Marvel Knights: Make the World Go Away

Marvel Knights: Make the World Go Away

The Marvel Knights are a superhero team with a complicated publishing backstory and, on Earth-616 (if you care about these things), a fluid line-up. I think they were always headed by Daredevil though.

What I like about them is that most of the members are meat-and-potatoes type grinders rather than mutants or aliens or deities with otherworldly powers. In this limited series written primarily by Donny Cates the Knights are Daredevil, Punisher, Elektra, and Black Panther, with the Hulk sort of tagging along to open doors. (Note: Before I get asked in the comments, I believe the figure on the cover appearing on the far right is Karnak, one of the Inhumans. I don’t know why his picture is on the cover. He’s not with the Marvel Knights here.) Aside from the Hulk they’re all just really athletic fighting machines, good with guns and martial arts but that’s about it. And that’s all I want most of the time.

The story here I found really intriguing. Matt Murdock (Daredevil) wakes up in a graveyard not knowing why he’s there or who he is. He’s met by Frank Castle (Punisher) who is a cop in this timeline, and who has also forgotten his secret identity but is being led around by a weird-acting Bruce Banner, contacting the members of the Knights. All of whom are stuck in the same state of amnesia.

But it’s not just the Knights. The whole world’s memory has been wiped by some unspecified “machine,” basically rebooting this corner of the Marvel universe. So reassembling the Knights is a difficult enterprise since none of the members knows or trusts any of the others. Poor Frank in particular gets the crap beaten out of him by pretty much everybody.

I thought this was an interesting premise and it worked well. Like I say, these heroes are grinders and that part of their identities is emphasized as they often make do with substitute, makeshift costumes. The Punisher just has a t-shirt with his logo. Black Panther has a face mask with some fangs on it.

Unfortunately, I thought it was an idea that needed more room to run. A lot more room. There are things going on that aren’t explained — though they may be elsewhere, in some other timestream. We’re not told what the machine is or its purpose. Doctor Doom and Kingpin are both involved, with Doctor Doom apparently knowing more about what’s going on, but neither of them tell us anything. (As an aside, I was also impressed at how powerful Kingpin has been getting. He’s almost another Hulk at this point, and just smashes Doctor Doom, which surprised me.) The status of Karen Page was mystifying. Angel? Ghost in the machine? And finally the ending was quite abrupt and anticlimactic. The Hulk does his thing and the machine has a reset button so that everyone can just get switched back to normal.

Disappointing then, but disappointing because there wasn’t more of it. I felt like they could have let it run for some more issues and given it a better ending. But comics are all about the churn and keeping the pipeline flowing. Finish one story arc and then on to the next.

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Churchgoing

I’ll bet you didn’t know Guelph had a B.A.C. That’s a Big Ass Cathedral. It’s right downtown and its proper name is the Basilica of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. Or just the Basilica of Our Lady for short. If you want the brochure bit:

The Basilica of our Lady Immaculate has been a place of worship and reflection for over 125 years. The Basilica is constructed of local limestone in the Gothic Revival style. It towers over the Guelph community as a constant reminder of God’s love and a community’s resilience. Designated a National Historic Site, it is the most visited tourist destination in the city of Guelph.

After an intensive five phase restoration spanning many years, the restoration was completed in December 2014. There was a special dedication mass at the Church on December 8, 2014, and it was at this mass that Bishop Crosby announced that our Holy Father Pope Francis had elevated our church to the status of a Basilica in honour of its rich history and the importance of this parish in the Diocese of Hamilton and the City of Guelph.

In the fall of 2015, the Basilica of our Lady Immaculate was recognized for the restoration of the church. The Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals awarded their 2015 Award of Excellence to our Church. This is the largest respected collective of heritage professionals involved in the preservation of our national heritage properties. In November we received the Peter Stokes Award by the Architectural Conservancy of Ontario.

You can read a lot more, and see professional pictures at their website.

I’ve been inside it exactly once, to listen to a chorus a friend was singing in.

This is a view from the parking lot.

And this is the view taken standing in the same spot as the first picture, but turned around and looking at beautiful downtown Guelph. Photos have a way of flattening hills. If you look over that hedge there are three steep flights of steps leading up to the cathedral. That street is a long way down.

Anyway, there’s your local tour. Drop by and visit anytime!

Holmes: The Case of the Gifted Amateur

The multifaceted J. C. Masterman published this slight send-up of a Holmes story in 1952, and it still stands as one of the more complex entries in that genre.

