Wedding Update: It happened! I’m married. And I couldn’t be luckier.
Monday, December 29, 2014
11-20 Recap
Man,
after that last book I had to take a break from my blog. I read books without reviewing if I wanted to keep them. Over the summer, I had the
privilege of meeting Christopher Moore at a book release for his Serpent of Venice. I shook his hand and
he signed my copy of Lamb.
My fiancé and I picked up four more
Moore books and we had a reading Moore-athon. I also read Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter and the Percy Jackson series.
My wife and I moved from Milwaukee’s
East Side to Wauwatosa’s East Side. I got a better job, and we got a second
cat.
20. The House of Blue Leaves
Book: The
House of Blue Leaves
Did I mention I can’t stand these
people?
Author: John
Guare
Number of pages: 80
What I’m watching: TV: It’s been half a year…
What I’m playing: I’m not even going to try to list everything…
There
is a reason this post took me half a year to write, but I will get into that
later…
Review
#20. The big 2-0. I thought I might throwback to my earliest book choices and
do another play. The House of Blue Leaves
grabbed my eye. What could the title mean? The cover only refers to “a play.”
Would it be a drama or a comedy? “Music and Lyrics By John Guare”? Is it a
musical? Usually, my other scripts identified themselves on the cover; Why Worry: A Farce, Agnes of God: A Drama, Ten
Little Indians: A Mystery. The House
of Blue Leaves drew me in with an intriguing title and a mysterious genre.
One
of the first pages I get is the character list and setting. Looking down the
names, I see Bunny Flingus, Bananas Shaughnessy, and Three Nuns (3). Okay, it
sounds like John Guare is setting up for a comedy. The play is set on October
4, 1965. That’s my 49th wedding negaversary! Is it a good sign? I
hope so.
The
play comes with a prologue (5). I don’t know if I’ve ever seen that before. A
character named Artie Shaughnessy performs at a bar and grill, singing a few
songs while accompanying himself on piano. The scene is staged so that Artie is
alone on stage and the theater house would be the bar and grill. It seems that
Artie’s show doesn’t go over as well as he hoped. It’s a pretty novel opening
to a play. Although, I didn’t find the lyrics to be anything special:
Back
together again,
Back
together again.
Since
we split up
The
skies we lit up
Looked
all bit up
Like
Fido chewed them. (5)
And:
It
seems I’m
Looking
for Something,
But
what can it be?
I
just need a someone
To
hold close to me. (6)
Pretty bland and mediocre, but maybe
it’s because I’m missing the music to fit the lyrics. Well, I googled them.
They aren’t terrible; John Guare composed some mediocre vaudeville type music
to fit his mediocre lyrics. Then again, if Artie’s show was supposed to suck,
it makes sense that his songs would suck.
Alright,
one scene down and I’m still unsure of the type of play I’m in for. On to Act
I. Artie’s sleeping on the couch, mumbling about his teenage son Ronnie becoming
the Pope. Who should show up but Ronnie, but he comes in by breaking through
the window and heads to his bedroom. The doorbell rings “quickly, quickly like little
mosquito jabs” (9). So far, this play comes off as exaggerated with the
Pope-talk and the stage directions, which means I’m leaning toward comedy.
In
comes Bunny spouting nonsense to Artie that I can’t keep up with. Suddenly, she’s
talking about astronomy: “you should see Orion – O’Ryan: the Irish
constellation” (10). Was that a joke? Or is Bunny an idiot? I can’t tell. Turns
out the nonsense she’s babbling about is the Pope’s coming to town today and
everyone’s excited. Bunny keeps blathering on: “When famous people go to sleep
at night, it’s us they dream of, Artie. The famous ones – they’re the real
people. We’re the creatures of their dreams” (10-11). That’s a stupid thought.
Artie’s
reaction to the Pope visiting: “What I want to know is who the hell is paying
for this wop’s trip over here anyway…I don’t put my nickels and dimes in Sunday
collections to pay for any dago holiday – flying over here with his robes and
geegaws and bringing his buddies over” (11). What a complete racist shithead dick
thing to say! The only thing that makes me feel any better is that Bunny is “shocked”
by him, too (11).
The
subject changes to his performance at the bar and grill. Artie’s down about it,
but Bunny cheers him up. Artie “pulls Bunny by the pudgy arm” –Really, John Guare? How necessary is
it to call her arm pudgy in a stage direction? – “over to the kitchen” (13).
