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Showing posts with label Last Temptation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Last Temptation. Show all posts

Jul 21, 2019

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1607 - 1608: Alice Cooper - The Last Temptation #2 - 3, August, December 1994


Our morality play ends as all morality plays do, with the protagonist having learned something that may not have made him happier, but that certainly made him wiser. The Showman is revealed to be a tempter, not necessarily The Devil, but a serpent, so make your own conclusions.

I am curious now about the Alice Cooper album that accompanied the series. I'll have to have a look next time I'm at the used CD place. Yep. I'm that kind of a dinosaur. I've liked, but not loved, Alice Cooper for a long while now. One of my treasured possessions is an original vinyl of his album From the Inside, on which each song is about an inmate in an asylum. The album features little cardboard doors to open behind which we have glimpses into the inmates' world. In retrospect, the album is definitely not doing any favours for the treatment or perception of people with mental health issues. It's more of a concept album version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (the book, not the film), but with much less depth. Which is not meant as a disparagement, merely an acknowledgement of Alice Cooper's place in the canon of popular culture. He's more entertainer than philosopher, I think.

The end of the story has piqued in me a curiosity. In proper horror-villain fashion, the Showman fades away into the mist in the last few panels, promising to return one day and claim our hero's soul. My curiosity is when did our villains start returning like this? Does it go as far back as our early myths? Does Loki slink away, promising to return in the original Norse epics? Or is this a more recent phenomena, spurred by the increasing paranoia of society, or, more likely, by a view of history that shows us that our problems always come back and rear their ugly heads. We must simply have the courage to not let our worse selves win.

That got deep. Neil Gaiman fans will like this comic. Alice Cooper fans will like this comic.

"Did I tell that you'll be going crazy tomorrow?"

Other things you might like reading:

More thoughts on music and comics: A Different Kind of Album

Another really obscure Neil Gaiman comic: The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 251: Elric #0 - One Life, 1996


Jul 19, 2019

The 40 Years of Comics Project - Day 1606: Alice Cooper - The Last Temptation #1, May 1994


I posted this image to Instagram this morning with the caption "Remember that time that Neil Gaiman, Alice Cooper, and Michael Zulli teamed up and made a comic together?"

I love that this is a thing that exists. It's even got a Dave McKean cover!

What we've got here is actually a cool little artifact that's one of the interesting places that music and comics crossover. The Last Temptation is both the title of this comic and of the album by Alice Cooper that was released around the same time. Gaiman and Cooper had worked on the story together. I think perhaps this gives us a nice idea of just how big Neil Gaiman was in some circles with the enormous success of The Sandman. It also, in that case, gives us a good idea of how good, and how influential, The Sandman really was.

The story, thus far, seems to be a fairly straightforward morality play told through a creepy theatre revue. Cooper appears as the host, guiding a young man on a creepy and thoroughly transparent metaphorical journey through his future. I don't want to sound like I'm being harsh, but the story is not that complex. And stories like this one, which are some of the oldest stories that we have, don't have to be. A moral tale is there specifically to teach us how to be moral people. Such stories can't really be that dense, or no one would ever read them, nor ever learn. I often think that this is one of the things traditional academics miss about the pop culture they often dismiss. Or maybe they don't. I really have to stop caring about what traditional academics would think. Fuck 'em.

Zulli's art is just brilliant, of course, though one or two panels struck me as a bit stilted and out of place. I wonder if it's harder to compose something like this when you have to be aware that one of the characters who appears on just about every page of the book has to look like someone from real life. And the likeness to Cooper is pretty amazing. Unsurprising, really.

It's a three-part story, so I'll fill you in on how things go tomorrow.