With
Killjoys, the comic is part of a much bigger package, including songs
that sent me on a long journey starting almost three years ago. So if there are
things that were not necessarily in the book, but the ideas coalesced for me while
reading and thinking about the book, it's not really that surprising. There's a
lot here. I'll probably ramble.
I
believe it started to focus when reading Shaun Simon's note at the end of the
special edition:
"We
wanted the new Killjoys to look at the old ones - like kids nowadays who wear
Ramones T-shirts without ever hearing a song - never understanding what the
original Killjoys stood for and ultimately failing because of it."
There
is a story here that I initially wasn't going to tell because I thought it was
pointless, and then I realized that it wasn't.
My
sister Maria used to want a Ramones T-shirt. She doesn't have anything against
them, but she doesn't really listen to them either. I told her she could start
listening more to the Ramones, which I will always support, but that it
probably just made more sense for her to get a Metallica T-shirt. She listens
to them all the time, and it sends a similar message: I do not like or
accept what is currently popular, and don't think that I do.
I
get that, even if I've never felt a need to put it on a T-shirt. As I have been
observing the world around me, it has become clear that there is a strong
division between establishment and anti-establishment, and a common need to
declare allegiance. On the establishment side it may be a declaration of
solidarity, and affirmation of the security it is supposed to bring. On the
anti-establishment side, it may be a rebel yell, defying the forces that feel
like they will consume you. On both sides it is often an expression of
contempt.
There
are funny and sad parts to this. For one thing, there are multiple little
subdivisions. You think people have your back, and you belong, and it can be
really traumatic finding out you're wrong. You can also find so much variety in
people on both sides that divisions don't make any sense, but it seems to be a
natural instinct.
What
works well with Killjoys is that they do not take the easy road. It
would be easy to see Better Living Industries as a total villain, and their
opposition as heroes, but the new Killjoys are not heroic. Val is downright
sadistic (and narcissistic and paranoid). There are moments of sympathy for
people on the BLInd side, but not for the monolith itself.
As
the most sympathetic characters are killed off, the most you can do is hope for
the girl, and her success comes from choosing liberation instead of revenge,
with better rewards than she could have possibly imagined.
Let
me bring in something from Marco Pirroni:
"I
was completely done with punk by the end of '77. It became an excuse to be
stupid. It lost style; it lost subversiveness; it got really conformist. I
thought the early punk thing was that old Oscar Wilde thing: 'We're all in the
gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.' Well, the second generation
was basically just 'We're all in the gutter.' They never moved on. A lot of
them still haven't."
(from
Mad World: An Oral History of the New Wave Artists and Songs That Defined
the 1980s, Lori Majewski and Jonathan Bernstein, p. 20)
Rebellion
can be necessary, but you have to know what you're rebelling against. Defining
yourself by rebellion, and opposition, gets stupid and ugly.
So
I guess one of the things that worked for me Killjoys is that even
though some characters really were not looking for the stars, they still found
them. That can be true to life, and it is fabulous.
No comments:
Post a Comment