0 Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 22, 1991 REN Continued from page 10 undying loyalty to his abusive, high- strung friend. Like a post-apocalyptic Bert and Ernie, Ren plays the brutish parent to Stimpy's eternally hopeful child. "Listen, man, don't you know car- toons will ruin your mind?" Ren warns his TV-loving pal, extracting "the cat's miniscule brain from his cranium and then flushing it back down his head like so much feline feces. This bizarre vision comes from director John Kricfalusi, whose past work includes The Jetsons and the Rolling Stones video "Harlem Shuffle." He gives R & S the sub- versive spirit of Mad Magazine, old Warner Brothers cartoons and Rocky and Bullwinkle. Ren and Stimpy even have their own version of Fractured Fairv Tales such as when Ren, as Robin Hood ("he robs from the rich and gives to the crimi- nally insane"), rescues a cross-dress- ing Stimpy, as "Maid Moron," from a castle by climbing her 50- foot nose hair. But wait, there's more. R & S sat- irizes the prosocial platitudes of Saturday morning television (if not the entire adult world) by promot- ing a Christmas-like "Yak Shaving Day" and not-so-super heroes like Powdered Toast Man. Their fake ad for LOG (by Blammo) is a perfect rip-off of the beloved - and useless - Slinky, even down to the cheery jingle ("LOG, LOG! It's big! It's heavy! It's wood!"). And if that isn't insidious enough, R & S is a twisted visual treat. Like the Toms and Jerrys be- fore them, Ren and Stimpy bounce back from physical abuse with Play- Doh resilience, although they're fairly repulsive to begin with. The animals are often hideously exposed in exaggerated close-ups of blood- shot eyes and warty complexions. In one amazing sequence, Ren finds himself held captive inside Stimpy's fetid mouth, hiding from the cat's coarse tongue among decaying teeth. Now doesn't that sound appeal- ing? Between the ambiguous nature of the Ren and Stimpy relationship (is it love, friendship or S & M?), the sleek and stylish retro '50s de- sign, the wonderful mixture of stock tunes, classical music selec- tions and cheesy sound effects, and Stimpy's endearing capacity for depthless sorrow and utter bliss, The Ren & Stimpy Show is bound to hook quite a few more rabid fans. Just go easy on the tattoos. COMIX Continued from page 8 of the kind usually reserved for tra- ditional fiction. The latest issues of Unsupervised Existence have dealt with a young American making his way through Europe without money or knowledge of a foreign language. LaBan himself conveys the excite- ment of a youth at the possibilities that comic books present. Asked why he is in the comic book busi- ness, he replies, "I wish I knew. I'm just compelled!" Pekar, on the other hand, repre- sents the old guard. He's among those who first demonstrated the artistic potential of the comic book and has weathered both good and bad times in the comic book world. Pekar's stories in American Splendor, illustrated by acclaimed artists such as Crumb, are autobio- graphical sketches. Doing something like this in a comic book was a revo- lutionary concept at the time, and is still a bit much for the average comic book fan. "The people who like my stuff best are people who read novels and short stories pri- marily," Pekar says. American Splendor has never caught on in a big way at comic shops. Pekar has also been published as an essayist and a book and music critic. He believes that with his comic book, he has set out upon wa- ters that are unexplored, not only by comic books, but by the world of literature in general. "Lives like mine have been pretty much ne- glected in literature - the so-called 'working stiff' as I've been called," Pekar says. And when American Splendor manages to reach that "working stiff' audience, the reac- tion is often very favorable. "People will write to me and say, 'I read such-and-such a story that you wrote and it reminded me an awful lot of something that I went through and it really helped me out,"' Pekar says. "Right now, virtually everyone that's in independent comics is do- ing it for the love of doing it, be- cause there's nobody making money off of it," LaBan comments. "I think people really are hungry for different kinds of art and differen kinds of entertainment, and here's this art form that's going on virtu- ally undiscovered by the main- stream." TERRY LABAN and HIAR VEY PEKAR, along with ROBERT CRUMB, THE HERNANDEZ BROTHERS and other comic book professionals, will be appearing at the Comic Book and Art Expo '91 convention in Chicago this week- end.: today from noon to 8 p.m., to- morrow from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. anc Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is $5 per day, at the door. For more info, call (708) 496- 0004. Yt, r IFOINMHELCIIIGAN&ILY&AFFo CAL 1 That's Ren & Stimpy, not Itchy & Scratchy, and kiddie TV hasn't been this adventurous since Mighty Mouse snorted a mysterious flower. m u S k 9 et t BOOKS Continued from page 8 Sayers' work, and in relating the first moment she ever laid eyes on a Sayers book, Kenney uses the termi- nology usually reserved for the conversion of a born-again Chris- tian. But considering the fact that 'Sayers' books still sell remarkably 'Well 50 years after they were first published, Kenney has a point. Kenney also laments the ten- dency for literary types to discard detective novels as the dregs of literature, and then claims that this prejudice may be a reason why Sayers hasn't been given the literary stature that Kenney so obviously feels is her due. Regardless, Kenney's discussions of Sayers' writing are easily fol- lowed, and while she is writing this book more for the masses than the specialists, she maintains the rigid academic standards of scholarship. Everything is supported, and her ar- guments do add a great deal to one's ROBERTS Continued from page 8 ,,hemistry between himself and Ellis, both on and off the stage. Not surprisingly, he attributes this to sharing the same musical ophilosophy. I "The type of sound (Ellis) gets from the piano is the sound that I like to hear. He's always feeling the swing, he understands enjoyment of Sayers' mysteries. Kenney also explores why it has been said that "there are two kinds of people who read mysteries: people who read only mystery fic- tion, and those who read only Dorothy L. Sayers." Kenney writes, "I want to understand why this is so. Why, after all these years, is (Sayers) often named as a favorite author, not only by inveterate detec- tive fans, but by some literary types who ordinarily express nothing but scorn for popular writers?" This Kenney answers, and rather well. After reading her book, one feels confident that Sayers was a great writer. Case also stimulates the curiosity of anyone who has only read the Lord Peter mysteries to explore the rest of Sayers' works. C. S. Lewis once said that "the variety of ... (Sayers') works makes it almost impossible for anyone to deal properly with it all." Kenney seems to have managed it quite well. -A J. Ilogg (p.e.s.c.), $12.50 for students with ID. the importance of blues. All the things that are necessary to play the instrument. He is addressing those things," Robert says. MARCUS ROBERTS AND ELLIS MARSALIS play this Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at Rackham Audito- rium. 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