Wednesday 29 February 2012

WOODY'S ROUND-UP


  The man’s a churner, he whips them out at a rate of knots. With his musical bent and love for wrapping old lips around things it’s easy to see Woody Allen as a rock star, albeit the wimpiest, smallest and most sensitive song-throttler of all time. Like the Bowies and Springsteens and Princes he turned out a run of genius through the dusty days of the early-seventies, an untouchable blast of creativity and genre-bumping that stands up and punches anything today and made his mark on a world he probably hates. He gets even better as the decade wears on, gets interesting and arty as the years of neon and Duran Duran kick in, then falls and sets fire to himself at the dawn of the nineties and well into the 2000s, rolling and screaming and trying to put the flames out as a few blind and deaf die-hards hail his latest packets of crap as ‘returns to form’.
  There’s a few ways to draw spurious comparisons, but above all it’s his work rate. The man’s 77 and he’s still written two scripts in the time it took you to delete your browsing history, and one of them’s pretty good. It’s easy to see his films as songs; they’re only 90 minutes, baby bears in the land of Christopher Nolan, and as such some are going to be Higher Grounds and others are going to be Stevie Wonder’s Entire Recorded Output Since 1984. This blog thing here has gone into his main bulk of work in questionable levels of detail elsewhere, but these films, these ones coming up, they’re the B-Sides, the detours, the early demos and ones that film bloggers might forget to review because they’re not very good at their craft and have been on a slightly worrying Modafinol bender for the past eighteen months. Some of them are good! Some of them star Anthony Hopkins!
WHAT’S NEW PUSSYCAT?
Starring Peter O’Toole
M
TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN
Starring Woody Allen
Y
  What a bastard, huh, starting both his earliest film titles with the word ‘What’s’. What’s up with that? Huh? What’s up with it? What’s… what’s that all about? Yeah? What’s…? What?
  Both are fast and funny, though Pussycat never betters its opening gambit of Peter Sellers, Comedy Accent and Fat Woman, the holy trinity of giggling since time began. Watching them back to back gives a good idea of how Allen evolved the idea of comedy direction back in the sixties, with Take The Money and Run being a vaguely revolutionary mockumentary straight-faced natural-fest compared to Pussycat’shackneyed crazy-romping and constant bursts of Bacharach. On the plus side the earlier film does feature the insanely brilliant Romy Schneider burning up every scene she’s in like a big German sun that went supernova too soon, as well as Peter O’Toole playing a dashing Peter O’Toole who reveals unexpected laugh-along chops. Peter-fest is won by Sellers though, effortlessly inhabiting an insane wig wearing pervatistic psychiatrist called Dr. Fritz Fassbender who should really look like this.
  It’s old, it’s dated, it stinks of a moth’s balls, but it does have some chuckles and an inspired live-action Mario Kart ending that involves lots of people crashing into bits of wood to a Burt-bopping soundtrack, so there’s that. Scriptwriter Woody’s barely noticeable in the frenzy though, and when he does show up it’s only to do that pervo-grin and grab that he perfected in the early sixties, an inconsequential turn in an easily forgettable farce.
  Take the Money and Run’s a different kettle entirely, and all the better for being a break from the past. A proto-Zelig in the big orb of Allen, it represents the first time that Woody chose to direct a proper film himself rather than sit in a dark room and let the Japanese do all the heavy lifting, and he’s got a bit of a flair for it. Alternating between interview footage and a series of increasingly ridiculous criminal-based skits, his chuck-everything approach moves at a frightening rate of frames, so any gag that doesn’t pass mustard is forgotten and swiftly replaced with a shot of his parents wearing Groucho Marx masks, or someone tripping over something and smiling politely. As a template for better films it’s an interesting slice of history, but likeable with it, and as such it’s as indispensable as a gun made of soap; funny at first, but useless in the rain. He’ll do better, but he’ll damn well do worse…
YOU WILL MEET A TALL DARK STRANGER
Starring A Load of Old Shit
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MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
Starring Owen Wilson
Y
  An old man piss-stink tag team of nostalgic despair, if Woods drops dead tomorrow at least he’ll go out on one of the best of his weird little life, even though it’s prompted by one of his most humungerific failures. All human life is here, if you hate human life and love the past with the insane fervour that can only come from locking yourself in a Manhattan apartment for twenty five years with only a clarinet and a joke book for company. Stranger is probably one of the worst, most alarming films he’s ever coughed out, a meandering diatribe against the middle-classes that have served him so well, front ended by the second most depressing performance of Naomi Watts’ otherwise wicked career. Pockmarked with hatred and failure throughout, its tales of crap writers and liars and idiots and charlatans criss-cross each other endlessly, going nowhere and resulting in nothing, and that’s the whole point of the film. He’s finally made a movie where nothing means anything and there isn’t anything real to believe in, but forgotten to lighten it with any levity other than the briefest wistful shots of Frieda Pinto’s face and a bit of classic chav-acting from the usually-reliable Lucy Punch, the woman with the most punchable name in show-business. It cuts out at the end with no resolution and no redeeming features, a bizarre misery-fest that dives full pelt into the sea of aimless crap that he’s dipped his disgusting old toes in so many times before. It’s worse than Match Point! IT MAKES WHATEVER WORKS LOOK OK!
  Midnight in Paris explains why. Woody hates so much now, he despises the modern world with such a huge catheter of quiet rage that he’s willing to produce a reasonably expensive film in the centre of London, wasting the precious time of Anthony Hopkins and anyone who paid money to see it, in order to show how mad he is, and then his next film strolls along down a 1920s Parisian boulevard with a Gauloise in its mouth, to explain what’s grabbed the man’s goat.
  Give him the past and he’s as happy as a dog with a bucket of cats, and he’ll produce something delightful, something that’ll pluck us all out of this recession and drop us in a puddle of pure retro-happiness that we’ll slowly drown in. Midnight in Parisis a great film, it’s something simple and lovely from a man who’s had difficulty doing both recently, and it might be one of the best of his career. From the off we’re pounded with love, a slow succession of Parisian streets filmed with the same adoring eyes that once trailed Manhattan, then Owen Wilson turns up in the role of his life as Woody but prettier, a lost soul in a city he can finally call home. Whenever Allen lapsed into whimsy and the supernatural in his earlier films it came off wonderfully, from Love and Death’s reaper chats to Stardust Memories’ dalliance with the helium-aliens, but here he’s grown, matured. All it takes for Gil Pender to realise his fantasies is an old car and the stroke of midnight, a subtly that ranks with the best magical-realist narratives in its restraint and class.
  From the time travel on we’re into Avengers Assemble for English lit students, a string of extended cameos by Hemingway, Stein and the Fitzgeralds all lovingly brought to life with a knowing wink by the likes of Tom ‘Mischief’ Hiddleton and Adrian Brody, playing a Dali so self obsessed that he spends half his screen time saying his own name. Special props here to Alison Pill as a Zelda Fitzgerald who’s ‘exactly like what we’ve read of her’ and Corey Stoll, playing Hemingway as a strong-armed, gilt edged poetic bastard, a man hewn from rock that beats up other rocks and leads Gil down the righteous path of artistic justice.
  It’s not a terribly clever film, it doesn’t have much to say other than ‘stay put and find a winsome eighteen year old record store clerk’, but like Vicky Christina Barcelona it’s gorgeous to stare at and it has a few whimsical musings, like sitting in a cafĂ© with thatFrench girl who used to be in the Renault adverts. Like many of his best he’s digging around in the past to find his missing optimism again, but here, played by pretty people and shot through with scene-wrenching cameos, he’s made a film that can be enjoyed by the masses outside of his usual three-blocks of Manhattan range, and as such it’s nearly up there with his A-team.
PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM
Starring Woody Allen
Y
SOUNDS FROM A TOWN I LOVE
Starring New York, New York

