February 10, 2012

Severed # 6 - Snyder, Tuft & Futaki


Jack Garron is merely 12 years old but surviving in the streets of Chicago has taught him much about adults and wickedness. Initially, he trusted in an old salesman who promised him to help him get into the music industry. However, the trip has been quite revealing about the man’s misogyny and hostile nature. But that’s not all, Jack has discovered his wallet inside the man’s luggage, the same wallet that Sam –Jack’s friend- had supposedly stolen from him, at least, according to this sinister salesman.

Now finally everything is clear to Jack, but can he vanquish a foe as old as vice itself? In a secluded house, the man no longer hides his shark-like teeth. Jack tries to defend himself and although armed with a knife he barely manages to escape.

In the first issue of ‘Severed’, Jack run away from home, in search of his father. There’s nothing weird about this quest, after all, the necessity for a fatherly figure has been explained by many psychoanalysts. It can’t be easy for a single mother to raise a child, but Jack cannot understand this. He blames his mother for the disappearance of his father. However, if any true failing can be adjudicated to the motherly figure is her inability to summon the name of the father and invest herself with an authority that comes from that tautological figure that does not need to explain or justify himself, that needs only to say 'no because I say so'.

The absence of Jack’s father also means the absence of the nom de pere, the ultimate authority that inscribes the subject into the symbolic order. Ultimately this ‘name of the father’ commands his offspring to occupy the male or female position in the symbolic order. Without this authority, male and female positions can be seen as interchangeable which is made evident by Sam’s cross-dressing, id est, a fatherless girl undertaking the male position. At the same time, Jack becoming the object of desire for other men, especially when he almost gets raped in a train, would seem to unequivocally place him in a more feminine/passive position.

Jack, nevertheless, cannot stop searching for this elusive father, although what he really wants is the ‘name of the father’, because his only wish is to be a part of society, of this world, and for that he requires this connection with his progenitor, a link severed by his own mother since he was a child. After finally arriving to his father’s place, Jack courageously enters into the house without realizing that the merciless salesman had planned for Jack to be there all along...

Overtaken by the salesman’s vicious attack, Jack seems to be defeated. Will youth and innocence succumb before the power of an old evil? There’s no way of knowing the ending until issue 7 –the final issue of this miniseries- is released.

Meanwhile, if you want to know what did you miss in issues 1 through 5 you can click on the following links:

Severed # 1, Severed # 2, Severed # 3, Severed # 4,
Severed # 5.
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Jack Garron sólo tiene 12 años, pero sobrevivir en las calles de Chicago le ha enseñado mucho sobre los adultos y la malicia. Al inicio, confió en un viejo vendedor que le prometió acercarlo a la industria de la música. No obstante, el viaje le ha revelado la misoginia y hostilidad de este individuo. Pero eso no es todo, Jack ha descubierto su billetera en el equipaje del hombre, la misma billetera que Sam -la amiga de Jack- supuestamente le había robado, al menos, según decía el siniestro vendedor.

Finalmente todo es claro para Jack, pero ¿podrá derrotar a un enemigo tan viejo como el vicio mismo? En una casa aislada, el hombre ya no esconde sus dientes de tiburón. Jack trata de defenderse y aunque está armado con un cuchillo apenas logra escapar.

En el primer número de 'Severed', Jack escapó de casa, en busca de su padre. No hay nada extraño en esta búsqueda, después de todo, la necesidad de una figura paterna ha sido explicada por muchos psicoanalistas. No debe ser fácil para una madre soltera criar a un hijo, pero Jack no entiende esto. Culpa a su madre por la desaparición del padre. Sin embargo, si se le puede adjudicar alguna falla a la figura materna es su incapacidad de invocar el nombre del padre para conferir sobre sí misma una autoridad que proviene de esa figura tautológica que no necesita explicarse ni justificarse a sí misma, que sólo necesita decir 'no porque no'.

La ausencia del padre de Jack también significa la ausencia del nom de pere, la autoridad definitiva que inscribe al sujeto en el orden simbólico. Este 'nombre del padre' ordena a sus vástagos ocupar la posición masculina o femenina en el orden simbólico. Sin esta autoridad, las posiciones masculinas y femeninas pueden verse como intercambiables, algo que se hace evidente en el travestismo de Sam, una chica sin padre que se desplaza hacia la posición masculina. Al mismo tiempo, Jack se convierte en el objeto de deseo de otros hombres, especialmente cuando casi es violado en un tren, esto lo ubicaría inequívocamente en una posición más femenina/pasiva.

