Welcome to Ruby's World

Ruby Harrison's life has changed dramatically since her summer internship at the local genetic lab. A freak accident dramatically altered her genetic makeup, leaving her much bigger, much stronger, and an organic generator of unparalleled power. But the accident also made her aware of an illegal vivisection agenda tied all the way back to her late mother; now, with other teenagers who have been harmed by this reprehensible use of science, Ruby tries to find justice in a world that prefers power...

Ruby's World Chapter 16 Page 2

30 Jan 2010 04:51 pm

Review of Warren Ellis' Graphic Novel " No Hero "

No Hero, an Avatar Press mini-series written by Warren Ellis and illustrated by Juan Jose Ryp, can easily be considered the spiritual sequel to Black Summer. Both stories are by the same creative team, work in the same genre, and raise similar questions about the role of the superhero in a contemporary world. They tackle the question with completely distinct worlds, however. In Black Summer, a superhero assassinated Dubya and made the American political situation even worse, while in No Hero, a group of super heroes emerge through the use of super-soldier hallucinogens, and....make things even worse. Both stories are basically about superheroes catastrophically failing to reform society.

Since both stories appeal to the same kind of reader, I can say this; if you can only read one, read Black Summer. If you’ve already read Black Summer but not No Hero, you don’t have to read No Hero because you’d just be getting an inferior version of the same type of story. And if you’ve already read No Hero but not Black Summer, read Black Summer to get the far superior story about corrupted super-heroes.

This statement is harsh because I expected much better from the creative team. At least, from Warren Ellis-- Juan Jose Ryp is an extremely talented artist who brings an incredible amount of detail to his pages, and renders with the kind of depth that artists on most franchise superhero books try wish they could achieve. It’s Ellis that’s the problem, because he’s got such an excellent track record, starts this story with a lot of potential, and proceeds squander that potential on yet another story about how superheroes would inherently be assholes if they existed in reality.

The problem is that No Hero starts off promisingly. We’re introduced to the Front Line, a superhero team that has been in existence since the late 1960’s, and get their powers from super-drugs. These hallucinogen-based enhanciles grant incredible power, but they don’t always work reliably in the short or long term, and the transformation requires the worst forms of physical and psychological pain possible. This doesn’t deter young Joshua Carver, a man so blindly idealistic he’s taken to urban vigilantism without any powers. Front Line recruits him because they’re short-handed and are being picked off by a killer with secret knowledge on how to kill super-beings, and rush him through the process-- it doesn’t end well, judging by the fact that Joshua emerges from the procedure looking much like Gollum from Lord of the Rings.

If you’re concerned about spoilers before reading this, you might wish to stop now, because the part I’m taking issue with is the big twist just before the story’s climax. It turns out that the Front Line have been secretly ruling the world all this time, using their super-power to dispatch anyone who doesn’t fit into their New World Order. And Joshua wasn’t a hero by choice, so much as a damaged pathological people-pleaser planted amidst the Front Line by the FBI. And once Joshua takes out the Front Line, the entire world falls apart, and the last panel has a news report talking about a plane being crashed into the White House.

So Front Line Carrick Masterson basically ends up as an extremely diluted version of Watchmen’s Ozymandias, the hero with the grossly unethical master plan for peace. Similarly, both antagonists start out appearing heroic, but were scheming all along ( while hints were being dropped ). However, where Ozymandias was complex in the way he justified his actions, and managed to more or less pull them off, Carrick is in the realm of “ republic serial villain “. He talks about saving the world so there will be “ more people to breed girls who I will inevitably fuck “-- and he implies that he always had this sort of mentality, as opposed to starting out idealistic and becoming jaded and cynical over the decades. If the story ends up as a conflict between him and Joshua, it’s a matter of rooting for imperious puppetmaster versus traumatized government pawn. Since the latter rips out a man’s spine and wears it as a strap-on for no good reason ( other than to justify Avatar Press’ mature label ), there’s nobody to sympathize with.

It starts off very well, true, but these revelations make you realize that any decent traits the characters had at the beginning were an illusion. If Front Line all die? They’ve been ruling a secret empire and dispatching dissidents, so that’s fine. If the world’s governments all die? They started it by allowing the world to get so out of control that the need for a Front Line would arise, so that’s fine too. The people caught in the middle? Don’t really appear, so they don’t really matter. It’s an exercise in cultural critique that doesn’t even try to show solutions to the problems it’s presenting, which is fine for a freshman creative writing workshop, but not for a professional comics writer who’s received critical acclaim partly for his ability to avoid such shallow satire.

In order to enjoy No Hero, you shouldn’t take it seriously. You should enjoy it for Juan Jose Ryp’s visuals, his intricate, nightmarish scenes and his superhero spoof covers. You should enjoy it for the science fiction examination of the super serum, and the novel exploration of possible side-effects. And you should enjoy it for Ellis’ dialogue, which has a great sarcastic wit. But you can get all these things in Black Summer, which backs them up with a story that doesn’t reduce its characters to nihilistic stereotype.

