The darker, harsher Jason. I’m thinking of Daniel Clowes, post-Ghost World movie success, who clearly is poised for The Big Bucks, and he instead heads in a darker direction, as if to say, I’m not selling out, I’m not going on talk shows, stop being so adoring of me, I do alt comix, I'm an outsider, so deal with it. Almost all but the title story in this comic collection has something to offend in it, and many people like it much less than his earlier works, but I will hold with my earlier assessment and stay with my original five stars. But be warned: This is less sweet, less sad, less whimsical, but I say the formal experiments in the stories are impressive, challenging. He’s not so much about the cute here.
A perfect example of this shift in tone is “A Cat From Heaven” which appears like it could be sorta autobiographical, because it features comics artist Jason in an epic fight with his girlfriend, saying things to her you never want to hear from your comics hero. He drinks to much, is late for a comic reading, sleeps with a fan, gets beaten up, begs forgiveness of his girlfriend. In a final image, he draws himself drawing. Autobiographical comics, or a commentary on autobiographical comics (because it never really happened, I hope?), or both. Interesting, and not cute at all.
“The Brain that Wouldn't Virginia Woolf,” is a weird tale of a girlfriend whose head is on a plate attached to tubes. It has this Frankenstein feel to it as he is trying to fix her problem, which is that she needs a body, so he goes out to look at ideal bodies for her to have. So it’s a strange horror story about this guy trying to get a body for his body-less girlfriend. Yeah, he's a lech, of course, too. Oh, yeah, and he caused her condition in an accident. It’s a sort of dark mash-up of The Brain that Wouldn’t Die and Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, which is kinda brilliant in its own goofy way. Pretty cute.
“Tom Waits on the Moon” is the best title, but it’s not “over the moon,” as in romance, really, again. It’s a series of portraits/vignettes of unhappy, Tom-Waits-song people, stuck, with missed opportunities, lonely. And has a strange finish that might explain it all. Not sure. Sad, melancholy, not so cute.
“So Long, Mary-Ann” (the title is a reference to a Leonard Cohen song; you gotta love these Jason pop references) is a crime three-way romance mash-up that Jason does so well. With murders and (sort of) steamy infidelity and double-crosses that make it clear this is basically a dark noir story where you can’t trust anyone, where no on is likeable. Not cute, but accomplished.
There's one section that is just a series of "covers" of Van Morrison song titles with monsters. The funny, goofy Jason returns! Carefully, Jason, we might just fall in love with you, again! SO cute!!
“Athos in America” is the least dark story and this least interesting to me, a kind of prequel of sorts to Jason’s other musketeer story The Last Musketeer. It’s a kind of golden age send-up of a guy who dated Louise Brooks (who was a silent film star, kiddies!). All right, pretty cute, I guess
But on the whole interesting and impressive. Low overall on the cuteness scale, but higher on the artist scale?