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November 29, 2007

ISOLATION

I haven’t been reading a lot of comics lately. Well, ‘cept for the SHOWCASE: JONAH HEX volume that James from the Isotope pressed into my hands upon my last visit there. That’s got some right fine artwork, it does. Writing is…well, kinda 70s DC house style, but it’s easy enough on the eyes. Though I’m a little surprised that they were drawing Hex’s face like Clint Eastwood’s even back then. I was thinking that said likeness was a more modern development.

What I have been doing is watching a lot of horror movies. Having skipped out on nearly everything that wasn’t an out and out zombie movie, as they played in the theatres, I missed out on a few things. And there’s some that woulda gone under the radar anyways. Take ISOLATION, for example.

Spoilers follow. Avert your eyes. No, really.


ISOLATION is well within the straight-up survival horror mold. And it’s a mold that’s worked well over the years forming the core of the modern classics (at least as I reckon them). It clearly owes a lot to ALIEN, but I get a very strong sort of Cronenberg vibe from it. This is far from a bad thing. Set in remote, rural Ireland (at least I’m assuming it’s Ireland—could very well be anywhere in the northern UK, and I’m not good at placing regional accents). ISOLATION tells the story of a struggling farmer (Dan), two young lovers on the run (Mary and Jamie), A veterinarian (Orla), and a geneticist (John).

And oh yes, the cows that John’s been working on. I know. You’re laughing already. Cows. Bovines. Walking hamburgers. Filet on the hoof as it were. The cows aren’t the monsters. The cows just make the monsters.

Having been modified to be more fertile and grow up more quickly, the cows give birth to calves, which appear normal on the surface. But inside each of these calves (who are aggressive and have a nasty tendency to bite) are six…things. These things are all wrong. They’re more insect than mammal, skeletons on the outside, fast and armed with razor claws. Five of them are killed when the first calf is born. This first calf is at the center of two really good scares. The first of them takes place during a routine examination of the calf’s mother. See, it bites the vet during the exam. The exam involves having the vet go shoulder deep in the cow’s womb, effectively blind and helpless. It’s utterly surprising, and turns out only to be a minor wound. Nothing to worry about. No, really.

The second of these scenes is when the calf is actually born. We know something terrible is going to come out of it, but nothing actually does. At least not until we’ve thought the danger has passed. That’s always the best.

Orla the vet comes to the farm, long after the birth (as these things go). Both baby and mother are put down, after it’s made explicit that the baby is not what it seems. Dan the farmer is bitten, losing most of a finger. And suddenly, there’s a worry of…infection. Infection from what? How the hell should we know? But the vet knows something. And she gets in touch with the geneticist. Of course there’s nothing to worry about.

Until he sees that the calf was born pregnant. Pregnant with those things. And that only five of them are accounted for. And the things have a horrifically fast rate of growth. And they infect with a bite, making the host a carrier of these organisms. Males don’t have the ability to give birth to them, but females do.

Once things get rolling, they spiral out of control dramatically. But before that moment, there’s plenty of atmosphere and creep factor set amidst a beautifully desolate and run-down farmstead. Not only is the farm itself at the end of its rope, but all the people are. Dan is about to lose the farm that he’s lived on his whole life. Orla has lost her soul in a Faustian bargain with the geneticist (as has Dan for that matter). The lovers have no family to return to. And the geneticist himself has gone and Messed With Things That Man Ought Not to Mess With.

Interestingly, the geneticist realizes this and he’s the only one who has the strength to do what has to be done to keep the organism from spreading. He attempts to kill Dan (who he knows is infected – Dan is saved only by playing possom), he kills Jamie (who he knows is infected). Orla, as it turns out, has been killed by one of the creatures that gestated inside her. And finally, the geneticist is killed by the very thing he unleashed, after coming to grips with what he’s done and his own responsibility for it. He’s both an antihero and a villain, which can make for interesting viewing, so far as I’m concerned.

Finally the last of the creatures is cornered and destroyed, by Mary. I don’t want to say that the suddenly strong female is a cliché in horror/action movies in my experience, but somehow it’s beginning to seem that way. There’s not much to lead her to that path, other than perhaps being cornered and given no other option, which rings true. Of course, there’s the concern that she’s been impregnated by her (then-infected) boyfriend and that she’s now carrying one of those things inside her.

