Mark Millar (The Authority, Ultimates, Wanted, Kick-Ass) and
Dave Gibbons (best known for Watchmen with Alan Moore) have both done great
work in the past. I think “Wanted”
is one of the best stories I’ve ever read. Gibbons work on the “Martha Washington” series with Frank
Miller is pretty cool. Matthew
Vaughn is a great director, I didn’t see X-Men First Class, but “Layer Cake”
was awesome. His work on “Snatch”
and “Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels” is wonderful. But even with all that star power the
book still comes off flat to me. “The
Secret Service” is not one of the best stories I’ve read, nor is it all that
great to look at. I tried repeatedly to come up with a good Colombian hooker joke, but the material was uninspiring.
It opens on a snow-covered chateau in Switzerland, where
some swarthy-neutral gentlemen are holding Mark Hamill hostage. There is a bit of good banter when one
of the armed men asks Hamill “What did
you think of the prequels, man? Don’t you think they were kinda pissing on your
legacy a little?” But before we can figure out the motive behind the
kidnapping---but not before finding out his destination, the Middle East, da-da-da-dummm---he
is rescued by a British Secret Service agent, or sort of rescued. After a short ski and snowmobile
escape-chase the agent and Hamill go off a cliff. The agent has a parachute, and in true Hollywood stuntman
style grabs onto Hamill, but it doesn’t open. He and Hamill die on impact. It’s supposed to be funny, that I get, but the way the
kidnappers talk it seems this was all part of the plan. They expected them to go off the cliff,
but they expected the chute to open.
Their boss, they say, is going to be very pissed about losing
Hamill. It opens up a bunch of
plot questions, as it should, but losing Mark Hamill is my first problem with
TSS.
I am tired of Star Wars references in
scifi-fantasy-pop-alt-culture media. It’s a cultural touchstone for geeks of the world to unite,
one of the biggest if not universal to a generation of nerds. It is over used, over played, and a cop
out. It’s lazy writing, I’ll make a Star Wars reference, old geeks
love Star Wars references. I
don’t want to see another room numbered “1138” or someone telling someone else
“these are not the droids you’re looking for.” I just don’t care.
Show me something new, or at least in a new way. Find something else, anything, but make
it clever. If you can’t entertain me, inform me, if you can’t inform me, insult
me, bring the fire, something, anything.
Anything but “it’s a trap!” or “do or do not, there is no try.” Writing
a good story is not easy, if it was, everyone would do it. Good writing is easy to identify, you
read it and if it’s any good it invokes emotion. Sadness, anger, passion, hope, fear, the better it is the
harder it grabs you. I don’t
care how you do it just make me care about your story.
Ultimately that’s my problem with “The Secret Service,” I
couldn’t find anything to care about, only more that just rubbed me wrong. After the technical difficulties with
the parachute we’re introduced to Gary, broken family, broken life. Mom dates an abusive jerk who gets
Gary’s little brother to roll spliffs for him. Now let me explain spliffs to the uninformed. They are a mixture of tobacco and
marijuana, very popular in the Europe.
Coloring duties for TSS goes to Angus McKie, who sounds like a good
Scotsman and all, but the “spliff” being rolled by Gary’s little brother has no
green in it. Not a speck. Is it a censorship thing, like “oh we
can’t show marijuana” so no green, or did no one see it when they proofed the
copy? The devil is in the details
Angus, and the Devil’s Weed is green.
Next up, Gary’s uncle, Jack London, British spy. He fills in the back story, getting the
low down from a government official, that various members of the cast and crew
of Star Wars, Doctor Who, Battlestar Galactica, and Star Trek have been
mysteriously kidnapped. London
asks if it was members of the original Star Trek or the Abrams’ version, which
is perfect opportunity for Millar to inform us of his opinion of the film. I don’t care what Millar thinks about
Star Trek, if he wants to jerk off J.J. Abrams, do it on your own time, don’t
make me pay $2.99 for it. Guess
what Mark, everybody loved the reboot.