So much so that one might even ask if it’s a send-up. The story is narrated by Inspector Lestrade, who is being interviewed at a Surrey nursing home by a writer digging for Holmesiana. As is so often the case, Lestrade is less interested in Holmes’s exploits than he is in his own, being the hero of his own story. He does, however, manage to recall this tale of the theft of the Dark Diamond of Dungbura from a semi-locked room (we know who went in and out of the room, and that the thief couldn’t have been anyone else). The reason he shares this story with the interviewer is because he sees it as casting Holmes in a bad light, as little more than the “gifted amateur” he wants to make him out to be.

But does he? It’s a quick story with a nifty trick to it, as there’s one person with access to the room who we don’t suspect. The real question though is whether Holmes might be ahead of the game, and is only looking on with a sense of irony as the culprit falls into what was a trap while the Gifted Amateur ends up getting paid.

That’s the feeling I had anyway, coming away from the story thinking that it was another example of Lestrade being too thick to understand, even after the fact, that he’s been played.

Holmes index

“Love” sounds a little strong

They have these banners up now all over downtown. Civic pride, I guess. Because this town isn’t a real tourist destination so most of the people seeing them are locals anyway. So isn’t that a little like loving yourself?

Not sure I love Guelph. But on balance it’s a nice place to live. Nicer than most other places I’ve been, or can think of.

The crowns, by the way, are a reference to our identity as “The Royal City.”

Ka-Zar: Lord of the Shadow Land

Ka-Zar: Lord of the Savage Land

Not my thing.

Ka-Zar was basically Marvel’s answer to Tarzan, the son of an English lord who was raised by a saber-tooth cat named Zabu in the Savage Land after his father’s untimely death. He didn’t have much in the way of super powers, but was a muscular guy in a loincloth who could usually hold his own against most superheroes and villains. At some point he married a jungle babe named Shanna the She-Devil and had a son named Matthew. Also at some other point he got killed but he was brought back to life. Which is where this series kicks off as a hero reboot.

And it’s quite a power-up, right down to his now high-tech breeches. Ka-Zar has gone from being a Tarzan figure to becoming something more like DC’s Animal Man, channeling the strengths and abilities of whatever animal he wants (including dinosaurs, which still live in the Savage Land). In fact, he’s even more than this now, and the comparison I made most readily was to Swamp Thing as the Knight of the Green. But then Animal Man was more recently revealed to be the defender of the Red or animal world, so these books are all talking the same language. Suffice to say that Ka-Zar is not just the Lord of the Savage Land but a god. Indeed, he even proclaims himself the God of Balance, which I thought being a bit full of himself, even if it’s true.

To be honest I never found Ka-Zar that interesting, but somehow with this new mythological overlay I found him even less so. And his domestic set-up with Shanna and Matthew (now a teenager) was dull too. The only bright spot here is the bad guy he’s up against, a figure known as Domovoy the Flesh Weaver. Now I didn’t really know what Domovoy was, or what his issues were, but he looks like a sort of walking octopus and he’s the half-machine creator (or perhaps just the leader) of an army of “Polyscions” who are also biotech monstrosities. As far as I could Domovoy the Flesh Weaver and the Polyscions (a great band name) constituted some sort of Savage Land death cult. They sort of have an environmentalist point of view, but it’s tainted by all their machine parts. In any event, Ka-Zar has become one with all of nature and so has evolved to a point where he knows that “death is just the beginning of a new phase.” Like Swamp Thing, he is now an eternally dying and reviving god, here to preach a green gospel: “Domovoy’s technology won’t save us. It’s callous to think so. The only thing that can save us now is being mindful. We must focus on today and reintegrate ourselves with nature. It’s sincerely that simple.”

As with so many of today’s comics I found myself thinking that less would have been more. Shanna doesn’t have much to do here aside from nursing Ka-Zar back to health, while freckle-faced Matthew is the most annoying character I’ve come across in a long time. This would have been a better comic if those two had been left out of things and Ka-Zar had fought Domovoy one-on-one with only his hands and some stone-flaked knives. But the mythic impulse seems irresistible, and it’s become a fatal attraction.

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Bookmarked! #141: The Fun Years

Take a book to bed instead . . . of what? A bottle? A blonde?

I don’t know when I picked these up, but it says they were printed in the mid-1980s which sounds about right. Bookstores and libraries used to always have stacks of free bookmarks like these at the checkout but now you rarely see them.

