The Rouen Show
Written By:
Chip Zdarsky
Art By: Joe
Quinones, Joe Rivera, Paolo Rivera, Marc Deering, Jordan Gibson
Lettered By:
Travis Lanham
Cover Price:
$3.99
On Sale Date: July 27, 2016
**NON SPOILERS AND SCORE AT THE
BOTTOM**
Sometimes I like to think that the Howard in the Dead
Milkmen’s “Howard Beware” is about Howard the Duck.
It probably isn’t, but I like to believe. Read on for
my review of issue #9!
Well, Lea Thompson is in this comic book. No, not a
stand-in for Lea Thompson named Lena Sompton. Not the coincidentally-named
alter ego of some newly-christened cannon fodder member of the X-Men. Actual
Lea Thompson, star of Some Kind of
Wonderful, Back to the Future, and yes, Howard
the Duck. The Movie. The Spielberg one. Is Zdarsky aware of what he’s
unleashed with this kind of crossover? When the Avengers were on Late Night with David Letterman (#239,
January 1984), the multiverse was in flux for months! Loki kept showing up to
pull pranks on Larry “Bud” Melman in the middle of taping! Paul Shaeffer had to
fend off the Scarlet Witch’s advances! It was anarchy! Yet here’s Lea freaking
Thompson soliciting the services of Howard the Duck (in his capacity as a
private dick, you sick-minded freak [as in private detective, you immoral gross bucket]) to find out just what the
hello operator has been going on around here! Which is something I’d like to
know, as well!
Seems Lea Thompson has been experiencing periodic
blackouts and blocks of unaccountable time, and when she saw Howard’s picture
in a newspaper ad, she was compelled to seek his help for unknown reasons. In
terms of hard evidence, all she’s got is a picture of a baby in a wheelchair
wearing a green suit, which would be adorable if it wasn’t so unsettling.
Howard goes to retrieve his best assistant, who happens to be the only
assistant he’s worked with in this volume of the series, Tara. She’s over at…the
Baxter Building, I guess? I assume that only because she’s trying on an old
Fantastic 4 jumpsuit, made from unstable molecules, with good old Johnny Storm
hanging around, telling her not to try to sleep with him because he’s seeing
Medusa (the Inhuman, not the Gorgon [No, not the Inhuman named Gorgon]). This
leads to some pretty funny exchanges that I enjoyed, even though I don’t really
know what is currently happening with Johnny Storm or the Inhumans in the
Marvel Universe (though now I know Johnny is dating one of them! Thanks, comic
book!) Outfitted with clothes that will transform with her, Tara takes a look
at Lea Thompson’s picture and recognizes it as the product of Brooklyn’s
hippest baby photography salon, Superbabies! And the picture, incidentally, is
of a baby dressed up like Professor Xavier of the X-Men. Pretty clever.
The trio make off for Superbabies, and after
distracting the hipster attending the storefront they steal into the cavernous
back room of the place, that turns out to be a television studio! There, a
mountainous fellow whose legs are replaced by some kind of mechanical insect
chassis, introduces himself as MOJO! the creative director of this endeavor,
aided by his producer/bean counter Major Domo, who have assembled a small cast
and crew, including a periodically and temporarily kidnapped Lea Thompson, to
film the reality show of Howard the Duck’s life! Huh? Well, no…the implication
is that when there’s a Howard the Duck comic
book, then they can “film” that. But during the lapses during which Howard does
not appear in comics and/or does not have his own series, Mojo has to film a
scripted version of his life, which includes Lea Thompson playing his old Steve
Gerber-era squeeze, Beverly, and a little blue alien named Trevor that wears a
Howard the Duck costume (that is suspiciously similar to the one from the Howard the Duck movie!) But more
recently, Mojo has gotten all the real footage he’s needed by making Howard’s
life really complicated, thanks to…two aliens sitting before a bank of
televisions displaying Howard on the last page! And I’m pretty sure they’re
supposed to be analogous to Joe Quinones and Chip Zdarsky. I mean, the one alien
is definitely Zdarsky. I guess the other guy looks like Joe Quinones, I could
see it. Quinones is a little less descript than Chip, but the fact that he’s a
little chubby implies that it’s him. The other guy is definitely supposed to be
Zdarsky, I mean that guy is distinctive. He’s got a shnozz like something out
of a Basil Wolverton cartoon.
Though it’s still clear that this series is winding
down, I enjoyed this more than the last issue because it was a lot more madcap
and silly rather than encumbered by its own continuity. I guess the fact is that
I don’t really feel like watching touching, emotional scenes featuring a
humanoid with a giant duck’s head. The art is top notch as usual, Quinones is
definitely tailoring a style that works great for this kind of story. And the
story is a little fun, despite getting a little clunky at the very end. But I
believe I get the point of what is happening, and that’s good enough for me.
Bits and
Pieces:
7.5/10
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