D
  Play It Again Sammy-Boy’s another anomaly: a Woody not directed by Woody, but still one of the quintessential works of the squinty one’s career, a pure shot of Allen that crams in a love triangle, an obsession with classic film and his first time verbally jiving with the ever-phenomenal Diane Keaton. Based on a play that must have been pretty good, Woody really settles into his role as himself for the first time here, showcasing the savant skill for prat falling and word-acrobatics that would keep him in prescription medicine and attractive wives for the next thirty years whilst barfing up an early part for Tony Roberts in his defining role as the deep-voiced, all round better best friend guy. The Casablanca allusions are skilfully thrown in throughout, some guy in a trench coat mounting a valiant attempt at Bogarting, whilst the ending triangle on the smoky airfield is almost as sad and effecting as the same scene nearly forty years earlier, but with less Nazis and more… well, crippling Jewish guilt. There are oddities; the action’s in San Francisco for some reason, and being directed by someone else means certain scenes seem off, with musical cues that don’t belong in Allen’s smoky world of jazz plink-plonking, as well as camera work that eschews his usual dual love for confined spaces and New York architecture. The result is a film that shows Allen’s genius for the first time in regards to dialogue, gurning and picking lead actresses, but feels like a more generic romantic comedy in terms of direction, as though Richard Curtis had travelled back in time in an attempt to destroy a comedy virtuoso to distract the world from The Boat That Rocked. He’s failed; the film’s a must-watch for any Allen aficionado or anyone who simply gives one about great cinema, a timeless neurotic classic that’ll stand for just a little less time than Bogart’s chain-smoking masterpiece itself.
  Sounds From A Town I Love is charming, wit-stuffed, wonder-shot, laugh-aloud, full of insight and pitch-perfect dialogue, with a wizened expert and beautiful amateur’s understanding of New York and human nature. Its two minutes and fifty nine seconds long.
That’s it. He’s great, he’s shit, he’s stupid and he’s clever, like ninety nine percent of the planet.
But he’s made films! Take that, people who haven’t made films!