Oooh I know, young geeks love the
new Trek, I’ll make a new Trek reference. Again, this is a cop out. Either drive the story forward, increase the scope of the
fictional world, or tease me with some cryptic info, but don’t, I REPEAT, DON’T
WASTE MY FUCKING TIME. How about
this, how about take this panel to SAY something, something about this world
we’re being introduced to, something about the characters that actually effects
the story, or at the very least, something funny. Instead Millar just wants us to know how much he has a
hard-on for Karl Urban.
Jack gets a text from Gary’s mom, Gary’s in trouble, he’s in
jail. He stole a car with some
friends of his and crashed it.
They might have got away but a dog crossed their path so Gary had to
swerve to avoid hitting it and crashed, see
he has heart of gold this one, SEE?
Uncle Jack shows up at the police station and he and mom get
into it a bit. Mom is pissed
because Jack is rich and doesn’t break off a piece for her, and he berates her
for being on welfare with a deadbeat for a boyfriend. This tone continues into the precinct house where Jack sees
Gary with a shiny new black eye, compliments of Southwark’s finest. Where Jack applauds the cops manhandling his nephew a bit in
an effort to set him straight, mom screams litigation to high heaven. This is the one interesting note to the
whole issue, Millar’s slightly to the right social discourse on modern
England. At one point mom screams
“How am I supposed to control him?!” Jack responds “If you raised him right you
wouldn’t need to control him.” Personal responsibility is at the heart of the
argument for Millar. Jack is
disgusted by his sister and nephew, they are everything that is wrong with his
England. They do nothing but leech
off of him and society, never seeing how their negative actions only lead to
negative consequences, or once seeing it, not caring enough to do anything
about it, it’s just easier this way. Jack wants to leave Gary there in jail,
but he can’t for the sake of his family.
He bails him out.
Gary goes home to the projects, he joins his friends drinking
and smoking in a common area. His
uncle leers menacingly from a walkway above them. Blue-fucking-tooth in ear he contacts “reception” and
requests to be connected to the “Practical Skills Facility in Hereford, that’s
right: The spy school.” The lettering for “spy” really is in
bold print too, I’m not making that up.
I wanted to throw the book away right then and there.
Anger is an emotion I am familiar with, I have read things
that make me angry. Some will make
you angry in a way that drives you to engage the text. Like getting angry at the guys bulling
Lennie in “Of Mice and Men.” Others
make you angry not at characters or story, but with the author. Once the anger is directed at the
author you’ve lost your reader.
You’ve taken them out of the story, you’re done, you’ve failed. That’s why don’t tell me, show me is a cardinal rule of storytelling. It’s that simple, and that
complicated. Again, if it was easy
everyone would do it, but dammit man this one is pretty big, I expect more from
the guy who made heroes out of villains.
I really like Mark Millar. I thought “Red Son” was a great concept, “Wanted” one of the
best flips on the super hero genre in a long time. I picked up all of Kick-Ass 1&2-saw the movie too, and I
enjoyed “Superior,” Leinil Yu’s art is great. “Nemesis” was highly entertaining. This book, this book is just crap. Gibbons art is okay, it wasn’t mind blowing in “Watchmen”
either, but it fit the story. Here
it just looks…dated. I get the
feeling more and more Gibbons was the Jim Lee of his time, it’s pretty but I
don’t really feel a lot going on there.
It’s too generic comic book cartoony. I can’t excuse Matthew Vaughan for his involvement with this
either, actions have consequences Matt, personal responsibility means taking
ownership of your fuckups too. It feels and looks too Hollywood. It’s too slick in all the wrong
ways. See right here, right here a
good Colombian hooker joke should go right here. I can’t recommend this book to anyone, maybe a
recommendation on what not to do in good comic book, then it would serve pretty
good.