Ragmop #1-3 (Planet Lucy Press)
by Rob Walton
Rating:
, Content:
This is one strange series. The first issue alone introduces over a dozen characters, ranging from sentient dinosaurs, several shadowy conspirators (including one with a suspicious little WWII-era-German moustache), a weird alien, a US president who acts like a 6-year-old, a professional bad girl named Thrill Kitten, various scientists, and an angel cast down from heaven. The next two issues keep it up: a lobotomising psychiatrist, a
cardinal assassin, Norwegian antarctic explorers, the Pontiff and his sidekick Castrato, and even YHWH Himself.
The plot is equally bizarre and convoluted. Somehow it all seems to
revolve around the O-Ring, a cosmic object which will grant its bearer
great power, but the story includes a dizzying number of subplots. (How
else could he work in so many diverse characters?) Fortunately, Walton
includes a "last issue" synopsis on the inside front cover. {whew}
And then there's the art. The dinosaurs are seemingly faithful to actual
known species. The alien looks like a refugee from a Dr Seuss book.
Thrill Kitten is a simplified, but anatomically possible figure. One
antarctic explorer is drawn with a "realistic" nose, lips, etc; in the
same panel, the other explorer has a simple cartoon nose and mouth. The
angel looks like he might have stepped out of Hellboy. Walton's style is
all over the map. (But then, so are the events of the story.)
Walton doesn't hesitate to blaspheme (at least from the Catholic and
Capitalist perspectives), so this book certainly won't appeal to members
of those persuasions without a sense of humour on the subject. But since
neither of those philosophies is dear to my heart (just my home), I've
found it highly amusing, if a bit blatant in making fun of those whom
Walton sees as the "villains".
Almost as good as the story itself are Walton's pin-up pages and single-page
back-ups. For example: a lampoon of bad girl comics, in which the
adolescent creator of the book "Stroke" explains to a wary-looking young
woman, "It's feminist cause, like, the chicks are just as violent as the
guys, and like, in every issue one of them gets hassled by some dude, and
she says, like, 'Don't call me "Babe"!' Saaay... you're a fox!"
Rob Walton even devotes a page to a comics-format essay (by one Brad Walton)
which debunks the modern interpretations of 18th Century economist Adam
Smith. Wow! Comics can be used for material other than super spandex,
funny animals, and slacker autobio!
Pick up a copy of Ragmop and read a page. If you don't like it... don't worry:
turn the page, and it'll change.
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