BAM! BOOM! KA-POW! SPOILERS??? MAYBE!
Daniel Clowes takes on The Superhero. That is what this is.
In The Death-Ray, he gives us the classic origin story (or at least his version of it), where we have present day, regular citizen, old Andy retelling the account of his life from discovering and understanding his new power, to dealing with the complications of it, to Clowes taking us all the way to the probable cause of his anti-hero’s ultimate death.
Yeah, Andy's dad and mom were scientists who are now dead, and he now lives with his progressively sick grandpa. But of course! Although, where things begin to differ is how his dad injected baby Andy with an experimental hormone that’s triggered by nicotine (to help with his son’s inevitable teenage scrawniness since he himself was, too), however, he didn’t realize that the nicotine would have the tremendous effect it had on Andy. And when the cigarette’s nicotine in his system, it’s best described as “…the nausea only lasted for a few seconds before I could feel my veins filling with the boiling juice. It was like my entire body was a giant boner,” and it’s then that he has the power to punch the stupid blood out of some deserving prick’s stupid face. He also gets handed-down the death-ray; it's only capable of working under Andy’s fingertips, with one shot causing the unfortunate person on the receiving end to be wiped off this Earth. Completely vanished in the blink of an eye. Gone.
But Andy was never interested in fighting crime and saving people from burning buildings with this gift of his. His sights aren’t set that high…they’re much, much lower. What he’s pondered all his life has been: “How does one man stand a chance against four billion assholes?” So, bullies, litterers, cheaters, you’re on watch! You’ve been warned!
Like his other more recent work in Ice Haven, Wilson, and Mister Wonderful, Clowes plays with his panels in size, shape, and amount on each page, along with color palette schemes, and even employing different illustration styles in Death-Ray. It was a pretty quick story, one much bigger in scope than, say, Wilson or Mister Wonderful, and I would’ve liked to see him flesh it out more. You know, give me something thick in page count and colorful to geek out over --cause I totally would have. I did enjoy the ending, though, particularly his end-end, ‘Choose Your Own Adventure! How will our story end?? You decide!’. It was pretty cool; you are left with what is probably the bleakest and most depressing option to have ever lived, and I wouldn’t have expected it any other way, Mr. Clowes.