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Pop

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What if the world's pop stars and celebrities were literally products, grown by the world's wealthiest (ie. most depraved) minds--and one of them escaped?

As unique as it is entertaining, POP is a white-knuckled thrill ride through the marketing-mastered, technologically-tethered tragicomedy we call life.

112 pages, Paperback

First published April 7, 2015

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Curt Pires

132 books20 followers

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5 stars
5 (3%)
4 stars
25 (18%)
3 stars
57 (41%)
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Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Jeff .
912 reviews823 followers
September 4, 2015
“Have you seen the bigger piggies
In their starched white shirts?
You will find the bigger piggies
Stirring up the dirt
Always have clean shirts
To play around in”


What exactly are you trying to tell us here, George Harrison? Pigs are a stand in here for unabashed gluttony and greed? Gotcha. Not the best song on the White Album. Wait, did Ringo do something on that record? Yes? Okay, not the worst either.

Jeff, what the hell do the Beatles have to do with this book

Well, fellow Goodreader, this book wades into kiddie end of the social satire pool. Pop is about pop stars who are birthed from test tubes. Brittany, Mariah etc. are all created in a lab to meet certain specifications – to appeal to the public in the slickest, facile way possible. It’s the nadir of mass-consumerism.





The people who oversee this process are all fat, pink skinned and porcine-like. Self-indulgent sensualists who profit from whomever the celebrity du-jour happens to be. And they’re the ones at the controls. Literally cranking and stamping stars out; hence the whole piggy thing.



The satire is pretentious and obvious but satire aside, this comic does work as an actioner. One of the test-tubers escapes and ends up under the protection of a stoner who happens to run a comic book store. They’re soon on the run, because the pop star to be is property and she did escape from the creepy secret facility.

So the proverbial chase is on.

Not recommended for the younguns – Excessive gore including a few shotgun blasts to the head and one of the more interesting sex scenes ever.

This sucker gets an extra star for a scene in which the Bieber clone, who makes the mistake of trying to retire, gets a pair of shattered knee caps for his troubles, by a pair of wacky henchman.

Bottom line: Pires has a knack for dialogue and the plotting and characterization is slightly above average. From my experience, comics and satire aren't exactly a peanut butter and jelly kind of mix. The art is serviceable.


Profile Image for Benny Morduchowitz.
54 reviews14 followers
July 19, 2015
I picked up this book because it had a great cover and the premise sounded fascinating, a world where pop stars are literally genetically constructed by corporations. Jason Copland's art and Pete Tom's colors were both phenomenal, reminding me at certain points of Fabio Moon/Gabriel Ba, and Dave Gibbons at certain points as well. The colors made me think of both Cris Peter's work on Casanova, as well as Brad Simpson's work on Sex. The problem was, the dull, cliched story didn't allow the visuals to flourish as much as they could have. There were gorgeous moments, but instead of the sci-fi world I had expected, it was a regular, mundane world with a sci-fi conspiracy being covered up. It was a typical couple-on-the-run narrative, and while the world building was strong, not much was done with it, and it didn't feel fully realized. The character's were easily distinguishable and well constructed visually, but they're writing felt a bit archetypal, which works for the assassins, but not so much for the protagonists.

I'd give it 3 stars because some excellent planning and visual construction went into the making of this book, but the plot and the characters were just disappointingly weak. It felt like the abstract ideals were where Pires put the bulk of his writing effort, and while Ales Kot does similar things in his books, his best work is always when he constructs strong characters as well. I will definitely check out other books by Curt Pires, because I think he does seem to have some vision, I just want him to figure out how exactly his characters tick, and who they are, for that matter.
Profile Image for Paulo Vinicius Figueiredo dos Santos.
977 reviews12 followers
June 5, 2021
Sabe quando você fica empolgado com uma ideia legal e no final você sai decepcionado? Foi um pouco disso o que aconteceu quando terminei de ler POP, uma HQ que tinha tudo para gerar boas histórias de conspiração e ideias malucas. Quando a gente lê os extras no final do encadernado, passa a impressão de que o autor tinha uma série de ideias legais, mas como só foram publicados quatro volumes ele precisou comprimir tudo em uma narrativa de perseguição. Para completar o final é aberto, mas em um aberto que deixa coisas demais por contar. A arte não me impressionou tanto, mas é o que há de melhor na HQ. Sei que esse texto introdutório da resenha não deixa você, leitor, muito ansioso por ler o resto dela, mas preciso ser honesto e tentar refletir sobre alguns temas tratados pelo autor.

