"We are all in the gutter, but some of us..."
Taking Trash Seriously.
"...are looking at the stars."
-- Oscar Wilde
December 16, 2004
Price: Your 2¢

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


HOW WOULD LUBITSCH DO IT?

lubitsch_bild_80.jpg

INT. DRISCOLL’S OFFICE - EVENING

It's a big office, and dark, which makes it feel even larger, cavernous. The theme from Dr. Who (Delia Derbyshire’s 1963 version) reverberates in the space, buzzing up your spine like a telegraph signal.

Continue reading...


Detroit Metal City: No Music, No Dream

dmc krauser 80.jpg

We live in a time of film adaptations of comic books massive and tiny, from Iron Man and The Dark Knight to Wanted and the upcoming Surrogates. But I don't need to see any more. I have seen Detroit Metal City and it is a testament to awesomeness.

Continue reading...


Sequelitis

sequel-small.jpgYou'd think that writing a sequel would be down to a science, considering how many get cranked out every year. Three parts more-of-the-same to two parts brand-new-adventure or some such recipe. I recently read two sequels, one that was fantastic, the other not so much. The difference? As far as I could tell, it was because of the books that came before.

Continue reading...


Forgetful?

Perhaps you'd like an e-mail notification of our weekly update.

 
 

Another Shot at Immortality

by Guy Leshinski
Feeling immortal.It's Enki Bilal's first visit to Toronto, and he's looking a little weary. It's been a full day of interviews promoting a new film he's written and directed, an FX-bloated fantasy called The Immortal. Now here he sits, pressed against a wall of books on The Beguiling's crowded first floor. Solemn fans, some draped in the neo-punk raiment of Bilal's most famous comics, shuffle toward him, clutching their hard-bound albums and waiting reverently for him to inscribe them.

He draws the same image in each: Horus -- the falcon-headed antagonist of Bilal's Nikopol Trilogy, on which the film is based. He is so skilled, or has drawn it so often, he can look up to answer a question while his hand continues undisturbed. "You are speaking too fast for me," the 53-year-old says around his Parisian accent. "I am an old man." He dapples the piece with shadow, signs his name in a loose-wristed slither and slides the book forward. "Voilà," he smacks.

He has reason to feel flagged. Bilal is a comics superstar, a vanguard of the Euro-fantasy BDs (pronounced "bay-day," the initialism for the French term for comics, bandes dessinées) that thrived in the 1970s and still cast a looming shadow. Along with compatriots like Moebius, Bilal (Parisian by way of Belgrade) reset the dystopian visions of George Orwell and Philip K. Dick in lush, elaborate comics that established the look and content of Métal Hurlant (Heavy Metal, in its English incarnation) and were later compiled in wildly successful hardcover volumes. Today, such collections are called graphic novels, and as they've grown in stature, so has Bilal. He's now an elder statesman. "It's a good time to discover comics," he says of the needling attention, "though me, I've had my head in this film for four years."

Feeling immortalThe Immortal remixes the first two books of The Nikopol Trilogy, Bilal's crowning achievement. The third book in the series, 1992's Froid Équateur (Cold Equator), was the first comic ever selected "Book of the Year" by French literary magazine Lire. The movie transports the story from Paris to New York City, permitting its characters to speak the language of the film's biggest potential market (amusingly with hints of both French and British in their accents). It's set in the year 2095 (the comic was set in 2023), in a world that viewers have encountered many times in their speculative fiction, a depraved, decomposing metropolis where tattered people hobble down filth-encrusted alleys. In the books, the stench of decay is palpable; every surface is another receptacle for a dribbling mass of cosmic expectoration.

The plot itself is just as familiar. It is, in essence, a buddy piece: a fugitive, arrested 30 years before for protesting his government's eugenics program, forms a grudging friendship with an alien. There is, of course, plenty of embroidery; the alien, for instance, is the ancient Egyptian sky god Horus, his ship is a massive pyramid that hovers above the city's core, their friendship is consummated when Horus' spirit invades Nikopol's body... and there's a girl -- a ravishing eugenics guinea pig with blue hair and lips -- who's clamped to the pair in an awkwardly kinky love triangle.

Unlike Bilal's previous foray into cinema, the spare, hallucinatory Tykho Moon (1996), The Immortal pulls every trick it can wrap its talons around. It's shot in the bloodless ochre that's become de rigueur for dystopian sci-fi, and each frame is slathered in sewer-grade CGI, including most of its digitized cast. Only three of its main actors are live, including the crystalline Linda Hardy, who plays sapphire-haired Jill Bioskop, and the dustily handsome Thomas Kretschmann (Nikopol), whose profile leans to Liam Neeson where his comics counterpart did Brando. Fans of the original will be pleased to find scenes, including Horus' crafting of a metal leg for Nikopol from the tracks of an abandoned subway line, drawn directly from the books. They may also recognize the sets and hovering cars from similar sequences in the animated feature, Heavy Metal. The pedigree, after all, is the same.

So, it seems, is the goal. "It's natural to try to go from one [medium] to the other," says Bilal. "It's natural for a comic artist to want to do a movie, and for a director to want to do a comic. BDs have more power and depth than cinema; but cinema is spectacle." The Immortal fares better as spectacle than as drama; for all its imagination, this isn't very sophisticated stuff. It is, however, an interesting study of how an artist perceives his work; another angle on one of European comics' notarized masters.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Chuck your 2¢ into the Gutter
Another Shot at Immortality - The Cultural Gutter
Lost your 2¢? Write us.

Paw through our archives

Of Note Elsewhere
A 1953 3-D comic online? My brain doesn't have the power to contain the glory of past, present and retro-future colliding in Brain Power!
~
Kyoto University of Art and Design's newest teacher is none other than JJ Sonny Chiba. Prof. Chiba will be teaching film acting and swordfighting. And I bet ninjutsu, but secretly. (via Kaiju Shakedown)
~
No more Plain Janes from DC. It's nixing Minx, it's line directed at girls. Shannon Smith breaks it down in bookstore terms.  When Fangirls Attack has more. 
~
Let your cursor drift to the right and all the way down for Ozploitation trailer goodness like a giant razorback, a postapocalyptic drive-in, erection jokes as well as Donald Pleasance, George Lazenby and Jimmy Wang Yu at Flyp magazine's look at Not Quite Hollywood.
~
Vampirella's been needing a make-over for a long time.  Project: Rooftop has original Vampirella costume designer and feminist historian Trina Robbins judge the results.
~

View all Notes here.
Seen something shiny? Gutter-talk worth hearing? Let us know!

On a Quest?

Pete Fairhurst made us this Mozilla search plug-in. Neat huh?

Obsessive?

Then you might be interested in knowing you can get an RSS Feed here, and that the site is autoconstructed by v4.01 of Movable Type and is hosted by No Media Kings.

Thanks To

Canada Council
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts which last year invested $20.3 million in writing and publishing throughout Canada.