Criminal Tp Vol 03 Dead And Dying
Review by SixGun:
WRITER: ED BRUBAKER
ARTIST: SEAN PHILLIPS
COVER BY: SEAN PHILLIPS
Price: $11.99
Whenever someone is trying to describe their love for some independent, relationship-based comic book they inevitably fall back on the explanation that “the characters are so real, I can see parts of people I know in each and every one of them!”. And while that type of praise is indeed warranted, the ability to craft convincing and relatable characters being a true mark of a great creator, I can’t help but feel a bit ho-hum about such a description. Sure, that’s great, I’m really glad that some people find themselves drawn to comic books where the main attractions are ones that they can see bits and pieces of themselves and others they know in. But that’s just not my cup of tea. I live my life, I interact with the people I know, and I don’t have any real desire to spend my entertainment dollars rehashing my everyday existence.
That’s not to say I don’t look for realism in my comic books, far from it in fact. I’m the kind of person who freaks out when Nick Fury’s gun in Secret Invasion is more like some fourth grader’s doodle than any real piece of military hardware. I’m the kind of person who drops comic books that are filled with characters that don’t act like normal human beings. I’m the kind of person who seeks realism out above most other considerations. But the realism I seek is an escapist’s realism. I want to be transported into another world that is still my own. I want grand adventures that I could never hope to have and I want to see them had by characters that I swear seem so real that I could find their names after a few minutes scrolling through my Google news feed. I don’t want people that I know; I want people that I hope to never know.
I want Jake “Gnarly” Brown. I want Teegar Lawless. And most of all, I want Danica Briggs.
Earlier this year Ed Brubaker re- launched his creator-owned comic book Criminal. The second volume was billed as a “Second Chance in Hell” (the title of the first issue) that ostensibly served to get new readers to jump on board and lift up the title’s Diamond orders. Reaction to the re-launch could be pretty easily divided into three camps. The die-hard fans who didn’t care one way or another, as long as they got their Criminal, the fans who balked at the new numbering, and then the guys arguing over who would win in a fight between Kilowag and Thanos who only know Ed Brubaker as the guy who took the X-Men back into space. I was in the first category, if Brubaker was a color, I’d bleed it. But after sitting down and really digesting the first three issues of volume two in a single sitting I’ve come to the conclusion that the new numbering was a really good decision in the long run, because Criminal 2 is playing in a completely different ballpark as the first series.
As far as I’m concerned, the first 10 issues of Criminal were the best comic books coming out during their year or so of release. But at their very best they were just brilliantly executed genre pieces, Brubaker’s ultimate realization of the noir trappings that had so defined his superhero work for years. Although filled with subtlety, (who killed Teeg Lawless? If you can answer that, then you read vol. 1 quite closely!) the books were pulp. Pulp isn’t bad, pulp is good and pulp is fun. But Pulp isn’t literature, and literature is something that I think comics can be if done with enough thought and care. In interviews leading up to the Criminal re-launch, Brubaker talked about how the first three issues of volume two were the hardest things he’s ever done as a comic book writer, about hours spent looking at a computer screen at a loss as to what to do. It makes sense, because for the first time he wasn’t writing good pulp, he was attempting to write literature. And you know what? He succeeded.
This first arc was collected last month with the title The Dead and the Dying, which (just like the last two arcs) refers more to the characters within than to the plots they find themselves entangled. While this has been more or less suitable as Criminal has always been about its characters, the plots of both Coward and Lawless were both out in front as being fairly crucial to the books’ quality. With The Dead and the Dying plot is essentially put aside as main characters Jake Brown, Teegar Lawless and Danica Brown step into the limelight to let their sad and messy stories spill out onto the page.
One of the main things bandied about as one of Criminal’s main draws was its “universe”, which consists mostly of the fictional Bay and Center Cities and the people who make them complete and utter hells. The way the universe manifested itself was… neat. It was cool that the cartoonist barely noticeable in Coward made Tracy a fake ID in Lawless, but for the most part these shared existences were unessential to the overall stories. But for The Dead and the Dying, Brubaker made a statement that his universe mattered, and he constructed a story that needed it to exist.
In 1951 Jake Brown’s father shook up the Bay City gang scene in such a way that it would stay changed for half a century. He did it by making a choice, a choice to help rather than kill a friend. Nearly 20 years later that friend ruins the life a young girl who makes it here lives’ goal to destroy that friend’s son. In many ways The Dead and the Dying is this girl, Danica’s, story. She’s the thread that ties this vicious circle together and she’s the hook that pulls in (Lawless main character) Tracy Lawless’ veteran father Teegar into said sphere. There is a plot here, and it’s really quite demanding. Owing more to films like Memento than those like Out of the Past, Brubaker expects more from his readers in this story than he ever has before. But for those who stand up to the challenge the reward is so much greater than anyting that the average comic book can give. Danica’s frightening grin as she takes Teegar into bed in issue two makes her statement in issue three that he “puss is a deadly weapon” a chilling truth rather than a funny quip. Sebastian Hyde’s mountains of insecurity in issue one make his feigned signs of machismo in issue two heart wrenchingly sad rather than pathetic.
But as I said earlier, the characters make The Dead and the Dying something that’s more than just great. And as their drama unfolds on the page you can’t help but see just how strikingly real these almost alien beings can be. I’ve never boxed, never killed people for living, never been addicted to heroin or known anyone who has. And yet I know that the people whose lives I’m seeing torn to shreds could be real if only because their stories made me feel something. NO comic book had ever made me cry, but on the last page of issue two, I got a bit watery; no comic had ever made me feel sick, and yet the entirety of issue three gave me such an emotional rattling that I really didn’t feel altogether well.
The Dead and the Dying isn’t always an easy read; it’s painful at times and depressing at others. But it will make you feel something, and in the end, that’s what makes it something spectacular.
46
pulls
Avg Rating: 4.6


