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Marshal Law: Blood, Sweat & Fears by Pat Mills, Kevin O'Neill (Titan, 2003) |
Originally published a decade ago, Marshal Law followed the constant struggle of a lawman whose job is to take down any would-be superheroes with any means necessary. As if the cover doesn't say it enough (Marshal Law is splitting through a Superman-esque torso complete with splitting ribs), this book is beyond violent. (I guess the proper description is "uber-violent"?) It's like a latter-day George Romero zombie movie thrown into a blender with cellophane-veiled superhero references, garnished with a bit of T&A just to keep it spicy. As the "hero," Marshal Law is a fascist extrusion of authority with an S&M costume (complete with a barbed wire sleeve) and an endless cadre of weapons. The problem with this graphic novel is that it borders between violent superhero romp and satire, but never takes a side. It's not just the writing by Pat Mills; the inconsistent scratchy/cartoony art of Kevin O'Neill reinforces the go-between nature. Violence is taken to a ridiculous level, providing a visual visceral gore-fest whose purpose is questionable at best and ludicrous at worst. The satirical aspects are over-used elements, even for 10 years ago: Adversaries that are actually superheroes with deep, dark (gasp!) SECRETS! Batman & Robin-esque homosexual references? -- like that's NEVER been done before. Wonder Woman bondage jokes? Pointing out the lame qualities of Golden Age superheroes? Honestly, this graphic novel offers nothing new. If you're itching for a violent superhero romp, there's better stuff out there. If you're looking for satire, there's better stuff out there. If you're wanting both a violent superhero romp AND satire, there's still better stuff out there. - Rambles |