowalski there's not that much subterfuge [7] or people trying to hide who they really are or stuff like that....

Don't be mistaken tho: it's not all "my dark and hidden secret" stuff with people feeling tortured about the oppression of society and trying not to use their powers or stuff like that [8] - most of the characters in the Forty-Niners are actively making a conscious choice to not allow themselves to be restricted by anything as mundane as the country they were born in or whether or not they're human beings - and for me what was refreshing (and maybe this is only really possible in an imaginary version of 1949 rather than the real thing) is that the majority of them are actually pretty happy with who they are and don't feel too burdened by how they come across (there's one particularly nice scene where one guy is talking to another and he's all like: "Yeah - this is who I am. Deal with it - I don't have time to play games and mess around." that stands in stark contrast to the histrionics you might usually expect in - well - comics, books, films, TV - everything).

Of course - none of that utopian good feelings / "oh actually if you read deeply into what this is about you can see it's all an analogy for x, y, z" stuff is really besides the point if the story isn't actually worth caring about [9] and - well - yeah: sad to say (in fact I said it already in [4]) this isn't a book that many people would put up there with his best work. And in fact - coming from the dynamic bold stylings of Top 10 - the Forty-Niners feels a little muted (a feeling that's only exacerbated by the artwork: even tho it's much clearer and seems like it's had a lot more work put into it (it's a little like Alex Ross if he decided that he was going to calm down a little and take a step back so that he wasn't always so much in people's faces): it's a more "morning after the night before" than a "hey we're having a party!" Yes - there are so nice choice moments (that Time Travel door cutting through the pages is a very nice effect once you get your mind around it) but by the time you get to the end - it doesn't really feel like it's all added up to much: and if you didn't know it was Alan Moore - well - I'm not entirely sure you'd be able to guess [11].
 
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[1] The population of London (at the time of the last census in 2011) was 8.2 million (which - hey - is a lot).

[2] Hey - I work in a library: which I think gives me the right to (now and again) make a reference to a proper book rather than just something from the graphic novel section.... (You never heard of 2666? Well - look it up).

[3] Yet.

[4] And I have only now this very second realised the repetition (reflection?) of Neopolis and Neonomicon (H. P. Lovecraft inspired comic book also written by Alan Moore). Neo of course is the hero of the Matrix trilogy a prefix from the ancient Greek word for young, neos (νέος), which is derived from the Proto-Indo European word for new, néwos: which (obviously) reflects Alan Moore's lifelong obsession with the new and breaking new ground coming at just the point (if you want to be cruel about it) where he finally started to run out of good ideas (Top 10: The Forty-Niners and Neonomicon in particular being books that don't tend to trouble the "best of Alan Moore" lists - and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (the only other comic book he had coming out around this time) being very much an acquired taste [5]).

[5] "Acquired taste" of course being an excellent way to describe something as being rubbish whilst still trying to sound polite.

[6] Although - obviously - that's exactly what I'm about to do. (And speaking personally - I do really love it when I can make some sorta insight into what a book is really about: it means that I can something more than just - the writing is good and the art is nice (which is probably about 75% of all the posts I have up on here) but - hell - (I'm not going to lie to you) it makes me feel a little bit smarter: and that's always cool isn't it?)

[7] I mean - there's a bit. And one character (I won't so who) does lie about their sexual preferences - but that's more by choice (and to get out of what could have been a sticky situation) rather than due to the fact that they felt conflicted or because it was socially unacceptable or anything like that...

[8] I'm thinking here of that scene in the first (second?) Bryan Singer X-Men film where that teenager has to come out to his parents and tell them that - sorry mum and dad: I'm a mutant.

[9] In fact - just the other day I was talking to be literary flatmate about Skyfall and he said that I should read this article on Lenin's Tomb ("SKYFALL: conformity, rebellion and the British post-colonial trauma") and although it seemed quite interesting and well thought out - I couldn't actually read it properly seeing how much I ended up disliking the movie (I agree with what the New Yorker said: "This Bond installment is weighty with calculation: it feels like a ploy of demographically targeted marketing, with the personal drama attached to the espionage, the highly specific motives grafted to the thriller plot, looking like a studio decision to attract women viewers rather than like a mapping of any person’s imagination. Its humanism reeks of cynicism, and the sentimental nods to the old-fashioned ways that underpin the story (not least, at its dénouement, at the rustic Bond family estate in remote and rural Scotland) have all the heart of an ad for whiskey.") I found it really hard to actually give enough of a fig to read the article all the way to end. The lesson being: it's only really interesting and fun to read in-depth analysis of things that you already enjoy (or - failing that: it has to be an in-depth analysis of why whatever it is that is talking about is so rubbish: if it just talks about whatever in neutral terms without making any reference to the fact that the thing that it's talking about is shoddy or whatever - then it just kinda feels like the person isn't smart enough for you to want to spend your time on (so something [10]).