Tudo começa quando Ella, uma mulher criada em laboratório, foge do seu tanque de crescimento e sai correndo pelas ruas de uma cidade no interior dos EUA. Ela acaba topando com Coop, um homem desesperado e com uma vida caindo aos pedaços. Em um momento instintivo, ele acaba abrigando Ella e dando um pouco de segurança. Só que Ella não se lembra do que aconteceu com ela. Só sabe que tem pessoas perigosas perseguindo-a, capazes de qualquer coisa para alcançar seus objetivos. Descobrimos que neste mundo, artistas e celebridades são criados in vitro por homens multimilionários que ditam a moda. Eles criam o novo sucesso e ganham milhões de dólares com isso. Só que essa é uma operação secreta e quando uma das experiências foge, o chefe do projeto teme que isso chegue aos ouvidos da imprensa e cause um terrível escândalo que poderia custar muito dinheiro para reparar uma imagem pública. Dois assassinos são contratados para recuperar Ella e matar todos os que tiveram contato com ela. Inicia-se uma terrível perseguição que colocará a vida de Coop em perigo e o levará a descobrir os mistérios mais sombrios da cultura pop.

O roteiro tinha tudo para entregar ótimas discussões sobre cultura pop e a influência das tendências na forma como idealizamos certas figuras. No entanto, o produto final é uma história de perseguição, que até é interessante, mas ela acaba ficando rasa e superficial. É aquilo: não é que eu não tenha gostado completamente da história. Mas, quando você se depara com um roteiro repleto de possibilidades instigantes, quando o resultado é muito aquém do esperado, o resultado é decepcionante. Entendi que a história se focava mais em Ella e Coop, mas nem isso redunda em algo satisfatório. Não há tempo de criar uma conexão com o casal já que o autor precisou explicar alguns elementos de seu roteiro. Houve uma divisão entre o núcleo dos protagonistas, o dos assassinos e o dos empresários. Quando o arco dos dois chega em seu momento climático, não consegui sequer aceitá-los como casal. Me pareceu forçado e fruto de um momento de perigo.

O protagonista é um personagem à beira de um precipício. Sua vida não tem muito sentido, ele é viciado em drogas e não sei como é a sua vida financeira. Porque o pano de fundo dele termina ali. O que eu consigo deduzir é que alguma coisa saiu errada no passado que o levou a ter esse jeito largado. Quando ele se encontra com Ella, uma faísca se acende nele de forma a que ele se sente útil em ajudar alguém em necessidade. Todos os movimentos dele acabam sendo instintivos, o que torna o personagem reativo demais. Ele simplesmente foge junto com Ella quando dois assassinos batem em sua porta. A perseguição de carro e a fuga do laboratório também são reações ao que está acontecendo com ele no momento presente. O pior é que ele nem fica sabendo por que Ella está sendo perseguida já que ela está sem memória. Ou seja: ele sabe que tem que correr e que tem gente má atrás dele. Só. Em um certo momento, ele tenta reavivar a memória de Ella com uma droga alucinógena, mas nunca ficamos sabendo com precisão se isso aconteceu mesmo ou não. Fico pensando na cara do Coop quando ele está sendo interrogado se realmente sabe de alguma coisa e ele responde consecutivamente que não. E o torturador continua com o interrogatório e ele realmente não sabe de nada. É frustrante isso.

Talvez a melhor coisa do quadrinho é o casal de assassinos. Eles são divertidos, depravados e mortais. Donos de algumas das melhores falas da HQ até. Nem mesmo o grupo de cientistas pesquisadores conseguiu me animar muito. Porque muitas das boas ideias acabaram cortadas por falta de espaço. O próprio diretor do laboratório me parece só um vilão de quinta, que somente grita por todo o lado, contrata pessoas e pisa no chão quando está frustrado. Isso antes do vilão acima do vilão de quinta ameaçar a vida dele e ele tomar medidas mais drásticas. Quando a HQ sai do seu enredo conspiratório, ela se torna um enredo sem graça e clichê. Mesmo o momento climático não é tão interessante assim porque não houve tempo para colocar os personagens em uma situação de perigo realmente mortal. Salvo a perseguição dos assassinos que termina rápido, não há uma sensação de urgência.

