"We are all in the gutter, but some of us..."
Taking Trash Seriously.
"...are looking at the stars."
-- Oscar Wilde
July 28, 2005
Price: Your 2¢

This site is updated Thursday afternoon 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. Click here for their bios and individual takes on the gutter.

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.


Recent Features


ROUND THE DECAY OF THAT COLOSSAL WRECK

Watchmen 80.jpgIn the run-up to, and wake of, the release of Watchmen, it has become common currency to say that adapting Zach Snyder, et al undertook a massive challenge in adapting Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ complex, sprawling medium- and genre-defining work for the screen.

But I’m going to suggest that they actually undertook an even more massive challenge: adapting Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ complex, sprawling medium- and genre-defining work for the screen - and completely missing its point.

Continue reading...


The Love Song of the Black Lagoon

Lagoon 2 80.jpgWe have lingered in the chambers of the sea
By gillmen wreathed with seaweed red and brown
Till human voices wake us, and we drown.
--sorta T.S. Eliot

Do you hear that? Off in the distance? A song too beautiful to be real but somehow... familiar? The song twines over the water, through the cattails and the woods, into the window, eighth notes swirling all around. The creature in the lagoon is singing. He's not dead after all and who are we to resist him and the “centuries of passion pent up in his savage heart?"

Continue reading...


Zahn's Star Wars; Or, Will This Death be Permanent?

coruscant-small.jpgA scrappy rebellion, a victory against an evil overlord, leftover spaceships in the dark outer reaches of the galaxy, warriors with extraordinary powers (nearly wiped out), now on the verge of a comeback. Laughs, thrills, moments of sadness, moments of sheer action. Exciting stuff! And oh yeah, it's a Star Wars tie-in novel.

Continue reading...


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Eiland in the Sky

by Guy Leshinski
The avant-garde is no place for a squeamish cartoonist — let alone two. They need unshakable faith in their medium, supreme confidence in their skill and it helps to be from Amsterdam, where razing the norm is a national pastime.

A man...

Dutch cartoonists Tobias Schalken and Stefan van Dinther are poster boys for the front lines, and their Toronto Comic Arts Festival reading in May was one of the festival's highlights. In broken English, aided by a translator and a glowing laptop, they held the modest crowd at the Victory Café; in thrall with their psychotropic cartoons and comic experiments. It was as though a pair of extraterrestrials had landed with a satchel of cosmic comics, and we would never be the same.

Back home they're known as Toob and Steef. "Over here," says Schalken by email, "comics are mainly an infantile business and I don't feel very comfortable in the scene." By way of rebuttal, he and van Dinther make a serial called Eiland, published by Belgian imprint Bries, that treats the comic form like a squash ball ricocheting between its artists' imaginations. Every issue has a cluster of stories that vary wildly in style and tone, from maundering musings to cold silence, from freehand swirls to suffocating realism. It's an alternating current of chaos and confusion... or so it looks at first. A careful reading reveals a quietly wrought order beneath the cacography and a set of firm, if grandiose, convictions — like the malleability of time and space — that the comics' recurring motifs and lateral presentation convey with baffling clarity. ... and his world.

Every time you read an Eiland story, you discover something new: another detail, another pattern, another way one panel relates to the next or to the whole. The correlations are dizzying.

Perhaps it's only natural that their climb to the heavens began outside the comics field. Though both eventually enrolled in art school, van Dinther first studied computer science. His website displays his Boolean tendencies. It's full of lofty, logic-twisting comics and animation, and games, including one that kills your avatar if you don't leap hurdles, shake hands and kiss feet as fast as possible. "How to tell/show things is really my main interest," he emails. "I'm not much of a storyteller."

Schalken's methods are more tactile. He's a sculptor, an art instructor and former ballet prodigy. His unsettling sculptures (see them at his website) sport the same corpuscular flesh as his painted cartoons and his installations use the tawny metals and stained wood of his comic scenery. His voice is the gristle — roughly the Lennon to van Dinther's whimsical, if nowhere as syrupy, McCartney.

Their extracurricular work sets the stage for their comical tinkering, their constant futzing with the medium's strictures to isolate then override its circuitry. Time, place, perspective, character, story — the medium's sacred components — are mere signposts. "I just try finding an authentic way of telling the stories I want to tell in the best possible way, which means partly (re)inventing the language," Schalken emails. "And with the possibility of becoming pretentious and silly, which is not that bad."

One Eiland story draws character and background in separate panels, a poignant metaphor for isolation. Another runs simultaneously through the eyes of a fly, a girl reading a comic book (which gets its own spin-off a page later), a man fondling a woman, and said fondlee reading his thought balloon. Many of the pieces are silent, a concession to non-Dutch readers — though animation at the pair's website, www.eiland.cc, is aptly scored in baroque strains. Despite the slim semantics, a single story can occupy the reader for days.

The pair plow headlong through the objection that comics are unfit to juggle with profundity. R. Crumb once wrote, "To imbue comics with serious literary subtlety seems absurd to me." Toob and Steef beg to differ. "I have always preferred a heroic failure," says Schalken, "above a safe success."


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Eiland in the Sky - The Cultural Gutter
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Of Note Elsewhere
A wrestler-fairy? A nerd-werewolf? A caveman-pirate? All these and more in Creebobby's second Archetype Times Table.
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Wong Fei-Hung's been on my mind lately. Luckily, Kung Fu Cinema has a nice video (scroll down) of Wong Fei-Hung in the movies from Kwan Tak-Hing to Gordon Liu, Jet Li as well as Jackie Chan and actress Angie Tsang Tze-Man's portrayals of young Wong Fei-Hung. There's also a detailed companion article tracing the historical and fictional Wong Fei-Hung through newspaper pulps, radio, tv and film. 
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"It's common practice for one of those guys, in a single day, to chainsaw his way out of the belly of a giant worm, take a detour through a zombie shantytown, euthanise his long-lost wife, and spend hours in a sewer trawling through blood and waste, with monsters leaping up at his face and depositing their brain matter on his boots."

Hit Self-Destruct again, on what life's like for videogame heroes.
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The Deleted Scenes webcomic takes a look at W. E. Coyote v. ACME Corporation.
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Frank Miller's Charlie Brown, Thumbsuckers.
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View all Notes here.
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