Jack, sin embargo, no puede dejar de buscar a su elusivo padre, aunque lo que realmente quiere es el 'nombre del padre', porque su único deseo es ser parte de la sociedad, de este mundo, y para ello requiere esta conexión con su progenitor, un lazo cercenado por su propia madre. Luego de llegar al hogar del padre, Jack valientemente cruza la puerta sin darse cuenta que el despiadado vendedor lo tenía todo planeado...

Abrumado por el salvaje ataque del vendedor, Jack parece estar derrotado. ¿Sucumbirá la juventud y la inocencia ante el poder de una maldad antigua? No hay forma de saber el desenlace hasta que el número 7 -el último de la miniserie- salga a la venta.

Mientras tanto, si quieren saber de qué se perdieron en los números 1 al 5 pueden hacer click a continuación:

Severed # 1, Severed # 2, Severed # 3, Severed # 4, Severed # 5 

February 9, 2012

Jóvenes talentos - Galería John Harriman / Británico

Lost in Translation (2003)
Directed by Sofia Coppola

The first minutes of Sofia Coppola’s best film to date are quite revealing: A woman, Scarlett Johansson, is in a five star hotel, beholding Tokyo’s skyline. A man, Bill Murray, looks through a car’s window, curious perhaps, but above all estranged. Combining a deeply poignant music with suggestive images, the director creates a world, a filmic universe that captures our attention immediately. What Sofia Coppola does in the opening frames is what many filmmakers struggle to achieve in their entire careers.

Throughout the film there is always a certain feeling of longing, of loneliness; longing for a different tomorrow, and loneliness as the confirmation that the one constant in human condition is discontent. Many critics must have explored the lack of communication as a fundamental key in “Lost in Translation”, both as the obvious reference of the title and also as an indicator of all that we can’t put into language.

Perhaps in the best role of his career, Bill Murray plays Bob Harris, a washed-out actor that used to be a super star and now has to endorse a Japanese whisky to make a couple of million bucks. He feels like an alien in Tokyo. But he’s also a specular image of the Japanese people’s own alienated condition. Westernized to the extreme, the Japanese have lost their essence, they are the living example of how further can people go in order to disallow themselves.

Giovanni Ribisi’s character, a professional photographer also ponders on it: Japanese rock and roll groups that have no substance and exist only thanks to the decoration, the false reality that photography and the right publicity stunt can imprint on them. The photographer is there to sustain the alienation process, even if he disagrees with the falseness of it all.

In the same way, Bob Harris has to synthetize in a TV commercial what the Japanese consider the core of Western elegance and sophistication. He is asked to be Roger Moore, Frank Sinatra, he is asked to perform not as the white man he is but as the white man they need him to be. Of course, there can be no words or guidelines for such a taxing acting job. And that’s why also it’s impossible for the interpreters to translate the instructions given to him. Not only are words lost in translation, but also there is an unnamed need, a ‘real’ that threatens to irrupt into reality, and as Lacan explains in his psychoanalytic theory, the real exceeds the language, the real can never exist within the boundaries of the symbolic, id est, language.

Bob Harris is an exhausted man that finds alcohol soothing, although just barely. After 25 years of marriage he is unhappy. Between him and his wife no real communication exists. What takes place, however, is a very insistent simulacrum, much in the same way that everything takes place in Japan. Philosopher Alan Badiou’s talks about the importance of the simulacrum in postmodern society; if Sofia Coppola’s film is more revealing and enthralling than anything else out there is precisely because it embraces contemporaneity to the maximum; this isn’t a film about explanations, about outcomes, which would be a modernist approach; this is a postmodern film in the way that it sates our hunger for art, for beauty and for intellectual value while establishing what Derrida proposed in his deconstruction theory: knowledge can never be complete. When Bob’s wife sends him a fax, or Fed-Exes carpet samples, or calls him, it’s all a simulacrum. They are never able to connect with each other, not even at the most basic of levels.
my page / mi página

In the same manner, Charlotte, extraordinarily interpreted by Scarlett Johansson seems to be drifting away. She’s married to a successful photographer but she can’t figure out what to do with her time. There is no meaning for life, and that thought depresses her and fills her heart with anguish. She tries to get into self-help audiobooks to feel better, to no avail. The entire boom of auto-help material is also an example of Badiou’s simulacrum; thousands if not millions of these books are written each year, and yet they are all useless. Life cannot be summarized, standardized and explained so that you can feel better. But despair takes the best of us all, and thus self-help becomes the one and only thing that sells out nowadays.

When Charlotte and Bob meet in the hotel’s bar, they recognize in the other the same existential doubts, the same sensibilities, and they feel connected. They are the only characters able to actually communicate with each other. Their bond is intensified when contrasted with the world around them, for example, with Charlotte’s Japanese friends who are so absolutely alienated and have tried so hard to look and act like Americans that end up as ridiculous and pathetic creatures. Tokyo is a city that denies its past, its traditions, so much that it’s simply brutal to see how its inhabitants behave.

