This site is updated Thursday at noon with a new article about an artistic pursuit generally considered to be beneath consideration. James Schellenberg probes science-fiction, Carol Borden draws out the best in comics, Chris Szego dallies with romance, and Ian Driscoll stares deeply into the screen.
While the writers have considerable enthusiasm for their subjects, they don't let it numb their critical faculties. Tossing away the shield of journalistic objectivity and refusing the shovel of fannish boosterism, they write in the hopes of starting honest and intelligent discussions about these oft-enjoyed but rarely examined artforms. Click here for the writer's bios and their individual takes on the gutter.
Recent Features
Old Reliable?
Dean Koontz has been on the bestseller list with his books for quite a
few decades now; one of his current series started with a book called
Odd Thomas in 2003. Odd (that’s his first name) sees dead people. I see
an old idea in new clothes.
Continue reading...
Alpha Bits
It kind of goes without saying that the Romance genre is full of tropes and archetypes (though just to be clear: the happy ending is not archetype, but architecture). Some come in plot form: the rags-to-riches story, for instance, a modern take on the Cinderella mythos. Sometimes they pertain to character: the driven career woman forced to reassess her priorities, or the survivor of a bad marriage learning to trust again. Occasionally character archetypes can read less like original patterns than faded photocopies, and stock characters become exhausted pastiches. One character archetype that’s occasionally misrepresented and often misunderstood - though never out of favour - is the character of the alpha male.
When the question arises of who could be the villain in a
third Batman movie, I’m stymied. I can’t picture The Penguin or The Riddler or
Catwoman working in the world Christopher Nolan has created. Poison Ivy? I
don’t think so. The Mad Hatter? Clayface? Kite
Man? Bane? Nope, nope, nope and please god no.
Alienated, ranting about how the world
could be perfected if only the fools would listen, plotting intricate
schemes, focusing great minds on tiny slights, losing their beloved
and scarred by experiments gone awry, revenging themselves on the
world, supervillains are where it's at. Here are some of my favorite
villains--in alphabetical order to avoid retribution.
Dr. Doom (many Marvel titles)
Victor
von Doom is the industry standard. He seeks world domination. He
has a country, a time machine and “Doombots.” He mixes science
and the mystic arts. He's polite. And he recognizes that
supervillainy is about aesthetics. Supervillains focus on process.
It's not that you destroy the hero, it's how you destroy the hero
that's important. Sure, it causes supervillains trouble
sometimes—even puts them in jail or makes them flee their
newly-liberated fiefdoms like Latveria or Kahndaq. But there's more
to life than good governance. There's industrial yet slick armor,
uniformed minions, time machines and living by your own code.
Emperor Zombie (Amazing Screw-On Head)
Cheerful is the word for Emperor Zombie. And, despite his flies, Emperor Zombie is
amazingly cheerful as he unlooses unspeakable evil or kills Amazing
Screw-On Head's man-servants one after another. His companions rock,
especially in the animated version (a tommy-gun toting chimpanzee! A
lycanthropic lady!) And he brings his steampunk schemes to fruition
in an evil skull balloon.
Harley and Ivy
(Batman: The Animated Series, Batman Adventures, Gotham
Girls, Batman: Harley and Ivy)
Catwoman's my favorite bat-villain, but right now she's more an anti-hero—or
maybe anti-villain. She is to crime what Batman is to the law. So
individually, and especially as a pair, Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy
rock the bat-villainy. Harley as the Joker's long-suffering
girlfriend and Ivy as a femme fatale can get stale. But together
they expand their possibilities with mallets and carnivorous plants.
Who doesn't like to see the ladies empower each other—especially
with super serums?
Huang Yaoshi (Legend of Condor Heroes, Return of the Condor Heroes, Legendary Lovers, Ashes of Time)
Huang Yaoshi isn't
necessarily evil, but he will break even his students' legs if they
cross him. He's a touchy, well-dressed recluse with crazy powerful
martial arts, a beautiful, talented daughter and the only copy of the
ultimate martial arts manual. That all spells hijinx with a capital
H. Plus, his wife's body is frozen in a chamber beneath his house,
waiting for the day when he can revive her. I guess I'm just a
softie for mercurial hermits who love their daughters and just want
to be left alone with their dead wives.
The Idea Men (The
Tick)
It's hard to choose
just one villain from The Tick. Man-Eating Cow is neat.
Chainsaw Vigilante's got a great look with his suit, chainsaw and
smiley face mask. But even though I'm trying to focus on single
supervillains, I'll go with the Idea Men because they've stripped
supervillainy to its essentials: nice outfits, a blimp and a Big
Idea—stealing a lot of money so they won't have to work.
Mojo Jojo(The
Powerpuff Girls)
Most chimpanzees
who become superintelligent and wear clothes after transformative
experimental accidents become heroes, but not Mojo Jojo. Mojo Jojo
turns to a life of mad science, crime and despising the “accursed
people!” His oration is great, but what made me love him was his
indignant exclamation, after an illegal search of his volcano top
observatory lair, “We are citizens! Evil citizens, but citizens
nonetheless!” Indignation and self-entitlement are central in mad
science and villainous monologues.