[10] Even when it's someone that I normally love (eg Zizek) - it's hard to care when the thing that they're talking about was such a colossal disappointment (eg The Dark Knight Rises).

[11] Yes - it's obvious a good thing that people don't always write in exactly the same way telling exactly the same story: but that's not what I mean by saying that you won't be able to guess it's Alan Moore: more that - no matter what he writes there's always a sense of someone operating at the height of their ability and constantly pushing the medium as far as it can go and spinning as many plates as possible: while this book feels a lot more like a relaxation and rest upon (considerable yeah) laurels. Or - to put it in Radiohead terms: it's a little like Hail to the Thief. Yeah - the song's are alright. But it's not going to change your world.

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Further reading: Top 10, SmaxTransmetropolitanArrowsmith: So Smart In Their Fine Uniforms, Aetheric MechanicsNeonomicon, GrandvilleSwamp Thing.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 20 March 2012

Books: Supreme

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Supreme
The Story of the Year
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Joe Bennett and Rick Veitch 
2002


Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Supreme
The Return
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Chris Sprouse and Rick Veitch
2003



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


I don't know if this is going too far - but (what the hell) - Alan Moore is the reason I read comics.

D.R. and Quinch are one of my earliest comic memories (not including the Beano): and round the age of 13 I was given Watchmen as a birthday present: and even though it took me a few reads to properly start to "get" it (first time I read Watchmen - it felt like a massive anti-climax - but I think that's probably because I didn't really understand what happened and hadn't really managed to put all the pieces together - who did what thirty five minutes ago? etc). And since then I've followed the beardy Northampton wierdo everywhere. I've never really cared much about Jack the Ripper - but as soon as From Hell came out in a collected edition I was first in line: and so on with every other book with his name across the cover.

And then there is Supreme.

I've never really "got" Supreme.

As opposed to his other books which not only always manage to look gorgeous but also show evidence of serious thought gone into the design (think of the nine grid layout of Watchmen or any page in Promethea): Supreme (frankly) looks shoddy. Open it up on to any random page and your eyes get blasted with either ugly late 90s superhero art as popularisied by the likes of Rob Liefeld - or it's (very well) constructed pastiches of comic styles from the 40s, 50s and 60s (which all tend to give me headaches). Plus - reading the first pages of Supreme: The Story of the Year - it's evident that you're joining the story halfway through - and it seems likely that (in order to make any sense of what's going on) - you need to have some idea of who this Supreme guy actually is. And - well - seeing how I only bothered to pick this book up in the first place because of Alan Moore's name - I had NO idea: he just seemed like some sort of Superman rip-off.

What I wish someone had told me [1]:

1. You don't need to have read any other Supreme stories in order to understand everything that happens in these books.

2. Yes - Supreme is a Superman rip-off: and that's the point. These books are Alan Moore playing around with the Superman archetype - and pushing, pulling and warping it into strange new messed up shapes.

And 3. It's not the best thing Alan Moore ever written by a long shot (and if you didn't know it was him - you might not even be able to guess): and in lots of ways it feels slightly lazy and under-developed - and it's not really "about" anything other than the possiblities that lie within the superhero story (there's no real human characters here - and nothing really that anyone could apply to their own life): and in lots of ways it's a dry-run for the stuff that he was going to do with his America's Best Comics line (Tom Strong in partiular - in fact it even has Chris Sprouse - who's the main artist on Tom Strong). But - damnit - it's a pretty wild and fun sort of ride. With some very cool time travel type madness that only kicks in at the end of each book.

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[1] Although I was kind of told this by two articles on the Comics Without Frontiers website (links below): which is the reason why I decided to give it one last go (despite having tried two or three times already - and never getting any further than about twenty or so pages in) - so thanks Miguel!

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Links: Comics Without Frontiers Article: Alan Moore's Supreme: Identity, Reality & Ideas / Final Thoughts on Alan Moore's Supreme.

Further reading: Tom Strong, Superman: All Star Superman, The Complete Future ShocksDC Universe: The Stories of Alan MooreIrredeemable, Flex Mentallo, Superman: Secret Identity.

Profiles: Alan Moore

All comments welcome.

Monday, 30 January 2012

Books: Smax

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Smax
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Zander Cannon and Andrew Currie
2005




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


Something that gets a little lost what with his whole image as a spooky, shaman-like, magic-man with a long beard and intellectual pronouncements about how our culture is going to turn to steam (see here) and the like: not to mention all of his serious examinations of the nature of superheroes and how to deconstruct swamp monsters etc is that - Alan Moore is actually a pretty funny guy. And that's funny as in: "on-purpose funny" (which is - obviously - the best kind)

Back when he used to write for 2000AD he used to bring his droll wit to the short 4 - 6 pages Future Shocks stories - one of which ended up becoming it's own spin off series as D.R. and Quinch (which you should read if you haven't already). Since that point tho his public persona got steadily more serious as he went from V for Vendetta to Swamp Thing to Watchmen to From Hell.

