Saturday, 10 November 2018

SuperRob — The Good Doctor




“THE SINGER ROBBIE Williams had, in his spare time, developed an interest in magic and the occult and, in 2005, he got in touch with me in my capacity as a “chaos magician” to ask if I could walk him through some of the basics. 


He was a textbook forward-thinking dissatisfied Aquarian, and he knew—years ahead of everyone else in his business—that superheroes were the next big thing. 


He asked if we could turn him into a superhero for his next tour, so Frank Quitely drew up some Super-Rob sketches before we all decided he’d look ridiculous in a cape and circus suit and went to work devising a more twenty-first-century Elizabethan “occult” approach for the record sleeve, which would be packed with secrets and hidden meanings in the Magical Mystery Tour puzzle tradition. He would become a British superhero in a coat and scarf, a time-traveling shaman, the “Good Doctor.” 


Quitely and I created a sequence of “alien abduction” tarot cards for the album Intensive Care, but far from provoking the hoped-for tabloid screamers—“ Robbie in Black Magic Shock!”—the talismanic images and witchy hieroglyphs were completely overlooked by a usually prurient media. 


Not a single “What’s he gotten himself into now?” story. Even when I wrote my own article for the Sun newspaper, it was rejected on the grounds that no one would be interested in Robbie Williams’s dalliances with the powers of the pit! 


I planted a sigil on the cover, which can be activated by finding the CD in the shops or pulling the cover up on-screen and pressing Rob’s finger. 


If enough of us do this the world will most certainly enter a new Golden Age of peace, creativity, and prosperity! “


- Grant Morrison

It's A Fool's Leap, A Shot in The Dark




Quitting my day job and starting my life as a writer was a tremendous risk. It was a fool’s leap, a shot in the dark, but anything of any value in our lives – whether that be a career, a work of art, a relationship – will always start with such a leap. And in order to be able to make it you have to put aside the fear of failing and the desire of succeeding.”  ~ Alan Moore.
Page taken from ‘Metaphore’, the twelfth issue of the comic ‘Promethea’ by Alan Moore, J.H. Williams III and Mick Gray – 1999-2005.

Friday, 9 November 2018

Cosmic Dress-up



” Mark Millar, Tom Peyer, Mark Waid, and I had approached DC in 1999 with the idea of relaunching Superman for a new generation in a series to be entitled Superman Now or Superman 2000, depending on which version of the story synopsis you read. We’d spent many enjoyable hours in conversation, working out how to restore our beloved Superman to his preeminent place as the world’s first and best superhero. Following the lead of the Lois and Clark TV show, the comic-book Superman had, at long last, put a ring on his long-suffering girlfriend’s finger and carried her across the threshold to holy matrimony after six decades of dodging the issue—although it was Clark Kent whom Lois married in public, while Superman had to conceal his wedding band every time he switched from his sober suit and tie. 

This newly domesticated Superman was a somehow diminished figure, all but sleepwalking through a sequence of increasingly contrived “event” story lines, which tried in vain to hit the heights of “The Death of Superman” seven years previously. 

Superman Now was to be a reaction against this often overemotional and ineffectual Man of Steel, reuniting him with his mythic potential, his archetypal purpose, but there was one fix we couldn’t seem to wrap our collective imagination around: the marriage. 

The Clark-Lois-Superman triangle—“ Clark loves Lois. Lois loves Superman. Superman loves Clark,” as Elliot S. Maggin put it in his intelligent, charming Superman novel Miracle Monday—seemed intrinsic to the appeal of the stories, but none of us wanted to simply undo the relationship using sorcery, or “memory wipes,” or any other of the hundreds of cheap and unlikely magic-wand plot devices we could have dredged up from the bottom of the barrel. 

Stuck with the problem, I found myself chewing it over with my JLA editor Dan Raspler at one in the morning in an airless hotel room overlooking the naval yards of San Diego harbor. We were there for 1999’ s Comic-Con. To clear our heads, we went downstairs and crossed the street, an oddly landscaped liminal zone between the rail tracks and the city. 

We were deep in discussion, debating earnestly the merits and demerits of a married Superman when we both spotted a couple of men crossing the tracks into town. One was an ordinary-looking bearded dude, at first sight like any of a hundred thousand comics fans. But the other was Superman. 