Artie asks her to cook breakfast, but that brings Bunny “near tears” and says, “You
bend my arm and twist my heart but I got to be strong” (13). Why? WTF is
happening? After a few pages of this, it turns out she’s saving her cooking for
after they’re married:
BUNNY: I’m not that kind of girl. I’ll sleep with you anytime you want.
Anywhere. In the two months I’ve known you, did I refuse you once?
(Wait, they’ve only known each other
for two months?!)
Not once! You want me…Give your fingers
a smack and I’m flat on my back. I’ll sew those words into a sampler for you in
our new home in California. We’ll hang it right by the front door. Because,
Artie, I’m a rotten lay and I know it and you know it and everybody knows it…I’m
not good in bed…My cooking is the only thing I got to lure you on with and hold
you with. Artie, we got to keep some magic for the honeymoon. It’s my first
honeymoon and I want it to be so good, I’m aiming for two million calories. I
want to cook for you so bad I walk by the A&P, I get all hot jabs of chili
powder inside my thighs. (15)
The idea is kinda funny, but mostly it’s
weird and sad. She’s got practically zero self-worth, thinking her food is the
only thing that can keep them together. And with that in mind, she’s using her
food to “lure” him into marriage, to trap him into commitment.
Bunny
leaves to pour Artie some cereal. In walks Bananas, Artie’s wife. Turns out,
she has mental health problems. Is that why she’s called Bananas? Tasteless. So
I guess that Artie is not only pressuring his girlfriend into giving up the
only thing with which she values about herself, he’s doing it while cheating on
his wife, on his sick wife, while his sick wife is in the other room. And he
hates the Pope. Is this a comedy? I haven’t laughed yet. Bananas has a spasm
and Artie gives her a pill. He tells her about his dream about Pope Ronnie:
ARTIE: I dreamed last night that Ronnie was the Pope and he came today
and all the streets were lined with everybody waiting to meet him…And it was
raining everywhere but on him and when he saw you and me on Queens Boulevard,
he stopped his glass limo and I stepped into the bubble, but you didn’t. He
wouldn’t take you.
BANANAS: He would take me!
ARTIE: (Triumphant.) Your own son denied you. Slammed the door in your face and you had open-toe shoes on and the water ran in the heels and out the toes like two Rin Tin Tins taking a leak – and Ronnie…made me a saint of the Church and in charge of writing all the hymns…and the whole congregation sang…You weren’t invited, Bananas. Ronnie loved only me…What a dream…it’s awful to have to wake up. (18)
ARTIE: (Triumphant.) Your own son denied you. Slammed the door in your face and you had open-toe shoes on and the water ran in the heels and out the toes like two Rin Tin Tins taking a leak – and Ronnie…made me a saint of the Church and in charge of writing all the hymns…and the whole congregation sang…You weren’t invited, Bananas. Ronnie loved only me…What a dream…it’s awful to have to wake up. (18)
What a horrible dick thing to say!
Honestly, every other line that comes out of Artie’s mouth makes me angry and
go “WTF?!”
Next,
Bunny and Bananas finally meet:
BUNNY: Bananas! What a name! (22)
Bunny
makes fun of her for being crazy, and Bananas makes fun of her in her own crazy
way. Artie wants to send Bananas to an institution. Turns out the mental
hospital is the house with blue leaves. Artie actually tries to be gentle with
Bananas during this scene, but Bunny acts like a complete asshole:
ARTIE: I talked to the doctor…You’ll like the place…A lot of famous
people have had crackdowns there, so you’ll be running in good company.
BANANAS: Shock treatments?
ARTIE: No. No shock treatments.
BANANAS: You swear?
BUNNY: If she needs them, she’ll get them.
ARTIE: I’m handling this my way.
ARTIE: I’m handling this my way.
BUNNY: I’m sick of you kowtowing to her. Those poison fumes that come
out of her hear make me dizzy – suffering – look at her – what does she know
about suffering? (22-23)
I can’t believe these characters! Artie
and Bunny are unbelievably ignorant and cruel, and this play is supposed to be
funny?
Bunny
asks Artie to call his Hollywood friend Billy, even though he’s probably out
partying, “frigging and frugging and swinging and eating and dancing. Since
Georgina died, he’s probably got a brace of nude starlets splashing in the pool”
(25). Yep, he sounds just like the type of guy Artie would like. Next, they’re
talking about movies they’ve seen, and Bunny asks about the latest Doris
Day/Rock Hudson flick.
