Saturday, August 09, 2008

easier done than said


Spend enough time on the comics internet and you're bound to run across one: a burst of message board bile or an angsty long form blogpost about how some recent event in the comics scene has raped the author's childhood, kicked her dog, or fractured some part of their anatomy, and so now they must holler a pointed "Adieu to comics" from their soapbox. Then, after a hiatus of minutes or even hours, they return to piss and moan about how Jean Grey is depicted in the latest issue of X-Cessive Franchise X-Pansion. Net-based bluster and net-based drama are cheap.

The sad truth is that the habits of ingrained fandom are harder to excise than pancreatic cancer. The attachment to the characters and titles and the serialized nature of the medium make it too easy to stick around for a while and hope things will sort themselves out, especially when a large percentage of the fanbase is caught up in the obsessive collector's mindset and will keep throwing money down a hole for the sake of completeness.

Which is why I was a bit startled to realize that my own sense of fandom has apparently scabbed up and fallen off after three decades. It's not a political statement or an empty gesture of protest...or a gesture of protest of any kind. Nor is it a blanket repudiation of my affection for the medium. I have no plans to unload my collection or quit buying reprint editions or back issues that interest me. I have simply quit caring about the current crop of offerings in the superhero genre and the marketing psychodrama that goes with them.

It was a small epiphany at the end of long, drawn out process, and it happened while I was reading the latest issue of DC's current big event title, Final Crisis. The series and comic itself weren't half bad. It's competently written and illustrated, contains the expected lashings of bombast and melodrama, and is more intelligently constructed than one would expect from an editorially-mandated tentpole title.

As well-crafted as Final Crisis is, it still comes off as an exercise in creative decadence, mired in the poorly focused sense of deja vu that typifies the present-day Marvel and DC Universes. The superhero genre has always been predicated upon finding new routes for the trip to the same old well, but these days it feels different somehow, with familiarity stressed as much as cosmetic differences used to be.

There are exceptions, but for the most part it feels that no one even tries to achieve escape velocity anymore. Instead they settle for a predicable (yet decaying) orbit around childhood nostalgia and creative hero worship that mimics superficial forms but not the underlying substance. The results are essentially licensed fan-fiction, a downward spiral clogged with hobby-horses and trivial obsessions passing for actual storytelling, and kept moving with clumsy grafts taken from the popcult zeitgeist. Why settle for adequate (at best) knock-offs that shamelessly ape the source material when you can just read the original stories?

I fully concede the point that "it's new to you, maybe, but not to a lot of fans," though that same logic, when applied to Gus Van Sant's remake of Psycho over the original film or Oasis's discography over that of The Beatles, comes off as pretty laughable. I've been collecting superhero comics for over three decades now. There have been creative high points and plenty of low ones, and through it all I've managed to stay engaged with the material, with some sense of eager anticipation. Now, at age thirty-six, I feel like I've outgrown the scene.

It's not fan entitlement that moves me, just plain vanilla apathy for current offerings, for the online mind-games between producers and vociferous aggrieved consumers (which is just sort of pathetic), and for the utter foolishness of it all.

Me, curse the darkness? Nah. Better, I think, to curl up on the couch with a tall glass of ice tea and the OMAC omnibus edition and quit pretending I care about Skrulls, demonic annulments, display cases, or other nonsense.

Belle & Sebastian - I'm Waking Up To Us (from a 2001 single, collected on Push Barman to Open Old Wounds, 2005) - It's not you, baby, it's me and you...but mostly you, though.

4 comments:

Mark W. Hale said...

Yeah. Exactly.

Dave Lartigue said...

There's a Peanuts comic where Charlie Brown is explaining to Sally that he has to put his left shoe on first for good luck on a game day because otherwise they might lose. Sally asks, "Have you ever won?" leaving Mr. C. B. sitting on the floor with an existential conundrum but no shoes when Linus comes to get him later on.

A lot of fans seem to have this same dread of what will happen if they stop doing what they're doing. they saw the other two movies in the series; what will happen if they don't see the third? They've bought all the other action figures; what if they don't buy the latest repaint of a character they've already bought dozens of times? They've bought this comic title for fifteen years; what'll happen if they quit, even though they don't like it anymore? They define themselves through consumption and habit, so surely if either is tampered with great engines will cease to function.

My personal experience and that of others I've known in similar situations has been a great feeling of relief. When I stopped buying Magic cards, watching TV shows that no longer interested me, dropped comic titles, quit buying Star Wars action figures, each time the fear of how hard it would be to quit was eliminated almost instantly. Instead of it being hard to stop, it was deliciously easy, and felt so good. And the slaying of each back-monkey emboldened me and made the next even easier.

Unknown said...

To piggyback on the previous commentor it IS liberating. It felt good to not like Civil War and promptly stop buying after the second issue. I wasn't even interested in the debates as to whether it was good or not. I didn't enjoy it so who cares what other people thought because it's not like they were going to see the light and say "Why you are correct! It does stink." Maybe that just comes with getting older. My problem is that sometimes when I get older stuff that I used to like or missed back in the day, some of it does not withstand the test of time. Except for the Defenders.

Harvey Jerkwater said...

Another to join your chorus. I walked away from comicry about two years ago, for the same reason, and it's been freeing. The comic blog-o-sphere provides me with amusement and entertainment without the cost or time of actual comicry. Sweet.

You point out the great fear of the comic companies. They don't care if they're hated -- hate proves you care. Stoking hate keeps you caring, too. What they fear is love's true opposite, apathy. If they piss you off, they can win you back with a sweet word and a promise it'll be all different this time. If you don't care anymore, they're in a tough spot.