As part of the 30 Days project, I’ll be reviving Gone&Forgotten for a short article every day
throughout the month. It’s June 2, and Your Humble Editor is revisiting a
previous subject, it’s…
I covered Secret Wars 2 many years ago in this very same
blog and walked away from that one dissatisfied; I actually enjoy most of the
comics which I review on this site (Solson excluded, across the board, hanging’s
too good for’em), if not for raw enthusiastic incompetence then at least for an
ambition which trumps ability. In my
review of Secret Wars 2, I came away only with a keen, baffled sense of unease.
The only high point of the review, by my recollection, involved me trying to cuss
the staples right off the spine.
Recently, tho, I came across a comment regarding Chris
Tucker’s portrayal of Ruby Rhod in Luc Besson's The Fifth Element - legitimately
one of my favorite films – which gave me pause to reconsider Secret Wars 2.
Specifically, the author suggested that Ruby Rhod was Besson's vision of the heterosexual
male sex symbol of the future, a complete inversion of the macho, gruff, silent
hero as portrayed in that same film by contemporary action hero Bruce Willis.
Luckily The Beyonder understands our human concept of "holding it" |
I’m not saying I subscribe to the theory completely –I’ll
save the specifics for the blog I run about arguing the semiotics and portrayal
of race in Luc Besson films, which is to say nowhere – but at the very least it
was an epiphany. I understood for the first time was author/editor Jim Shooter
was trying to accomplish.
That put me in the mind of this: When The Beyonder chooses
to incarnate himself in a human body in Secret Wars 2, he makes a duplicate of
Captain America’s alter-ego, the blonde, blue-eyed brick shithouse Steve Rogers.
He takes the body of this classically handsome, muscular idealized
hetero-masculine male figure and spends the remainder of the series and
crossovers either inverting or caricaturizing its paradigm. By the end, he’s
got Rogers’ beefy body jeri-curled and decked out in bleach-white pleather
tracksuit so that he looks like an enormous singular white male Klymaxx
immediately following an enormous multiple white male climax.
This is how the story meetings went |
With the idea that Shooter was tickling the underside of
paradigm, Secret Wars 2 seems to have been intended as a broad cultural and
social satire - the immediate Trust Fund offspring of the thoughtful and lurid work
produced under the influence in the 1970s by Bullpen writers like Moench,
Starlin and Gerber. If there are any significant distinctions between the
purple prose of Marvel’s Seventies catalog and Shooter’s pet crossover project
it lies in the scope, scale and the fact that all those other writers spent
their teenage years expanding their consciousness with mind-altering drugs and
Shooter spent his teenage years being terrorized by Mort Weisinger.
As a satire, its ambition is breathtaking, not only because
it audaciously takes place as a multi-issue major crossover involving the
company’s best-selling books well inside canon, but also because of the scale
of the cultural and philosophical parody; Suburban domesticity, the entertainment
industry, fandom, fast food, limousine liberalism, agnostic holisticism, asceticism,
a potshot at airplane seats and that’s just in the first issue. He’ll go on to cover pop culture, conspicuous
consumerism, solipsism, hedonism, existentialism, criminal ethics, abortion
(!), spiritual morality, secular ethics, transcendentalism and generally the
folly of the human condition while making hay of the tropes of the super-hero genre
all in the company of well-meaning but tunnel-visioned human helpers (including
a watered-down version of Funky Flashman who was himself an amped-up version of
Stan Lee so … Stan Lee).
That none of it is done very well is almost beside the
point, the ambition is so tremendous as to be noteworthy. A major round of
applause for a glorious catastrophe, Secret Wars 2…
Aaah, so it's Marvel's Stranger in a Strange Land?
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