"We are all in the gutter, but some of us..."
Taking Trash Seriously.
"...are looking at the stars."
-- Oscar Wilde
August 10, 2006
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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. Our Guest Stars shine here

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. Contact us here.


Recent Features


Disconnected Viewing

sita brahmin.jpegI don't have cable right now so I'm rewatching old shows and movies. A lot of them are animated. Such is my way. I'd like to have a nobler reason for rewatching them--something like when James revisited his favorite childhood books. And it's true—he did inspire me. But it's also true that I don't have cable.

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Hammering Away at the Here and Now

mapinternet-small.jpgLet's say you're the newly-sentient internet. How would you decipher the meaning of all the bits and bytes whizzing past you? And what about the real world outside your electronic realm?

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Pilgrim's Progress

Pilgrim 80.jpgFormer Comics Editor, Guy Leshinski has very kindly given us permission to reprint a prophetic interview with Bryan Lee O'Malley in 2005.  Will Bryan Lee O'Malley attain the Holy Grail of cartoonists? As Bryan says, "We'll see..."


There’s a girl sitting on the subway. She’s 16 or so, in a brown corduroy jacket and a pair of faded sneakers, her feet propped on the seat across from her. She’s absently brushing on lipstick, absorbed by Bryan Lee O’Malley’s graphic novel Scott Pilgrim’s Precious Little Life: Volume 1.

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Breaking Taboos

by James Schellenberg

Under this flag is a coffin with a zombie in itHorror stories make people uncomfortable or scared in many ways. The most basic has always been fear of death and/or physical destruction. For example, I don't want my body torn to shreds by zombies, so I'll be scared if it happens to a character I empathize with.

In another sense, taboos are what's being broken -- taboo behaviour such as violence and all the other things that happen in a horror movie but not (constantly) in real life. But what happens when a zombie story breaks taboos that are unusual? If the zombies don't eat very many brains, are they still scary?

That question came to mind while I was watching "Homecoming," a short film directed by Joe Dante for the recent anthology series on Showtime, Masters of Horror. ("Homecoming" was written by Sam Hamm from a short story by a writer well-known in SF circles, Dale Bailey. Bailey's story, "Death and Suffrage," is different than the resulting script, as I'll point out in a minute.)

It's a zombie show, complete with hordes of zombies and stinkingly evil villains. But most significantly it's an attack on the current American government, which is where the more interesting breaking-of-taboos comes from. Dead soldiers start coming back from the Iraq War, mainly in order to vote against the politicians who started the war.

The first scene with zombies is also the best: no photographs are allowed of coffins coming back from the war, and two guards go to investigate some noises since they have to chase off photographers. All of the flag-draped coffins start erupting. It's a potent image! The restless dead leaving their flag-draped coffins is a peerless way to uncover all of the costs of war that the warmongers desperately want to stay hidden. Like the best genre work, it mixes the power of metaphor with the potency of a literal story.

Under this flag is a coffin with a zombie in itThe image is mirrored later in the show by zombies breaking out of their graves. Unfortunately, the hands rising up out of the dirt is an old cliche, and it doesn't have the same power, to shock or to make us think. Somewhere, Dante loses his way.

In other words, "Homecoming" starts strong but doesn't entirely know where to go. Death made manifest and making the cost of war obvious... this is all good stuff. Dante's overly obvious anti-Bush messages are layered onto this basic structure, with some odd results. For example, within the show, the politicians and their PR spin are critiqued for speaking for dead soldiers, but the show itself is speaking for the dead by making them zombies who vote anti-war. The obvious distinction of course is that these are just moviemakers, and their targets are people who are actually doing the oh-so-heroic task of sending others to die.

"Homecoming" also breaks the taboo against cheesiness, to put it facetiously. Scenes too schmaltzy to be borne include the main character's flashbacks to the real cause of his brother's death. There's also another scene in a cafe where parents of a soldier still serving in Iraq welcome a zombie. Even the soldier's dog likes the zombie, which is a manipulation too far (and also flies in the face of all zombie knowledge that I've gleaned from the movies -- dogs always start barking at a supernatural threat before anyone else knows what is going on).

The anti-Republican satire is pretty close to the bone, since the characters are so schematically drawn from real life. The "fictional" characters of Jane Cleaver and Kurt Rand in particular are harsh, but like most satire, it's almost always overtaken by reality (to be perfectly clear on what I'm talking about, see this recent story about Ann Coulter calling Al Gore a "total fag"). Bailey finished his original story in 2000, so it obviously doesn't have any material about the Bush Administration; also, it was about victims of gun violence rather than the Iraq War.

All in all though, this political stuff seems much less visceral than a typical zombie story. Politics is something people disagree on (even if the issues seem clear enough), but nobody really wants a zombie to chew on their intestines while they're still alive and watching. I'm certainly not claiming that the only thing a zombie movie can do is show excessive gore and guts -- more that Dante and his team have a hard job to stretch zombies into overt political satire. They succeed in scenes like the aircraft hangar filled with coffins, but the success is not consistent.

Showtime has been releasing all of the Masters of Horror series on separate DVDs, which would ordinarily be an annoying money grab. But it looks like each DVD is getting star treatment, with tons of extras and added value.

So I regret to note that most of the episodes are poor in quality. Masters of Horror was intended to give free rein to horror movie directors who have already proved their abilities. Instead, the opposite seems to have happened, and the series has proved that constraints are usually good for creativity.

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Of Note Elsewhere
Wicked posters for Raleigh, North Carolina's Cinema Overdrive film series.
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Here are some pictures of the ladies reading comics for Read Comics in Public Day. As Gail Simone writes, "Take note everybody in comics!"  (For the record, Carol read Kurosagi Corpse Delivery Service 5 on a sidewalk bench, but there's no photo).
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48 vs. 61 in Rintaro and Katsushiro Otomo's excellent bicycle racing short where the racers look kinda like Rintaro and Otomo. Also, damn fine music and possible steampunkery.
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Klingon opera has finally happened. Get an earful at Cinematical. (The musical part begins at about 2:15).
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Makiko Itoh has translated Satoshi Kon's farewell.
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