Tuesday 28 February 2012

CONNERY WINS AGAIN


So Marvel’s previously unstoppable summer juggernaut The Avengers has changed it’s name in the UK to avoid confusion with a cult show from the 1960s that only eighteen people remember or care about. Frankly, it’s shocking how frightened studio executives can be about the slightest…
… Fair enough.

Sunday 26 February 2012

OSCAR PREDICTIONS 2012


3D STAR WARS EPISODE I: THE PHANTOM MENACE


dMYD
Starring Liam Neeson
d
  Full circle fun-sucked shenanigans as the increasingly unwieldy Star Wars franchise devours itself and starts naming the films the way it names the unending stream of products that are fast covering every square mile of the planet. ‘Star Wars’ is a great moniker for a movie. Does that thing up there sound like an enticing title to you? And by you I mean Bobby Mars, unfortunate thirteen-year-old-son-of-a-family-friend who’s amazingly managed to bypass watching any of the non-stop space juggernauts for the entirety of his natural life. Bobby’s never seen A New Hope. He’s never seen Clone Wars Season Two. He’s never seen Caravan of Courage or whatever the nerf this is. Bribed with three boxes of Frosty Nerds and the promise of Liam ‘Daughter-Taker-Fucker’ Neeson in the cast, the robbed boy was coerced into sitting through it and giving his opinion as an example of the naĂŻve money-shedding tweenager demographic that George Lucas is presumably grabbing at with these re-re-re-re-re-releases. Bake ‘em away, toy!
  ‘I’ve seen Yoda before on the Vodaphone adverts and I really like Taken, especially the bit where Liam Neeson tells The Soup Nazi why he’s a member of UKIP. But in this he just looked like a tramp, and he takes the boy away from his mum and his planet because he can smell something in his blood, and I thought that was a bit weird. I don’t remember much of the story, but they did go to a place, then another place, then they talked some more and went to a place so it was a bit like Lord of the Rings, but without all the hot dwarves. Do you have any troll dolls? My sister went to college and I found this box under her bed that had loads of trolls in it. I comb the hair a lot, but it’s their faces that I really like. I kiss them under my blanket. My mom doesn’t know. Have you got any? Oh, and Pogs. They make good troll mirrors, but it’s never their face, so it freaks them out.
  What’s a Jar Jar? I didn’t get what he meant. What he was saying, and why he was there. He looked like a red duck having a stroke. Can we talk about something else? I’m thirteen years old, my attention span amounts to the time it takes Jeremy Clarkson to have sex whilst he’s thinking about a Volkswagen Scirroco.
  I don’t think it represents the death of imagination and faith for several generations, or even that it symbolises Hollywood’s slow nose-dive into money-led plastic wank over any semblance of a basic plot. I guess, if anything, it actually shows that an insane, reality-phobic robo-auteur can still have creative freedom outside of studio influence, as long as he has eight billion dollars and his own ranch and more neck-flaps than an over-eighties bowling team. But what do I know? I’m only a fictional child with the face of the boy from Mad MenFictional children are rubbish.’
From the mouths of babes. Please don’t fund the machine any further.

