A couple of comic quickies

1. Pyongyang: A Journey in North Korea


Cover

Wow.  Even after a strong recommendation I was surprised how good this was. Guy Delisle has a very Canadian sense of humour and captures the weirdness of travel in a way I really appreciated.

I find autobiography in comics to be a very hit and miss proposition. For some reason, though, (maybe since Delisle was so isolated during his time in North Korea) there’s something about this work that seems very immediate and confessional. As a reader, I share his frustration with never really learning anything about the people of North Korea. It is both amazing and a little terrifying that the state is so completely in control that a foreign visitor living there for months really sees no cracks in the veneer. Highly recommended.

2. Kick-Ass



I’m excited about this for several reasons.

First, although I’m not a huge fan of Mark Millar’s work in the Marvel Universe, this series of his (or mini, whatever it was) got a lot of raves in print. With a few notable exceptions, I think comic writers do their best work in their own sandboxes. Hopefully the tone of Millar’s writing that I found too “mean” for the MU is better suited to his own characters. I can see it working better in film.

Second, although I love all kinds of comics/graphic novels, I can’t read them all. I do manage to see almost every Hollywood adaption of anything remotely comic book related, however. (It’s a holdover from the drought of decent fantasy in cinema when I was a kid). The pattern I’ve noticed is that by and large,  my favorite comic movies come from work I haven’t read. Road to Perdition. Ghost World. And probably the best example – V for Vendetta. All of them great movies made from great comics that might have been on my radar but never made it into my collection.

Finally, I’ve been waiting to enjoy a Nicholas Cage in a movie since, what… Raising Arizona? Now that’s a drought.

Anyhoo… I do loves me a good trailer, and this is at least the third version I’ve seen. It’s probably the most mainstream cut I’ve seen (complete with the gun-glam shots), but it still looks pretty decent, and from what I’ve read the content is going to know people for a loop if they’re expecting Mystery Men: TNG.



As an aside: A typical WASP Ontario boy, I never really “got” the Quebecois swearing through blasphemy thing… until I heard the zinger in that trailer:  “With no power comes no responsibility.”

Delicious sacrilege. Osti, tabarnac!

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