Book: Written in Water: The Ephemeral Life of the Classic in Art by Rochelle Gurstein

Bookmarked Bookmarks

Hammer: One Lonely Night

1951, the beginnings of the Cold War. Or the cold war, as it’s rendered here, as it hadn’t gotten around to being capitalized yet. (An aside: it’s thought that George Orwell was the first to use the term “cold war,” in 1945, and he didn’t capitalize it either.) Mike Hammer is going for a lonely walk that takes him across what I think is the George Washington Bridge, feeling morose after having been reamed out by an angry judge. It seem the Judge, a figure who will continue to haunt Mike throughout the novel, disapproves of Mike’s brutal methods. Standing behind the Judge might we see a shadowy cabal of book reviewers and the literary establishment taking their shots? I think it likely.

I’ve mentioned before how toxic a fellow Mike Hammer is, and how so many of the babes he encounters soon wind up dead. Indeed, this is something he frequently takes himself to task for, and is the excuse he gives in Vengeance is Mine! for not committing himself to Velda. Well, in One Lonely Night this fatal effect is felt immediately as Mike meets a beauty in distress who is being pursued by a gunman who is both a “dirty son-of-a-bitch” and a “fat little slob.” Spillane does like to pile it on when it comes to invective. Mike shoots the gunman and the girl, who is terrified of Mike, jumps off the bridge. So that didn’t take long!

Just to keep with this theme for a bit, there’s another babe that Mike meets who winds up being shot, but she actually gets to live. I think because we want to see her live to recognize the errors of her ways. And that’s all the curveball you’re going to get here.

The plot is chaotic, and more than a little far-fetched. Basically the two people on the bridge connect up with a ring of Commies who are getting together to plot . . . a bunch of dastardly Commie things, no doubt. You will be unsurprised to learn that Mike Hammer, despite having no interest in politics (“I haven’t voted since they dissolved the Whig party”) has an instinctual, homicidal hatred of Commies. And so does Velda. They are the Red Menace. They are a “tumor.” They are “a scurvy bunch of lice.” They are “dirty, filthy Red bastards!” You get the picture. It was the time of the Red Scare, a historical fact even if the Red Menace was a bogeyman of the explicitly “cartoon kind” presented here. Lots of upper-class pansies cosplaying as revolutionaries, like the loser the society beauty gets engaged to. For readers of Dorothy Sayers he sounds a lot like Goyles from Clouds of Witness or Harriet in “The Fascinating Problem of Uncle Meleager’s Will.” (An aside: British mystery stories of the time found socialists and Communists a source of fun. It was in America post-War that they became a threat to the existence of Western civilization.) Anyway, the loser I mentioned in this novel is a “down-and-out artist who made speeches for the Communist Party and was quite willing to become a capitalist by marriage. He was a conscientious objector during the war though he probably could have made 4-F without trouble.” 4-F, in case you’re wondering, is a designation that someone is not qualified for military service due to medical, psychological, or moral reasons. But the main knock against this guy is that he’s not a true believer in Communist ideology, like the Red killers who are Mike’s real nemeses.

Joined to this plot that has Mike as Cold Warrior is another parallel story involving an up-and-coming politician, someone who is ready to take it to the Reds. Unfortunately, said politician is being blackmailed by a psycho twin brother. How these two plotlines intersect is where things get ridiculous, and I won’t try to explain. Suffice it to say that Mike piles up a lot of bodies before he’s through. He even has to break out a Tommy gun for the climactic slaughter. This is when he has gone completely kill-crazy, a Berserker fugue state where we get interior monologues like this: “Kill ‘em left and right . . . Kill, kill, kill, kill!” This is war, after all. “I was a killer and I was looking forward to killing again. I wanted them all, every one of them from bottom to top and especially the one at the top even if I had to go to the Kremlin to do it.”

That’s a tough hill to climb, but . . .

But some day, maybe, some day I’d stand on the steps of the Kremlin with a gun in my fist and I’d yell for them to come out and if they wouldn’t I’d go in and get them and when I had them lined up against the wall I’d start shooting until all I had left was a row of corpses that bled on the cold floors and in whose thick red blood would be the promise of a peace that would stick for more generations than I’d live to see.

A little of this goes a long way, and there’s a lot of it. There’s also a lot of soft, yielding babes throwing themselves into Mike’s arms. Even after Mike has apparently proposed to Velda, giving her a ring. Basically we ping-pong between scenes of sex and violence, so quickly that at times the two start to blur. Mike fantasizes about administering corporal punishment to one babe and gets as far as ripping her clothes off and getting set to enjoy “a naked woman and a leather belt” but she is shot through the window just as he swings the first crack of the belt across her thighs. Those dirty Reds again! It’s like Commie interruptus! Then later Mike will rescue Velda from perverse Red tortures, as she is being whipped while hanging “stark naked” from the rafters. A moment that made its way onto the cover even. Signet knew what they were selling.