Quanto à arte, ela é interessante. Tem um aspecto meio sujo como se fosse uma história policial com aspectos de ciência. Jason Copland emprega muitos cenários de interior como casas, lojas ou escritórios. Tem alguns momentos em que um laboratório científico é criado e ele consegue se sair bem ao criar um ambiente que parece saído de um filme A Experiência. Acho que aqueles tanques com pessoas pode ter sido inspirado nesse filme. No meio da HQ, ele até apresenta uma arte diferente, simulando a viagem alucinógena da Ella. E esse é o melhor momento da arte dele, quando ele mescla as cores e cria uns caleidoscópios visuais bem legais. O design de personagens me pareceu um pouco inspirado no que Mike Dringenberg usou em Sandman com rostos pesados e expressões fechadas. Por exemplo, nada me tira da cabeça que o assassino homem foi inspirado no rosto do Ozzy Osbourne. Ah, tem uma homenagem curiosa no meio da HQ ao Grant Morrison e ao Frank Quitely.

Enfim, não dá para esconder a minha decepção. Procurei destacar alguns pontos positivos na HQ, mas a história me incomodou a tal ponto que não consegui curti-la por completo. Achei uma bela oportunidade desperdiçada para contar uma boa história. Não sei se o momento em que ela foi publicada foi errado e a Dark Horse pisou no freio e não deixou a história continuar. Não sei se o autor não tinha solidificado o que queria fazer e só queria uma história de perseguição com um enredo maluco. Bem, ele dá pistas do que ele pretendia na carta de intenções no final da HQ então a gente consegue tirar algumas conclusões. Não indico a HQ. Procurem outros trabalhos do Curt Pires porque ele é um roteirista bastante criativo, mas esse não foi um dos seus melhores projetos.
Profile Image for John.
1,682 reviews29 followers
May 28, 2018
Curt Pires is one of the curreny "Young Guns" writers that wear their influences on their sleeve--but have the transgressive chops to perhaps someday try some thing. This includes Ales Kot, Donny Cats and Eric Esquivel as well.

POP is what I was like in my mid-20s, pretnetious and mecurial name dropping rather than having sincere and hard opinions on things; browsing through the comic let me relay some of the references;

Grant Morrison, Suicidal Ideation, Pop Culture Eats Itself, Donna Haraway (Cyborg Manifesto), Ketamine, Kung-Fu films (36th Chamber of Shaolin), DMT, Jodorowsky, the New Gods, Waveform Theory, Borges, Easy Rider, Matt Fraction's "Batman Dreams of Heironymous Machines" speech, Jean Buadrillard (Simulacta and Simulation), Hakim Bey, Tarantino Suitcas MacGuffins, Jonathan Hickman/Scott Morse/Kieron Gillen bullet use, Heinreich Heine, etc.

Soo....not a whole bunch of new DNA, but how those moleculses are weaved together makes it a noble "first effort".
Profile Image for Jeffrey Penn.
6 reviews
October 15, 2015
Pretty much shite. The art was not very compelling, perspective seemed off, not much to look at. It seems like it is aiming at some kind of social commentary but comes off as so disconnected from reality and cynical as to be sophomoric, like a high schooler's attempt at conveying the artifice of modern pop music but with all of the subtlety of a sledgehammer. The dialogue is cooler than real and the characters' motivations are painfully one dimensional. Could barely finish reading it. Actually, that's not true; the storyline is so thin that there was not much to think about while reading it so although it aims high concept, it amounts to a caper. Not recommended.
Profile Image for Nate.
1,978 reviews17 followers
Read
August 1, 2020
An obvious commentary on pop stars full of try-hard edginess and pretension. Pires wants to be Grant Morrison (or something) and fails miserably. The world building is poor, characters are paper thin, and the story is laughably predictable. I’m not even sure why I bothered with this. Pires is probably someone who loves comics, and I feel bad bashing lesser-known independent books like this. But Pop is pretty awful.
Profile Image for Sierra Dean.
Author 53 books623 followers
February 18, 2019
This one didn't do much for me. The art was fine but the colours were jarring. I didn't connect with any of the characters, and the backstory of pop stars being manufactured was never properly fleshed out. It was fine, and I certainly wouldn't tell anyone not to read it (as the whole thing is concluded in one volume, so why not?) but nothing really felt earned.
Profile Image for Audrey (Warped Shelves).
853 reviews53 followers
April 5, 2022
This was okay. I mostly liked the still art (if that makes sense??) on the filler pages. I didn't love the action, I didn't connect to the characters. I can see the creators' effort, and I appreciate that much, however, I'm sure that I will forget about Pop rather quickly.