It was nice to see then - in last days of the 20th Century - Alan Moore return to basics with his America's Best Comics - a comic's brand that included Tom Strong, Promethea, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and Top 10. A line of titles that (in their early days at least) promised a return to the simple, slightly-goofy era of comics as pure fantastical escapism rather than say - the "grim and gritty" violence cess-pool they had become.

Smax is a spin-off from Top 10: a police series set in a city where literally everyone has super-powers. Jeff Smax - one of the cops in Top 10 and the star of Smax (obviously) - is the Top 10 embodiment of the moody, hard-bitten, trenchcoat-wearing no-nonsense-taking supercop who likes to keep himself to himself. In Top 10 you don't really learn too much about him other than how bad-ass he is - but in Smax: we've given the chance to look beneath his tough blue exterior and find out what lies beneath.

At this point I'll say that if you're intending to read Smax then please please pick up Top 10 first and read those before you start on this. It's not only that things will make more sense but also a lot of the jokes will be much funnier (and we all like funny jokes - right?). Plus also: Top 10 is totally amazing (and everyone likes stuff that is totally amazing - right?). Now know that Smax isn't really like Top 10: even tho it continues the story with a few of the same characters one of the thing's that kinda delightful about it is how it jumps from being a crime/super-hero/science-fiction thing into a comedy/fantasty/epic quest-type thing (or as it's more commonly known: "Terry Pratchett").

So - like I said at the start: this is Alan Moore in comedy-form and all the jokes are dead good. The character interactions are spot on. And it does the same thing as Top 10 with all it's easter egg goodness references to other stuff. I'd don't know what sort of fiend would not enjoy reading this book: but I guess it would be someone with a heart of stone, who hates to giggle and doesn't enjoy any type of sword and sorcery fun whatsoever (but that's their loss). For everyone else: this is the comics version of peaches and cream: sweet and delicious. 

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Links: Tor Article: The Great Alan Moore Reread: SmaxBurning Leaves Review, Jess Nevins Annotations on #1 / #2.

Further reading: Top 10Top 10: The Forty-NinersD.R and Quinch, The Complete Future Shocks, Tom Strong, Orc Stain, Joe The Barbarian, The Hobbit.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Friday, 13 January 2012

Books: V for Vendetta

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V for Vendetta
Written by Alan Moore
Art by David Lloyd

1989




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


The 1980s were a different time. Hell - they were a different world. Populated by a people who may have looked like us on the outside: but smelt different [1], spoke different [2] and thought different.  

Of course it may not seem it now: nowadays we can laugh it all off as big hair and shoulder-pads [3] but if you pay attention to the stuff behind all the ill-advised revivals and cheesy nostalgia clip shows (or do they not make those anymore?) for those poor souls having to live through it - nuclear war wasn't so much a science-fictional "what if?" - it was more some ginormous inevitability hanging over the world's head just waiting for it's chance to drop [4].

So yeah - V for Vendetta is set in 1997 which - for those of us lucky enough to have made it this far - is no longer some distant far-away future unimaginable point - but rather a shabby year way back in the ever receding past and getting smaller all the time. But - hey - credit where it's due: altho Moore and Lloyd flunked things like who was going to win the 1983 General Election and just how destructive a nuclear war can be - at the time they wrote this the idea of security cameras on every street corner was just a hippy's nightmare rather than an accepted fact of reality.

Obviously that frozen smile on the cover has different connotations nowadays then when this comic was first being serialized back in eighties. (And if you want to feel your heart break a little then check this clip and check the moment when the protestor talking to Alan Moore refers to "doing the same kind of thing that the character does in the... movie." Ouch: although ironically fitting seeing how stems from a book that argues for (amongst other things) the indestructible power of a good idea - and if a character's reputation can overcome a scene where he speaks in words nothing but words beginning with the letter 'V' (see here for the full awfulness): then it's obvious that there's something special there).

V for Vendetta created with David Lloyd was Alan Moore's first step into the genre of supehero comics. Stepping away from 2000AD it was published in Warrior (originally in black and white) starring a enigmatic heroic vigilante anarchist with a Guy Fawkes mask with the unlikely name of "V". Set in a bleak future England controlled by a facist far-right government it seemed like just another "one man fighting against the dark forces of control" but soon unravelled into something a little bit more curious and a little bit more nuanced with a sprawling narrative and willingness to see things from more than just the one person's point of view. There are explosions, fights and cool set-pieces but there's also lots of stuff about individualism, anarchy and fascism. Or to put it another way (my desperate bid for the cover quote): it's 1984 meets Batman.

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[1] "It's hard to say goodbye to a man who wear Brut."

[2] Wail: Awesome; cool. Ex. "That song wails"; "your new outfit wails".

[3] Exhibit A: Meet the Fatboy Slim Family.

[4] If you've never seen Threads - which (for me) - up there in Top 10 scariest films of all time - well - it's on youtube: knock yourself out.