However, there is still some true beauty left (beauty as it would be understood in the Genji Monogatari and other traditional Japanese works of art), and Coppola gives us a glimpse of it, in a couple of moments. Nevertheless, this beauty, this true spirit, is constantly covered by the appalling reality that surrounds the protagonists. When Bob Harris receives the visit of a woman wearing sexy stockings, we are privy to yet another example of westernized acculturation and fantasies, although here the fantasy instead of covering the horror of the real merely exacerbates the void, the structural fissures of Japan’s society.

Sofia Coppola’s masterwork resonates deeply inside of us because it’s one of the most refined and superb portrayals of the human condition in cinema’s history. The final scene, of course, proves once again that there is no such thing as a happy ending, and precisely because of that it reminds us that life is just like that, unpredictable, full of suffering but also possibilities of change and, of course, free will. Lost in Translation makes it into my personal top twenty without a second thought. 
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Hace más de una década que no visito Cusco y mis últimos viajes han sido o bien a Estados Unidos o bien a países vecinos como Colombia, la tierra de mi padre. Así es que considero una falta grave, de mi parte, estar desconectado de lo que sucede fuera de Lima. Más aún en términos artísticos.

Por suerte, aunque sea levemente, algo de esto se puede subsanar gracias a la admirable labor de la curadora Élida Román, quien se ha esforzado en descentralizar el arte. Así, con el apoyo de la galería John Harriman del Británico, ella ha logrado organizar una muestra anual enfocada en artistas de provincias, en este caso, de Cusco.

La muestra “Jóvenes talentos” reúne las originales y sugerentes esculturas en piedra y metal de Edwin Huamán y los fantásticos cuadros del artista plástico Richard Peralta. Acostumbrado al arte contemporáneo limeño, debo admitir que quedé gratamente sorprendido por el altísimo nivel de calidad de los trabajos seleccionados para esta muestra. Tantos las esculturas como los cuadros me transmitieron una fuerza y una energía que a veces no se percibe en obras de artistas locales. La muestra quedará abierta al público en la galería John Harriman (Jr. Bellavista 531 / Malecón Balta 740. Miraflores) desde el día de mañana hasta el 31 de marzo. Vayan a verla, realmente vale la pena.

Me enteré de la muestra gracias a mis amigos Andreé Ferro y Natalia Higa, justamente hace un par de semanas, los tres nos reunimos en el café Gianfranco y conversamos con Élida Román mientras comíamos helados artesanales. Conozco más artistas que curadores, pero considero sumamente valiosa la opinión de una conocedora del arte que está en constante búsqueda de nuevos talentos. Gracias a ese afán, Élida ha descubierto para nosotros la obra de dos cusqueños con propuestas artísticas de primer nivel.

Además de conversar con Andreé y Natalia durante la inauguración, también me encontré con varias amistades como Mariloli de Koechlin y artistas como Joseph de Utia. Lo cierto es que, tras conversar brevemente con ellos (y tomarme un par de vasos de whisky y algunas copas de vino tinto y blanco, dicho sea de paso), todos estuvieron de acuerdo en una cosa: la originalidad y lucimiento de los trabajos expuestos.

Por esas casualidades de la vida, la primera vez que un escritor me firmó un libro Andreé estaba presente, y eso me ha hecho pensar en la gran cantidad de libros autografiados que tengo actualmente, entre ellos “La piedra alada” del genial poeta José Watanabe. Ahí van la foto del libro y del autógrafo. Y también he decidido incluir una de mis páginas completas para un próximo cómic (así como el gran dibujante Keith Giffen se inspiró en el genial artista francés Druillet a principios de los 80, yo también intenté plasmar, sobre todo en la primera viñeta, el estilo y la composición del ilustrador galo). 

February 8, 2012

Ferals # 1 - David Lapham & Gabriel Andrade

Truly frightening werewolves stories don’t come easy. I won’t even try to find a good one in comic books, suffice to say that in movies, for instance, it’s not that difficult to come across interesting productions about Dracula or other classical monsters. I can think of several extraordinary productions about vampires, such as Tomas Alfredson's “Låt den rätte komma in” (“Let the Right One In”).

Nonetheless, in recent years films or comic books about lycanthropes are not only rare but usually quite disappointing. I’m pleased to see that David Lapham has created a very solid narrative that brings werewolves into an isolated and peaceful town.
cover by Gabriel Andrade / portada de Gabriel Andrade

When a man is found in the woods savagely mutilated theories start to abound. For some, only a bear or a mountain lion could be responsible for such butchery, nonetheless, as officer Dale asks “what kind of animal stuffs a man’s dick in his throat?”. Nobody can explain this death and there are no suspects.