BANANAS: I didn’t see that…
BANANAS: I didn’t see that…
ARTIE: (Mocking.)
Bananas doesn’t go out of the house. (26)
WHY ARE THEY SO AWFUL?
So,
Artie calls Billy, and honestly, what he says over the phone is worse than
anything I’ve heard so far. After a minute, Billy asks about Bananas:
ARTIE: Bananas is fine. She’s right here…Billy, this sounds cruel to
say, but Bananas is as dead for me as Georgina is for you. I’m in love with a
remarkable, wonderful girl – yeah, she’s here too – who I should’ve married
years ago – no, we didn’t know her years ago – I only met here two months ago…[at]
this health club…I went into this steam room and there was Bunny…she couldn’t
see me and she started talking about the weight she had to take off and the
food she had to give up…well, you know me and food and I got so excited and the
steam’s getting thicker and thicker and I ripped off my towel and kind of raped
her…and she was quiet for a long time and then she finally said one of the
greatest lines of all time…She said, “There’s a man in here… (27-28)
That is wrong on just so many levels my
head might explode.
1. Artie minimizing Georgina’s death.
2. Artie raping a stranger.
3. Artie raping a stranger because she
talked about food.
4. The stranger being okay and making a joke after being raped.
5. Artie raping a stranger being the
story of how two people fell in love.
6. Artie happy to share his rape/love story with Billy.
7. Artie and Bunny falling in love by
rape while Artie is still married to
Bananas.
Bunny
leaves, but not without some blasphemy, saying to Artie, “Hello, John the
Baptist. That’s who you are. John the Baptist. You called Billy and prepared
the way – the way for yourself. Oh Christ” (30). There’s another rare moment
between just Artie and Bananas when Artie speaks kindly, saying “We used to
have fun. Sometimes I miss you so much…” (32). But it’s short-lived and he’s a
dick again and Bunny shows up again with some of Artie’s sheet music. They want
to get it blessed by the Pope or something. Bananas takes it and Bunny screams
at her “You witch! You’ll be in Bellevue tonight with enough shock treatments
they can plug Times Square into your ear” (34). Fuck’s sake! Leave the poor
woman alone or show some goddamn compassion!
Everyone
leaves, and Ronnie (remember him from the top of the Act?) shows up again and
Act I ends with Ronnie holding a box and staring at the audience. Two words:
Creepy, and Why?! So far, this is
probably the worst thing I’ve ever read in my life. Artie and Bunny are maddeningly
disgusting characters.
As
much as it pains me to go on…Act II. Ronnie’s where we left him. He’s full of “deep,
suffocated, religious fervor. His eyes bulge with a strange mixture of
terrifying innocence and diabolism. You can’t figure out whether he’d be a
gargoyle on some Gothic cathedral or a skinny cherub on some altar” (35). That
is some weird-ass stage direction. I’d hate to try playing that. Of course, I’d
hate being a part of this show at all. Ronnie gives a long monologue about how
everybody thinks he’s nothing: his father, Billy, the army. Ronnie leaves
again.
Billy’s
girlfriend – I guess he did move on quickly – shows up. Her name’s Corrinna and
she’s an actress or something. Corrinna breaks the fourth wall to tell the
audience that she uses a hearing aid, but doesn’t want us to tell because she
doesn’t “want them to think Billy’s going around with some deaf girl” (39). What
is wrong with these people that a girl has to hide that she’s deaf for fear of
being dumped?!
Three
nuns break into the room (remember them?) because they were climbing the
building to get a better look at the Pope. They missed him in person and want
to see it on Artie’s TV. The three of them fall into bickering. Corrinna loses
her hearing aid. Bananas shows up and calls Bunny fat. Bunny calls Bananas a
dog. Everyone is just so unnecessarily callous.
Artie
wants to impress Corrinna with his music so she and Billy will help Artie get
into Hollywood. Artie plays some of his songs, but Corrinna cannot hear since
she’s lost her hearing aid. Bananas makes a request for one of Artie’s older
songs. She makes him realize that his song ripped off “White Christmas.” He
responds by smashing the piano keyboard cover on her fingers. Bananas gets
upset and Bunny slaps her. Bananas promises to take her pills and accidentally
swallows Corrinna’s hearing aid, which apparently fell in the pill bottle.