He was dressed in a perfectly tailored red, blue, and yellow costume; his hair was slicked back with a kiss curl; and unlike the often weedy or paunchy Supermen who paraded through the convention halls, he was trim, buff, and handsome. He was the most convincing Superman I’ve ever seen, looking somewhat like a cross between Christopher Reeve and the actor Billy Zane. 

I knew a visitation when I saw one. 

Racing to intercept the pair, Dan and I explained who we were, what we were doing, and asked “Superman” if he wouldn’t mind answering a few questions. 

He didn’t, and sat on a concrete bollard with one knee to his chest shield, completely relaxed. It occurred to me that this was exactly how Superman would sit. A man who was invulnerable to all harm would be always relaxed and at ease. He’d have no need for the kind of physically aggressive postures superheroes tended to go in for. 

I suddenly began to understand Superman in a new way. We asked questions, “How do you feel about Lois?,” “What about Batman?,” and received answers in the voice and persona of Superman—“ I don’t think Lois will ever really understand me or why I do what I do” or “Batman sees only the darkness in people’s hearts. I wish he could see the best”—that seemed utterly convincing. 

The whole encounter lasted an hour and a half, then he left, graciously, and on foot I’m sad to say. Dan and I stared at each other in the fuzzy sodium glare of the streetlamps then quietly returned to our rooms. 

Enflamed, I stayed awake the whole night, writing about Superman until the fuming August sun rose above the warships, the hangars, and the Pacific. I was now certain we could keep the marriage to Lois and simply make it work to our advantage. 

Bumping into someone dressed as Superman at the San Diego Comic Convention may sound about as wondrous and unlikely as meeting an alcoholic at an AA meeting, of course, but it rarely happens at night, and of the dozens of Men of Steel I’ve witnessed marching up and down the aisles at Comic-Con, or posing with tourists outside Mann’s Chinese on Hollywood Boulevard, not one was ever as convincing as the Superman who appeared at the precise moment I needed him most. 

This is what I mean when I talk about magic: By choosing to frame my encounter as a pop-shamanic vision quest yielding pure contact with embodied archetypal forces, I got much more out of it than if I’d simply sat there with Dan sniggering at the delusional fool in tights. 

By telling myself a very specific story about what was occurring, I was able to benefit artistically, financially, and I like to think spiritually, in a way that perhaps might not have been possible had I simply assumed that our Superman was a convention “cosplayer.” 

Superman Now never happened, but I’d come to envisage a Superman project that would serve as the pinnacle of my work on hero comics, and a way to put all of my thoughts about superheroes into a single piece. 

There is, you’ll be heartened to discover, a cruel, ironic counter to the tale of glory and grace I relate above. Coincidences came with fangs in the 9/ 11 decade. 

During the 2002 Comic-Con, artist Chris Weston was in full enthusiastic flow, telling me just how much he wanted to draw a story featuring Bizarro, Superman’s deranged “imperfect duplicate.” 

At that very moment, as they say, a convention goer, dressed as the deformed, backward-talking Bizarro, appeared in the street ahead of us. Chris, sensing an opportunity for a spirit encounter of his own, dragged the green-painted stranger along to a party but unlike the courteous Superman of 1999, Bizarro refused to leave Chris’s side, becoming ever drunker and more belligerent, raucous and true to character. 

The more drunk he became, the more authentically possessed he was by the Dionysian spirit of Bizarro. Clearly distressed, Chris wailed, “I can’t get rid of him! What am I going to do?” 

In the end, much as Superman often found himself doing, we had to trick Bizarro into going home by using his own code of “uz do opposite” against him. 

On the topsy-turvy Bizarro world, we explained, a party was when you were alone, not with other people. Other people, in fact, ruined a party. 

He was forced to admit this made perfect Bizarro sense and marched backward up the stairs, blind drunk, while we all waved and yelled, “Hello, Bizarro!

 I imagined him being pulled over by the highway patrol an hour later, pissed at the wheel in his baggy costume, and flaking gray-green face paint. Running this fantasy to its inevitable conclusion, I couldn’t help but picture him on CCTV curled in a fetal position whimpering “Yes! Yes! Hit Bizarro again!” as his tormentors pummelled him back to sanity with rubber truncheons. “


The Oracle





“ I have a great many responsibilities.
foremost amongst these, however, is my concern for Children.

I am concerned regarding their wellbeing, and the healthy development of their imaginations

I am concerned regarding their behaviour...