So when Dale gets drunk and finds comfort in the arms of a mysterious albeit seductive Norwegian woman, an ominous moment takes place. As they head for the bathroom to have sex, the woman demands to be hit, she demands violence. What is the essence of sadomasochism? For some, the quintessential sadistic pleasure derives from the Marquis de Sade’s philosophical assertions. For others, however, the masochist is the one who adopts a particular position in the sexual structure (sadomasochism and sex are, after all, undividable which explains why the sex scene between Dale and the woman is indispensable). The masochistic subject makes himself the instrument of the Other's volonté de jouissance.
check the mouth... / revisen la boca...

A werewolf could easily be seen as a manifestation of the otherness that we carry inside ourselves. The savageness, the bestiality, the undiluted rage… There is, nonetheless, a jouissance present in the behavior of the man –or woman- who turns into an animal. An undeniable jouissance that explains why the werewolf seems to target sexual organs with a special ferocity. The entrancing perversity created by Lapham’s wild imagination successfully places a classical monster of black and white cinema into the colorful although bleak reality of today’s world.  

Whosever the werewolf might be, he or she is clearly a pervert. A pervert is the person in whom the structure of the drive is most clearly revealed, and also the person who carries the attempt to go beyond the pleasure principle to the limit "he who goes as far as he can along the path of jouissance" (Lacan).

This is a very promising issue but, of course, it wouldn’t be so great if not for Gabriel Andrade’s wonderful pages. Gabriel provides the reader with a clear sequential approach while retaining all the details that we need to see. For instance, the viciously disemboweled bodies are shown in its integrity, while the sex scenes are enticing without becoming too graphically explicit. Avatar Press has yet again released a series that no horror fan can miss. You’ve been warned.   
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Las buenas historias de hombres lobo son escasas. Ni siquiera intentaré encontrar alguna en cómics, basta decir que en el cine, por ejemplo, no es tan difícil hallar producciones interesantes sobre Drácula u otros monstruos clásicos. Puedo pensar en varias obras extraordinarias sobre vampiros, como “Låt den rätte komma in” (“Let the Right One In”) de Tomas Alfredson.
the masochistic woman / la mujer masoquista

No obstante, en años recientes las películas o cómics sobre licántropos son poco habituales y usualmente decepcionantes. Me complace ver que David Lapham ha creado una sólida narrativa que lleva al hombre lobo a un aislado y pacífico pueblo.

Cuando aparece el cuerpo de un hombre salvajemente mutilado, las teorías abundan. Para algunos, sólo un oso o un león montañés podría ser responsable de semejante carnicería, sin embargo, el oficial Dale se pregunta "¿Qué clase de animal metería el pene de un hombre en su garganta?". Nadie puede explicar esta muerte y no hay sospechosos.

Así que cuando Dale se emborracha y se acerca una misteriosa aunque seductora noruega, llega el momento de lo ominoso. Mientras si dirigen al baño para tener sexo, la mujer exige ser golpeada, ella demanda violencia. ¿Cuál es la esencia del sadomasoquismo? Para algunos, la quintaesencia del placer sádico deriva de las afirmaciones filosóficas del Marqués de Sade. Pero para otros el masoquista es aquel que adopta una posición particular en la estructura sexual (el sadomasoquismo y el sexo, después de todo, son indesligables y esto explica por qué la escena de sexo entre Dale y la mujer es indispensable). El sujeto masoquista se convierte en instrumento de la voluntad de goce del Otro.
Dale's lover / la amante de Dale

Un hombre lobo podría ser visto fácilmente como una manifestación de la otredad que tenemos en nuestro interior. El salvajismo, la bestialidad, la ira sin control... Hay, no obstante, un goce presente en la conducta del hombre -o mujer- que se transforma en animal. Un innegable goce que explica por qué el hombre lobo parece ensañarse en los órganos sexuales con especial ferocidad. La sugerente perversidad creada por la imaginación salvaje de Lapham ubica con éxito al monstruo clásico del cine a blanco y negro dentro de la colorida aunque desolada realidad del mundo actual.

Sin importar quién sea el hombre lobo, se trata claramente de un ser perverso. El perverso es la persona en quien la estructura de la pulsión está más claramente revelada, y también la persona que intenta llevar el principio del placer hasta el límite y más allá "aquel que va tan lejos como puede en el camino de la jouissance" (Lacan).