DISTANT VOICES, STILL LIVES


dMYD DVD
Starring Pete Postlethwaite and a Load of Other Amazing People Who You’ve Never Heard Of
Y

  Who’d have thought Woody Allen would ever look like a bombastic madman with a jockstrap full of happiness? Released a year after the neurotic ginger-snap’s own family album Radio Days, Distant Voices sees lost auteur Terrance Davies pick apart his own synapses for memories of 1940s Liverpool, with all the hard-drinking, sing-songs and pent-up emotional nut-cracking that the time and place entails. This is a poverty-lumpen British street just a couple of short decades away from being saved byThe Beatles, and as such it’s no walk in the park; essentially misery business all the way through, there’s little light for the family at its core save for the near endless stream of traditional songs that pepper the scenes in the pub and living room gatherings, a constant reminder of the universal hurt and hope that human lungs can spread.
  Like Radio Days it’s a fragmentary journey through an old man’s childhood, but unlike Captain Quip Davies relies on a mastery of framing, filters and face-fucking excellence in the field of subtlety to get by. There’s no plot to speak of, but the overbearing lovehate of Pete Postlethwaite’s ‘Father’ falls like a jagged shadow over the rest of the family, the tragedies and small triumphs of one man’s life filtering through every moment of their days and every action and decision they make. All the actors present a perfect performance, the fractured narrative makes you feel you’re trapped in the house with them like a pervert coalman, and the absolute control of Davies’ lens makes the whole thing a genius moving photo album, a lyrical mind-bomb of emotions and social comment that’ll leave you desperate to scrub the defining images out of your head. Candles at Christmas, hay in a loft, the terrifying shatter of plate glass windows and the relentless rain outside the front door; all combine to form a wonderful fever-dream that rewards repeated viewings, sedating and challenging at the same time. It’s tempting to avoid aueurist works like this after a day of work and the shitty wet paint of real life, to leap straight to whatever the Stath or Cage is doing this week on Channel Five and tell the world to go rip it’s Face Off or get Cranked, but suck it up; relax, take one night to watch something different and you’ll get a lifetime’s worth of cinematic gold, a sometimes horrific, sometimes almost holy glimpse into a world you can’t ever know or knew too well to step back from. And that’s what people with more critical credentials call a masterpiece, a work that’s intensely personal, but also terrifyingly universal. In this case they’re probably right. 

FANTASTIC PLANET


dMYD DVD
Starring Gigantic Blue Tits
M

  Hey, look out the porthole: isn’t that a relentlessly demented sci-fi animation from the seventies, produced by the French and thus loaded with philosophy and tits? Touchdown! Heavy handed religious-metaphors roam free over a landscape of Ricky Gervais’ time-tossed Flanimals rejects, stomping on the plains of visual whimsy with an annoying voice over and strange fixation on the parliamentary process of web-gilled space-Gods that detracts from the overall beauty of a mind running free with a tray of watercolours. At its best there’s the quality of Victorian prints brought to life, all delicate line work and detailed close ups, but sometimes it veers dangerously close to an extended Terry Gilliam animated segment, with its fast zooms and clumsy frame rate. Everything jerks like a hell-storm version of Jackanory, whilst the weird prevalence of nudity and vaguely-sexualised clothing makes it blindfold-worthy for the majority of kids it was probably aimed at, unless you’re a well-adjusted parent who realises everyone has a body or, you know, French.
  The message behind it’s a complicated one, at least for an art form that’s routinely bracketed off in society’s playpen; there’s knowledge vs primitivism, revolution and free will all kicking around in here somewhere, and repeated viewings reveal it as a noble if simplistic attempt at instigating some Cold War debate from an unlikely source. The artistic failings come from its inability to sync up words and pictures: the design’s strong enough to carry a silent movie, but the pace and magic are routinely interrupted by whatever tin-eared translations the writers were desperate to get across. Watched on massive quantities of drugs though it’s delightful, with a fine line in suggestive shapes every eight seconds and a funk-tastic psycho-blobbing seventies soundtrack that deserves a dissertation of its own. Not great, but unique, and a perfect alternative to these dick-breath pimp-rats.