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Links: Mindless Ones Article, GraphiContent Article: Notes On Teaching V for Vendetta, Supervillian Article: On perspective and influence in Orwell’s “Shooting An Elephant” and Moore & Lloyd’s V for Vendetta, The Hooded Utilitarian Article: V for Vile.

Further reading: Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, The Life and Times of Martha Washington in the Twenty-First Century, From Hell.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Books: Top 10

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Top 10
Book One
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Gene Ha and Zander Cannon

2001



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
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Top 10
Book Two
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Gene Ha and Zander Cannon

2003



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
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The best place to start would be just to pick up Book 1 and read it. Those first two pages - with the overheard conversations that we've all heard a million times before just ever-so lightly dressed up with a touch of the strange ("...new see-through capes with the prism effect?") and then that picture of the train going across the bridge. I mean: I think the first time I read it - what was the point that I was in and totally sold and be ready to be taken wherever it was that the book decided to take me. I mean: even rereading it for like - what - the tenth time? It just makes you feel like you're on the cusp of something cool. What's that line from the Lord of the Rings film? "If I take one more step, it'll be the farthest away from home I've ever been." Starting Top 10 makes me feel like that - that I'm just about to take a trip to a alien world and have (several) awfully exciting adventures.

But - ok: before you start then - some background: At the end of the 20th Century Alan Moore launched four brand new comic series under the America's Best Comics (ABC) imprint: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Promethea, Tom Strong and Top 10. Although they all started simply enough with a kinda simple: "hey kids! Look - comics! Wooo!" attitude (with Moore reportedly wanting to undo some of the damage that he felt Watchmen and it's ilk caused the comic book industry - where every superhero was an alcoholic burnout and the female characters weren't fully developed unless they'd suffered somekind of a sexual assault) The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen ("TLOEG" hereafter) and Promethea both outgrew their simple bubblegum premises and ended up mutating into mediations on - well: life, the universe and everything plus: the entirety of humankind's imaginative landscape (but - hey - you know: with Alan Moore in the mix people should have probably should have guessed that kinda thing would happen: the guy doesn't like to do things by half and (this is why I love him so): he can be a bit of a show-off with a persistent "look what I can do!" attitude to pretty much everything he writes...

Of course with all the attention that ended up being showered on TLOEG and Promethea - Tom Strong and Top 10 ended up being overcast a little and nowsdays it can be a little difficult finding anything written by anyone on them... (I mean "Top 10" isn't the easiest thing to google - but still... [1]). I mean: I guess it makes sense - there's lots to say about TLOEG and Promethea in terms of intellectual content and all the rest of it - and they're books that you would have no problem dropping into conversation amongst a bunch of clever people at a dinner party ("Yeah - it's actually a detailed treatise about the idea of magic and features one of the more elegant explications of Kabbalah I've ever read (that's kinda like the map of our spiritual universe if you didn't know)...") while Top 10 is pretty much nothing but pure pulp fun from beginning to end and so doesn't lead itself quite so much to making the person praising it sound smart ("Erm - yeah: Imagine Hill Street Blues where everyone (the cops, the criminals, the citizens) are superheroes (or "science-heroes" as Alan Moore likes to call 'em) and you're pretty much there." [2]). But then imagine a world where nobody had ever seen a Star Wars film and then try to imagine how you would explain it to people: I mean - however you did it [3] - I'm guessing that after facing a sea of confused looking faces you would just end up resorting to exclaiming: "Look - it's just really great fun - yeah? And you should just all watch it." Well: that's how I feel about Top 10. I don't care how dumb you might think it sounds (and I will admit that it does sound a little dumb): just shut up and read it ok? It's by Alan Moore ok? (And come on - this is a guy who's basically made it his life's mission to show comic fans a great time...) Plus: you know - the art's really great. What more could you possibly need to know?

Like (I think?) all his ABC books it starts off with a big fat two-page slab of text (actually maybe TLOEG doesn't have that? But I'd have to check...): "Powers of Arrest: Precinct Ten and Social Super-Vision." Reading it isn't necessary to enjoy the rest of the book but it will set up nicely for what to expect ("Once described as a "strontium wedding cake," Neopolis as it is now brings to mind more a four-story carpark designed by a varied committee that including Ray Bradbury, Fritz Lang and Zeus.") as well as filling you with enough background detail to help you make sense of what to expect - as well as getting in a nice little dig on the proliferation of superheroes in the worlds of Marvel and DC [4]: "...with too few jobs to offer the hordes of science-champions, who were therefore forced to seek employment in less glamorous professions." [5] Oh: and not forgetting the important fact that it's also pretty funny ("You got stung by a normal bee? It wasn't even radioactive? What the hell is wrong with you?").