..and I’m afraid, Young Man, that I don’t care for you at all."









[Colt]: Yes, sir.
Link: Hey. Hey! We got a call. Operator. It’s Seraph.
Seraph: I bring word from the Oracle. You must come at once.

(Mobil Ave. train station)
Sati: Good morning.
Neo: Who are you?
Sati: My name is Sati. Your name is Neo. My papa says you’re not supposed to be here. He says you must be lost. Are you lost, Neo?
Neo: Where am I?
Sati: This is the train station.
Neo: This isn’t the Matrix?
Sati: That’s where the Train goes. That’s where we’re going. But you cannot go with us.
Neo: Why not?
Sati: He won’t let you.
Neo: Who won’t let me?
Sati: The Trainman. *whispers* I don’t like him, but my Papa says we have to do what the Trainman says or he will leave us here for ever and ever.

(Oracle’s apartment)

Oracle
Morpheus, Trinity. 
Thank you for coming. 

One thing I’ve learned in all my years is that
 nothing ever works out just the way you want it to.


Trinity
Who are you?

Oracle
I’m The Oracle. 
I wish there was an easier way to get through this but there ain’t. 
I’m sorry this had to happen. 
I’m sorry I couldn’t be sitting here like you remember me. 
But it wasn’t meant to be.

Trinity: 
What happened?

Oracle
I made A Choice, 
and that Choice cost me 
more than I wanted it to.

Morpheus
What choice?

Oracle
To help you to guide Neo. 

Now, since the real test for any choice is 
having to make the same choice again, 
knowing full well what it might cost – 

I guess I feel pretty good about that choice, 
’cause here I am, at it again.

Trinity
Do you know what happened to Neo?

Oracle
Yes. He’s trapped in a place between 
This World and The Machine World. 

The link is controlled by a program called 
The Trainman. 

He uses it to smuggle programs 
in and out of the Matrix. 

If he finds out where Neo is 
before you get to him, 
then I’m afraid our choices are going to become difficult.


Trinity
Why?

Oracle
Because of who the Trainman works for.

Morpheus
The Merovingian.

Oracle
He has placed a bounty on your lives. 
You must be careful at all times. 

Seraph knows how to find the Trainman, 
he will go with you. 

For years, he has protected me. 
I hope he can do the same for you.

Seraph
Please, come.

Morpheus
Oracle.

Oracle
I know, Morpheus. 
I can see you’re filled with doubt, 
clouded by uncertainty.

Morpheus
After everything that’s happened, 
how can you expect me to believe you?

Oracle
I don’t. I expect just what I’ve always expected :
 For you to make up your own damn mind. 

Believe Me or Don’t. 

All I can really tell you is 
Your Friend’s in Trouble
 and 
He needs Your Help. 

He needs all our help.


(Matrix: inside a car)
Morpheus: 
Are you ready for us?

Link: 
Almost, sir. They got some pretty ancient hacks here, we’re working on it. 
Did you find Neo?

Morpheus:
 Can’t you see him?

Link: 
No, sir. We were reading something but I couldn’t tell what it was.

Neo: 
I can’t leave yet.

{Trinity looks over at him}
Neo: 
I have to see her.

Trinity: 
Now?

Neo: 
This is my last chance.

(Oracle’s kitchen)
Oracle: 

That’s it. That’s The Secret. 
You’ve got to use Your Hands.

Sati: 
Why?

Oracle
Cookies need love like everything does.

Sati: 
Neo!

Oracle: 
was hoping to have these done before you got here. Oh well. 

Sati, honey, I think it’s time for a tasting. 
Take the bowl to Seraph and find out if they’re ready.

Sati: 
Okay. 
*to Neo* 

I’m glad you got out.

Neo: 
Me too.

Oracle: 
So, do you recognize me?

Neo: 
A Part of You.

Oracle: 
Yeah, that’s How it Works.
 
Some bits you lose, some bits you keep. 

I don’t yet recognize my face in the mirror, but… 

I still love candy. 

*offers Neo a piece of red candy*

Neo: 
No, thank you.

Oracle: 
Remember what you were like when you first walked through my door, jittery as a junebug? 

And now just look at you. 

You sure did surprise me, Neo, 
and you still do.

Neo: 
You gave me a few surprises, too.

Oracle: 
I hope I helped.

Neo:
 You helped me to get here, but my question is why? 

Where does this go? 
Where does it end?

