Exit from Eden


What follows are some thoughts on nostalgia and how it may blur critical assessment, prompted by yesterday’s post on this year’s Oscars show.

I’d like to preface them with a quote from an interview that Stefan Blitz (now founder/editor-in-chief of Forces of Geek) and I conducted with comics writer Brian Michael Bendis back in 2001 for my magazine Comicology. After I stopped myself literally in the middle of referring to Stefan as a DVD connoisseur, Stefan made my point for me — by admitting that he owned the 1983 movie Krull.

“You know what’s funny about that movie?” said Bendis. “I remember seeing that
movie [at 15] with my mom and my brother, and sitting in the movie theater having
my first realization that movies could suck.”

Lately I’ve found myself discussing that phenomenon with several friends, online and
in person, across the breadth of my pop-culture interests. The conversation is about how, at once perfectly naturally and quite strangely, we tend to hold material (I wish I had a better catch-all word here) that dates to our youths in an untouchable regard,
yet when the chain is broken — a property gets relaunched or just revisited by us in its current version after we’ve taken time away — we’re free to criticize with abandon.

Part of this, of course, is nostalgia’s rose-colored lens. Stuff that tickled us in our childhoods — and reminds us, often viscerally, not only of that experience but of the generally carefree days in which the experience took place — gets a free pass from objective evaluation. Stuff in the same mold yet of more recent vintage, particularly if
it attempts to evoke such reverie and comes up short, most certainly does not.

For example...

My reading tastes are varied, but at heart, all things being equal and especially when
in need of a pick-me-up, I prefer comic books — specifically, comic books from the 1970s; more specifically, superhero comic books from the 1970s; and more specifically, DC superhero comic books from the 1970s.

And I love comic books from that era for the total package: the newsprint, the trade dress, even the advertising. Yes, they were pulpy and cheap, but that’s a considerable part of the appeal in context. I have very little affection for the majority of comic books released by the big publishers today as physical articles, however, finding the ads intrusive and the entire package unflatteringly disposable. When it comes to modern comics I tend to prefer “graphic novels” (be they original long-form works or bound collections of serialized stories) on slick paper, smartly designed, in a lasting package that provides more bang for my buck than single-issue comic books (or, as they were once called more aptly, comic magazines).

The package isn’t everything, though. In fact, I’m mostly talking about content. The creators of the stuff I read in my youth were laying down gospel. Now I’m aware that the writers and artists and editors are, to unintentionally continue and somewhat mix my ecclesiastic metaphor, far from infallible — and not simply because I’ve met enough to have had the spell broken, to know that they’re real people struggling with various creative and/or business constraints.

Maybe there was a bum plot turn or a cover illustration that I didn’t care for as a kid, but my perspective was far more that of acolyte than critic. This holds for TV and movies as well as comics. If I didn’t like a work, I could stop buying it or watching
it, true, yet while my engagement with the material might have been deeply held the acceptance or rejection was rather superficial. Do you remember the first time you felt in your bones that a favorite series got something “wrong”? It sort-of blows the mind. How can the inventors or even designated custodians of a fictional world not by definition always do right by their own property? {*coughMidichlorianscough*} How are we entitled to say, as readers and viewers, that Clark Kent or Willow Rosenberg or Albus Dumbledore wouldn’t act a certain way?

There’s a weird tipping point conjured into existence when a concept has coalesced. Rarely is an ongoing mythology its definitive self from the very beginning — early chapters often look odd (and to the more continuity-minded they require explaining away or are deemed apocryphal) in hindsight: Batman carries a pistol, The Hulk is
gray and transforms at sunrise/sunset, Kirk’s Enterprise belongs to the United Earth Space Probe Agency. Soon enough, however, an ideal is formed in aggregate from scripts and the artists who interpret them (be they pencilers, inkers, etc. or actors, directors, and production designers) such that both those involved and we, the audience, can argue that the concept has been violated.

If the concept’s nothing special to begin with and never becomes anything special,
then none of this matters. Moreover, if we encounter a comic book, a TV show, a movie (perhaps especially a movie, since films stand alone to a greater extent) on its own terms as something “new” that’s unfamiliar to us — even if (or again, perhaps especially if) it’s actually rather derivative — we have a greater chance of being struck by a realization that, as with Bendis and Krull, such an effort can, well, suck.

Isn’t not even liking an example of the kind of thing we heretofore only know loving just crazy talk? Kids are in for a rude awakening once that unthinkable option manifests.

We accept contradictions when we’re younger more readily, I think, as either part of
the mystery or evidence of a pattern beyond our ken — maybe that religious motif wasn’t so out-of-bounds. Questioning authority, challenging the status quo, demanding the highest quality for our investment (time or money) is entirely righteous but also rather exhausting. And the need to do it is often plain disappointing. Now and then, at least, it’s nice to be coddled.

