Monday, December 17, 2018

Pluvial Perusals


A rainy weekend left time to munch on bookshelf fodder, both morsels of which had curious origin stories. My reasons for picking them are less curious. Anthony Burgess had satisfied my reading urges before. As for the other, my recent review of academic publications about superhero mythology prompted me once again toward the comic book shelves to explore one character (strangely absent from Marvel live-action movies), none of whose comics I had previously read.

Napoleon Symphony: a Novel in Four Movements by Anthony Burgess
After the success of the modestly budgeted film A Clockwork Orange based on Anthony Burgess’ novel of the same name, Stanley Kubrick approached Burgess once again. This time Kubrick had in mind a grand epic about Napoleon. Kubrick asked him if he could come up with something. Burgess obliged, providing Kubrick with an idiosyncratic manuscript structured like (to the extent two very different art forms can be alike) Beethoven’s Eroica. Kubrick decided he couldn’t do anything with it and dropped the notion of a definitive Napoleon movie. (This was probably wise: the last serious attempt, Napoleon [1927] written and directed by Abel Gance, is 333 minutes and gets us only as far as 1797.) Kubrick instead chose to make the less epic but still interesting 18th century period film Barry Lyndon (1975). Anthony Burgess, meantime, polished up his manuscript and published it as a novel in 1974.

This novel is no challenge to Tolstoy and was not intended to be. It is (in Burgess’ words) “a comic novel” though it is not a parody either. The comedy arises, when it does, in the contrast of the heroic image with the human beneath – as it arises whenever we examine our idols closely. We don’t get the great battles and grand events but rather the stage coach rides before them, repasts after them, evenings in taverns, arguments with colleagues, table talk with lovers, and private moments. Burgess assumes the reader already has at least a basic knowledge of his historical career and does little more than indicate (often indirectly) when and where a scene occurs. We see Napoleon as humanly inconsistent: alternately inspirational, mawkish, noble, petty, idealistic, unprincipled, self-effacing, and pompous. The four “movements” into which the book is divided are his rise to fame and power, his defeat in Russia, the Hundred Days, and his exile at St. Helena. Burgess, by the way, planned to be a composer before unexpectedly finding success as a writer. His flair with words is always reason enough to read him.

This is not a book for someone looking to learn history via a more-or-less accurate historical novel. Most basic information about the era’s events simply isn’t in it. But if you wonder what the man could have been like when just being himself, this gives a plausible picture.

Thumbs Up. Not my top pick of Burgess (A Clockwork Orange and Nothing Like the Sun are more fun), but Thumbs Up nevertheless.

**** ****

She-Hulk by Dan Slott
In 1978 CBS had a hit with its TV show The Incredible Hulk starring Bill Bixby as Dr. Banner and Lou Ferrigno as his green alter-ego. It was so popular that executives at Marvel worried that CBS might develop a gender-reversed spin-off series, much in the way The Bionic Woman was spun off The Six Million Dollar Man. If CBS did this before Marvel copyrighted and trademarked a female Hulk, CBS rather than Marvel would own the rights to the character. Marvel tasked Stan Lee with creating the character, and in February 1980 The Savage She-Hulk appeared on comic book racks.

Jennifer Walters is a petite and physically frail young attorney. She is also a cousin to Bruce Banner (Hulk). Bruce has no choice but to infuse her with his own mutated blood after a run-in with criminals leaves her bleeding to death: there is no time to wait for a safer source. Jennifer catches her cousin’s condition and acquires the alter-ego She-Hulk. Unlike her cousin, however, she retains her full mental faculties when green and has considerable control over her transitions. She actually prefers her green persona to her vulnerable original one, sometimes even arguing her court cases as She-Hulk. She isn’t very secret with her identity. She becomes one of the Avengers. A feature of her 20th century comics is her awareness of being a comic book character and her tendency to “break the fourth wall” and talk to the reader.

Comic book characters get rebooted and made over regularly in order to keep them current, and She-Hulk is no exception. Accordingly, I opted for the 21st century tales by Dan Slott in the collection She-Hulk: The Complete Collection. In Slott’s updated version of She-Hulk the fourth wall is more often bent than broken: Jennifer is one of the star lawyers at a prestigious firm specializing in (what else?) superhero law, and the firm’s prime research tool is its comic book collection. Not all the courtroom drama is in earthly courtrooms. She is whisked away on a matter of Universal Law in outer space and is herself put on trial by temporal authorities for interfering with the timeline. Meantime there are more conventional (by comic book standards) confrontations and interactions with other superheroes and villains including her archenemy Titania who at one point comes into possession of an infinity gem. (Marvel fans will know what that means.) There are good supporting characters in the stories, for example a teen would-be villain who is the granddaughter of Jen’s boss, and Mallory Book, Jen’s rival at the firm. There is also Jen’s reliable colleague (non-superhero) admirer at the firm who, though never making any overtures, awaits the right moment to escape the “friend zone.” The moment never arrives since Jennifer always has suitors with whom he can’t hope to compete.

When I was a child my mom had none of the snobbish prejudice so common at the time against comic books for kids. She opined that “reading is reading” and anything that encourages it is a good thing. So, she craftily brought home reading material likely to appeal to my sister and me including comic books. She supplemented these with magazines, children’s literature, and more ambitious material such as Mark Twain and Sir Walter Scott. The strategy worked. Both Sharon and I became early and lifelong recreational readers. Comics faded from the mix of my recreational reads by the time I was in high school with the exception of some counterculture novelties by Robert Crumb and his ilk. They didn’t really return to my coffee table until the current century, and then only because adult-oriented comics were a social phenomenon that couldn’t be ignored by anyone interested in the state of popular culture.

Adult mainstream comics were already well established in the US by the 1980s, but I’m often late to pop-culture parties. I’m not quite sure what to make of them. There is something unsettling about the power fantasies of superhero comics appealing to adults; they seem to be something one should grow past. Yet, I readily admit I often enjoy the comics even if my reason for buying them (at least so I tell myself) is to keep abreast of pop-culture. Their popularity coincides with an ongoing long-term decline in sales of traditional literature, both fiction and non-fiction, but I doubt that is cause-and-effect. Other modern diversions probably account for the decline – along with current approaches to formal education that too often make reading seem painful to students. The decline in the consumption of literature is regrettable, but perhaps my mom’s perspective is still the right one: reading is reading and something (even something with pictures and words like “zonk!” and “plink!”) is better than nothing. If it contains clever artwork and storytelling, better yet.

Thumbs Up


Smash Mouth - Everyday Superhero

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