Wednesday 22 February 2012

TEN POSSIBLE CONTINUATIONS OF THE BILL AND TED FRANCHISE


  1. BILL AND TED’S BOURGEOIS JOURNEY
  2. BILL AND TED’S LAND BEFORE TIME
  3. BILL AND TED’S CRUSHING REALIZATION
  4. BILL
  5. BILL AND TED’S BOGUS NURSERY
  6. BILL AND TED 3
  7. BILL AND TED’S EXCELLENT TAX RETURN
  8. BILL AND TED'S WEDDING
  9. BILL AND TED’S MASSIVE HAEMORRHAGE
  10. THE MATRIX RELOADED

Sunday 19 February 2012

THE MUPPETS


dMYD
Starring The Muppets
Y

  Underdogs and underpigs and underbears and underfrogs, The Muppets were always the runty archipelago to the continent-consuming might of DISNEYCORP, with budgets that only paid for bits of rope and weed and voice-acting that was always slightly too uniform across their menagerie of dead-eyed felt. But at their best… look up some Muppet Show stuff on YouTube and gurn at how different it is to ITV now, how lovely and ramshackle and stuffed with Steve Martin it all was back then. Not the best: as much as he may have tried to escape it there’s no doubt that Jim Henson’s real genius was Sesame Street, a beautiful, unending oasis of wonder and education that’ll outlive us all, but he also realised that his Muppets looked inherently stupid, and that any human muppet stood next to them would look stupider still, forced to choke a chicken or sing a song with a bean-bag full of pipe cleaners. The Muppet Showrevolved around two poles: inspired, pot-wrecked surrealism and chuckling away at real-life, a gentle type of satire infinitely more difficult to pull off than being Frankie Boyle. They lost these two spines for a while in some admittedly charming classic book adaptations… but now they’re back. And they’re old. It’s good.
  The central conceit of The Muppets is near-genius. A group that relied upon laughing at the ridiculousness of fame has now been chewed up and chucked into the bins at the back of Disneyworld, forgotten for decades in a painfully honest mirror of our real life fickleness. No idea lasts forever, especially something as one note as Fozzie and co, but nostalgia and simplicity are wunderbar wares that’ll never go out of style, and as such it’s completely fitting that the flap-mouthed crew be given one last shot at putting on a show, their real-life hard times putting you on side from the start. They’re decrepit though, and limpy, so it’s up to some current fizz-bang talent to give them a leg up and draw in all the dumbos and hipsters and people who like The Big Bang Theory. All credit to Jason Segel – not so good at the acting, but a dab hand with street-dancing, dressing like a Vice City character and, crucially, writing a clever, sweet and few-lafs-a-minute script that treads a dizzy tightrope of mental, modern comedy and sentimental bubble bath run by pigs in spacesuits. Amy Adams also pulls a doozy as a romantic foil who could have come off as  ball-chain, but thanks to an impeccable singing voice and wink in her eye she jazz-hands through the best musical number of the whole piece. And there’s the key; the whole thing’s directed by James Bobin of the equally charming and squewif Flight of the Conchords, whilst the role of ‘musical supervisor’ falls to Brett ‘Brit’ McKenzie, a modern-pop-joke-monster extraordinaire and creator of this. The Conchords stamp is dotted all over the movie, but most pronounced in three songs; Adams and Miss Piggy having an amazing ‘Me Party’, the world’s only credible old-white-man rap, and the bizarre, rain-drenched ‘Man or Muppet, a future YouTube-staple that turns a terrifying car-crash of bendy-arms, soft-rock and over emoting into four of the best minutes of any movie released last year.
 At its velvety core though it’s all about the old school; after a great opening, relying heavily on the new humour of the new writers, the Muppets themselves arrive, dated and darling, and your heart’ll melt all over the carpet handing the movie over to them, to their endearing crapness and fart shoes, their love of old-school vaudeville and ending number daring in its message of entertainment for the masses. The sequel’s going to be a lot worse; this is the kind of nostalgia that can only be peddled out every thirty years, with returns flushing down a big toilet of indifference each time. But fuck it – they’re here now, for one night only, they’re funny and stupid and furry and the Swedish Chef makes sense now when he’s KICKING JACK BLACK IN THE FACE.