Este es un primer ejemplar muy prometedor pero, por supuesto, no sería lo mismo si no fuese por las maravillosas páginas de Gabriel Andrade. Gabriel le proporciona al lector un claro enfoque secuencial mientras retiene todos los detalles que necesitamos ver. Por ejemplo, los cuerpos salvajemente destripados se ven en su integridad, mientras que las escenas de sexo son eróticas sin ser demasiado explícitas gráficamente. Avatar Press, nuevamente, ha creado una serie que ningún fan del terror puede perderse. Están advertidos.

February 7, 2012

January comic books / cómics de enero

I got my January comic books on record time! And I think I read them even faster. Icon is still producing some of the most interesting titles such as Brilliant and Superior, while Avatar keeps catering to the horror fans like no other publisher could… this month Caligula ends, but Ferals begins. Unwritten and Morning Glories continue to be some of my favorite ongoing series, while Luther Strode and Severed are the best Image miniseries right now. I’d like to emphasize the quality of the first issue of Whispers, a very promising title. And now, without further ado, January issues are here as per solicitations. Which one of these should I review first?


And also, a couple of panels from an old X-Factor issue. How could you not love Madrox, the Multiple Man?

BRILLIANT #2 (MR)
Created by BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS & MARK BAGLEY Written by BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS Pencils & Cover by MARK BAGLEY Variant Covers by DAVID MACK & MICHAEL AVON OEMING How do Bendis and Bagley follow up their record-breaking, award-winning run on the million-selling ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN? With another chapter of their new creator-owned series BRILLIANT. The challenge has been set: a handful of?genius college students have taken it upon themselves to crack the mystery of superpowers. Can it be done? Can science fiction again become science fact? Find out in this crackling thriller sure to entertain fans of SCARLET and POWERS. 40 PGS./Mature  Copyright 2011 Jinxworld Inc.


CALIGULA #6 (OF 6)
The streets of Rome run red with blood as David (CROSSED) Lapham brings a startling conclusion to the story of the most feared Emperor of time, Caligula!  Felix has endured the brutal slaughter of his parents, the intrusive savage needs of a nightmare steed, and the hedonistically maddened ravings of his beloved and despised enemy.  Having been tasked to record the gospel of Caligula, can a mortal man decipher the supernatural secrets of Rome's most despised despot and put an end to the insanity® David Lapham drags fans into the darkest corners of Rome's history and dares you to stare down the madness within.  German Nobile illustrates this final gruesome chapter in the Caligula epic.  Caligula #6 is available with a Regular cover by Jacen Burrows, a Wraparound cover by series artist German Nobile, and a special Golden age of Rome retailer incentive cover.


FERALS # 1
Cover: Gabriel Andrade Writer: David Lapham Art: Gabriel Andrade Lapham unleashes a new on-going horror series! David (CROSSED) Lapham returns to his Stray Bullets roots with a brutal supernatural crime drama that features the grueling horror of a new type of werewolf! Officer Dale Chesnutt has a big bloody problem - slaughtered civilians are turning up in the sleepy town of Cypress and now it's on him to figure it out. But while he is discovering more carnage, and his violent passions for a sexy mysterious woman, a vicious creature strikes again, this time at Dale's own family. The horrific mystery begins to unfold with Gabriel (LADY DEATH) Andrade illustrating the on-going Ferals epic. Available with a Regular, Wraparound, Gore, and special Slashed Retailer Incentive cover by series artist Gabriel Andrade.


LORD OF THE JUNGLE #1 (MR)
The original Lord of the Jungle returns! If you thought you knew the story, think again! For the first time in its 100 year history the classic Edgar Rice Burroughs story, Tarzan of The Apes is told UNCENSORED! This series will capture the savagery and action of the original while expanding on it with new elements! The story begins in the late 1800s, John Clayton, Lord of Greystoke, and his wife, the Lady Alice, are left stranded on a remote African coast. They must fend for themselves in this savage world, and the fact that Lady Alice is pregnant doesn't make things any easier! The violent saga of Greystoke begins in December written by Arvid Nelson and illustrated by Roberto Castro, and featuring covers by Alex Ross, Lucio Parillo, Ryan Sook, and Paul Renaud!


MORNING GLORIES #15 (MR)
P.E. Part Two


SEVERED #6 (MR)
story SCOTT SNYDER & SCOTT TUFT art / cover ATTILA FUTAKI  'PERMANENT TEETH' In 1916, a boy runs away from home in search of his father. But along the way he meets a salesman with sharp teeth and a hunger for flesh. SCOTT SNYDER (AMERICAN VAMPIRE, BATMAN, SWAMP THING), SCOTT TUFT and ATTILA FUTAKI (NYT Best-Selling-Artist: PERCY JACKSON) comes the most terrifying horror series of the last year.