Corrinna heads out the door, announcing she’s headed to Australia with Billy for
an ear operation. Ronnie shows up with his box:
RONNIE: Pop, I’m going to blow up the Pope. (48)
RONNIE: Pop, I’m going to blow up the Pope. (48)
Honestly? Goddammit…
No
one pays him any attention. Corrinna offers up her two tickets to see the Pope.
Ronnie grabs the tickets, but the nuns chase after him. Someone comes to arrest
Ronnie for being AWOL and joins the chase. They catch him. Ronnie gives the
nuns the tickets. He gives Corrinna his bomb, which is wrapped as a gift. The
nuns leave. Corrinna leaves, but first invites Artie out to Hollywood. Someone
comes to take Bananas to the institution, but gets mixed up and takes Bunny
instead. So, almost everyone is out in the hallway when an explosion happens.
Yep, the bomb goes off in the hall. End scene. So, still zero laughs, but I
feel like this play is supposed to be a comedy. With that in mind, I predicted
that the explosion would fix Corrinna’s hearing.
The
next scene starts up with Billy sobbing, having had to come identify Corrinna’s
blown up body. She fucking died?! I guess I was wrong. Bananas enters and seems
to be her most cognizant with Billy. One of the nuns shows up again. The other
two were killed. Ronnie’s in jail. And the worst part of all, in all the grief
and pain and anger surrounding Ronnie’s triple murder, Artie is still trying to
push his songs on Billy. But Bunny swoops in again, and raises the bar of selfishness/tackiness/insensitivity:
BUNNY: Mr. Einhorn, I met your friend today before Hiroshima Mon Amour
happened out there…Deaf starlets. That’s no life…Crying and explanations won’t
bring her back. Mr. Einhorn, if it took all this to get you here, I kiss the
calendar for today. Grief puts erasers in my ears. My world is kept a beautiful
place. Artie…I feel a song coming on. (59)
Somehow, Billy isn’t offended. On the
contrary, Bunny cooks Billy a bite to eat and suddenly Billy is ready “drop off
Corrinna’s body” and fly Bunny to Australia in his dead girlfriend’s place (60).
Are you kidding me?!
Adding
to this mess, apparently no one figured out the explosion was Ronnie’s fault. I
guess he’s only in jail for being AWOL, not for killing half the cast. Billy
pulls some strings to not only get Ronnie out of jail, but to have him sent to
Rome instead of Vietnam like everyone else. The surviving nun says “maybe when
I take my final vows I can cross my fingers and they won’t count” (61). As in,
she wants to keep herself available for Ronnie. Good grief!
Billy
leaves with Bunny, but not before telling Artie to stay with Bananas, to not
send her to the house of blue leaves. So Artie and Bananas are all alone.
Bananas forgives Artie for Bunny and promises to be better. Then she sits and
barks like a dog. Rather than try to put the ending into words, I can only repeat
what John Guare wrote because it’s too fucking ridiculous. I don’t want to
believe it, but:
Bananas begins barking. She crawls on all fours. She barks happily. She
wags her behind. She licks Artie’s hands. Artie looks at her. He touches the
piano. She rubs her face against his pants leg, nuzzling him. She whimpers
happily. She barks. She sits up, begging, her hands tucked under her chin. Her
hands swing out. She knocks the music on the floor. She rubs her face into
Artie’s legs. He pats her head. She is thrilled. He kneels down in front of
her. He is crying. He touches her face. She beams. She licks his hand. He
kisses her. He strokes her throat. He looks away. He holds her. He kisses her
fully. She kisses him. He leans into her. She looks up at him with a beautiful
smile as his hands go softly on her throat as if she had always been waiting
for this. He kisses her temples, her cheeks. His hands tighten around her
throat. Their bodies blend as he moves on top of her. He lays her body gently
on the floor. Soft piano music plays. The stage begins to change. Blue leaves
begin to filter all over the room until it looks like Artie is standing in a
forest of leaves that are blue. A blue spotlight appears D. and he steps into
it. He is very happy and smiles at us. (64)
Then he sings a song and the play ends.
WHAT?!
Are you serious?! After all that, he kills her? Is Bananas happy he kills her? Is
it supposed to be a mercy killing? Or out of frustration that everything Artie
worked toward during the whole play just vanished out the door? Does he end up
going crazy himself? Is this really supposed to a comedy?