Oracle: 
I don’t know.

Neo: 
You don’t know or you won’t tell me?

Oracle: 
I told you before. 
No one can see beyond a choice they don’t understand, and I mean no one.

Neo: 
What choice?

Oracle: 
It doesn’t matter. It’s my choice. 
I have mine to make, same as you have yours.

Neo: 
Does that include What Things to Tell Me 
and What Not to Tell Me?

Oracle: 
Of course not.

Neo: 
Then why didn’t you tell me about 
The Architect? 

Why didn’t you tell me about Zion, 
The Ones before me – 

Why didn’t you tell me The Truth?

Oracle: 
Because it wasn’t time for you to know.

Neo: 
Who decided it wasn’t time?

Oracle: 
You know who. 

*She points at the Temet Nosce sign above the door*

Neo: 
I did. 
*Oracle nods* 
Then I think it’s time for me to know a few more things.

Oracle: 
So do I.

Neo: 
Tell me how I separated my mind from my body without jacking in. 

Tell me how I stopped four sentinels by thinking it. 

Tell me just what the hell is happening to me.

Oracle: 
The Power of the One extends beyond This World. 

It reaches from here all the way back to 
Where it Came From.

Neo: 
Where?

Oracle: 
The Source. 
That’s what you felt when you touched those Sentinels. 

But you weren’t ready for it. 

You should be Dead
but apparently 
you weren’t ready for that, either.

Neo: 
The Architect told me that if I didn’t return to The Source, Zion would be destroyed by midnight tonight.

Oracle: 
*rolls eyes
Please… You and I may not be able to see beyond Our Own Choices, 
but That Man can’t see past any choices.

Neo: 
Why not?

Oracle: 
He doesn’t understand them – he can’t.
 
To him they are variables in an equation.
 
One at a time each variable must be 
solved and countered.
 
That’s His Purpose
To Balance An Equation.

Neo: 
What’s your purpose?

Oracle: 
To unbalance it.

Neo: 
Why? What do you want?

Oracle: 
I want the same thing you want, Neo. 
And I am willing to go as far as you are to get it.

Neo: 
The end of the war. 
*Oracle nods* 
Is it going to end?
Oracle: One way, or another.

Neo: 
Can Zion be saved?

Oracle: 
I’m sorry, I don’t have the answer to that question, but if there’s An Answer, there’s only one place you’re going to find it.

Neo: 
Where?

Oracle: 
You know where. 

And if you can’t find The Answer, 
then I’m afraid there may be no tomorrow for any of us.

Neo: 
What does that mean?

Oracle: 
Everything that has a beginning has an end. 

I see the end coming. 
I see the darkness spreading. I see death. 
And you are all that stands in his way.

Neo: 
Smith.

Oracle: 
*nods* 

Very soon he’s going to have the power to destroy This World, 
but I believe he won’t stop there; he can’t

He won’t stop until there’s nothing left at all.

Neo: 
What is he?

Oracle: 

He is You.

 Your opposite, your negative, 
The Result of The Equation trying to balance itself out.

Neo: 
What if I can’t stop him?

Oracle: 
One way or another, Neo, 
This War is going to end

Tonight, the future of both worlds will be in your hands… or in his.

Oh, Mama, Can This Really Be The End? To be Stuck Inside of Mobil with The Memphis Blues Again






Oh, the ragman draws circles
Up and down the block
I’d ask him what the matter was
But I know that he don’t talk
And the ladies treat me kindly
And they furnish me with tape
But deep inside my heart
I know I can’t escape