As I said Alan Moore sure likes showing off how smart he can be - and the evidence of that is splattered over every single background detail, plot-line and location of Top 10: only instead of trying to unpick the mysteries of existence (or whatever): his only aim is to entertain you (the lucky reader) as much as possible. I mean - to take just one tiny example: he names a superhero nightclub: "Chemicals & Lightning" because - obviously - that's the perfect name for a superhero nightclub (I would explain the reasons why - but it feel like that would dilute the joke - but you get it right?) [6]. Also one of the big funs from reading Top 10 is the massive cast of characters - you don't normally get such large ensembles in comics mainly because (I guess) it can be hard to bring people to life when all you have is the art and a few lines of dialogue for each person: proper literature non-picture books are easier because you've got more space to get to know someone - and TV takes some of the strain off because you have actors doing a lot of the leg-work for you: the only real exception in comics I guess is the big team up books like the Avengers and the Justice league: but there some of the strain is taken off because - well - everyone knows who Batman is. Which makes the work Alan Moore pulls off in Top 10 seem even more remarkable: he basically invents a whole police department (according to wikipedia there's twenty-one police officers alone: and that's before you get to the random citizens they encounter) and then makes every one of them feel fully formed and - well - like real people [7].

But yeah - Dealing with typical police drama issues (and it's no shy of dealing with some pretty hardcore subjects [8] - so don't think that it's all jolly fun and games ok?) but (mostly) with sortsort of science-fiction twist it's based around the lives of the assorted police officers (at one point memorably described as: "dogs, lesbians and devil worshippers" - but hey - just so you know: they also have their bad points too) at the 10th Precinct Police Station of the futuristic city of Neopolis. Overloaded with superhero references [9] and easter eggs hidden in all the corners of the almost deliriously busy artwork by Gene Ha and Zander Cannon (I mean - even the first panel of the first book has enough jokes and ideas to keep most other comic going for (I dunno) a whole year or so: "Logan's DNA dietary supplement. With extra adamantium!" "Injured? Call...Legion of Super-Lawyers") it also (yes) provides the all entertainment any good cop show needs - office politics, romantic entanglements ("So what did she say about me? She told you we went out together right?") and lots of messed-up cases (taking in both the high (serial killers and Deicide [10]) and the low (you know: traffic accidents and stuff like that...)): I mean - ok - maybe it might not live on much in your head after you put it down but while you're inside and breathing it in - it's frothy and diverting and loads and loads and loads of fun. You know: like any other cop / police procedural show (only this one has more brightly-coloured capes).

Oh and (in case you weren't aware): there are two spin-offs also by Alan Moore called Smax and Top 10: The Forty-Niners (a prequel) which should also be checked out for all of those who enjoyed Top 10 as much as I do.

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[1] Although it does tend to appear in a few of "Best of Alan Moore" lists (including: io9's 10 Alan Moore Comics You Must Read! (Besides Watchmen) but then I guess if you google "Top 10 Alan Moore" then Top 10 lists of Alan Moore stories are the kinda thing that are gonna appear...

[2] Oh - and didn't realise this myself but reading the TV Tropes page apparently a lot of the Top 10 characters are dead-ringers (or "Expies") for people in Hill Street Blues (so if you've ever watched Hill Street Blues then maybe this will mean something to you (I'll admit I've never seen it - so it's pretty much lost on me): Captain Traynor is Captain Furillo Sgt. Kemlo Caesar is Sgt. Esterhaus King Peacock is Neal Washington Duane Bodine is Mick Belker Bill Bailey is Howard Hunter Irma Geddon and Girl One are Andy Renko and Bobby Hill Ernesto Gograh is Jesus Martinez)

[3] See: Star Wars: Retold (by someone that's never seen it): "The Planet's really bad now because of the Dark Side."

[4] Check out Mark Waid and Alex Ross' Kingdom Come for a much more po-faced take on the same idea... (I mean I've nothing against Kingdom Come - but it's nowhere near as lively and well - fun - as Top 10 is...)

[5] Although this reader really wants to know: did he start with the idea of a superhero (sorry - science-hero) police unit and work backwards from there or did he start with the idea of what would happen if there were too many people in the world with superpowers and then build upwards from that? Both seem equally plausible...

[6] And the plotting is mega-tight too. I mean - the first time you read it it might just seem like a bunch of chaotic running around but like they say here (someone thought it would be a good exercise to unpick all the plot strands running around the book): "I remembered that the plot of Top 10 was fairly dense, but the number of subplots introduced in the first few pages was still amazing. In pages 6 through 9 of issue #1, Moore mentions seven different plot threads, and every one of those threads had at least a panel or two of additional reference in the first issue (listed as "partials," if less than a page). Even the "Ghostly Goose on the loose" story gets panels on pages 6, 25, and 28 of issue #1 and reappears in issues #2, 3, and 5." (And that doesn't even get to all the graceful non-plot related moments like that one panel where Robyn walks past Shock-headed Pete leaning up against the Red K drinks machine: it doesn't really add that much really to the plot (other than: "Shock-headed Pete is sad") but - well - it's just a great little - I dunno - "comics moment."