After
Act I, I said The House of Blue Leaves
was probably the worst thing I’ve ever read. Now, having read the full script,
I can confidently say that this book has topped all others (or should I say
bottomed) as the absolute worst book I’ve ever seen. Artie and Bunny are two of
the most despicable characters I’ve ever seen. What makes it worse is that
Bunny gets swept off an Australian vacation with a hotshot Hollywood producer,
and Artie may be committed in the end, but he’s happy. Artie’s a bigger douche
than Socrates or Reverend Eddie or even Faustus, plus he gets away with it.
Plato’s
Five Dialogues may be the dumbest
thing I’ve read, Pearl S. Buck’s The Good
Earth may be the most boring thing I’ve ever read, and up until this script
I might have said that Ernest Hemingway’s The
Old Man and the Sea was my least favorite book. But without a doubt, John
Guare has set a new low. Review #20 marks a huge milestone for me in my
lifetime as a reader. The House of Blue
Leaves is the worst thing I’ve ever read. It even took me half a year to
bring myself up to writing about it…
But
if you’re reading this review and John Guare’s romp through mental illness,
adultery, and death sounds right up your alley, you’re in luck! There are two recommendations
at the back of the book:
Knock
Knock: A Farce by Jules Feiffer
…Cohn, an atheistic ex-musician is the housekeeper “half” of this “odd
couple.” Abe, an agnostic ex-stockbroker is the practical “half.” They have
lived together for twenty years – are bored to tears with one another and
constantly squabble. Cohn, exasperated, wishes for intelligent company and on
the scene enters one Wiseman who appears in many roles and is part
Mephistopheles, part Groucho Marx. The Joan of Arc appears before the couple
telling them her mission is to recruit two of every species for a spaceship
trip to heaven. After that all antic hell breaks loose and continues to a mad
ending…
Little Murders: A Comedy by Jules
Feiffer
…A modern metropolitan family of matriarchal mother, milquetoast father,
normal cuddly sister, and brother who is trying to adapt himself to
homosexuality. Sister’s fiancé is a fellow who knows how to roll with the
punches; he figures that if you daydream while being mugged, it won’t hurt so
much. They have a hard time finding a preacher who will marry them without pronouncing
the name of God. But they succeed, to their sorrow. For immediately afterward
sister is killed by a sniper’s bullet. A detective who has a stack of unsolved
crimes suspects that there is a “subtle pattern” forming here. ‘Little Murders’
is fantastically funny. (80)
…
…What the hell?
Verdict (Is the book staying or going?): For the love of God and all that is
holy, this book is going!
Works
Cited
Guare, John. The House of Blue Leaves. New York: Samuel French Inc, 1971. Print.
Sunday, May 4, 2014
19. Birds of Prey
Book: Birds
of Prey: Brightest Day Issues #1-4
Everyone is hanging out, but are
interrupted when a bunch of “rogue cops” raid the place, and fighting ensues (12).
In the middle of the action1 there’s this really weird moment
between Dove and Penguin.
I have absolutely no idea what the hell
just happened. Penguin looked like some Bizarro Superman for a second. WTF?
Mayer (i). “Endrun: Impact Fracture.” Birds of Prey: Brightest Day #4. DC
Comics: Oct 2010. Print.
Author: Gail
Simone
Number of pages: 128 (32 per issue)
What I’m watching: TV: Bones, South Park, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
What I’m playing: Marble Blast Ultra, Fallout: New Vegas
I
know I selected Plato in hopes of getting rid of it, but it was so bad that I
wanted a quick and easy pick me up. I thought what better than comics? Birds of Prey: Brightest Day is a little
four-issue series, and, lucky me, I’ve got all four.
ISSUE #1
The
story opens up with a hostage situation on top of an isolated Icelandic
mountain. Dinah Lance is trying to stop some asshole who is holding a gun to a
little girl’s head. With the comic book medium, I get to follow Dinah’s inner
monologue. While talking to Chasco (the asshole (almost rhymes)), she thinks,
“I know what it’s like to lose a child, even if Sin wasn’t really my daughter”
(3). Damn, how can it be the first issue and I’m already missing important
backstory? Nothing should come before 1! I was hoping for a self-contained
story within the four comic books, but I guess that was too much to ask for. At
first, I was hoping this was all some in
media res technique, but no. Turns out there is a much larger context built
from I don’t know how many other comic book series. I’ll just have to move on,
not knowing who Sin is. Luckily, the comic gives a little help to new readers
by introducing all the Birds of Prey members.
