J.C.
Maçek III
Gothic
American Lit
Dr.
T. Du Bose
5/5/98
4:47:22 PM
From Dark Nights to Dark Knights
The gothic novels of
the nineteenth century as well as the grotesque and horrifying works of the
early twentieth century have given way to the gothic nineteen eighties and
nineties. With authors such as Stephen
King and Anne Rice, not to mention musical artists such as Alice Cooper and J.
Ozzy Osbourne we see that the gothic, the grotesque, and the horrific are alive
and well at least in the descendants of the original forms. One clearly strong, yet often overlooked
descendant of the gothic and grotesque tradition is the modern comic book. In today’s graphic literature the horrific
is commonly a key element in the success and marketing of a particular
title. Some of the best, and best
selling, comic books are direct descendants of the works of Mary Shelley, H.P.
Lovecraft, Bram Stoker, Edgar Allen Poe, and Ambrose Bierce. Some of the most influential comics of the
age are influenced greatly by the works of gothic and grotesque writers, and
this influenced has helped to shape what is thought of today as the modern
graphic novel.
No look at gothicism
in comics could be near complete without a look at Bob Kane’s Batman. Those who are familiar with the Batman of
the sixties television show and its comic counterpart would find themselves in
for a culture shock when looking at the origins of the Batman.
During the golden age
of comic books a new form of character arose:
the “superhero.” With the
creation of Superman by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, the demand for costumed
larger-than-life heroes was on the rise (Daniels DC Comics, 32). A young
cartoonist named Bob Kane heard about the successes of Siegel and Schuster, and
decided to abandon comedy fill ins (for forty dollars a week) and create from
the top of his head a costumed hero of his own (Daniels DC Comics, 32). What Kane
was looking for was not a building on the angry orphan story that is the
driving force in Batman’s psyche (this origin story was not added until months after the character’s creation),
but rather an eye-catching hero with “a kind of simplistic, definitive design
that was easily recognizable” (Daniels DC
Comics, 32) that could indeed be ready over a weekend.
Kane dipped into his
memory for inspiration for the character, and was immediately inspired by
Leonardo da Vinci’s proposed flying machine “the ornithopter” (Daniels DC
Comics, 32). Kane attached the
wings of the machine to a man’s frame and shot next for the design of the frame
itself. A long time film buff, Kane
lifted his character’s design from the innovative, 1926 Roland West film The Bat
(Daniels DC Comics, 32). The title villain of the film is a dark,
menacing bat-suited thief who stalks rooftops, communicates via bat-shaped
cards, and scales the walls of buildings.
The opening titles in the film say, “Can you keep a secret? Don’t reveal the identity of ‘The Bat’. Future audiences will fully enjoy this
mystery play if left to find out for themselves.” (Bat). Not only could Kane not keep the secret, he
used the many tricks of “The Bat” to create his character, the mood of his
pictures, and the edge of menace common to both The Bat, and Batman. The morality of the Batman was inspired by
the acting of Douglas Fairbanks in the role of Zorro. While the mood, atmosphere and movements of the character were
inspired by a still darker character of fiction.
Kane’s “moody
lighting and expressionistic angles” (Daniels DC Comics, 32) came from the horrific Dracula films of the
thirties. The interpretation of Bram
Stoker’s seminal vampire, as performed by Bela Lugosi, carried his cape in his
hand and hid his face from view as often as was necessary to create the ominous
effect of the unknown. Early images of
Batman showed the hero with his bat-shaped cape pulled up over his mouth and
grimacing against any light source. It
was this vampiric image that marked the Batman from his first appearance in
1939 (Detective Comics #27) to the
point when the lonely and sinister hero was matched with a sprite named Robin
who humanized the Batman in 1940 (Detective
Comics #38).
Further evidence of
the gothic in early Batman stories came with the writing of Gardner Fox. While Kane and partner Bill Finger provided
much darkness in their presentation of Batman, Fox took the stories a step
further from the revamped pulp format, and added a European mysticism to the
mix. In one story Fox placed Batman in
a Hungarian castle where he discovered that the villains of the story were
actually vampires (Daniels DC Comics, 34). Batman promptly dispatched the vampires with
his gun, loaded with silver bullets.
While the gun soon went away, the gothicism was there to stay (Daniels DC Comics, 64).
The Dracula inspired
art was a testament to the Gothic nature of the character as well. The cover of Detective Comics #31 shows a red-suited man carrying a maiden to a
European castle, with a dark caped and cowled figure looming over the entire
scene. “A casual glance would suggest
that Batman is the menacing vampire of the castle” (Daniels DC Comics, 35). In fact the image of a horrific hero in each
and every Batman story was not even toned down until 1940, and not eliminated
until the mid fifties when the Comics Code controversy forced the issue.
