Secretly a Doombot...

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
kierongillen

I Could Pull Quotes From This All Day

kierongillen

PAUL GRAVETT: My question concerned how to create works of depth in work that consciously and continuously embraces the surfaces of things.

GRANT MORRISON: Hmm. Well, I think I find my depth, paradoxically, in the surface of things. I like playing with the pure sound of word on word in my writing, or concerning myself with surface glamour. But I believe, say, The Invisibles to be a work of great emotional depths. You can read it as an action-filled philosophical wank book, or you can read it for King Mob's attempt to get over the loss of his girlfriend and the death of his cats by turning himself into a pop god with a gun.

PAUL GRAVETT: Hmm. So, on one level, The Invisibles is about a man trying to get over the death of his cats.

GRANT MORRISON: That’s right, yes. About 60% of The Invisibles was autobiographical.

PAUL GRAVETT: Now, as I recall, don’t you appear in your last issue on Animal Man and discuss the death of one of your cats?

GRANT MORRISON: Yes, in fact.

PAUL GRAVETT: I see. And isn’t The Filth, on one level, about Greg Feely possibly losing his mind while trying to care for his dying cat?

GRANT MORRISON: On one level, yes.

PAUL GRAVETT: Now, I forget. Does a cat die in Flex Mentallo?

GRANT MORRISON: No, no. I don’t have to have a cat die in order to produce a good work, Paul.

PAUL GRAVETT: So it wasn’t written after a cat had died?

GRANT MORRISON: Absolutely not.

PAUL GRAVETT: Loss of a girlfriend?

*pause*

GRANT MORRISON: Well, yes, in fact. I wrote Flex Mentallo after a bad break-up with a girlfriend.

PAUL GRAVETT: And Marvel Boy?

GRANT MORRISON: Bad break-up with a girlfriend.

PAUL GRAVETT: Your Fantastic Four miniseries? Cat or girlfriend?

GRANT MORRISON: Caring for a sick girlfriend.

PAUL GRAVETT: Did she die?

GRANT MORRISON: No, she recovered. That’s why it’s only four issues.

PAUL GRAVETT: Doom Patrol?

GRANT MORRISON: A bad break-up.

PAUL GRAVETT: With a girlfriend?

GRANT MORRISON: With a cat. It was very painful.

PAUL GRAVETT: Now, this isn’t a magic thing, is it? You’re not sacrificing your cats, or anything?

GRANT MORRISON: No, no, not at all. I love cats, Paul.

PAUL GRAVETT: As do I. As do I.

deathchrist2000
assiraphales

the ninth doctor was lowkey so under appreciated. he was the perfect combination of rascal (mostly) benevolent god and slut

assiraphales

imo he was the most considerate doctor, who was the most aware of his power and the people he was capable of hurting. he was cynical and moody and war worn but he cared so deeply. he loved knowing he’d lose. he kissed a servant girl on the forehead that sacrificed herself who no one would remember except for him and rose. and at the same time a right bastard <3

nudityandnerdery

The contrast between Nine's absolute glee in, "Everybody lives, Rose! Just this once, everybody lives!" and the cold self-recognition of loathing in his "Only a killer would know that" dinner with the Slitheen leader. Eccleston was so good.

saint-batrick

forever my doctor.

maxwell-grant

Anonymous asked:

🔥the Shadow

maxwell-grant answered:

I still like those comics, but in the grand scheme of things I think Denny O'Neil might have actually done a lot more harm to the character than good, because much of what I complain about in regards to how subsequent runs handled the character kinda starts with him. By his own admission, he saw the character as a fascist demigod and unsurprisingly depicted him as such, and he started the idea of The Shadow bullying and wrangling his agents, and Harry Vincent in particular, like tools. There’s room to talk about over whether O'Neil’s view was justified and I’m not even entirely denying it, that’s a charged topic for another time, I’m just saying he most definitely kicked off the ball that Chaykin and the movie and co. would later run with.

(I have an immense respect for him and love a lot that he’s done, but if nothing else I can definitely blame Denny O'Neil for completely ruining Harry Vincent’s characterization for every comic since)

Also, The Shadow (2017) by Si Spurrier and Dan Watters was a great comic and the backlash to it gets more absurd with every year. I hated it too on release, and I didn’t get what it was trying to do. I’ve reread through it several times now and, okay yeah, there’s plenty of stuff in there to criticize but also, by and large the response to it was an overblown fandom tantrum with a not-insignificant amount of racist vitrol towards the protagonist and a Pavlovian attack dog gnashing of teeth from right-wingers over the book’s politics over issue one, nobody even touched the following ones. That comic was significantly ahead of the curve and it tried to break the mediocre streak of Shadow comics and it got crucified over it.

kierongillen

wmb-salticidae asked:

Uber questions that aren’t the usual question!

  1. Do you / did you have plans for Uber-related stuff following Invasion, or do you feel like Invasion will wrap up everything you want to do with that world?
  2. When Uber wraps up for good, is there any chance that the series bible might be made available or does the WFH nature of the series mean that you can’t post notes like that?

In any case, I’ve greatly enjoyed the series and, regardless of when/whether Uber wraps up, I’m glad to have been able to read as much of it as I have.

kierongillen answered:

  1. I didn’t. I think Uber Invasion would wrap up everything I’d want to say, in terms of where I would want to leave it. I tended to think if there was more Uber, it’d be actually going back into the whole war and digging into bits we didn’t explore - but even that was a lomg shot.
  2. I think that’s unlikely. Less because of WFH, and more that it’s such a long project and a bible’s always a living document from a long time ago. I mostly wouldn’t want to show how the sausage was made. Maybe fragments? I dunno.