TUCKER AND DALE VS EVIL


dMYD DVD
Starring Alan Tudyk and Tyler Labine
d

  If you’re gonna be dumb, you gotta be tough, and if you wanna be sat-e-rical you gotta have more than a thimbleful of synapses or you’re gonna be down there ruttin’ in the bargain bin with all them June-Klurd-Van-Daym movies. A big disc of neither,Tucker and Dale treads a watery line of indifference and incompetence whilst carrying its one joke, never sure whether it wants to be a hot new axe-em-up based on thirty year old tropes or a flea in the ointment, a piss-fuelled piss take chock with genre subversions and the excellent eyes of Alan Tudyk. There’s problems in them thar hills; Tudyk for one, the greatest impaled man in cinema history, given barely anything to do and forced to play second banjo to the fat beard from Reaper as he moons about the forest staring at the sexy assistant from 30 Rock while she desperately tries to climb her way out of the B-Movie ditch. Tudyk’s a great actor by anyone’s estimations, but here the script jumps on his chest and bludgeons him with its half-assed mediocrity, desperately trying to ape Shaun of the Dead’s respectful ribbing but never passionate enough about its subject matter to pull any limbs off.
  There’s fun to be had with a wood chipper full of blood, and watching people get attacked by bees has been fun ever since Overmind Cage made it the internet’snational sport, but the good sprinkles are too few and far between, degenerating into an attempt by whatever hunks of wood wrote the script to make it into a genuine horror movie with a genuine bad guy. That said bad guy is played by the itchy-werewolf-rapist-boy from Ginger Snaps sporting a fright wig tells you all you need to know about the back-office bumbling going on behind the whole thing; in a film with a clumsy message about misunderstanding, there’s been a trailer full of communication errors at almost every step of the production process. Especially at the offices of Empire magazine. Four stars? What’s wrong with you Empire magazine? What’s wrong with you?

DONNIE DARKO

dMYD DVD
Starring Jake Gyllenhaal
Y
  A masterpiece then, but one which you have to watch eleven times with your pupils plastered to the flat-screen in order to understand even one tenth of what’s happening. Donnie only works it out by the end, and he’s the lead. Don’t feel bad.
  Feel uncomfortable, warm and slightly deranged. Feel sad, fearful and strangely elated. Richard Kelly is a whiz kid of new, drawing on a shining, luminescent pool of ideas and concepts through his first film, always distracting, always obtuse but somehow making absolute sense in the back of your head. Its many things at once, which makes it simultaneously hard to grasp and incredibly satisfying. Small town intellectual debauchery, super-heroes, fat people, time-streams and dying love all bubble to the surface at different points to remind you of things you’ve felt and other things that never existed, but stuff you know anyway deep down on the trampoline-in-a-swimming pool of your subconscious. Stylistically it’s tough to remember how different this felt when it came out; everything’s lit in the same impending darkness, the score is warped and nagging but leavened with John Hughes aping soundtrack bliss, the acting has rarely been bettered by everyone involved. The years have been kind, stuff like ‘SOMETIMES I DOUBT YOUR COMMITMENT TO SPARKLE MOTION’ sticking out, whilst others, like the conversation about the perfection of ‘Cellar Door’ go forgotten, another philosophical dead end that could break apart in a shower of bricks at if you looked hard enough.
  Film as puzzle box, half the fun in the years since has been in trying to decipher what it’s really about. The Director knows, but the funniest part is that he’s probably wrong, or his truth’s only another part of the problem. Like tripping or burning or falling off some twin peaks the real worth’s in the feeling the film gives off the first time, the sensual delights of its visuals and soundtrack and doorways to another world, one that feels like parallel history, myth and yesterday all at the same time. That Kelly’s never mastered the same feeling again is no surprise, because nobody has and probably never will, but luckily its depths and unique atmosphere give it almost unending re-watch value, a time-loop in your own life that’ll you’ll never find a jet engine for.
But if you must, here’s a thing.