William M. Gaines
formed a company known as Educational
Comics at this time (Daniels Comix, 62). While the company began with kids’ comics and bible adaptations,
E.C., as it came to be known, became the pioneer in both horror and humor
comics. The now world-famous Crypt
Keeper made his first appearance in the last two issues of Crime Patrol which already featured a Lovecraftian mixture of the
mundane and the super-grotesque (i.e.:
police detectives battling zombies)
(Daniels Comix, 62). The subsequent rise of the Crypt Keeper’s
own title Crypt of Terror (later Tales From the Crypt) spawned such
partners as The Vault of Horror, and The Haunt of Fear (Daniels, Comix, 62). The fantastic artwork and literary writing style, coupled with
the fact that the books (and followers such as Weird Science, Weird Fantasy, and Shock Suspesnstories) adapted works by such authors as Ray
Bradbury and Bram Stoker made these titles instant classics (Daniels Comix, 62).
The E.C. titles (now
identified on the covers as “entertaining” comics) made the bold move of opting
for suspense rather than a continuous hero sure to win in each issue to keep
sales high. The quality of the story
pulled it off, and the creative writers and artists are to be credited (Daniels
Comix, 63). “They owed their success, perhaps, to the theories and practice
of Edgar Allan Poe, who had called for short stories planned to achieve a
single effect and ceasing when the effect had been achieved.” (Daniels Comix,
63-64). In these works resurfaced the
Poe-like idea of the object of horror also being the force of justice (which
goes back to Elizabethan revenge tragedies as well). The alliteration and pun-based black comedy that showed up in the
works’ jeering dialogue recreated the nineteenth and twentieth century gothic
moods that frightened and still made the reader laugh at the same time (Daniels
Comix, 64). “Their tone was reminiscent of that master of sarcasm and satire,
Ambrose Bierce” (Daniels Comix, 64).
Unfortunately the
innovative stories and graphic morality plays were put to a stop during the
Comics Code controversy. 1954 marked
the grip of Joseph McCarthy-spawned intolerance concerning politics, Hollywood,
and literature. Comics were no
exception to the rule. When the
Red-Scare Gestapo was finished with the comics not only was it unlawful to
portray crime in any detail, hence Batman’s having to do detective work to find
out why the Joker was giving away money and painting
people’s houses (Stacked Deck, 164), but it was also
prohibited for a comic magazine to “use the word horror or terror in its
title” (Daniels Comix, 90). The E.C.
revolution was crushed by the government and no amount of quality American
literature could save it from good old fashioned moral totalitarianism. The elimination of Poe, Bierce and Lovecraft
inspired stories can be traced back at least in part to greed. “It is interesting to note that John
Goldwater, the spearhead of the Comics Code Authority, was in his spare time
the owner and manager of that perennial champion of tasteless conformity, Archie.” (Daniels, Comix, 85). While the Code
is a mere afterthought now, and is not a necessity for publication, it did end
an era of quality horror comics and caused entertainment sterility outside of
the underground comics.
The influence of
Lovecraft specifically is seen in various places throughout the comic book
genre. This is due in no small part to
the fact that H.P. Lovecraft’s actual literary agent, Julius Schwartz went on
to become one of the most prolific, best loved and talented comic book editors
of all time (Daniels DC Comics, 52). Schwartz had never read a comic book in his
life when he accepted the job at DC Comics, so he had to work with what he
knew. Schwartz plotted stories with
writers and was given the power to veto stories he did not like (Daniels DC
Comics, 53). The ones that got through were those that preserved the pulp
writing style and innovative literary pictures that Lovecraft had perfected years
before. Gardner Fox, besides being a
brilliant proponent for horror in Batman, brought similar supernature to such
titles as All Star Comics. Issue number three of All Star Comics, for example features occult hero Doctor Fate
battling a Cthulu-like octopoid monster with his knowledge and sorcery, a
“tribute to pulp author H.P. Lovecraft.”
(Daniels DC Comics, 45).
The ripples and
echoes of Lovecraft are still seen in
the Batman titles. For example, Lovecraft
sets many of his adventures in a town called “Arkham.” In the Batman mythos the insane asylum that
houses the most menacing of criminals, such as the Joker and Two-Face, is named
“Arkham.” As it is never actually
spelled out where Batman’s home town, Gotham City is geographically, it has
been suggested that Gotham is the modern name for the old New England town of Arkham. Further evidence of this exists in Grant
Morrison and Dave McKean’s gothic graphic novel Arkham Asylum: A Serious House
on Serious Earth. In this work it
is suggested that Arkham Asylum is, and always was on the grounds of insanity,
as an ancient evil had permeated the land years before (Morrison & McKean). In Lovecraft’s Herbert West – Reanimator The title character and his partner bury
their dead in a place called “Potter’s Field.”