[7] The only other example I can think of that manages to pull off the same trick is J. Michael Straczynski and Chris Weston's The Twelve (which I'm a pretty big fan of - so yeah).  

[8] Another selection from the introduction: "See, what it is, this ain't just your everyday three-girls-and-a-donkey-and-a-dwarf-stuff. That you can get in New York. Here in Neopolis, the seasoned porn-junkie has what we might call a boarder smorgasbord of deviance to choose from. You got all the stretchy rubber people, all of the size-shifters, all the robots."

[9] There's even an inadvertent reference with The Incredibles - (the Brad Bird-directed Pixar film didn't come out until 2004: a good few years after the last issue was published...).

[10] No - that's not some sorta strange misspelling of "decide". It's Deicide: the killing of a God.

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Links: Comics Cube Article, Tor Article: The Great Alan Moore Reread: Top 10, Part One / Part TwoTopless Robot Article: The Top 20 Nods, Cameos and Easter Eggs in Alan Moore's Top 10 Comics, The Brutal Circle Article: Deconstructing Alan Moore - Plotting in Top 10Jess Nevins Top 10 Annotations #1 / #2 / #3 / #4 / #5 / #6 / #7 / #8 / #9 / #10 / #11 / #12 .

Further reading: Top 10: The Forty-NinersSmax, Powers, Tom Strong, Gotham Central, Promethea, The League of Extraordinary GentlemenD.R. and QuinchSupreme, Astro City, DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore, Kingdom Come, The Twelve.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Books: Watchmen

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Watchmen
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Dave Gibbons

1987




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/


A lot of people take issue with the idea of Watchmen being "The Best Comic Book of All Time" (TRUE FACT). But it's like getting miffed that when people say that Lord of the Rings is the best fantasy book of all time / Star Wars is the best sci-fi/fantasy/action/epic ever made / The Office [1] is best the fake comedy documentary set in an office: even tho that taste is subjective and there's no such thing as objective "facts" about what "the best ever" thing is and (not forgetting the fact most of the time that it's kind of a stupid debate to have anyway: as if ranking things really helps you to understand them - although there are always exceptions) and who cares anyway? Even tho all that: Watchmen is the best comic of all time. Ok? Deal with it.

Because - like Lord of the Ring / Star Wars / The Office (and I could throw in Citizen Kane and Ulysses in there too if I wanted to show off): Watchmen got there first and in lots and lots and lots of respects it got there best. Yes - there are antecedents with all the things I've mentioned - and there are people and things and books that Watchmen is indebted to in some way or another (but that's obvious - nothing is ever created in a vacuum blah): but just like no else gets to be Edmund Hillary - nothing else really comes close to doing so much and being so much and meaning so much as - Watchmen. Sorry.  These are the facts: Written by Alan Moore. Art by Dave Gibbons Watchmen is 12 issues that is  (depending of who you talk) either: A deconstruction of the superhero genre. Comic books as "serious literature". A mathematical equation in the shape of a story. A treaty on both the interconnectedness of everything and your lack of control over it. Or a bunch of impotent people in tights. It also gets better every time you read it.

Out of everything out there - Watchmen is probably the book I've read the most (I have a copy at home that's pretty much unreadable and - I'm not kidding - held together with gaffer tape). A major reason for  that is that I first read it when I was still pretty young and didn't have that many other books but also (and this is the main reason) is that there is just so much contained within it in some many different types of ways that you can pick several paths through the book (best example: try just reading Marooned by itself) - all of them equally fulfilling. Another part is that fact that it manages to take all the main superhero archetypes and make them seem human and desperate and real: and make every other superhero invented afterwards seem like a pale imitation - which to fair - in most cases it's because they are. There's a quote somewhere by Alan Moore (can't be bothered to track it down - because - let's face it - that guys sure does like to talk a lot) about how when him and Dave Gibbons made Watchmen they were most concerned about showing off and being as clever as they could possibly be - which makes lots of sense: as the thing that Watchmen is most 'about' (beyond the men in tights stuff and the inter-subjectivity "we all only ever see a small part of the world" blah) is Watchmen itself: Look at me! Look how clever I'm being! Look at how every small thing fits into every other small thing! Gaze upon my works and delight and despair! (I don't know if anyone has ever conducted any sort of studio - but I'd be willing to bet that there's quite a high cross-over between Watchmen fans and those on the autistic spectrum: [2] it's all such a beautifully constructed little world and there's so much great stuff to get lost in - I'm guessing it provides the same sort of comforting 'everything connects' feeling that Lord of The Rings is said to provide...)

It's not (prepare for shocked gasp) completely flawless (why exactly does Doctor Manhattan have a girlfriend? Anyone? There's that great Ozymandias line [3] about "which do you prefer, red ants or black ants?": which makes it all the more mysterious why that same - erm - being? - would choose to have sex with a particular ant - you get me?) and there are bits where characters do things because the story needs them to (the Laurie on Mars stuff particularly - which I guess kinda answers that ant question a bit) but - hell - it's got so much going on (Philosophy! Action! Mystery! Drama! Conspiracies! End of The World!). If you somehow somehow haven't already (as much as my mind struggles to imagine someone who hasn't already read Watchmen) - READ THIS.