I
did know a small amount about the Birds of Prey before reading this. I heard of
it because of my interest in Batman. All I knew was that Barbara Gordon joins
it some time after becoming Oracle. I knew there was someone named Black
Canary, though I knew absolutely nothing about her. So, my Birds of Prey
knowledge was equal to about one minute’s worth of Wikipedia reading.
Soon,
Oracle makes her appearance, as well as Lady Blackhawk, a WWII fighter pilot
who somehow is not old or dead, and a vigilante named Huntress:
Hey! She’s the one from Knightfall I
didn’t recognize – how about that! Well, I finally know who she is, or at
least, what her name is. And her poses and outfit still look like something
fitting the Hawkeye Initiative.
I
get the feeling I’m missing information during Oracle’s inner monologue as well.
She’s working at the Batcomputer and thinks, “It’s possible Dick or Alfred
decided to make the Batcave wheelchair-friendly. But I bet it was Bruce. Always
a lot more caring than he ever let on. Like someone else whose name I won’t
mention” (12). Who else is there? And come on Barbara, you’re thinking to
yourself and you can’t mention the name to yourself, in your head?
Then,
I’m introduced to the final two members of the Birds of Prey: Hawk, Avatar of
War and Dove, Avatar of Peace:
Are they some kind of yin-yang duo? I
think that’d be a pretty cool concept. I really like Dove’s design, though I
don’t understand how “she is the conscience of the superhero community” (15).
What does that even mean? I’m also confused about Hawk. He died but is alive
again somehow? I’m pretty lost with the story so far. Yet, there’s lots of
action, superheroes beating up criminals, which is easy enough to follow.
Okay,
maybe Hawk and Dove aren’t members yet, because they only first meet Black
Canary this issue. I don’t know. The larger story starts arcing when Oracle is
sent a package of files detailing secret identities, addresses, and more of
both superheroes and villains, including the Birds of Prey. The package also
comes with a threat to go public with the information and that people on the
list will start dying if the Birds of Prey “refuse to play” (21). I’m not sure
what the game is.
They
get summoned á la a Bird version of the Bat-signal, believing the mysterious
file-sender behind it. They’re right. The mystery person is there but obscured
by the bright signal light, along with the Penguin. Black Canary can make out
that the mystery person is a woman, and thinks it may be Shiva. Alright,
Penguin and Shiva – it feels good to finally recognize a couple more names. She
kicks their asses and shoves an arrow in Penguin’s throat.
I guess whatever agreement she and
Penguin had made is off now. The story ends this issue by finally revealing
what she looks like.
White Canary, huh? Interesting. Don’t
know her either, though. She did hint at knowing Black Canary personally. Cool.
I’m enjoying the read, although I’m stumbling through a little blind of
context.
Issue
#1 also includes a little preview of a Green
Arrow: Brightest Day comic. There’s not much to it. A bunch of armed thugs
chase a young woman through a forest. It seems like they’re going to rape her,
which makes me hate them. They catch her, but then Green Arrow shows up and
starts shooting them (with arrows, of course!). And since they were about to
rape someone, I don’t feel too sorry for them.
ISSUE #2
The
action picks up right where #1 left off. The Birds of Prey get a second wind,
only to get their asses handed to them again. They do manage a couple good
hits, though. Oracle hears on the news that Chasco the Asshole died and the
media is blaming Black Canary. Police show up to arrest the Birds of Prey, and
White Canary disappears, again threatening to kill each of them, one by one.
Unrelated
to the story, there’s an ad for an Aquaman comic. He’s definitely not high on
my list of favorite superheroes, but I have to admit, he looks awesome in the
picture.
The
Birds of Prey resist arrest and run, heading for Penguin’s Iceberg Lounge,
which he says is safe. I don’t know why they’re so trusting of Penguin. And
speaking of Penguin, for a guy who’s supposed to be dying, he still manages to
act like a perv.
He’s staring right at her boobs! No
shame.
The
story cuts to Oracle, who is sent a video transmission by a guy named Creote.