If this were all there were to Spillane I don’t think I’d bother with him. You can see why so many critics were disgusted, and why Hammer was so popular. But Spillane could write. While there are sloppy moments when minor characters seem to drop in out of nowhere, there are also places where some care seems to have been exercised. The way the torn green Communist Party membership cards are described as twins, or how the movie Mike goes to see is about a man with a split personality, play into the good vs. evil twin motif. Or the way Velda is described as “a great big, luxurious cat leaning against the desk. A cat with gleaming black hair darker than the night and a hidden body of smooth skin that covered a wealth of rippling, deadly muscles that were poised for the kill. The desk light made her teeth an even row of merciless ivory, ready to rip and tear.” That may be boilerplate, but two pages later, as Mike and Velda are making their way through a foggy alley filled with rats we get this:

Soft furry things would squeal and run across our feet wherever we disturbed the junk lying around. Tiny pairs of eyes would glare at us balefully and retreat when we came closer. A cat moved in the darkness and trapped a pair of eyes that had been paying too much attention to us and the jungle echoed with a mad death cry.

As the scene develops Velda will actually kill a Red in the apartment they’re breaking into. We don’t have to reach far back to make the connection: Velda is the killer big cat in this urban jungle.

The other thing about Spillane that makes him such an easy read is his demotic style. As you’d expect, some of the language has changed in the last 75 years, but a plain piece of writing like this sentence still feels fresh: “It was a little before noon, so I hopped in the heap and tooled it up Broadway and angled over to the hotel where it cost me a buck to park in an unloading zone with a guy to cover for me.” Tooling one’s heap isn’t something we’d say today, but I think we still get a clear picture of what’s happening here. And with the language comes a certain vision of the traffic on the street, a vision without any Toyotas or Teslas in sight.

Even giving credit where it’s due though, I found this a slog of a read. The politics are crude and repetitive, it’s easy to figure out what the twist at the end is going to be, and the emphasis on sex and violence even managed to put me off. One gets the feeling that Spillane was just banging these out at this point, reducing the series to a lowest common denominator of character and plot.

Hammer index

Libraries, old and new

This is the main branch of my hometown’s public library. The building has been there a long time. I remember going there when I was eight years old.

They are currently building a new library just a block away. It’s coming along nicely and looks like it’s going to be really big. On this particular morning the police were driving around a lot because there’d been an accident just a road over. (You can click on the pics to make them bigger.)

Parasyte: Full Color Collection 1

Parasyte Full Color Collection 1

Another popular manga series, this time in a deluxe colored version. Hitoshi Iwaaki’s Parasyte was originally serialized from 1989 to 1994, when it appeared in black-and-white. Having success (over 25 million copies in circulation by 2022), it would later go on to spawn some spin-offs and be made into a TV series and some films.

As you probably know, I’m not the world’s biggest manga fan, and Parasyte shares some of the main faults that characterize the form, at least for me. The two I’d highlight are (1) the lazy artwork, with indecipherable fight scenes, generic figure, and characters who somehow fail to register any emotion at all on their faces even when supposedly experiencing incredible shocks, and (2) the odd blend of violence and gore with leering, juvenile sexual elements.

But even with those strikes against it I enjoyed Parasyte. It’s has a good basic story, with alien spores falling to Earth, where they immediately crawl inside the brains of other, host life forms. One of them tries to get into the brain of highschool student Shinichi Izumi but he stops it and it can only inhabit his right hand. He calls it “Migi” (Japanese for “right”), and they share a consciousness and talk to each other so that Migi is able to explain to Shinichi what is going on. Migi also has special alien powers that allow him to fight with other aliens. This is important as the aliens can sense each other and they’re not happy that Migi and Shinichi form a human-alien hybrid. And these aliens are very dangerous, as they have the ability to split open and unwind in fantastic ways that allows them to tear humans apart and eat them. This leads the newspapers to be full of reports of the “mincemeat murders,” because that’s all that’s left of people once the aliens are done with them.

What I liked about Parasyte is that it avoids the usual manga trap of just repeating the same situations over and over, with the hero taking on progressively more powerful bad guys. The story is more complicated than that, with a number of interesting pieces that introduce some real drama, like Shinichi’s relationship with his parents, a would-be girlfriend, and a sexy teacher who is an alien. There are also allegorical and political messages in play, from the way Shinichi’s battle with Migi’s impulses stands in for anxiety over masturbation to the environmental angle that, in this first volume at least, is only hinted at.

The upshot being that this is a manga that I actually want to continue reading. High praise!

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