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[1] UK version (obviously).

[2] And - duh - as a bit of a comic book geek I've often been accused of that (most often by my girlfriend).

[3] And - man - apart from everything else if there's one thing that Watchmen has in abundance it's a host of quotable lines. From: "This city is afraid of me... I have seen it's true face." to "I never said, "The superman exists, and he's American." What I said was,"God exists, and he's American."" all the way to that penultimate goose-bump moment of: " I did it thirty-five minutes ago." I mean there's a reason that the wikiquote page is so long: it's all just so great.

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Links: Comics Journal Interview from 1987 Neil Gaiman Interviews Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons,  Sean T Collins Review4th Letter ArticleSupervillain ArticleHooded Utilitarian Articles On WatchmenHooded Utilitarian ReviewGraphiContent Article 1 / 2, Hooded Utilitarian ArticleComics Cube Article: Reclaiming History: Dave Gibbons and Watchmen / What Watchmen Means To MeMichael Moorcock on Watchmen.

Further reading: Batman: The Dark Knight ReturnsFrom HellBlack Summer, Astro City, DC Universe: The Stories of Alan MooreThe Perry Bible FellowshipMarvelsSupergodsThe Twelve, Flex Mentallo, The Death Ray.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Friday, 16 December 2011

Books: Neonomicon

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Neonomicon
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Jacen Burrows

2011




Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

I'm gonna start with an Alan Moore quote from a Wired Interview (link below) that sums up (in the best way) what to expect: "With Neonomicon, because I was in a very misanthropic state due to all the problems we had been having, I probably wasn’t at my most cheery. So Neonomicon is very black, and I’m only using “black” to describe it because there isn’t a darker color."

Consider that your due warning.

The history: In 1994 Alan Moore wrote a short little (but nasty) prose story called The Courtyard for an anthology The Starry Wisdom: A Tribute to H. P. Lovecraft: set in the year 2004 (which I mention so you don't get confused by the small little science-fiction touches) it took as many Lovecraftian elements and references as it could [1] - and mixed them into a dark cocktail of horror, evil and madness. In 2003 this story was then adapted in into a short 2-issue comic by Antony Johnston (who did the scripting) and Jacen Burrows (who did the art): both of which are very worth reading and both as scary as hell.

Then - in 2010 - following a series of disputes with DC Comics (which you can read in his own words: here) which provided the "misanthropic state" mentioned above and needing money to pay a tax bill (hey - at least you can't say he isn't forthcoming) Moore decided to write a sequel - only this time instead of writing it in prose he decided to team up with the Jacen Burrows (the artist of The Courtyard) and make it directly into a comic. And thus we have: Neonomicon.

For those of you that don't catch the H.P. Lovecraft reference in the title - I would recommend getting yourself acquainted with a book of his short stories before you delve into this comic: your experience will be all the richer for it - and if you don't know the difference between these guys or this thing then some important stuff is going to pass you by (not to mention a massively inappropriate joke in #3). A grounding in some Lovecraft is also important to make sure that you get what exactly Neonomicon is up to: namely telling a modern-day Lovecraftian tale that doesn't shy away from the more unpalatable racist elements and also seeks to uncensor things which have only been previously referred to as "blasphemous rituals." There's another element too (that kicks in around the halfway point) that attempts to debunk Lovecraft and the horror that lies beneath his stories. For anyone that's read Swamp Thing or Promethea (particularly Promethea) the message that comes across won't be much of a surprise - but it does have the effect of lessening the horrific elements in play. But that's the trouble with Alan Moore - he's way too restless to stick to telling a straight ahead horror story - when he can deconstruct it and then put the elements back together in fresh new ways (which is what happens in #4). And it's interesting how the horror lurches through the book from the visceral level all the way to something much more intellectual...

My best guess - based on past conversations with members of the Comic Forum and seeing the way that various people have reacted on the internet - is that this is going to be a fairly divisive book and one that is going to inspire a hell of a lot of extreme reactions. Just to be clear one final time: there is a lot in Neonomicon that is incredibly unpleasant - and indeed one of the few other books that it resembles is Garth Ennis' Crossed (also drawn by Jacen Burrows who it seems is dedicated to the horror genre like no other comic book artist I'm currently aware of).  

This collection contains both The Courtyard and Neonomicon. The Courtyard is worth reading here rather than in it's original form seeing how they've added colour - which adds a whole other grisly dimension.

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[1] See here for a full list.

