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Tag: Review (page 2 of 2)

A very personal review of Alt-Hero #2: Rebel’s Cell

Back into the world of Arkhaven we go. As with issue #1, we pick back up with the recruitment of superheroes, but this time we have hopped the pond to the states. And topics are now highly relevant: one of our heroes is acting as a vigilante enforcer, ridding the world of MS13 and Antifa one gang at a time.

There are quite a few other triggers embedded in the story, too. You could play bingo with current events.

But the real story is the introduction of Rebel, our Southern Belle superhero. TBH, I’m not sure what her superpower is aside from being hot, flexible, and charming, but I trust that we’ll find out in the coming issues. I have a feeling that Rebel will become a major plot point.

Because this issue focused mainly on two superheroes instead of one, the plot felt a little more disjointed. Not bad enough to be an issue, but there was a lot of ground to cover in a short amount of time so don’t expect any hand-holding or elegant transitions.

Which leads me to my major logistical complaint: sometimes I’m still not sure which panel to read in what order, and sometimes panels seem to be jammed into the story without warning. There are a few rapid transitions and flashbacks in this issue that took me a few read-throughs to parse out. (Please note that I’m not a seasoned comics reader so your mileage may vary.)

However. The art is much improved in this issue. So much that I could see someone ripping out a page and hanging it in his wall (but somehow I suspect that is comic book sacrilege). I appreciate enjoyed the range and quality of the facial expressions, and the backgrounds. All those trees!

The coloring is also pretty great, especially the bits with light it fire in them.

Anyhow, this was a fun issue meeting many of the American heroes (including a 100% genuine American badass). Where issue #1 sucked me in with a compelling story, issue #2 presents a myriad of compelling characters.

It’s a nice balance, and I look forward to seeing how the story develops on both sides of the Atlantic.

And maybe the Pacific, based on that cliffhanger!

Apollo Burger appreciation post

Update: this appears to apply only to the downtown location.

Travel changes everything, y’all. Because that’s all I”m posting about. Travel and food.

In this case I have a purpose. I would like to express my deepest appreciation for Apollo Burger for existing a block away from my hotel.

Not only do they serve 1/3 pound burgers (really!) made out of high-quality beef, the server didn’t bat an eye when I asked for my usual. (That’s 4 patties to go in a box with a side of bacon, please.)

Not only do they serve breakfast, but when I ordered their biggest breakfast without hashbrowns or cheese, they made up for it by giving me an extra egg and some extra bacon.

Not only is their store impeccably clean and stylish, but their service is fast.

The food is freeking delicious, too. Even cold, the burgers are juicy. There’s just the right amount of char on them from the grill, but they’re not overdone at all. And the size is so satisfying.

And, my usual is roundabouts $10. That’s cheaper than Burgerville, and I owe them an appreciation post as well.

If you’re ever in Utah, check out Apollo Burger.

American Psycho: A Portrait of Gamma Rage

I read American Psycho even though I didn’t particularly like it. Patrick Bateman’s inner monologue reads like a cross between bad chick-lit (brand names, restaurants, and a weird obsession with grooming) and mansplaining (or when a 12-year-old boy explains to you in detail his drawing of a war scene) (I say this with love), sprinkled with enough italics to out-Victorian the Victorians.

This is clearly deliberate, but I was expecting something akin to “The Confessions of Anders Breivik” (should those exist) but got more like “A Portrait of Gamma Rage.”

What is a Gamma, you ask? Gamma is a level on a hierarchy of male behaviors that is more nuanced than the simple alpha/beta dichotomy. Gamma is very useful for distinguishing between helpful beta behavior and useless beta behavior. Vox Day developed this hierarchy and I’ve found it to be very useful in dealing with men in the workplace. (Disclaimer: I’m a woman.)

American Psycho is an portrait of a Wall Street executive in the 80s. It has the air of literary fiction, in which the author clearly looks down upon his protagonist and is clearly making a Very Serious Thoughts About Society. The ambiguous ending adds to this, which I find obnoxious because while I enjoy puzzling out books, I do not enjoy puzzling out books that the author very self consciously wants you to puzzle out.

Forgive me, I’m a recovering English major. Anything that reminds me of an MFA seminar makes me break out in hives.

Additionally, unlike The Wolf of Wall Street (movie edition) which was told by an unreliable narrator clearly trying to sell us on how cool he is but that actually had the chops to back it up and who had a sense of humor, Patrick Bateman doesn’t have a sense of humor. He never talks about work. He talks about the office, and business cards, lunch meetings, and the Fisher account, all sorts of stuff RELATING to work, but never anything about doing actual work. He never appears to actually do anything.

I think this is deliberate on the part of the author, and it reads like this is somebody’s idea of how Wall Street works rather than an actual satire of the real (“real”?) work in finance. The Wolf of Wall Street felt like it was told in good faith; American Psycho I’m not so sure. However, I like how the author took the “killer” phrases that men often use in the workplace, and use them for dramatic effect:

He pats me on the back, says, “You’re a madman, Bateman. An animal. A total animal.”

