Tangled Web UK Review September 1998
File Updated: 30/03/00
The Invisibles: Bloody Hell In America The Invisibles: Bloody Hell In America by Grant Morrison
pbk out August 98 (Titan Books) at £8.99
JLA: AMERICAN DREAMS and JLA: ROCK OF AGES by Grant Morrison, Howard Porter, John Dell. Titan £5.99; £6.50
Grant Morrison is hard to figure as a writer. He is capable of very good work, as demonstrated by early comics such as ST. SWITHEN'S DAY and DARE, and even interesting takes on the dreaded superhero tale, as in BATMAN: ARKHAM ASYLUM. He has also shown a penchant for the truly lacklustre, as proven by such forgettable titles as SEBASTIAN O and KILL YOUR BOYFRIEND. Morrison remains a very hot property in comics, largely due to the popularity of the monthly JLA series, the most successful (indeed, the *only* successful) comic currently published by industry giant DC. His other ongoing project - and rumored to be coming soon to the BBC - is THE INVISIBLES, a hyperbolic catalogue of conspiracy plots blended with Hong Kongcinema-style action. THE INVISIBLES is the far more interesting of the two series, though both seem well below the standard of whichMorrison is capable. Of course, he's probably earning a ton from the success of JLA. So maybe he ain't *that* hard to figure.
The JLA (Justice League of America -- remember them?) stories are conventional, old-fashioned superhero fare gussied up for today's audience: i.e., they're a bit more knowing about themselves than comics were in the old days. The plots are comic-bookish in the most pejorative sense of the word, though so convoluted (as opposed to complex) that you actually have to be pretty attentive to make sense of them. That's not to say they amount to anything in the end, but with their pretensions to cosmic cool it's not hard to see why they're so appealing to thirteen year olds. In the "American Dreams" collection, Morrison at least pokes some good tongue-in-cheek fun at the material, though he plays it mercilessly straight in "Rock of Ages," which for all its gimmicks and fancy vocabulary is still just Jack Kirby- wannabe stuff. The artwork is bright and vibrant, though poorly flowing and unhelpful in augmenting the absurd narrative.
THE INVISIBLES could almost qualify as a guilty pleasure if only Morrison took the material just a little more seriously. Morrison's basic style, as in JLA, is take a simple story and tack onto it as many red herrings and dead-end flights of fancy that he can before bringing it to its predictable resolution. The plot is almost all MacGuffin and sleight of hand, though some of the trips down Morrison's dead ends are good fun. The eye-catching art by Phil Jimenez is crisp and bright, and the covers by Brian Bolland are terrific. Morrison is a guy with lots of interesting stuff in his head and he can express it in a very amusing way when he wants to. Unfortunately his love of the convoluted and obscure overrides his storytelling good sense. He's just a little too anxious to show how clever and postmodern he can be, at the expense of the story and the characters (who are tedious). It's a shame really, because it's clear that if he'd just stop revelling in juvenile pursuits, Morrison good once again turn out excellent comics. Clever is better than stupid, but thoughtful is better than clever.


( Jay Russell - one of the greatest talents the horror industry has produced for some time… (Black Tears))

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