POPSUGAR 2022 Reading Challenge: A book with a palindromic title
Profile Image for Vivi.
328 reviews14 followers
October 10, 2024
This really made me upset, it’s so tropy the classical pretty woman is in trouble and an average nerdy guy gets to save her. It made me really appreciate the progressive lefty books I read and always expect more from.
At one point I thought the main character guy was murder and got pretty excited lol that would have given Elle a proper story line and not just a love interest needing to be saved.
The irony of the world objectifying pop idols and the main guy(don’t remember his name but also don’t care) does exactly that when he first sees her. He’s like wow a pretty almost naked girl, my life makes sense now and I’m no longer suicidal. Offensive to mental healthy issues too.
The women occasionally called out sexism “menspaining” and “stop calling me sugarplum” but they are dress in skimpy clothing and then agree with the men which feels comical. They have so few lines like we have this pop star grown up in the lab and the nerdy guy who does fringe gets more line? I don’t care about him.
Mostly I think my projection made me angry because I was never got into this sort of action, guy saves the girl stories and movies and I used to be ashamed of it. I couldn’t tell it’s one dimensional and offensive. I thought I’m not smart enough to be interested in sci-fi and action and I missed out of interesting concepts. It makes sense why I’m not interested in these kind of books, it makes sense why no one I know reads them. It makes sense comic books were never popular in my friends group growing up, because they were still problematic. And even when we were too young to tell something is hurtful to women we still feel disconnected from it. Now there are good wholesome comic books out there and I’m grateful I get through engage with drawings and art too.

Also just remember it also mocks young Justin Beiber, I’m so tired of adults punching down to a young teenager.
The violence and sex scenes were awful and honestly I’m going through a phase of looking for books with no villains. I don’t think I believe anyone that stories need an antagonist to move the action along.
I would give it 1 star but that feels too mean. Maybe the author has better work these days but it honestly put me off any male authors writing women in comics. I gave this a chance because I just finished Paper Girls and thought I can trust men with writing women again. Such a long rant….i have too much to complain.
I wish I stopped reading early on but was really hoping they won’t be end game. Regardless even if it had a redeemed act it would have still been a tool to use the same violence against women and fetishising. It’s the same story regardless how it ends.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jesse.
1,286 reviews11 followers
November 30, 2018
Not that great. The story and characters were really flat and boring. The "satire" bits were mostly uninspired. Bits of good 'ol misogyny here and there. BUT the art was pretty decent, with beautiful coloring and the occasional really inventive panel layouts. Plus it was a really short read.
Profile Image for David Lipely.
414 reviews2 followers
June 2, 2018
An incredibly compelling read with an interestingly original story
Profile Image for Michael.
14 reviews
July 14, 2021
I 100% agree with the general sentiment shared by community reviews section of this comic. Cool art and imaginative premise, wrapped up in cliched stoner profundity and pop culture references.

But I want to add that there is nothing wrong with that. Somewhere out there is a 16 year-old who will absolutely lose their shit to this book. 16 year-olds need to know there are weirdo burn-outs out there who wear plaid and smoke DMT in the woods with their half-naked girlfriends. 16 year-olds need to know about comic shops, Donna Harraway, and the Wu-Tang Clan. 16 year-olds need to know about underground music. Above all, 16 year-olds need to know that there's more to life than whatever dumb shit their 16 year old sell is so thoroughly pre-occupied with.

I don't condone drug abuse in teenagers. And until they become tax-paying adults with fully developed brains, comic books like this one will have to suffice.
Profile Image for Kim.
727 reviews13 followers
July 2, 2015
The violence in this book is a little more graphic than I care for, and it didn't feel like there was enough backstory. Had I not read the blurb on the back, I'm fairly certain I wouldn't have quite put the pieces together. I also wanted to know more about how this world evolved to the point it came to, because it's pretty bleak.
Profile Image for Cindy Kleback.
465 reviews6 followers
August 14, 2015
It's an interesting premise: a world where the world's pop stars are grown in a lab and made exactly to specification. Unfortunately, we don't get much of the backstory, and that would have helped to make the plot easier to jump into and follow.
Profile Image for Bruno.
1,158 reviews165 followers
September 4, 2015
Niet half zo slecht als de synopsis zou kunnen laten vermoeden.
Profile Image for Annice22.
625 reviews
September 4, 2015
This was okay. It was very predictable with not much information and detail given about the characters or the story. The story had potential but it didn't go anywhere.
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