Oh, Mama, can this really be The End?
To be stuck inside of Mobil with the
Memphis blues again
Well, Shakespeare, he’s in the alley
With his pointed shoes and his bells
Speaking to some French girl
Who says she knows me well
And I would send a message
To find out if she’s talked
But the post office has been stolen
And the mailbox is locked
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Mona tried to tell me
To stay away from the train line
She said that all the railroad men
Just drink up your blood like wine
An’ I said, “Oh, I didn’t know that
But then again, there’s only one I’ve met
An’ he just smoked my eyelids
An’ punched my cigarette”
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Grandpa died last week
And now he’s buried in the rocks
But everybody still talks about how
Badly they were shocked
But me, I expected it to happen
I knew he’d lost control
When I speed built a fire on Main Street
And shot it full of holes
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Now the senator came down here
Showing ev’ryone his gun
Handing out free tickets
To the wedding of his son
An’ me, I nearly got busted
An’ wouldn’t it be my luck
To get caught without a ticket
And be discovered beneath a truck
Oh, Mama, is this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Now the tea preacher looked so baffled
When I asked him why he dressed
With twenty pounds of headlines
Stapled to his chest
But he cursed me when I proved it to him
Then I whispered and said, “Not even you can hide
You see, you’re just like me
I hope you’re satisfied”
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Now the rainman gave me two cures
Then he said, “Jump right in”
The one was Texas medicine
The other was just railroad gin
An’ like a fool I mixed them
An’ it strangled up my mind
An’ now people just get uglier
An’ I have no sense of time
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
And when Ruthie says come see her
In her honky-tonk lagoon
Where I can watch her waltz for free
’neath her Panamanian moon
An’ I say, “Aw come on now
You know you knew about my debutante”
An’ she says, “Your debutante just knows what you need
But I know what you want”
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again
Now the bricks lay on Grand Street
Where the neon madmen climb
They all fall there so perfectly
It all seems so well timed
An’ here I sit so patiently
Waiting to find out what price
You have to pay to get out of
Going through all these things twice
Oh, Mama, can this really be the end
To be stuck inside of Mobile
With the Memphis blues again

Toad, The Mushroom Retainer









She’s a Mushroom Retainer.









Thursday, 8 November 2018

A Generation Whose Weakness is Not Your Technique




Good — Adaptation, Improvisation.

But Your Weakness is Not Your Technique.

Shekinah

 

“ I gave a great many responsibilities.

foremost amongst these, however, is my concern for children.



I am concerned regarding their wellbeing, and the healthy development of their imaginations


I am concerned regarding their behaviour...


..and I’m afraid, young man, that I don’t care for you at all.”




















Wednesday, 7 November 2018

NPCs


"The Matrix is a System, Neo. 

That System is Our Enemy.  


But when you're inside, you look around, what do you see? 

Businessmen, teachers, lawyers, carpenters. 

The very minds of the people we are trying to save

[ You Can’t Save Them by Killing Them... ]

But until we DO, these people are still a part of That System and that makes THEM Our Enemy. 



You have to understand, 
most of these people are not ready to be unplugged. 

And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will FIGHT to protect it.

If you are not one of Us, you are one of THEM —  

Agents of The System.

THIS IS NOT WHAT NEO ENDS UP BELIEVING WHEN HE DIES 
AND IT IS NOT WHAT HE ENDS UP DYING FOR....

Agent Smith's out of control fundamentalism threatens — 
The survival of every living mind inside The Matrix (which he overwhelms and inhabits, so nobody is eating, drinking or sleeping anymore),
 
Every human battery in the battery farms (same cause and reason), 

Infects the "Real" World (even penetrating the defensive walls of Zion)

 and 

Threatens to guarantee extinction for both Mankind AND The Machine Civilisation on The Surface, who depend on the Human-Battery farms to survive and the Battery-People (NPCs) depend on The Fantasy Reality of The Matrix to survive in.









NEMESIS: 
I am beautiful, am I not? 

ACE: 
Yes. You're very beautiful. 

NEMESIS: 
It is only my present form. 
I have had others which would horrify you.
I shall have those again. 

You are surprised I speak? 

ACE: 
I know you're living metal. 

NEMESIS: 
I am whatever I am made to be. 

This time, Lady Peinforte called me 
"Nemesis"
so 
I am Retribution. 













Rocket Raccoon: 
So, we’re saving the galaxy again?
 
Peter Quill: 
I guess.
 
Rocket Raccoon: 
Awesome! 
We’re really gonna be able to jack up our prices if we’re two-time galaxy savers.
 
Peter Quill: 
I seriously can’t believe that’s where your mind goes.
 
Rocket Raccoon: 
It was just a random thought, man. 
I thought we were friends. 
Of course, I care about The Planets, and The Buildings… 
and all The Animals on The Planets.
 
Peter Quill: 
And The People.
 
Rocket Raccoon: 
Meh.
 

The Slow Liberation of The Slave-Mind of C-3PO










“And have the protocol droid’s memory wiped.”

Senator Organa,
Bail,
Dude

HE’S STANDING RIGHT THERE....

The Millennium Falcon Was From Tiamat’s Womb Most Timely Ripped!