Creote tells her that another guy named Savant was killed by White Canary
because of his association with Oracle. Creote “tried to keep his heart beating
with [his] hands” (20). That’s pretty intense. Then Creote shoots himself in
the head. That’s pretty intense too. It’s probably a really big deal that these
two characters died, but I’ve never heard of them before, so I don’t know.
It
cuts back to Penguin, calling Dove “the dear, lovely child with the softly
pillowy bosom” (21). I called it! Penguin’s being a total pervert. He’s boob-mad!
Issue #2 ends with the media destroying Black Canary’s reputation, Oracle
pissed at White Canary, and the rest of the Birds of Prey heading to the
Iceberg Lounge with an injured and horny Penguin in tow.
This
issue previews a Jonah Hex comic, with him acting like his usual Wild West-ish,
morally gray, Jonah Hex-y self.
ISSUE #3
Part
3 opens with Black Canary, Lady Blackhawk, Huntress, Hawk, Dove, and Penguin
all at the Iceberg Lounge. I thought Penguin’s lust was bad in Issue #2, but
it’s nothing compared to the opening of #3. In his blood loss, he imagines all
the women posing, undressing, and making out with him. I feel a little dirty watching Penguin's horny thoughts.
There's another advertisement that I notice. It's for hair dye. The brand is Splat, and its draw is "Rebellious Colors." But reading the names of the colors, it's not about rebelling: it's about sex. Come on, "Lusty Lavender," "Blue Envy," "Luscious Raspberries," "Pink Fetish"? This ad just weirds me out.
Meanwhile,
Oracle’s got her own shit going on. That’s pretty much how it’s been this whole
time, with her staying in the Batcave alone lending support. Though now Savant
and Creote show up in the Batcave, perfectly alive and healthy, and kidnap
Oracle. From what I can infer, Savant is a bad guy-turned good-turned bad
again, and Creote is his lackey. They staged their death (Why? I don’t know.
Just to mess with her?), and now they want her to reveal her identity to the
public.
Back
at the battle at Iceberg Lounge, White Canary appears and fatally wounds Hawk.
Apparently, just being able to injure Hawk at all is supposed to be difficult,
so White Canary must be pretty formidable. Black Canary goes after her, and
Huntress tells her to kill White Canary. Black Canary and White Canary fight on
a rooftop for a bit, and White Canary taunts her, saying “I will void my
bladder on [the] broken corpses [of your families]” (30). Who says “void my
bladder”? Just say piss!2 Black Canary realizes who White Canary is,
but it isn’t revealed to the reader yet. Issue #3 ends with White Canary
hinting that Penguin is leading the others to their death as they leave the
lounge.
No
little bonus preview at the end of this issue. So far, it’s an intriguing
story, but there’s too much backstory for each of the characters that I don’t
know, making it hard to understand everything that’s happening. Turns out I
can’t even follow Barbara Gordon’s story that well because these Savant and
Creote guys are unknown to me.
ISSUE #4
Part
4 of 4 opens with White Canary’s birth. Nineteen years ago, she was born during
a storm in China. The mother died due to complications including not being at a
hospital. The father was expecting a son and wanted the baby killed after he
heard it was a girl. However, lightning struck the man sent to kill the baby.
The father saw it as an omen and decided to keep her and train her with her
older brothers.
I
also get a little more backstory of Black Canary. Turns out one of her uncles
was a Green Lantern. That’s cool. She had a second superhero uncle that I
didn’t recognize. Wow. “It’s a whole family of supers!”
The
two canaries fight some more, and Black Canary calls White Canary “Silk Sister”
(6). Some more backstory that I didn’t know: I guess Black Canary beat all
dozen of Silk Sister’s brothers. So this makes the whole story a simple albeit
fierce revenge. I enjoyed a moment during the fight when Black Canary was
running out of strategies and thought, “there’s one thing left that I’m really
good at. And that’s &^%$ with people’s heads” (6).3 Ha!
Cut
to Oracle. Turns out that two years ago Savant had been tortured for two days
because of his association with Oracle. He is still upset at Oracle because he
has no concept of time, so for him the torture is still fresh in his mind and
those two days seemed like forever. So, is he called Savant because he actually
has a form of autism? That’s pretty tacky. What would Marvel’s version be
named? Autismo? The Aspurglar? Of course it’s totally fine that a character has
autism in the story, but the name Savant works as a label for him, defining him
by his mental disorder. His autism is his identity. I just see that as poor
taste.