STRANGE TALENT OF LUTHER STRODE #4 (OF 6) (MR)
story JUSTIN JORDAN art / cover TRADD MOORE Luther versus The Librarian, Round One! The truth is revealed as Luther meets the Librarian for the first time and finds out the origin of his abilities and what the pinstriped madman has planned for him. All your questions are answered as the countdown to the end begins.


SUPERIOR # 7
Written by MARK MILLAR Pencils & Cover by LEINIL FRANICS YU DOUBLE-SIZED FINALE to the best new comic in years as the first volume of Superior draws to a close and the creators promise is the best fight-scene they have ever achieved on the printed page. It's Superior versus Abraxas in the middle of New York and thousands of innocent people dying every time someone throws a punch. Matthew Vaughn (Kick-Ass) has already snapped up the rights for this book meaning Millar has yet another movie franchise he can boast about. Buy this now while it's still cheap. Plus: An exclusive 6-page lettered preview of the new Supercrooks series by Mark Millar and Leinil Yu, launching in January. 40 PGS./Mature


UNWRITTEN #33
Recovered and recharged, Tom is ready to invade the cabal's inner sanctum as 'Tommy Taylor and the War of Words' continues. And the Cabal are more than ready to receive him into the charged narrative space of the Grid. As Pullman's trap closes, revelations about the Cabal's true aims come thick and fast.


WALKING DEAD #93 (MR)
story ROBERT KIRKMAN art / cover CHARLIE ADLARD & CLIFF RATHBURN  'A LARGER WORLD' begins here! As we ramp up to the release of our monumental 100th issue, the world is changing.  Rick and his band of survivors are faced with new threats - and new opportunities.  Nothing will ever be the same - and with this book, you know we mean it!


WHISPERS #1
story JOSHUA LUNA art & cover JOSHUA LUNA A mentally troubled man is suddenly empowered with the ability to leave his physical body in 'ghost' form and manipulate people in strange and disturbing ways. With this incredible power, will he control his demons...or discover even more® JOSHUA LUNA of the Luna Brothers (ULTRA, GIRLS, THE SWORD) makes a solo debut with a dark, supernatural thriller that questions free will and explores the obsessions, addictions and urges we all have and may not have control of at all.

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Recibí mis cómics de enero en tiempo récord. Y los leí aún más rápido. Icon sigue produciendo algunos de los títulos más interesantes como Brilliant y Superior, mientras que Avatar sigue engriendo a los fans del terror... este mes finaliza Caligula pero comienza Ferals. Unwritten y Morning Glories siguen siendo algunas de mis colecciones regulares favoritas, mientras que Luther Strode y Severed son las mejores miniseries de Image actualmente. Me gustaría hacer énfasis en la calidad del primer número de Whispers, un título más que prometedor. Y ahora, sin más preámbulos, ahí van los cómics de enero. ¿Cuál debería reseñar primero?
X-Factor

Y finalmente un par de páginas de un número viejo de X-Factor, ¿a quién no le encanta Madrox, el Hombre Múltiple?

BRILLIANT #2 (MR) 
Todos conocen el reto. Ahora, un grupo de jóvenes genios, estudiantes universitarios, deciden investigar científicamente los súper poderes. ¿Podrá la ciencia ficción convertirse en ciencia a secas?


CALIGULA #6 (OF 6)
Las calles de Roma se llenan de sangre. Félix ha resistido el brutal asesinato de sus padres, las intrusivas necesidades salvajes de un corcel de pesadilla, la locura de su hedonística de su amado y odiado enemigo. Su misión es registrar el evangelio de Calígula, pero ¿podrá un mortal descubrir el secreto sobrenatural del más odiado déspota?


FERALS # 1
Llega una nueva raza de hombres lobo. El oficial Dale tiene un grave problema: civiles masacrados empiezan a aparecer en su pacífico pueblito. Y mientras descubre la carnicería, su propia familia es atacada.

Multiple Man

LORD OF THE JUNGLE #1 (MR)
El rey de la jungla original regresa. Por primera vez, la historia de TARZAN de los simios es contada sin censura. En 1800, John Clayton y su esposa Alice se pierden en la costa africana. Y ella está embarazada.


MORNING GLORIES #15 (MR)
‘Educación Física’, segunda parte.


SEVERED #6 (MR)
Dientes permanentes. El horror de verdad está en 1916.


STRANGE TALENT OF LUTHER STRODE #4
Luther versus el Bibliotecario. La verdad se revela en este primer encuentro, y Luther descubrirá el origen de sus extraordinarias habilidades.


SUPERIOR # 7
Superior versus Abraxas pelean en medio de New York, y miles de inocentes mueren cada vez que uno de ellos lanza un golpe.


