"We are all in the gutter, but some of us..."
Taking Trash Seriously.
"...are looking at the stars."
-- Oscar Wilde
May 20, 2004
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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Johnny on the Spot

by Guy Leshinski

When it comes to scat, Ryan is a whiz. A few weeks ago, Guelph cartoonist Seth was giving a scripted talk on the art of comics to a worshipful crowd at the Rivoli. He accompanied himself with slides projected onto a screen behind him, ringing a bell between each slide like a performance-art concierge. Once, he rang the bell and up slid the apple-red cover of Johnny Ryan’s Angry Youth Comix — a profoundly crass (and profoundly hilarious) series by one of comicdom’s greatest slingers of smut. Beside Ryan’s typical excretions — a detective story called “Sherlock McRape,” another about aliens whose words for ice cream and its toppings are heinous epithets — this particular issue (No. 6) included a scalding parody of Seth and fellow anachronist Jason Little, trying to “out old-timey” each other in increasingly bizarre acts of desperation. Seth admitted that his publisher, which also publishes Ryan, had sent him a copy, but that he’d been too afraid to read it.


As usual, Ryan’s cut had hit its mark. “I’m always glad to hear I’m annoying the uptight liberal prigs that are out there,” says Ryan, his snark-rimed monotone bristling over the phone from LA. He fondly recalls a review of one of his books at www.sequentialtart.com, a website for women in comics. The critic had warned her readers to avoid Ryan’s work at any cost, writing solemnly, “A bully can only be a bully if you allow him to intimidate you.” Ryan responded in his next issue with a story about a female cartoonist who’s peed on by her all-male classmates and thrown out the window. “Whenever I see people who really get irate about what I’m doing, I make a small effort to continue insulting them in my work.”

He blames his working-class Irish roots for teasing the aggression out of him, the insult comedy he now gleefully inflicts on his subjects. “Growing up, I was mostly on the receiving end,” he says. “My aunts and uncles were a lot sharper than I was. It was just our way of communicating, lobbing insults at each other.” Ryan spent his teens absorbing B-movies by gutter auteurs like John Waters, finding his vocation in their rabid obscenity. “They didn’t have stars to push movies. The only thing they had was rape or murder or lurid sex scenes. Get a fat transvestite to eat dog shit, and reel them in. That’s my school of entertainment.”

When it comes to scat, Ryan is a whiz.Like most cartooning careers, his began with a stapled zine swapped among friends. From the first, Angry Youth Comix was redolent of Ryan’s obsessions: “Violence, stabbing, sex, shit, throw-up,” he recounts. “The wonderfully horrible things that go on in your mind. In my mind, anyway.” Starring the fulsome pair of Loady McGee (scheming, acne-encrusted tyrant) and goggle-wearing rube Sinus O’Gynus, AYC transcends taste and decorum with each hysterical discharge. In “Survey Sez,” a story from Ryan’s early days (collected in the priceless AYC anthology, Portajohnny, published by Fantagraphics, $22.95), Loady goes door to door with a clipboard, firing questions like “Why is your fat mother a flea-ridden whore that’ll suck your dick for a red apple?” (To which one unwitting participant replies, “Well… mom’s been kinda going thru some tuff times….”) Ryan is a master of the low, a humorist with an astonishing imagination for depravity, and fangs for satire that can gnaw etiquette to a pulp. “There’s a lot of effort in writing shit jokes,” the 33-year-old says. “More than you think. It’s like chess. You have to out-think the audience.” He plumbs the depths without fear, probing crevices that would give most artists the runs. “If I think maybe I shouldn’t do this, that’s the cue for me to do it.”

For all his flagrancy, though, his jokes wouldn’t be half as funny without the art: a pneumatic cartoonscape of plasticine limbs and marshmallowy teeth. It’s all so guileless, it could almost be for kids — an audience Ryan caters to in his ongoing series for Nickelodeon magazine. “I’m doing the same job,” he says, comparing that book to AYC, “just taking out the diarrhea, rape and murder.” His art recalls another famous Nick property — John Kricfalusi’s Ren & Stimpy — and the work of some of Ryan’s biggest influences, cartoonists such as Kaz and Peter Bagge. With so innocent a vessel delivering his gags, every crude quip stings like a sucker punch. “People write my humour off as, ‘Oh, he’s just trying to shock,’” Ryan says. “As if ‘shock’ were pejorative.”

The next issue of AYC, due this summer, will give audiences the chance to blanch anew at Ryan’s ribald brilliance. In the meantime, www.johnnyr.com is a tasty appetizer that includes his weekly strip for the Portland Mercury, Blecky Yuckerella. “My comic is very polarizing. Some people hate it. And the fact that they hate it so much is cool.”

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Of Note Elsewhere
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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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