“I can’t disagree.” I laugh weakly, walking him to the door.

That’s not to defend Wall Street, because I’ve seen the corruption in Higher Education and I can’t even imagine how bad it gets when there are actual, material rewards to be stolen. I just wish that this book had more substance, instead of mirror.

Now. Half of that is because Patrick Bateman is quite likely a Gamma male, and the violence in the book is most likely (spoilers really start here) all inside of his head. I started to realize this about halfway through the book, when he claims to have killed a dog in front of a grocery store in broad daylight, with nobody noticing. Of course Bateman’s point is that people are sheep and don’t pay attention to anything, but when, later in the book, a shootout with the police results in an exploding gas tank, I have a hard time taking this guy’s narration at face value. Clearly a rich fantasy life.

That takes care of gamma tell number one:

There are two easy Gamma signals. The first is dishonesty, particularly in the face of conflict. That dishonesty can take many forms, from false bravado to bizarre lies about their accomplishments to inaccurate explanations of their actions.

Bateman goes so far into his delusions that he imagines real-life consequences for his own imagined actions, such as when a cabbie mugs him in revenge for the time that he killed another cab driver. Or, for instance, in a scene near the beginning of the book ends in him blinding a bum, but he happens across the same bum later in the novel with a sign that reads “Blinded in Vietnam.”

Gamma tell number two comes into play at the end of the novel, where we’re coasting toward the realization that ~maybe it was a delusion after all:

The second is heightened sensitivity. The Gamma is constantly on the alert for what others are thinking and saying about him. He is excessively pleased by praise and will often cite it, and is inordinately upset by criticism. He has a very limited capacity for shrugging off either.

The narration gives us a few cracks in which to see the true Bateman, or see Bateman through others’ eyes. The next exchange happens at a party, where Bateman corners Carnes, who he once called and left a voicemail confessing all the crimes he had committed, which he then tried to pass off as a joke. Of course none of the men remember each others’ names, so Carnes thinks this whole thing is a joke played by somebody named Davis.

“Davis,” he sighs, as if patiently trying to explain something to a child, “I am not one to bad-mouth anyone, but your joke was amusing. But come on, man, you had one fatal flaw: Bateman’s such a bloody ass-kisser, such a brown-nosing goody-goody, that I couldn’t fully appreciate it. Otherwise it was amusing. Now let’s have lunch, or we’ll have dinner at 150 Wooster or something with McDermott or Preston. A real raver.” He tries to move on.

“Ray-vah? Ray-vah? Did you say ray-vah, Carnes?” I’m wide-eyed, feeling wired even though I haven’t done any drugs. “What are you talking about? Bateman is what?”

“Oh good god, man. Why else would Evelyn Richards dump him? You know, really. He could barely pick up an escort girl, let alone…what was it you said he did to her?” Harold is still looking distractedly around the club and he waves to another couple, raising his champagne glass. “Oh yes, ‘chop her up.'” He starts laughing again, though this time it sounds polite. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I must really.”

In delusion-land, this could be another example of how you can spell something out to people but, unlike people who are enlightened by their own intelligence, who will never pay attention enough to understand. In real life, nobody takes Bateman seriously. Bateman, though, tries to make fun of your uncultured Boston accent.

Then we turn to a third gamma tell: the secret king. This is my favorite.

All gammas are secret kings ruling over their delusion bubble with majesty and sly, smooth charm….

In this passage, from the breakup scene, Bateman lays it right on out:

“Honey?” she asks.

“Don’t call me that,” I snap.

“What? Honey?” she asks.

“Yes,” I snap again.

“What do you want me to call you?” she asks, indignantly. “CEO?” She stifles a giggle.

“Oh Christ.”

“No, really Patrick. What do you want me to call you?”

King, I’m thinking. King, Evelyn. I want you to call me King. But I don’t say this.

And by not saying it, he stays safely inside the delusion bubble.

I don’t know anything about the author of American Psycho, Brett Easton Ellis, but part of me wonders how much he is projecting into this book. Honestly wondering, this is not a leading question or anything.

There were funny moments, but they didn’t offset the “I’m just gonna skip ahead a few pages” depictions of violence and sex. At some point, even if it’s supposed to be satire, there’s a limit. Maybe my limit is lower than most people’s. But I’m at the point where I don’t want my mind’s eye cluttered with that type of imagery.

Thematically, Batesons’s skewed self-image raises questions of the difference between how others see us and what we keep inside, hidden to ourselves. I can relate to that, as I’ve kept quite a number of things (like my political views) hidden from my own colleagues. Questions like this can be interesting to ask ourselves–if we’re being honest–and can spark a good amount of self-reflection.

I’m not sure you need this book to do that.

 


It’s also fun to finally understand some references that I didn’t even know were references. Surprise!

A very personal review of Alt-Hero #1: Crackdown

Okay: there are some things that you should know if you’re going to read one my review of a comic.

1. I’m a reluctant comics reader. I’m not even really a comics person at all, there just happen to be a few that I really like (like Watchmen, Hellboy, Scott Pilgrim vs The World, and Tintin).

