Boot Angel Bridges...

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loCAtek
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Boot Angel Bridges...

Post by loCAtek »

If superheros had to engage in real life, Hernandez would draw them;
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Jaime Hernandez Bridges The Indie-Vs.-Cape Divide



by Glen Weldon







God and Science

Return of the Ti-Girls

by Jaime Hernandez


Hardcover, 134 pages | purchase











Comics & Graphic Novels


More on this book:
NPR reviews, interviews and more



text size AAA
August 2, 2012
If only Nixon could go to China, only indie-comics master Jaime Hernandez could produce God and Science: Return of the Ti-Girls, the brightest, purest, most quintessentially superheroic superhero yarn in years.

The exploits of garishly clad do-gooding mesomorphs have dominated American comics for three-fourths of a century. This fact breeds contempt among many who know that the medium of comics can be used to tell a much wider variety of stories, be they bolder and weirder (like Kevin Huizenga's hilarious new Gloriana) or quieter and more personal (such as Natalie Nourigat's recent, charming autobiographical comic Between Gears).

Many devotees of what are sometimes dubbed indie comics (or, God help us all, "art-comix") evince a disdain toward the capes-and-cowls set; this deeply entrenched dismissiveness, in turn, only serves to make those who love superheroes defensive and resentful. And so the battle lines deepen and, in comics shops, message boards and blogs, the war rages on.

Too often overlooked amid this roiling stew of mutual fannish antipathy is the simple fact that good comics are good comics. Case in point: God and Science, a book that gleefully grafts a gee-whiz superhuman sensibility onto a set of nuanced, all-too-human relationships. Within its breezily charming pages, the pointless battle between capes-lovers and capes-haters subsides: detente at last.

Artist and writer Jaime Hernandez is, along with brother Gilbert (and, infrequently, brother Mario), the co-creator of Love and Rockets, the expansive, emotionally rich and achingly felt comics series celebrating its 30th anniversary this year. When the series began, Gilbert focused on tales set in the Marquez-inflected Latin-American village of Palomar, while Jaime's stories revolved around Maggie and Hopey, two members of an all-girl punk group in California, and the ever-expanding cast of characters that surround them. Over the years, we've watched romances blossom and wither, plots gleefully twist and retwist, characters grow wiser (and older) and the brothers' unself-conscious mastery of the comic form deepen.


Courtesy of Fantagraphics
Love and Rockets author Jaime Hernandez, with a fan dressed as Boot Angel, one of the characters in God and Science.

In recent years, Jaime's stories have turned away from the high adventure of early Maggie and Hopey tales and grown more subdued, and his characters — Maggie in particular — steadily more grounded, even sober.

But in God and Science: Return of the Ti-Girls (which reprints material serialized in Love and Rockets: New Stories and adds a new ending), we learn that Maggie's new roommate is secretly the superhero Boot Angel, who longs to join one of several all-female superhero teams that have always functioned at the periphery of the series' narrative universe. What follows is only tangentially connected to Maggie's workaday world — a nonstop whimsical whirlwind of superheroic feats, bloodless battles and a huge, varied, entirely female cast of characters.

"Varied" being the keyword. As he has for three decades, Jaime peoples God and Science (named for one old-school superteam's battle cry) with women of all sizes, shapes and ages — and depicts them all with a sexiness that seems bracingly matter-of-fact. In many a Marvel and DC comic, women with bodies that defy all laws of anatomy and physics are drawn lasciviously even in repose; Hernandez's characters instead radiate a clear-eyed, self-possessed, don't screw-with-me confidence.


Read An Excerpt: 'God And Science'

Fans of Love and Rockets who disdain superhero stories as puerile pap will attempt to read God and Science as a withering satire of the genre, but the book will resolutely confound them. These pages exude a deep and abiding affection for even — especially — the hokiest of superhero tropes.

Fans of superheroes who roll their eyes at the preciousness of indie comics, on the other hand, will find that Hernandez's ability to establish a rounded, utterly believable friendship in the span of a few panels only enriches a character's most outlandish exploits. Without decades of pre-existing continuity hemming him in, Hernandez is free to let his imagination run riot — and creates, through dialogue, body language and characterizing detail, what feels like a living, fully-formed universe of superwomen whose network of relationships has weathered many years of shared history.

So let the pro- and anti-cape factions continue to wage their meaningless war. But let God and Science stand as a happy synthesis of the two, a reminder to the rest of us who look to the comics medium for good stories told well.


...oh wait , he did. <3

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Lord Jim
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Re: Boot Angel Bridges...

Post by Lord Jim »

You know, I understand and see as legitimate concerns about fashion and other magazines aimed at teen girls glorifying consistently unrealistic and unhealthy body images....

However....

When it comes to fictional, comic book super heroes and heroines, it seems to me they really should be on the buffed side to make the characters credible....

It's hard to believe somebody can leap tall buildings in a single bound if they look like doughnuts are their primary food group.....
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loCAtek
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Re: Boot Angel Bridges...

Post by loCAtek »

Like I said, his figures are based on real women;
loCAtek wrote:Since Hawkgirl is turning black, I decided to go for more realism with a Latina Heroine, who looks and acts like a real Latina ...and a lot like me!

Boot Angel!

¡Ándale pues! at least she's not a cartoon stick figure with an impossible wasp-waist.
Call her Thunder Thighs again, and you'll be the first to get a Rocket Round-House to the Face!

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...if Boot Angel and the TI-Girls look like Lady Luchadores, it because illustrious Illustrator Jaime Hernandez has always loved Lucha Libre

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Other characters he's used in his stories were actual Woman Wrestlers, not Super heroines but note the similarities in costumes;

Vicki Glori
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Rena Titañon

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Xochitl Navas, getting her butt kicked as usual, with in Gina in the background;

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Angel Altergot

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...and many others illustrated in Jaine's cross-over short series'

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These are real looking Latina folks, they're the people that you meet, when you're walking down the street, each day ♩ ♪ ♫ ♬


More true to life art from the books, no weak wasp-waists or gravity defying boobs here;

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Lord Jim
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Re: Boot Angel Bridges...

Post by Lord Jim »

Okay LoCa, I find those uh, "BBW's" believable as female wrestlers, but not as faster-than-a-speeding-bullet types... 8-)

Comic book super heroes and heroines aren't supposed to look like people you see walking down the street...

They're supposed to look...super....

Back in the 1930's when Universal was looking for someone to bring the comic book character Flash Gordon to the screen, they hired the Olympic swimmer Buster Crabbe....

Not Charles Laughton....

Superior physical appearance is part of what makes the character more credible in terms of what they are supposed to be able to do... Who makes a more believable Wonder Woman? Linda Carter or Roseanne Barr?
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Rick
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Re: Boot Angel Bridges...

Post by Rick »

Next will be Roller Derby...
Sometimes it seems as though one has to cross the line just to figger out where it is

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