Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Matt Bors: Cinéaste

Gijoe81

Okay, before I start blathering today, you have to go read Matt Bors' review of the new GI Joe movie.

Seriously. Go.

I'll wait.

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.

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Was that awesome, or what?

It brings up some great possibilities, only coincidentally related to the loss of Roger Ebert. 

But given the increasingly visual nature of our culture, given the decreasing attention span of our culture, why not expand the role of cartoonists into a less monumental genre of graphic commentary?

Graphic commentary itself — even in long-form — is, obviously, nothing "new."

BoringOr not terribly new, in any case. "Maus" and "My Friend Dahmer," not to mention Bors' own collaboration with David Axe, "War is Boring," and the work of Joe Sacco,  Alison Bechdel, Raina Telgemeier, Brian Fies, all qualify as graphic commentary, with highly blurred lines between memoir and reportage being endemic to the genre. (Bors also having done some actual short-form, on-the-ground graphic reporting from Afghanistan.)

Going much further back, at the dawn of the editorial cartoon, Hogarth did some multipanel story-telling, and even invented the sequel. And there is even precedent for multi-panel cartooning in a more gentle, affectionate format: In the mid-20th century, Francis Dahl was a champion at multi-panel local humor, and Rob Rogers and Ed Stein and others have gone that route as well.

The notion that cartoons necessarily take the place of text, rather than augment it, is perhaps something put forth by cartoonists themselves, particularly those who would rather draw than write.

But that doesn't mean the two forms are incompatible: This blog, after all, is dedicated to the idea that a simple cartoon can spin off a lot of thought, while Nast (who was either dyslexic or poorly educated, depending on who you ask) worked backwards in that respect, with many of his cartoons in Harper's Weekly illustrating longer articles by other writers.

But the combination can certainly exist: Though Mauldin's Willie and Joe cartoons appeared on their own, he wrote the text combining them with commentary in "Up Front" and it's a classic. And, recently, David Horsey has begun drawing a cartoon and then writing his own blog on the topic. (If I were unionized, I'd file a grievance.)

But there's a huge difference between providing social commentary and doing mixed-media movie reviews.

Most editorial cartoons about pop culture are ephemeral at best, and, for actual editorial cartoons, usually suggest a very slow day, or a little laziness on someone's part. When the editorial page runs a cartoon about saggy blue jeans, we should be able to assume war and poverty have been pretty much eradicated.

Not that other levels of cartoon commentary can't provide some pop culture laughter:

Non_Sequitur_pan.526

But the notion of using of a cartoonist as an actual movie reviewer brings up a question.

Well, it brings up two questions. The first is, can we please have some more, Wired, please? 

The other question, though, is, how well would this format work with a movie that wasn't so well-made for ridicule?

That is, what if he'd liked it?

I'm sure I would enjoy a similar review, even of a more serious movie like "Lincoln." But would people who like thoughtful reviews in this mixed format be a significant demographic?

And never mind "Lincoln" or "Rashomon" or "The Sorrow and the Pity."

What about a well-crafted, mid-level movie like "The Hunger Games," which had an 85% favorable rating at Rotten Tomatoes?

Would there be pressure — from editors, from adoring fans, from within — to find amusing wisecracks to make, even if you had to dig for them? And, if he didn't mock it, would the review be compelling?

I know snark sells, but is it (artistically) mandatory?

I don't know. I'm asking.

I'd love to see someone offer Matt some opportunities to let us find out.

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Comments 6

  1. Mike,
    I can give you my answer/opinion.
    In my daily journal comic (which you can read here, http://www.theblabbingbaboon.com free plug!) I also post my movie reviews in comic form. Now, the fact that I see upwards of 70 movies in the theaters each year and the fact that I have a day job along with my comic job, the biggest stumbling block I have is time.
    I currently do a combination drawing and text review, like this one:
    http://www.theblabbingbaboon.com/?p=3472
    I used to draw (without lengthy text) reviews like this:
    http://www.theblabbingbaboon.com/?p=1580
    But that takes time. And that, for me at least, is a main stumbling block, not that of writing positive or negative reviews.

  2. Critics choosing snark over substance is an old theme. See, for instance, “Please Don’t Eat the Daisies.”
    Reviewers, in my experience, tend to be balanced.

  3. There’s a lot of people with a lot of things to write about. We are inundated with too much choice when it comes to just about any avenue of entertainment. Too much choice can paralyze people.
    I feel that any person who is willing to augment their writing with pictures and/or graphs (at least something beyond promo pictures put at the top of a review) is willing to put forth just a bit more effort into their work than someone else who provides nothing but text.
    Of course, it helps that Matt Bors is really good at what he does. On the opposite side of the spectrum, there are a lot of bad writers who are willing to add pictures. I find the vast majority of Cracked’s lists to be insufferable. However, it’s helpful when you can determine that an article is full of crap with the first sentence: either providing a premise that I cannot support or providing a statement that is provably false.
    Even further, the formatting of text plays a huge role in enticing someone to read too. Walls of text, all caps, aggressive use of ellipses, improper punctuation, poor spelling, etc are all structural components that dissuade people from attempting to read. On the other hand, an article with good spacing, proper paragraph separation and other organizational cues is a lot easier to read.

  4. Yet the art director types insist on grey text (rather than crisp, legible black) because it “looks better” when the page is viewed as a whole. And then there are the full page illustrations *under* the text, rendering the latter unreadable.
    See also today’s Dilbert:
    http://www.dilbert.com/2013-04-05/

  5. Boy, Mat, agreed about those slideshow “lists.” What a colossal waste of a click! I also wonder about mainstream publications that seek revenue with idiotic links to “Kim Kardashian Nip Slip!” and “Are You Going To Have A Heart Attack?” sites — I realize they aren’t selecting what is served up, but don’t they realize how cheesy it makes their own work seem?
    And, Richard, thanks for the reminder. I had followed your cartoon journal for some time but, as I recall, you went into a slump a few years ago and didn’t update for awhile. I enjoy it — it is, to coin a phrase, “Pekaresque”! But the reviews, when you feature them, are then within that context. It’s very much based on knowing your personality, which is different than a more freestanding critique.
    Not that this doesn’t exist in reality — I think most Ebert/Siskel watchers learned the Ebert had more patience with entertaining-but-stupid films than Siskel, and I remember a critic for the Rocky Mountain News who would praise anything with subtitles, no matter what crap it turned out to actually be. Which means that people who like your point of view enough to follow your blog regularly (and you’re back on my watchlist) would probably also take your reaction to a movie as valuable. Loved the Oz review, for instance.

  6. A good reviewer is useful even if I disagree with his tastes, as Tom Easton, I think it was, pointed out in one of his columns in Analog.

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