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Links: Comics Comics Review #2Mindless Ones Article: The Mashless Ones on Neonomicon #2, Alan Moore LiveJounal: Happy Neo Year: It's Neonomicon #2Bleeding Cool: Rereading And Translating Neonomicon #3, Alan Moore LiveJournal: Neonomicon #3: Aagluh Luhng-WujjMultiversity Comics Review #4Comic Book Grrrl Review, Dork Forty ReviewA Lay of the Land ReviewMindless Ones Article: The Neonomicon ReReviewed via Swamp Thing, Comics Comics Comic-Book Club, Bleeding Cool: Neonomicon Vs Watchmensch, Imaginary Stories ArticleBleeding Cool Interview with Jacen Burrows, Wired Interview with Alan Moore, The Skinny Interview with Alan Moore, Alan Moore Acceptance Speech for the Bram Stoker Awards.

Further reading: Alan Moore's The Courtyard, Crossed, The Starry Wisdom: A Tribute to H.P. Lovecraft, CradlegraveLocke & Key, Swamp Thing, No Hero, From HellPromethea, League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century .

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.

Friday, 2 December 2011

Books: The Complete Future Shocks

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The Complete Future Shocks
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Steve Dillon, Bryan Talbot, Ian Gibson, Alan Davis, Dave Gibbons, Mike White, Paul Neary, Brendan McCarthy, John Higgins, Garry Leach, et al

2007



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

Everyone has to start somewhere. And - for the now-legendary beardy Northampton weirdo (and I say that with the greatest respect) and comic book writer extraordinar Alan Moore - that start was writing short 2 to 6 self-contained science-fiction short stories (or for those that speak the lingo: "future shocks") for the mainstay British comic anthology favourite 2000AD. If you're expecting non-stop genius - then you're going to be a tad disappointed - as there's a fair few duds that don't quite hit the mark: but to be fair they were all written between 1980 and 1983 where comics were still treated by their creators and fans as mindless entertainment for teenage boys. For those willing to take the rough with the smooth - there's some golden nuggets contained within that manage (and I hope this isn't too much hyperbole) to find a sweet spot between the short stories of Jorge Luis Borges and Philip K Dick.

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Links: The Comics Journal ReviewFlames Rising Review.

Further reading: DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore, Tom Strong, Global Frequency, The Ballad of Halo Jones, D.R. and Quinch, Skizz.

Profiles: Alan Moore, Bryan Talbot.

All comments welcome.

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

Books: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century

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The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century
1910
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Kevin O'Neill

2009



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century
1969
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Kevin O'Neill

2011



Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/

The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century
2009
Written by Alan Moore
Art by Kevin O'Neill

2012



Available now from Islington Libraries
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The Third Volume of Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill's equal parts praise-worthy to befuddling epic League of Extraordinary Gentlemen series. Beginning relatively simplistically with Vols 1 and 2 before taking a detour into ever more esoteric territories with The Black Dossier (which was set in 1958 placing it in-between the adventures of 1910 and 1969 - but which should be read before both - got that?) this is a comic series that began as a high concept rip-roaring boys own adventure type thing before steadily transforming into an aloof byzantium of ever increasing complexity featuring a multitude of characters drawn from across the whole of the 20th (and early 21st) Century popular culture (thus the title).

These are books that I have struggled (and still struggle) very much to enjoy. Totally not the sort of thing that you can dip in-and-out - but rather the sort of work that needs careful and diligent attention paid in order to suss out: so far it's been the sort of thing that I've enjoyed more reading about than actually reading.

It's at this point that I'd like to draw your attention to a few sites linked below. Practically every single panel in this comic has a reference to someone or other - and unless you're a super-brain who's spent every waking second watching and reading everything that's ever been made - you're going to get slightly lost at some point. Help comes in two very distinct flavours: first off is Jess Nevins with a very dry and academic annotations page that lists all the references like butterflies pinned under glass - it's very easy to use: but does make it feel that you're just reading a book of "spot the references." The second is the more complex, much longer - but for me much more satisfying annotations by good folks at The Mindless Ones: which is a thoughtful and in-depth examination of the reasons behind the references and the connotations and thoughts and feelings they invoke. Or (the third way): there's the Newsarama's Cheat Sheet - which is mercifully brief and to-the-point. I don't know whether to recommend that you read the books first without trying to check out the links - or to try and read them side-by-side as I did (which takes away a lot of the fun): but I guess whatever feels good - do that.

There is really is nothing else in the world like this - and nothing else that feels (thanks to it's canny use of other sources) so almost unimaginably vast.

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Links: Jess Nevin's 1910 Annotations, The Mindless Ones 1910 Annotations, Jess Nevin's 1969 Annotations, The Mindless Ones 1969 Annotations Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4, Comics Alliance 1969 Review, Also Sprach Fletchathustra 1969 Review, Newsarama 1969 Cheat Sheet, Newsarama Interview with Alan Moore Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4, The Comics Journal 1969 Review 1, The Comics Journal 1969 Review 2.

Further reading: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Black Dossier, The UnwrittenNeonomicon.

Profiles: Alan Moore.

All comments welcome.