2. Double that for superhero comics. I couldn’t even make it through the series that the first Thor movie was based on, even though I liked the movie and the writer that wrote both the movie and the comic. And that was when I was actively taking a class on comics because I want to understand.

Basically I’m a comics window-shopper.

So trust me when I tell you that I opened Alt-Hero #1: Crackdown and it’s so good that I read the whole thing in one sitting.

I was just going to open her up, look at a few pages of the art, and go to bed. But no: I got sucked into the story so thoroughly that I was sad and disappointed to reach the end so quickly. Completely forgot that I was reading the first issue of a comic and not a graphic novel.

If you are a superhero comics reader, the structure is very familiar. It’s a superhero origin story, opening into a Eurozone-flavored X-men setup. All the characters are slightly improbably and – well – very superheroesque in that way that the powers really don’t make any sense and it’s all very weird. (Sorry, I told you I could never get into superheroes!)

However, the characters are compelling. Even the ones who are introduced briefly and have few speaking lines – somehow, they are intriguing and I want to know more. I even want to get to know Captain Europa.

These well-drawn characters lead into quite a few laugh-out-loud moments. And I don’t say that lightly – this wasn’t sensible_chuckle.gif but a literal throw-my-head-back laugh. I appreciate that, especially in a comic that tackles dark political themes.

At this point it’s all positive: gripping story, characters that you can tell have deep backstories, and good jokes.

However (you knew this was coming), there are two things that I hope improve in future issues.

One is the placement of the speech bubbles. Sometimes it was a little difficult to determine the order in which they were to be read, and while I think I guessed right most of the time, sometimes it was a little daunting to look at a new panel and not really know where to start.

The other is that I don’t love the art. It’s not bad art, certainly, and it gets the point across, but it’s not art that I would want to look at for an extended period of time. Note that with the exception of Watchmen, my favorite comics all have highly stylized, refined artwork.

In terms of a story-focused approach to comics, which I think Arkhaven is using, I think this is a perfectly appropriate style – workmanlike, not overly realistic or overly stylized. It reminds me of the amount of work put into something like old-school Doctor Who episodes or a pulpy sci-fi novel — just enough work put in to build the world, but that needs the grace and imagination of the reader to fill in the rest of the blanks.

Basically the antithesis of Modern Literary Fiction™, which I would venture to guess that Arkhaven Comics stands resolutely against. All seems to be in order.

I should have probably said this at the beginning of the review, but I was a backer for this run of Alt-Hero and firmly believe in their mission of pushing back against the SJWs in comics.

That said, I still enjoyed the heck out of this comic and can’t wait for the next one to hit my inbox.

It’s available on Amazon for $2.99 if you’re interested.

Tuesday is a Blooming Day

Ah, EXO-CBX. So good to see you again.

One of the things that I like most about Korean entertainment is that quite often they pull off tropes that would be tacky, cheesy, or otherwise embarrassing in a Western context. This happens in a variety of media – dramas, movies, music.

In this case, the hook for “Blooming Day,” the title track of EXO-CBX’s new mini-album, sounds AWFUL on paper.

Can I be your boyfriend, can I?

And yet, CBX make it work with their smooth vocals. The “ask” is over-the-top, but the presentation is low-key enough in the vocals and music (even the video isn’t overtly sexy) that the question sounds matter-of-fact rather than desperate.

My favorite part of this song is the bridge, which reminds me a little of “Forever” from The War album, the way that it goes full minor key and feels a bit inside-out.

As expected from SM and EXO, CBX’s second mini-album is full of complex pop songs. This album is built for grooving. Chill, but built on a layer of that 70s funk bass that permeated CBX’s first mini-album. Some of the music is super-nostalgic to me – really nice 80s synths – but coupled with modern beats so nothing feels like a retro throwback. It’s a really easy album to listen to. I’m especially fond of “Monday Blues,” “Blooming Day,” “Thursday” and “Vroom Vroom.”

As with their previous album, this one is tailor-made for working, single women – so much this time that there’s a track for every day of the week, from “Monday Blues” to a “Lazy” Sunday. SM continues its full-court press with the “virtual boyfriend” trope.*

This only works because of Chen, Baekhyun, and Xiumin – the most flirty and shameless members of EXO. CBX are energetic and playful, so their subunit appropriately explores happier types of music that regular EXO would never try out. Regular EXO has a mysterious image to maintain, after all. (Can you imagine DO trying to pull this off? Never gonna happen.)

Anyhow, I enjoy this mini-album a lot. The aesthetics are great, and I’m probably going to do a post soon breaking down one specific set of outfits because I like them so much. The music is good. Most of the songs are good (and none of them are bad.)

It is impossible to be sad while listening to EXO-CBX.

And that is a good thing.

 


*I have a theory that SM is feeling a tad threatened by BTS aka the internet’s preferred virtual boyfriend. There’s been a lot more overt fanservice and fantasy-building in regular promotions, which was usually reserved for fans only in concerts and fan events. Specific examples include the choreography for EXO’s “The Eve” and the cringefest that is NCT 127’s “Touch.”

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