Wednesday 15 February 2012

STEP THE FUCK AWAY FROM THOSE THIRD ONES AND READ A COMIC INSTEAD


SPIDER MAN 3
X MEN: THE LAST STAND
dMYD DVDs
Starring Tobey Maguire and Hugh Jackman
d
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WATCHMEN
 by Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons
  Scathing socio-political comment partly seen through the eyes of a man dressed as a giant owl. The best comic book ever made.
Y: THE LAST MAN
by Brian K Vaughn, Pia Guerra et al
  Hilarious hypothetical madness as the last two creatures with a Y chromosome consist of a monkey called Ampersand and a twenty two year old escapologist named after the dead idiot jester from Hamlet. Cleverer than it sounds, but don’t let that put you off.

RUNAWAYS
by Brian K Vaughn, Adrian Alphona et al
  Super powered teenagers fight crime by their own rules, man, on the mean streets of fetid sinkhole Los Angeles, California. Contains the line ‘HELP! I’M BEING KIDNAPPED BY AN EVIL BLACK MAN FROM THE 1980s!’

NEW X-MEN
by Grant Morrison, Frank Quitely et al
  So good that Marvel kicked Grant Morrison off the book for fear of how talented he was. The smoothest team of X men ever take on soulless, formless killer womb-twins, sentient evolutionary bacteria and Wolverine’s unfortunate whiskey tolerance whilst recruiting a man with a sun for a brain. Fan-fucking-tastic.
THE LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN
by Alan Moore & Kevin O’Neill
  Eight worlds away from the god-awful film, Allan Quartermain and Co solve all sorts of dastardly plots on the streets and seas of Victorian England. You’ll never see Rupert Bear in the same way again. And then it moves onto the 20th Century and WARPS REALITY ITSELF.

 

ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN
 by Brian Michael Bendis, Mark Bagley et al
  Spider Guy done right. Peter Parker trips over his own shoes, endlessly stares at women’s breasts, makes ‘Yo mama’ jokes and annoys Daredevil to the point that the blind lawyer nearly beats a fifteen year old child to death with a blunt club. Still refreshing and new even though it’s been going for a million years now.
 
LOVE AND ROCKETS
by Jaime &Gilbert Hernandez
  Long running punk-woman epic glugging an insane cocktail of bitch-fights, ancient evil and heart-felt confessionals, told in some of the most subtle storytelling and genius ink work ever committed to paper. Has a character called Penny Century and…. Oh, it’s probably the best piece of fiction of the last fifty years.
THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS
by Frank Miller
  Bruce Wayne fires Robin because he’s ‘useless’, starts drinking heavily and grows the most refined moustache this side of Paul AND Barry Chuckle. Oh, and later on the Joker breaks his own neck just to piss Batman off. And all that without mentioning the Bat-Tank. Just as good as everyone says.
 
ALL-STAR SUPERMAN
by Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely
  The first and best superhero updated for the modern age in a timeless tale of hungry suns, anti-matter rocket men and absent fathers. A pop-art classic that’ll never age or lose its beauty, no matter how many screens it’s splayed across or how many times someone rips it off.
SCOTT PILGRIM
 by Bryan Lee O’Malley
  ‘Scott Pilgrim is the best book ever. It is the chronicle of our time. With Kung Fu, so, yeah: perfect.’ – Joss Whedon
Christ, there’s loads of them. Come on, Hollywood.