04.13.07 By: Clayton Neuman
Webcomics Get Serious(ly Good)
But all that changed when a former colleague of mine who contributes to SMITH Magazine recently turned me on to some truly inegnious graphic novels his site has been serializing over the past year. First on my list of raves is Anthony Lappé and Dan Goldman's Shooting War. In this sharp and poignant DMZ-esque satire the year is 2011, John McCain is President and hipster vlogger Jimmy Burns lands a contract to cover the Iraq war--yup, it's still ragin'--first hand for a major news network.
Now, I became interested in webcomics probably because I liked the idea of Calvin swearing, but this is a different animal altogether. The novel weaves commentary on our country's politics, the ever-growing insignificance of the mainstram media, the importance of the blogosphere (ahem, thanks AOL!) and the disturbing realities of war. And the real icing on the cake is the artwork, which has as much depth, color and detail as any Vertigo trade you might pick up while still subtly reminding the reader that yes, you're looking at a computer screen because hey, that's the age we're living in.
Shooting War is on to bigger and better things--the scribes have signed with Warner Books and a hardcover should be hitting stores this November. Now SMITH is running a new serial by American Splendor artist Josh Neufeld called A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge.
The story begins with two ominous prologues in which Neufield depicts the city of New Orleans in the days leading up to Hurrican Katrina, during the storm, and its inevitable aftermath. In a mininalist artistic style very much akin to Alison Bechdel's stellar graphic novel Fun Home, Neufeld creates the sense much of the world had during Katrina of seeing the mayhem from afar--of depersonalizing the horror.
The main story--the second chapter of which was released this month--tells a much different tale, focusing on a cross-section of lives in the Crescent City before and after the levees broke. Among the main characters Neufeld paints is Kevin, the football player excited at the prospect of missing a few days of high school for the storm; the aristocratic Doctor, throwing a party to wait out the hurricane; and Hamid, the convenience store owner determined not to leave his property in the hands of looters. Each character is in their own orbit, unable to comprehend the significance of what we all know is about to occur, making their stories all the more human.
These webcomics are worth far more than 30-second laughs in between porn downloads--er, I mean, news websites. They represent what I see as the natural evolution of the art form, and are far more interesting than a lot of the paper issues I happily shell out four bucks a week for. Penny Arcade still has my attention three times a week, but its competition is getting pretty stiff.
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The Best Dirty Comics by Great Artists
SECRET IDENTITY:
Archivist Craig Yoe recently released a book of fetish art from Superman co-creator Joe Shuster called "Secret Identity," which stands out not just for its BDSM themes, but the fact that pretty much everyone in it looks EXACTLY like Superman and Lois Lane. And occasionally Perry White, which is just weird.
LOST GIRLS:
One of the best known erotic comics of all time, Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie's "Lost Girls" centers on Wendy from Peter Pan, Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz and Alice from Alice in Wonderland discussing their sexual adventures, which makes it the all-girl "League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" of porn.
DAN DECARLO PIN-UPS:
Among comics fans, Dan DeCarlo is best known as the defining artist for "Archie" and the creator of Josie and the Pussycats and Cheryl Blossom, which casts the pin-up work he did for men's magazines in a whole new light -- especially since his subjects often look like very, VERY grown-up versions of Betty and Veronica.
JACK COLE PIN-UPS:
In a similar vein, Jack Cole, the revolutionary creator of Plastic Man whose comics are often cited alongside Will Eisner's as being years ahead of their time, also did his share of pinups and gag strips for Playboy and other men's mags of the '50s, working under the pseudonym "Jake."
SMALL FAVORS:
Colleen Coover is currently enjoying well-deserved success as one of the most popular artists for Marvel's kid-friendly titles, which -- considering that her breakout hit "Small Favors" was a "girly porno comic" about a nymphomaniac and the size-changing embodiment of her own conscience that was equal parts dirty jokes, sweet romance and hardcore girl-on-girl action -- is a pretty neat trick.
THE ROCKETEER
While nowhere near the actual pornography of "Lost Girls" or "Small Favors," the love interest of Dave Stevens' Rocketeer introduced a whole new generation of comics readers to '40s pinup queen Bettie Page.
EMPOWERED:
In what has to be the best/worst/best again origin story of all time, Adam Warren's "Empowered" came about when the popular artist of "The Dirty Pair" (a comic about two girls in metal bikinis blowing things up) was commissioned to draw a super-heroine with an easily-shredded costume in bondage, and ended up creating an entire world built around a neurotic aspiring heroine with an ironic name and one of the most romantic relationships in comics, all while keeping things as adult as you can possibly get without any actual nudity.
ELEMENTALS:
In what was undoubtedly Dr. Wertham's worst nightmare, the Elementals (by future "Fables" creator Bill Willingham) were a super-team that would occasionally just take a few issues off to get it on. And let's be honest here, if Marvel had done that with the X-Men in the early '90s, they'd STILL be counting the money.
XXXENOPHILE:
Cartoonist Phil Foglio might be best known for his long-running webcomic "Girl Genius," but his self-published "XXXenophile" -- known both for its humor and its truly bizarre couplings that featured cyborgs, demons, aliens, dryads, at least one were-panther and the occasional centaur--featured a Who's Who of comics creators with contributions from John Workman, "TMNT" co-creator Kevin Eastman, and even Adam Hughes.
HERICANE:
And speaking of Hughes, it might not come as much of a surprise that one of the first jobs for the current king of "good girl" art was drawing "Hericane" for Penthouse Comix, a series about a heroine who gained her powers from, and we are not making this up, "a combination of a TNT explosion and oral sex."
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Saturday 14 April
By dan goldman
Hey Clayton:
Thanks for the love! I've just finished the entire SHOOTING WAR novel, and if you like what's online, that's basically now a rough cut of the first half of the book. The whole thing's been visually "remastered", reworked and rewritten into something much tighter and louder. It comes out Nov 19.
But that's not why I am writing.
If you're looking for smart and varied webcomics, you should be hip to ACT-I-VATE, a daily web comix anthology that both Josh Neufeld and I are founding members of. We've hand-picked over 20 cartoonists to create ongoing online graphic novels by auteurs like Dean Haspiel, Nick Bertozzi, Leland Purvis, Nikki Cook, Paul Maybury, Tim Hamilton. This is where we're making the kind of comics we want to read, and having a realtime dialogue about our work with the readers and other creators. It's been an amazing experiment for a year already and I'm watching old and new pals of mine suddenly creating the best work of their careers, all at the same time.
You should drop in sometime and say hi.
--love--> d!
Dan Goldman>
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Saturday 14 April
By John Anderson
Heya Dan, funny you should mention ACT-I-VATE as we're currently prepping an interview with Nick Bertozzi for publication in which he plugs the site, and on my own to-do list is having a follow-up conversation with Dean Haspiel on that very topic ... so stay tuned for more webcomics love!
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