Back
to Penguin and the other Birds of Prey. He stabs Lady Blackhawk and holds her
hostage with his umbrella sword. He reveals to them how Savant was responsible
for obtaining the files. He believes his deal with Silk Sister is intact. His
injury was a part of the plan, even though it’s worse than he expected. He
wants the files for himself.
Black
Canary and Silk Sister fight more. They sure have fought a lot over this story
arc. The action’s been decent all throughout the comics, but there hasn’t
really been anything that stood out as memorable. Black Canary recalls more of
her encounter with Silk Sister’s brothers. Even with help from others, Black
Canary only met a stalemate with them. Silk Sister said that the stalemate
shamed her family’s honor, so she beat all her brothers to death. I’m going to
go ahead and say she’s mental.
Back
again to Oracle. Savant admits that he’s not there to kill Barbara. He came to kill
himself to end his suffering. He steps off a ledge but Oracle jumps out of her
chair to catch him. That’s right. She’s paralyzed below the waist but she’s
“practiced this move many times. Forceful ejection from the chair without the
use of [her] legs. It’s always painful” (23). Damn, Barbara Gordon is pretty
badass. Creote doesn’t help lift them up because he knows Savant wants to die.
After Savant and Oracle struggle awhile, Creote decides to help. Savant did not
want help, but Oracle tells him Creote acted out of love (30). So, I guess it’s
a happy resolution for them?
Hawk
is dying. He tells Dove that he hopes to stay dead this time. It’s unclear if
he actually dies or just loses consciousness. Dove loses her temper and knocks
out Penguin with a punch to his face, breaking a few of his teeth. It is pretty
gratifying to see after Penguin’s been such an asshole. And to have Dove be the
one who does it is also very satisfying, because she’s always been the calm and
patient one. But I guess if we were to follow the yin-yang interpretation of
Hawk and Dove, with Hawk’s apparent death, the yang side is gone, throwing off
the balance that existed with both of them. Also, the symbol depicts both yin
and yang containing a small aspect of the other. Arguably, though Dove’s role
is the yin half, she does have her own inner yang. It’s just a thought.
Black
Canary and Silk Sister are still going at it. Black Canary tackles Silk Sister,
sending them both out a window. They fall far and land hard on the back of a
van. Black Canary fights passing out long enough to handcuff Silk Sister. The
issue ends with Silk Sister revealing to Black Canary that it was Shiva who
killed Chasco in order to frame Black Canary. Silk Sister offers to work with
Black Canary to kill Shiva together.
So
much for this four-issue series being a self-contained story. I was behind on
important backstory before I started. I was lost a lot during the action in the
middle. And even with White Canary apprehended, the story doesn’t really end.
But that’s the nature of comics, to always lead forward to something new and
exciting. I had hoped for a straightforward story with a clear beginning and
end, but I didn’t really expect it. Instead, reading these comics would be like only watching the Battle of Hoth but not knowing a thing about Star Wars. It's entertaining, but without the surrounding context, the viewer would be lost and confused. May the Fourth be with you.
Verdict (Is the book staying or going?): Going. I read it. It was fun, but I
didn’t understand half of it and I don’t think I’ll read it again.
Notes
1. Or in Latin: in medias res.
2. I think that was Nancy Reagan’s
lesser known anti-drugs campaign.
3. I realize that as I type out the
comic book curse, it is [Shift] + 7654. $#@! is 4321. I wonder how many comic
book curses are based on sequential shifting.
Works
Cited
Simone, Gail (w) and Ed Benes (a). “Endrun:
Without Breaking a Few Eggs.”
Birds of Prey: Brightest Day #1. DC
Comics: July 2010. Print.
Simone, Gail (w), Ed Benes and Adriana
Melo (p), and Ed Benes and Mariah
Benes (i). “Endrun: The Rage of the White
Canary.” Birds of Prey:
Brightest Day #2. DC Comics: Aug 2010. Print.
---. “Endrun: Whistling Past the
Gravestones.” Birds of Prey: Brightest Day #3.
DC Comics: Sep 2010.
Print.
Simone, Gail (w), Ed Benes and Adriana Melo (p), and
Ed Benes and J.P. Mayer (i). “Endrun: Impact Fracture.” Birds of Prey: Brightest Day #4. DC
Comics: Oct 2010. Print.
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