UNWRITTEN #33
Recuperado y recargado, Tom está listo para invadir el santuario interno de la Cábala. La guerra de los mundos continúa.


WALKING DEAD #93 (MR)
El mundo está cambiando. Rick y los suyos se enfrentan a nuevas amenazas y nuevas oportunidades. Nada volverá a ser lo mismo.

Madrox

WHISPERS #1
Un hombre mentalmente inestable repentinamente gana el poder de salir de su cuerpo físico como un fantasma, manipulando a la gente de extrañas y perturbadoras maneras. ¿Podrá controlarse a sí mismo?

February 6, 2012

Séptimo festival del pisco sour - Wong Asia

7 festival del pisco sour
I had a great weekend. Every year, here in Peru, we celebrate pisco sour’s day -or rather weekend. So as usual, you get to drink for free and if you are interested you can compare the different varieties of our prestigious pisco.

I was checking my list of January comics and I realized that 10 out of 12 issues had the ‘(MR)’ tag… which means ‘Mature Readers’. I don’t know if that’s a sign of alert or what. Something must be happening. How can you explain that there are almost no ‘regular’ titles on my list? I mean, I just read The Legion of Super-Heroes: Great Darkness Saga, an ‘all audiences’ title from the early 80s which has its fair share of naiveté and politeness. But I digress…

Some friends were asking me why I sign my posts as Arion instead of using my real name Arcadio. Well, basically, it’s because I started posting on message boards in 2006. And I’ve always been Arion. I was one of  Newsarama’s most active users with thousands of posts before they eliminated the forums. I’m still quite an active member in Jinxworld.com with 14780 posts, theouthousers.com with 9660 posts and BleedingCool.com with 406 posts. So after having 25000 posts I decided it would be easier to keep posting as Arion over here. And that’s what I’ve done so far.

Although regardless of names or nicknames, my opinion is always the same. About my ‘Before Watchmen’ post I wanted to make a few clarifications. As I’ve seen in a few message boards, some people pretend to be more obtuse than they really are saying things like “Siegel and Shuster made a mistake in the 30s, almost 50 years later Moore should have known better”.

So what happened? When Alan Moore signed his contract with DC in the 80s, the comic book industry was very different from what it is today. For example, the graphic novel market didn’t exist. Today, every six issues of any given title are automatically collected in hardcovers and trade paperbacks, back in the Watchmen era, collected editions were extremely rare.
my 'mature readers' list / mis lista de 'lectores maduros'

So when Moore agreed on the terms of his contract he did so thinking, justifiably, that a collected edition of Watchmen would get out of circulation quickly and the rights of ownership would return to him. No one could have foreseen that with Watchmen a new market had been created: the graphic novels market. Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns were the first ones, but then works like The Killing Joke or Arkham Asylum proved to be so successful that from that moment on, the comic book industry would no longer have to rely exclusively on single issues, now a new revenue source was at their disposal: trades and hardcovers.

Nowadays, we see two categories in monthly sales charts: single issues and graphic novels. So to those who say ‘Moore should have known better’ my answer would be short: ‘can you predict the future?’. Obviously nobody can, and Alan Moore had no divinatory powers to foretell the huge success of Watchmen. Because of its huge sales, Watchmen would stay in print since 1986 to 2012, and given the relevance and quality of this 12-issue miniseries, it will remain in print in decades yet to come.

In 2010 DC tried to renegotiate the contract with Moore, basically they promised him to give him back what was rightfully his with some conditions... he had to authorize prequels and sequels. Adi Tantimedh said it best: “Basically they [DC] were saying, «Hi!  We’ll give you back your kid if you let us keep pimping it out and raping it.  How about it, squire? »”. Of course, Moore didn’t compromise the artistic integrity of his ‘kid’ Watchmen, and eventually DC did what they had planned to do anyway. The worst thing about all of this? That probably thousands of fans are more than willing to spend money in these prequels. Now THEY should know better.     

Arcadio Bolaños (AKA Arion)
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Este fin se semana estuvo dedicado íntegramente a nuestra bebida de bandera, o mejor dicho, a nuestro cóctel de bandera: el pisco sour. El sábado estuve en el séptimo festival del pisco sour organizado por Wong en el Bulevar de Asia.
festival del pisco sour

El evento, como en años anteriores, tuvo bastante acogida y una enorme cantidad de gente pudo degustar gratuitamente diversos tragos a base de pisco. Me acompañaron Castro y Pamela, aunque como yo era el único que no tenía que manejar después, para variar, fui el más entusiasta en el tema de la degustación. Probé pisco sour, maracuyá sour, chicha sour, algarrobina, chilcano, pisco puro (variedades Italia, Quebranta y Mosto Verde). Además de conocidas marcas como Rotondo, Bianca, Ocucaje y el clásico Queirolo, pude probar algunas que me parecieron bastante prometedoras como Chalán Oro y Sarcay.