Mildly Recommended.

19 Jan 2010 06:33 pm

X-Men Artist David Finch Likes Cloning

One of my biggest problems with mainstream superhero comics is the art; specifically, the art's de-emphasis on individual character design. Though the artists are largely talented, they tend to recycle the same faces, bodies, and poses. With women, most artists will use exactly one face and one body type. With men, there's only a couple more in the queue-- for bodies especially, it's just buff, really buff, and Hulk-level grotesquely buff. And the previews for Marvel's April catalog give us a good example of this problem, by popular artist David Finch;



All three women on this pin-up look exactly alike, even the Japanese character Psylocke. The men aren't much better; the only one who looks substantially different in body type is Colossus, and that's because he's a big hulking mass of organic metal. Look closely, and you see the same facial and skeletal structures on Wolverine, Nightcrawler, and Archangel.

What's really galling about this is that it wasn't necessary to make them all look alike to fit the heroic posing mold. All these characters have rich backstories, and thinking through their histories would give the artist the opportunity to provide diverse looks that are still impressive and attractive. For example...

-- Logan ( Wolverine ) has two basic looks; the ruggedly handsome man that 6' 2" Hugh Jackman portrayed, and the stumpy, hairy, 5' 3" little troll that the comics introduced him as. I can't tell if that's hair on his arms or just dynamic use of shadow, but putting some fuzz there would help. And while his mask hides much of his face, a couple subtle touches to establish his animalistic nature-- perhaps a sharper nose and pronounced canine teeth-- would go miles to make him look unique.

-- Just because Kurt ( Nightcrawler ) is a blue-furred, three-fingered, two-toed, pointy-eared devil man with a prehensile tail, doesn't mean he has to have identical body structure to the others. Before joining the X-Men, he had a lucrative career as an acrobatic circus freak; a leaner, tighter body than the muscle-bound Wolverine would establish that. Also, since he's often nicknamed " Elf ", why not give him elfin features-- he's already got the ears, but perhaps a leaner face, in the style of Orlando Bloom? The fangirls would surely appreciate this.

-- Similarly, Warren ( Archangel ) would have a different body structure-- the Marvel Handbooks tell us that to support his wings, he's got a lot of muscle but thinner, hollower bones. And while he doesn't have much to smile about since his Evil Metal Wings resurfaced, he used to be quite the looker-- even under the blue skin and bad attitude, he should still have that pretty ( in a WASP ideal of beauty, at least ) mug.

-- Laura ( X-23 ) is a teen girl clone of Wolverine. Fortunately for her, this doesn't mean being coated in body hair. However, she should have more of her " daddy's " phenotypical traits as adapted to a teen girl-- maybe a slightly shorter, thicker build than average. Finch seems to have her unleashing a battle cry, but it just looks like her mouth's hanging open-- how about an animalistic fury expression, fangs bared and eyes bloodshot? Or if you're going for the " emotionless killbot " persona, a completely neutral and cold face?

-- Illyana ( Magik ) may have been raised in a demonic limbo, but she was born Russian. She, at least, could potentially be excused for her face and figure as fitting into the Russian model mold, a Maria Sharapova of the mutant set. But her face is expressionless in this shot, with no clear reason. Since she has her Soulsword out, how about also giving her some of the Darkchylde features-- an increasingly demonic face, perhaps going so far as to bring the horns out? Make it look like by using her power, she's going back to the dark side?

-- Betsy ( Psylocke ) is the worst example here; though she's Japanese ( at least the body her British mind is currently inhabiting is-- genetic yellowface, but I digress ), she looks like any other white girl. How about, at the very least, giving her Asian features? Or, if you want to be more ambitious, giving her a slimmer and slighter build-- the hourglass look may be more conventionally attractive, but it's not at all suited for the rigors of her ninjutsu. Chris Bachalo drew Psylocke perfectly in this regard-- why not follow his example?

These are just a few subtle touches that would give the image personality, instead of rendering it another example of identical supermodels in varied types posing and grimacing.

28 Dec 2009 09:25 am

Ruby's World: Now Weekly!

To ring in the new year ( in advance, admittedly ), I'm going to start posting new Ruby's World pages on a weekly schedule. Thus far, I plan to do three a week, on a Monday-Wednesday-Friday schedule. Hopefully this will be a beneficial experiment; if not, I can switch back to monthly mega-updates.

21 Nov 2009 07:27 pm

Chapter 13: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut

Start Here

Longer than usual, but also a bit more punctual; three days under a month is a new record. As always, feedback is appreciated...

31 Oct 2009 11:29 pm

Happy Halloween, Fan Art is your Treat!

Go Here for some Ruby's World Halloween Cosplay art, including commentary. Happy Halloween, everybody!

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