I’ve had this discussion, like I said, in slightly different form on different topics — and not exactly this profoundly — from baseball to James Bond. When if ever is it “okay” to switch allegiances from one’s hometown team as rosters turn over completely? How does one reconcile the reflexive acceptance one has of the paradigm of a fictional property or “universe” as one first encounters it with an emerging belief of what the paradigm “should” be once a variety of interpretations has been sampled?

These questions never end — although the extent to which they’re so consciously articulated to yourself or to others probably depends on how much you live in your head and what kind of geek circles you frequent.

Each of us, we discover as we get older, is perfectly, imperfectly human, a fact reassuring in some ways and constantly deflating in others. This realization naturally has broad and intense existential ramifications, but I don’t want to discount how it impacts our appraisal of frivolous yet eminently stimulating entertainment.

Just recently I’ve seen fascinating debates spring up around beliefs, or actions undertaken on behalf of those beliefs, that could preclude someone from being able
or allowed to write a hero. I’ve had ongoing discussions with people whose childhoods were a decade earlier or later than mine clinching how determinant age is in preferring, accepting, or even caring at all about a comic book, TV show, or movie and which incarnation of a series is the “right” one. As of this past Sunday night — to return to what sparked this rumination — I’ve belatedly realized that the producers and host of the Oscars aren’t unerring simply by dint of the power vested in them by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences. Awards telecasts aren’t fiction, obviously; this rubicon I’ve crossed with them actually falls in a space between the sort of thing I’ve focused on above and the shaking of foundations in one’s personal life through the awareness that, say, parents and teachers and politicians are (or at least can be) as susceptible to error as anyone else.

It’s eating from the Tree of Knowledge. It’s opening Pandora’s Box. It’s understanding how the sausage is made. It’s knowing better, essentially, and losing a state of grace.

We all have to grow up sometime.



Related: 41 Favorites: #6 The Bloom Is Off the Gilded Lily El on Earth

3 comments:

  1. Man, I really hope you get the kinks worked out on your Oscar post, because I'm really curious to read it now. It sounds like you absolutely hated the show.

    Do you remember the first time you felt in your bones that a favorite series got something "wrong"?

    I don't recall the specific issue, but sometime between the "Onslaught" and "Operation: Zero Tolerance" crossovers was when the bloom came off the rose and my naive belief that everything that was happening in the shared universe of the X-Men (and comics in general) was planned out well in advance, that if a subplot or clue was introduced it meant the writer already knew the answer to the mystery, was shattered.

    Incidentally, "Operation: Zero Tolerance" was the first big X-Men story that left me disappointed, the first time I couldn't convince myself that even though what happened wasn't what I was expecting it, it was still good, and the debacle that was "The Twelve" was the first story I actually got angry about.

    Obviously, I still read plenty of comics, including the X-Men stuff, but after "Onslaught", I could see the man behind the curtain, and that childlike naivety and zest was gone (though it was replaced with the ability to appreciate things I may not have appreciated before on more critical levels).

    Oddly enough, I don't remember the first movie I saw where I was able to judge it critically, without a child's eye, but it was probably something in high school, after I'd taken a few film classes and thus possessed at least rudimentary critical skills (that said, I've always, even to this day, been terribly forgiving of movies. It takes a lot for me to hate a movie I've seen in the theaters, and even in middling films, I usually tend to focus on the positive. It's a defense mechanism, I guess, to keep myself from feeling like I wasted my time/money).

    Heck, even the Star Wars prequels (which you alluded to) weren't bloom-off-the-rose events for me, much as they were for so many Star Wars fans my age and slightly older. I just accepted them for what they were and moved on, because I long ago decided I'm a Star Wars fan, and that means accepting the good and the bad (and I honestly don't think the prequels are all bad).

    Anyways, I'm long past rambling now. Excellent post, very thought provoking.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Great piece, Blam. I'm glad that something good came out of this year's Oscars. I'll write more when it's not Friday night.

    ReplyDelete

  3. @Arben: I'm glad that something good came out of this year's Oscars.

    Ha! I look forward to your further thoughts (but no pressure).

    @Teebore: Man, I really hope you get the kinks worked out on your Oscar post, because I'm really curious to read it now. It sounds like you absolutely hated the show.

    Not really... I've decided that it's the very indifference to the fact that the show was less than thrilling, however, that brought me to (or, in the larger sense as discussed above, added to) this place. Over the years I dropped various comic-book series and I even stopped watching SNL for a while there, so almost everything culturally significant to me that I can think of has been something either that I returned to after taking a hiatus from or that had its own break; the Oscars was one of the last institutions standing. As you've seen if you've gone back to read the fixed post, MacFarlane and the whole production in general were not really operating on a level appropriate to that literal and metaphorical stage, but the larger issue is what my own assessment meant to me. Just don't ask me how I didn't cross that rubicon with Hathaway/Franco... 8^)

    ReplyDelete