In the Batman mythos Potter’s Field is “where the city of Gotham
provides simple graves for the destitute, the forgotten, the unknown” (Moench, Jones, & Jones III, 23). In the self-contained graphic novel Batman & Dracula: Red Rain the Potter’s
Field graves open up to allow the reanimated corpses of vampires to issue forth
and conquer Gotham at Dracula’s command.
This echoes the siege of the West residence in Herbert West – Reanimator, as the reanimated dead come to claim
their creator (Lovecraft, 232-233). Also in Batman: Dark Joker-The
Wild there appears a bizarre world of sword and sorcery where the “Dark
Joker” evokes horrific Lovecraftian demons to reshape the earth (Moench, Jones
& Beatty, 16). The mythology of Lovecraft is clearly seen in all its life
today in the modern tales of Batman.
It is not merely the
twentieth century American writers that have influenced the Batman stories of
today and yesterday, but also the gothic horror writers of England. Naturally Batman & Dracula: Red Rain
deals with Bram Stoker’s Character of Dracula being met by his successor the Batman. (Moench, Jones & Jones III, 88), but it
also contains an army of “Dhampire,” the half human, half vampire entities that
can detect and hunt vampires, tracking down Dracula and aiming for his extinction
with the help of Bruce Wayne(Moench, Jones, & Jones III, 40).
Batman: Castle of the Bat is the retelling of the Frankenstein
story with the Batman as the monster.
This avenging, patchwork Batmonster stalks the night in 1819 Germany, thwarting
thieves, and frightening all but the blind (Harris & Hampton, 3). The plot thickens with the monster’s degenerating
into a horror more bat-like than human, and his absconding with his creator’s
bride (Harris & Hampton, 46). As the tale ends the monster is burned alive
within a building and becomes a subject of legend (Harris & Hampton, 63).
Just as nineteenth
century horror fiction has become integral in the Batman stories, so has
nineteenth century horror fact. In Gotham by Gaslight: An Alternative History of the Batman,
Batman goes up against the famed serial killer Jack the Ripper. In this case actual events are left intact,
while another chapter is added to what is known about Jack. The tale ends in Gotham with the Ripper’s
pan-oceanic killing spree being ceased by the Batman on American soil
(Augustyn, Mignola, & Russell).
The gothic and the
grotesque in American comics are certainly not limited to tales of the
Batman. Neil Gaiman’s Sandman brought horror and supernature into the mainstream of comic book
successes (Daniels DC Comics, 206). Sandman’s
mixture of irony, horror, and the fantastic, along with Alan Moore’s Swamp Thing, paved the way for such innovative
works as Grant Morrison’s revamp of Doom
Patrol to be added to the list of DC’s Gothic titles, and for the imprint
called “Vertigo” to be created for the housing of these titles (Daniels DC
Comics, 244).
One of the finest
examples of the supernatural gothic comic is seen in John Rozum’s Xombi.
Xombi is the story of David Kim, a man who is
reanimated by medical means and as a result cannot be killed by anything (Rozum, 3). What sets Xombi apart from Frankenstein,
or Herbert West – Reanimator is David
Kim’s innocence and constant sentience.
While never becoming a Zombie, Xombi readjusts to life, knowing
that death is now an impossibility, and step by step he is drawn farther and
farther into a strange world where the souls of long-dead knights inhabit
bodies made of steak and leather, cathedrals rise from the ground in an instant
to trap monsters only to sink again as quickly as they came, and teleportation
is marked by the screams of talking frogs.
Such characters as “Nun of the Above,”
“Catholic Girl,” and “Rabbi
Sinnowitz” add to the darkness the same
light that Robin did for Batman, but with a much more cynical (and humorous) edge. While one of the finest works of
supernatural literature of any form, poor sales led to the cancellation of Xombi after only two years. The true horror of Xombi is that its magnificence could not be appreciated by a closed
minded populace.
American and British
gothic literature has infused the modern American genre of the Comic Book with
horrific and grotesque imagery that is as original to itself as it is a homage
to the past creators who graced us with gothic literature in the first
place. The works of John Rozum, Neil Gaiman,
Grant Morrison, Gardner Fox, and Doug Moench recapture the tones of the creators
of the past such as Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker, Ambrose Bierce, Edgar Allen Poe,
and H.P. Lovecraft. While many
hardships including the rise of McCarthyism, editorial censors, and poor sales
have attempted to put a complete stop to the success of this genre in its
graphic form, the truth is that graphic gothic literature is literature that is simply too good to die easily, and in
fact, it has only grown and improved.
The influences of the gothic writers are clear in today’s graphic literature,
and it is likely that the future will hold an increased observance of the sub-genre
that merges the forms. In time the
current writers and artists that preserve this form of literature, originated
by Shelley, Lovecraft, and Beirce, and augmented by Schwartz, Kane, and the
like, are sure to influence more of those who know that if a picture is worth a
thousand words, then a graphic novel is literarily invaluable!