El festival de pisco de Asia sigue siendo uno de los eventos más incluyentes del sur, y es que cualquier habitante de Mala o Cañete puede ingresar libremente al bulevar y participar de esta celebración que nos recuerda por qué en verano hay pocas opciones más deliciosas que un pisco sour bien heladito. Lo único que me pareció preocupante fue la ausencia de importantes marcas de pisco que habían estado presentes en años anteriores, como Viñas de Oro. Esperemos que esta omisión sea subsanada en el verano del 2013.

Revisando mi lista de los cómics de enero compruebo que 10 de los 12 números tienen la etiqueta MR, es decir 'lectores maduros' por sus siglas en inglés. No sé si eso sea señal de alerta. Algo debe estar sucediendo. ¿Cómo explicarían que no hay títulos 'normales' en mi lista? Y eso que acabo de leer Legion of Super-Heroes: Great Darkness Saga, un título 'apto para toda la familia' con una cierta ingenuidad… pero estoy me yendo por las ramas...
Jinxworld, TheOutHousers & BleedingCool

Algunos amigos me han preguntado por qué utilizo el seudónimo de Arion en vez de mi nombre verdadero Arcadio. Bueno, básicamente, es porque empecé a participar en foros de cómics el 2006, y siempre fui Arion. Era uno de los miembros más activos de Newsarama hace años. Y todavía participo a diario en páginas como Jinxworld.com con 14780 posts, theouthousers.com con 9660 posts y BleedingCool.com con 406 posts. Así es que después de 25000 posts decidí que sería más fácil firmar como Arion. Y así lo he hecho hasta ahora.

Pero sin importar qué nombre o sobrenombre use, mis opiniones son las mismas. Ahora quería hacer algunas aclaraciones sobre mi post de 'Before Watchmen'. En algunas páginas he visto a algunos fans actuando como si fuesen más obtusos de lo que son realmente al decir cosas como "A Siegel y Shuster los estafaron en los años 30, 50 años después Moore tendría que haber sido más astuto".

Entonces ¿qué sucedió? Cuando Alan Moore firmó su contrato con DC en los 80, la industria del cómic no era lo que es hoy. De hecho, el mercado de las novelas gráficas no existía. Hoy en día, cualquier título que alcance los seis números es automáticamente recopilado en tomos de tapa dura y tapa blanda, pero en la época de Watchmen, estas recopilaciones eran extremadamente infrecuentes.

Cuando Moore accedió a los términos del contrato lo hizo pensando, justificadamente, que una edición recopilatoria de Watchmen no estaría mucho tiempo en circulación y los derechos de propiedad regresarían a sus manos. Nadie pudo prever que con Watchmen un nuevo mercado se había creado: el mercado de las novelas gráficas. Watchmen y The Dark Knight Returns fueron los primeros, pero luego obras como The Killing Joke o Arkham Asylum fueron tan exitosas que desde ese momento, la industria del cómic ya no dependía exclusivamente de los números sueltos, ahora una nueva fuente de ingresos estaba a su disposición: los tomos recopilatorios.
Newsarama

En la actualidad vemos dos categorías en los gráficos de ventas mensuales: números sueltos y tomos recopilatorios. Así que para aquellos que dicen que 'Moore debió haber sido más astuto' mi respuesta es corta '¿se puede predecir el futuro?'. Obviamente no, y Moore no tenía poderes adivinatorios para predecir el inmenso éxito de Watchmen. A causa de sus fuertes ventas, Watchmen seguiría en circulación desde 1986 hasta 2012, y dada la relevancia y calidad de esta miniserie de 12 ejemplares habrá nuevas reediciones en próximas décadas.

El 2010 DC intentó renegociar el contrato con Moore, básicamente le prometieron devolverle aquello que le pertenecía por derecho con algunas condiciones... él tenía que autorizar precuelas y secuelas. Adi Tantimedh lo dice claramente: "Básicamente ellos [DC] estaban diciendo, «¡Hola!, te devolveremos a tu hijo si permites que lo sigamos prostituyendo y violando, ¿qué te parece, caballero?»". Por supuesto, Alan Moore no comprometió la integridad artística de su 'hijo' Watchmen y eventualmente DC hizo de todos modos lo que había planeado. ¿Lo peor de todo? Que probablemente miles de fans están deseosos de gastar su dinero en estas precuelas. Son ellos los que deberían ser más astutos.

Arcadio Bolaños (AKA Arion)