ISOLATION is beautifully shot, drawing in textures from the decaying farmstead, bogs and pine forests that aren’t a protective fortress, but more of a green prison. The actors are all pleasantly average in looks, but each of them has their own presence on the screen, but nothing like “star power.” Yeah, that’s pejorative. It isn’t a hugely gory film, nor does it revel in showing the monsters to the viewers (you never see the full-grown beast in the light). Instead it relies on atmosphere and the viewer’s imagination. This is a good trend to stick with. And really, those classic sensibilities serve the genre well, even in the age of CGI and prosthetic makeup mastery.


November 21, 2007

Full Bleed 11

Full Bleed 11

Matt vs. THE BLACK DOSSIER.

November 20, 2007

Things that make me happy

Whilst in San Francisco to get my copy of BLACK DOSSIER signed, I was asked by Ian (Brill of the Building fame) about what makes me happy lately. He knows that I'm usually grumpy and prickly about Things In General, so if something makes me happy, it must be pretty good.

Here's a few of those things, and some that occurred to me later:

THE DEEP BLUE GOOD-BYE by John D. MacDonald. Beautiful prose, engaging story and smarter than it has any right to be.

SHINE ON ME by The Prisoners. This tiny single (three songs) packs so much epic goodness in that there ought to be a law against it. Driving, melodic, swirly organ (thanks to James Taylor), biting songwriting (perhaps not as clever as Paul Weller, but Graham Day knows what the hell he's doing.) it came out several (maybe ten) years ago now, but it never fails to put a smile on my face.

THE RISE AND FALL OF ZIGGY STARDUST - the film, that is. Wow, just wow. I love the album to pieces, but this performance blows the recording out of the water, and not just because Bowie is on fire, but because the Spiders are as well.

THE WOODEN SHJIPS - monster psych like you like it.

JOHN CARPENTER - watching a good deal of his output right now. Really, there aren't any losers in his films up to the nineties. THE THING, THE FOG (of which the best parts are all last-moment additions put in when the original cut didn't deliver), ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK (audacious to say the least), THEY LIVE, THE MOUTH OF MADNESS (which I really should watch again.)

ALL-STAR SUPERMAN - Duh. Why is Superman Superman? Read and learn. I wish that Batman was delivering the same zing, but it isn't.

DEBATE - Superheroes are not hard. If you think so, you're probably doing it wrong.

THE ISOTOPE - James is a king among men. Who else could actually sell me on WORLD WAR HULK? He gets it, and talking comics with him makes the trip into the city worthwhile. Even if parking in his neighborhood is an exercise that would test the patence of a Zen monk.

KEVIN O'NEILL - If I was a good blogger, I'd scan the sketch of Nemesis the Warlock that I had done. He makes the new LEAGUE book shine, particularly the fine erotica of the Fanny Hill subsection. Sublime.

LA FIESTA - A local taqueria that stands head and shoulders above the rest. And coming from San Diego, I've got relatively high standards in that regard. Carnitas with enough roasting to make them a little crispy yet succulent. Prepare my bypass surgery, stat!

KING FOOT SUBS - A kimchi beefsteak? Yes please.

November 16, 2007

Late, just late

Full Bleed 10

Full Bleed for the pre-Thanksgiving week is up. They say you can't draw blood from a stone. That's not right. You can, just not a whole lot of it...

When is a joystick not a joystick?

Level Up : How the Videogame Industry Shot Itself In the Joystick--and Why the Wii Has Stopped the Bleeding

Required reading. Disruptive technologies (like the OGN and webcomic) rule. Thesis, meet antithesis. Can't wait for the synthesis.

Speaking of which, guys like this are part of the problem, not the solution. Oh no, young males not the end-all, be-all of the videogame market? Everything I know is wrong!

Substitute "video games" for "comics."

Thanks to Dorian for pointing this out.

November 13, 2007

Scallop and Frog



Originally uploaded by
But I didn't see any crunchy frog. Also note the "Sea Cucumber and Abalone" heading above.

mmmm...echinoderms...

November 10, 2007

TWENTY-TWO

As suggested by Sean, a list of current favorite horror flicks. No, I can't be bothered to find images for them all.

NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
They’re coming to get you, Barbara.

ALIEN
Mother!

DAWN OF THE DEAD
Maybe it’s all that they remember from before.

DAWN OF THE DEAD
Bro? I’m sorry.

28 WEEKS LATER
The monkeys. You don't understand.

THEM
The city of Los Angeles is now under martial law.

INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS
They’re coming. You’re next.

THE THING
Trust is a hard thing to come by these days.

IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS
That happened two chapters ago. Ha ha.

QUATERMASS AND THE PIT
Hobbs End is closed for good reason.

FIGHT CLUB
Your name is Tyler Durden.

RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD
I know you’re in there. I can smell your brains.

THE TERMINATOR
And it will not stop until you are dead.

JAWS
But we delivered the bomb.

POLTERGEIST
This house is cleansed.

TWIN PEAKS
Where’s Annie?

NAKED LUNCH
Time for our William Tell act.

BLUE VELVET
Don’t you fucking look at me.

THE FLY
I’ll just find someone else to be my friend.

CHINATOWN
The future, Mr. Gittes. The future.

GODZILLA
It cannot be stopped.

VIDEODROME
Long live the new flesh.

THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK
Possible that it won't stand the test of time.

November 07, 2007

Got the window, but not the shutter

Full Bleed 9

You're already here, so why don't you click once more to get to some real content. I'm still busy plotting out EATERS stuff that I should have plotted before I leaped into writing. But sometimes you have to make a misstep before you make a step.

Or something.

November 01, 2007

I asked her name and she said to me...

Zuda, Zu Zu Zu Zuuuu-daaaa

Zuda Comics | Click Here to Continue

Zudacomics went live yesterday. I checked it out, mostly, I'll admit, to see "High Moon", which on its face seems exactly like the cogent plot elements of my OGN MURDER MOON, only in color and in a webcomic. Oh yes, and to see "Bayou", which I had high hopes for.

Let's talk about the good. "Bayou" is the most fully realized of the offerings, with an intriguing setting/cast and charming art that I'm sure belies the real nature of the storyline. It's the first continuing series to be named at Zuda, and deservedly so. I look forward to reading this as it continues.

"Dead in the Now" is also a good read, though you don't read Rey's work so much as you absorb it. It's big, bold, energetic, unafraid to eat up page space, learning lessons from manga without simply aping the styles. There is story there, believe it or not, though it's presented unadorned and unfettered. No messing around. I'll be reading this as well, though I can see how some folks might not be digging it.

"High Moon" actually has some lovely art, but the story isn't doing it for me. However, I'm biased since I'm gonna have to take grief for "hey, cowboys and werewolves, just like that Zuda comic." "Leprenomicon" is intriguing, but I'm going to need more before I'm convinced.

"Alpha Monkey" has some vibrant art but doesn't do much for me (though my son will probably dig it.) "Black Swan" suffers for having a distinctive look that is only used in flashbacks and not in the main storyline (which in and of itself is pretty average). I'd probably like "The Dead Seas" if I was in its target audience bracket (I'm not, by probably twenty-five years or more).

One of the biggest problems seems to be pacing for webcomic pages, and that's a big one. It took me a long time to understand (some would argue that I don't get it yet) how a page and a series of panels needs to flow for story/dialogue beats to work. It feels like too much is being packed into some of the strip pages (while some don't have enough going on at all or following what is there is tricky.) This is a problem that is solvable.

I have to confess I'm not wild about the shockwave-based reader and inability to jump to a bookmarked page, for instance. I might have missed it, I'll admit. But the interface can be changed once the content is placed.

The quality of the offerings is variable, either in the art or the writing (and yes, I know it's unfair to judge writing on the basis of eight pages, sixteen in the case of "Bayou". On the other hand, I knew that Cameron Stewart's "Sin Titulo" was good on the basis of three pages, maybe four.) Granted, there's no way I'm going to be enraptured with "The Dead Seas" or "The Enders" or "Raining Cats and Dogs". They're aimed at literally a different generation of readers. And there's a chance that DC/Zuda will connect with some of them.

Costwise, there isn't much to lose, from DC's perspective. Sure, there's page rates (I'm assuming that there are page rates), but a vastly reduced cost of production comes into play when playing on the digital ballfield. And that cost only drops after you've eaten the initial development (though I'd hope they'd spend a little money on a plain interface for mobile devices, etc.)

But please don't ask me to make a prognostication as to how this is going to turn out. There's some good stuff there, most of it's readable (but largely not my thing), probably enough to keep people coming back, if the content comes in regularly and is updated often. Besides, DC shouldn't be aiming this at me; they should be aiming this at folks who aren't reading comics yet but could possibly be talked into it.

And here's the second of my Halloween-dated pieces, posted at the dead-but-not-forgotten Dark, But Shining. It's about a western. A good one.