The
Monarch (The Venture Bros).
The Monarch was
raised by butterflies, filled with the toxic sap of
milkweed—rendering him immune to all poisons—and tools around in
a giant flying coccoon. Sure, there are cooler origins and powers,
but the Monarch is true to himself. Where other supervillains might
pretty up their motivations, loving Dr. Mrs. The Monarch and hating
Dr. Venture are good enough for him.
Monsieur Mallah
(Doom Patrol, Teen Titans)
In a
world filled with evil gorilla masterminds, it's hard to choose one.
Gorilla Grodd has a mind control helmet, is alienated from the
goody-goodies in Gorilla City and plans to turn everyone into
gorillas. The Venture Bros.'
King Gorilla is gay and has sharp shoes. And Mike Mignola's
Kriegsaffe are German. But I have a soft spot for Monsieur Mallah.
He's French. He's a talented scientist and surgeon. He wears a beret
and bandoleer. He knows his ordinance. He's the supervillain gorilla
Che or John Rambo. And he's so alienated, I have no idea what he's
alienated from, unless it's the peacable world of mountain gorillas.
Of course, one of the things I like about Doom Patrol
is that being a gay French Gorilla genius in love with a brain in a cannister is alienating enough. He doesn't need another reason to join
the Brotherhood of Evil.
Steeljack (Astro
City: The Tarnished Angel)
Formerly the
Steel-jacketed Man, Carl “Steeljack” Donewicz is super strong and
nearly invulnerable with his steel skin and hair. He's so metal he
scrubs with steelwool in the shower. But it's not his career as a
heavy that I love—it's the Steeljack who tries to reform, but
doesn't have a chance. And not just because he's a steel Robert
Mitchum, he's seen as a muscleheaded patsy. Physically and
narratively, he embodies the hangdog sadness of Robert Mitchum's
noirs. Knowing he's done the right thing is all he gets.
~~~
Horribly disfigured by an unspeakable evil raised during an experiment gone terribly wrong, Carol Borden bides her time behind faceless steel till she can show the disbelieving fools who they trifle with. She'll also be writing at theToronto International Film Festival's Midnight Madness Blog about movies for the next few weeks.
(If referencing this article, please link to this page.)
I'm ashamed to admit that I know less about most of these villains than I should. I always had more sympathy for the villains than I felt towards the heroes, so maybe that's why my friends gave me the cool moniker I proudly bear today. My favorite villain is probably The Brain from Pinky and The Brain, but I also have to admit that I always admired the (while not strictly speaking villains) random acts of insanity by Daffy Duck, or the stubborn vindictive temperament of Slappy the Squirrel. Make the world shape itself in our image and it'll be a better place!
—Nefarious Dr O
Nobody ever gives Nightshift his due respect
anymore.
What gives? You hipster kids only respect print.
Print print print. Bah! Only a supervillan who
might also be a superhero who only questionably
exists or probably doesn't exist because nobody
ever put him/her/it/they/glorp in a printed book,
magazine, comic book, newspaper, zine, or online
is worth fantasizing about. Well, I'm not gonna
stand for it, I tell ya! *tromp trOMP TROMP TROMP
TROMP...*
*SLAM*
Or not.
Regards,
Nightshift's Hat
—StFo
I was super unimpressed that Gotham Girls was included as an extra on the Birds of Prey dvd box set. I don't want real people! I just want more cartoons set in the B:TAS Gotham! Boooo.
—Matthew
>Regards,
>Nightshift's Hat
>—StFo
I have to commend you for your bravery, Steve. I thought you would have turned around and fled the scene as soon as Carol mentioned steampunk.
But it looks like you soldiered on. Very good.
But, anyways, your earlier point...
>Nobody ever gives Nightshift his due respect
>anymore.
>What gives? You hipster kids only respect print.
>Print print print. Bah!
I think the Judging Panel is the real power behind the throne with all those supervillians.
Their influence crosses comic universes.
>Only a supervillan who
>might also be a superhero who only questionably
>exists or probably doesn't exist because nobody
>ever put him/her/it/they/glorp in a printed book,
>magazine, comic book, newspaper, zine, or online
>is worth fantasizing about.
The truly insidious thing about the Judging Panel is that their presence will NEVER be revealed.
—Chuck
"Indignation and self-entitlement are central in mad science and villainous monologues."
This explains... so very much about the world.
—Chris Szego
Chuck your 2¢ into the Gutter
The Cultural Gutter: Perfect Candidates for Costumed Aggression
"16) If you have a nosebleed, you most definitely have cancer. And you
have no money to pay for the surgery that will save your life. And your
liver is missing. We're not sure where it went, but it's making your
cancer progress faster."
Everything Mark Russell needs to know about life he learned from Korean tv dramas.