{"id":15,"date":"2010-10-20T09:00:38","date_gmt":"2010-10-20T08:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=15"},"modified":"2010-10-20T09:00:38","modified_gmt":"2010-10-20T08:00:38","slug":"greek-street-or-sexy-sexy-body-touch-me-sexy-sexy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2010\/10\/20\/greek-street-or-sexy-sexy-body-touch-me-sexy-sexy\/","title":{"rendered":"Greek Street, or \u201cSEXY SEXY BODY! TOUCH ME SEXY SEXY!\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Cover<\/a>

Cover of 'Blood for Blood', the first Greek Street Graphic novel, shows a woman in silhouette and Eddie holding a knife.<\/p><\/div>\n

Yes, the words quoted above are the first words printed in Peter Milligan’s newest comic, Greek Street<\/strong>.\u00a0 As the music plays in a strip club, these words blare from the speakers.\u00a0 One might purport that they sum it up entirely\u2026<\/p>\n

[some spoilers in this post]<\/em> <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

<\/em>At first glance, Greek Street<\/strong> seems to be the kind of graphic novel I like to see on the shelves – I’m a huge Vertigo<\/a> fan, because unlike many mainstream comics imprints Vertigo consistently releases a large range of stories told in a wide choice of settings1<\/a><\/sup> where one does not need a pre-existing knowledge of the characters or a love of the superhero genre to enjoy the title. Despite being myself a fan of the superhero genre, comics can and and regularly do cover so much more than stories about spandex-clad egomaniacs.<\/p>\n

The premise of Greek Street<\/strong> is that some stories are too powerful to ever go away entirely. Humankind re-enacts them again and again over the centuries. This involuntary re-enactment is hardly an original idea (see Terry Pratchett’s Witches Abroad<\/strong><\/a>,<\/em>) and ‘the old stories are real’ is a theme that has been explored rigorously by Vertigo’s Sandman<\/strong><\/a> series, their Fables<\/a> <\/strong>series,\u00a0 The Unwritten<\/strong><\/a>,<\/em> and Alan Moore’s Lost Girls<\/strong><\/a> <\/em>and his League of Extraordinary Gentlemen<\/a><\/strong>,<\/em> to name but a few titles. In fact, it’s a pretty tired theme.<\/p>\n

In these comics I’ve mentioned, some of the fun of reading them was in spotting the older stories underlying the modern tales – realising who each character represented. Greek Street<\/strong> has none of this subtlety, it wants to hit you over the head with its references, like an over-enthusiastic arts graduate in the pub who just can\u2019t wait to tell you exactly how much they know about the theory of Shakespearean tragedy. Thus its references are clunky and, well, obvious<\/em>.<\/p>\n

The Chorus who narrate the play are all strippers, working in clubs on Greek Street in Soho. The characters – thinly disguised versions of Agamemnon, Daedalus, Medea &c. are men and women involved in the London criminal underworld who pass in and out of these clubs in-<\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>

A strip club scene from the comic. There are many of these...<\/p><\/div>\n

Sorry, yes, you read that right – The Chorus are strippers. That is the level that Peter Milligan is pitching to, here. It’s as if he thought “Hey, Vertigo is an adult imprint, how do I make these Greek myths (with all their, y’know, inherent incest, murder, sex, blood and guts &c.) adult? I know, I’ll add a STRIPPER CHORUS!”<\/p>\n

By virtue of their choral role, these women do end up allowing the story to pass the Bechdel Test<\/a>, but it is a hollow triumph when this role seems merely an excuse to draw naked women over and over again – in the dressing room, on stage, in the bath\u2026 Did Milligan think that people would be so bored by women actually talking to each other in comics that he had to give readers some breasts to look at during it?<\/p>\n

When one of the strippers is killed (dead sex workers in comics? How original\u2026) and comes back to life, stalking the streets as a revenge-driven zombie, she is also drawn naked. I was slightly amused at the lengths the artist had to go to convey the image of a completely naked zombie women over and over again without ever drawing anything around her groin and therefore upsetting the censors – strategic shadows here, and little strategic scrap of clothing there\u2026 quite ingenious work, really, from an artist who can barely distinguish one very similar-looking character from another, and occasionally draws people as though their features are sliding very slowly down their faces\u2026<\/p>\n

The strippers aren’t the only women who appear naked (perhaps getting to draw lots of breasts was in the artist’s contract?) and none of them are anything below a D cup, or over a size 12 waistline. Maybe there’s just something in the tap water in Soho? Body diversity is rare in comics, but when an artist is trying to portray the gritty, real world, its lack is always more disappointing.<\/p>\n

Eddie – the closest thing we have to a protagonist – begins the story by having sex with and accidentally killing his mother and ends this volume in a sexual relationship with an underage girl (a prophetess called ‘Sandy’ – see what I mean about the obvious references?). He’s a walking catastrophe – getting into all sorts of trouble with criminal gangs, mostly through his own stupidity. It’s hard to sympathise with a character with few morals and no sense of self-preservation.<\/p>\n

Wracked with guilt after the encounter with his mother, Eddie attempts to castrate himself – a slightly more extreme version of the self-harm his Ancient Greek counterpart carries out – but useless Eddie cannot even do this properly. Presumably the writer decided that it would get in the way of him having hawt hawt illegal sex with Sandy<\/a> only a few short days later. This seems a pretty unbelievable leap of logic to ask the reader to make, I mean, surely he’d rip his stitches? (Ouch!) Sandy’s mother also throws herself at Eddie – presumably this is how we know that Eddie is the protagonist, ALL of the women just can’t stop throwing themselves at this scrawny little guy.<\/p>\n

Greek Street<\/strong> <\/em>could have been another great addition to the Vertigo line-up, but it is let down by shallow storytelling and some very poor artwork in places. Milligan needs to shake things up a bit – where something like <\/em>Fables<\/strong> could get away with using characters from myths and legends, this was because their myths were in the past, over and done with, the Fables<\/strong> characters were facing new problems, not acting out stories we already knew. But this is only the first volume of Greek Street<\/strong>, so perhaps the characters will move on and the plot will improve.<\/p>\n

While this book does pass the Bechdel Test and only barely<\/em> passes the Frank Miller Test<\/a>, those ‘tests’ are not the be all and end all of writing gender, and unlike Fables, <\/strong>Milligan’s Greek Street<\/strong> treats its female characters as little more than stereotypes and eye candy. And for an imprint such as Vertigo, which is edited by one of the most powerful women in comics and already enjoyed by many female comics fans, that’s just disappointing.<\/p>\n

To sum up – SEXY SEXY BODY! I’ve never been to a strip club, but if that’s what the music’s like, I’m not going.<\/p>\n


\n<\/span> <\/span><\/p>\n

  1. Having mentioned that ‘wide choice of settings’, however, I have to ask, did we really need yet another comic set in bloody London? I imagine that comics fans around the world will begin to see Britain as merely a state comprised of one large London-like city and some small parts of Ireland (because they have to make Guinness somewhere, don’t they, Garth Ennis). [↩<\/a>]<\/li><\/ol>