Tuesday, September 30, 2008
(A long, meandering) Review: Prince of Persia
I would tell you that most comic books based on videogames are complete trash, but it would be more conjecture than informed opinion, as I don’t read very many comics that are based on video games, due to the fact that they look like complete trash.
Sure I was kinda curious about the old Daredevil team of Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev doing Halo comics for Marvel, or Walt Simonson writing World of Warcraft for DC/WildStorm because they seem like weird endeavors for such name talents, but having no knowledge or interest of those games I never checked them out. I tried a Castlevania comic a while back and it was awful; I saw a new trade based on the property in shops last week, but didn’t even flip through it. I could never even get past the covers of the old Tomb Raider comics.
The only based-on-a-game comics I’ve actually stuck with for a while were the Darkstalkers comics (first from Viz and later from Devil’s Due), which were pretty terrible*, but I had some affection for the game and the character designs, and the Tokyopop Kingdom Hearts manga, because I thought the game looked really cool, and figured reading a comic based on it would be the next best thing to playing it. It wasn’t that great either, but it was still kinda fun to see all the Disney characters interact in an adventure story.
As to why comics based on videogames tend to not be very good (and/or look like they aren’t very good), I don’t know if it has something to do with the essential differences between the interactivity of the original medium vs. the passivity of comics (similarly, movies based on videogames tend to be terrible**), or if it’s because publishers who gain licenses of popular games tend to assume the license alone will sell the book so why bother making it good, or if maybe it’s mostly in my head and comes from my own antipathy towards videogames, having never made the jump from sidescrolling games to the 3-D looking immersive games with all the buttons on the pads (I think the Super Nintendo was as far as I followed videogames on their evolution…?).
If we were to ignore all comics other than those based on videogames, however, to pretend that when we said “comics” we just meant “comics based on videogames,” then First Second’s Prince of Persia is Watchmen. Combined with Maus.
Prince of Persia is yet another videogame that I knew next to nothing about, beyond the fact that it must have been pretty popular since it had at least one sequel and was going to have a movie based on it. That, and that it sufficiently distracted one of my old roommates that he played it for what seemed like four or five days straight.
The cover of the First Second graphic novel sure seemed to set it apart from most video game comics; there’s the titular prince, running like the star of an old-fashioned sidescroller, above a triptych of images: A strange-looking bird, an exotic princess in a come hither pose, and an army of guys on horses waving scimitars.
The title is in shiny gold, upraised letters, sprinkled with little star-shaped holograms. It’s kinda cheesy, but a neat kind of cheesy; tilt it under the light, and the logo gets all magical on you. I was amused to see beneath the words “Prince of Persia” the words “The Graphic Novel,” I guess so that readers won’t become confused and think they were playing a handheld videogame with archaic graphics while reading…?
In smaller font, across the top are the somewhat portentous words “From the creator of the legendary games—the legend itself.”
But it’s the imagery and format that is most striking: This isn’t your traditional American licensed comic book, released as a four-to-six-issue story arc to be collected and re-sold in a trade later—it’s an original graphic novel. The art isn’t poor man’s superhero art, but an honest-to-goodness art comics cartooning style. A glance at the cover is all you need to know that First Second is taking this book seriously.
The credits are a little on the murky side, at least at the top. Original game creator and designer Jordan Mechner gets a “created by” credit, although he doesn’t seem to have done any of the writing of this particular story (Based on his extensive afterword, I got the sense that he played a sort of producer-like role with the graphic novel, but I’m not sure).
It’s written by Iranian born A.B. Sina, and drawn by the art team of LeUyen Pham and Alex Puvilland (the former a children’s book illustrator, the latter having worked for Dreamworks animation), and their work is beautifully colored by Hilary Sycamore.
The story they tell is a surprisingly, refreshingly complex one, with none of the markings of an origin in a game of any kind—while there’s plenty of action (When a lion lunges at one of the titular princes, dude cuts him in half from face to tail with a sword!), it’s all dramatic in nature; there’s no running and jumping about for the sake of running and jumping, no levels to clear or bosses to fight. Scott Pilgrim operates on arcade logic to a far greater extent than this book with actual arcade origins***.
Sina seems to circumvent the source material, or at least the most recent reflections of that source material, instead reaching back to the types of stories that originally inspired Mechner in creating the franchise: Legends from his own culture, 1,001 Arabian Nights fairy tales, Hollywood orientalism exotica. And it’s this inspiration that he weaves into a story that is very much about story, and the way stories from one generation can powerfully affect others.
Prince of Persia is set during two different centuries, the ninth and the thirteenth. In the ninth century three great friends Layth, Guiv and Guilan were inseparable, and were all considered the prince of their city Marv. As they grew older, Layth married Guilan, and he became the ruler of Marv, while Guiv, Guilan’s brother and the true heir to the throne, was cast out of the city—in part for perceived betrayal, and in part to avoid bloodshed from an outside army that wanted Layth on the throne. Guiv lived among the ruins with a monstrous magical talking bird and strange visions and later an army of lions (And did I mention he totally cut a lion in half? Or that he swordfights an army of skeletons that look all Harryhausen-y? Because he does.)
In the thirteenth century, a teenage girl named Shirin cuts her hair, escapes from her corrupt government official father’s palace, and poses as a boy until she falls down a well and meets Ferdos, a mysterious boy who lives in the same ruins Guiv once dead (and looks an awful lot like a Bruce Timm drawing of Paul Pope).
Ferdos makes drawings that tell the stories of the ninth century trio, and he and Shirin see the actualization of a prophecy made in Layth and company’s time. That prophecy informs the actions in their century, and Sina and company weave in and out of the two narratives throughout the entire book, so that the two stories climax at the same time. It’s an amazingly well constructed story, one that manages to withhold bits of important information until the precise moment where their revelation will have the greatest impact.
I can’t say enough good things about the artwork. It’s a highly illustrative, very comic-book-y looking graphic novel—the images are flat, obviously hand-made and hand-drawn, something I take greater and greater pleasure in these days when so many comics seek pseudo-photorealism through excessive photo reference and reliance on highly-gradiated computer coloring.
Sycamore’s coloring is smartly done, giving the panels the look of immaculate old-school 2D animation. There are delicate tones and observant decisions on what to color what when and why, but these are all in service to the lines of ink laid down, and do nothing to obscure or overpower them.
There are some showy techniques, like the soft lines of the magical bird that separates him from the world he walks through, and Pham and Puvilland’s switch to era-appropirate style when depicting events seen in Ferdos’ scrolls, or the juxtapositon of the two epilogues in vertical stacks of panels separated by flowing water, but it’s the panel-to-panel story telling and fine character acting that make the art so damn impressive more than any of these other more idiosyncratic strategies.
I implied that this was probably the best based-on-a-videogame comic I’d ever read, but that’s probably pretty feint praise, huh? So forget videogame comics then; this may not be the greatest comic comic period, but it is a pretty great one.
Or, to put it as simply as possible, Prince of Persia rules.
Mecher provides an eleven-page afterword focusing on the life of the “Prince” character, who was older and starred in far more games than I realized: Mechner conceived him in 1985 and he was in a game by 1989, and then a whole series of games, for the Nintendo, the Sega Genesis and the current generation of platforms I don’t understand. It’s a pretty fascinating piece of text, not just because it educated me on something that I was ignorant of or because it framed this graphic novel as a distillation of a story that had wound through centuries old fairy tales into Hollywood movies into Mecher’s childhood ambitions of being a comic creator into his career into videogames before reaching this point, but because it frames the story you just got done reading in a new and interesting way.
Mecher reminds us that there is no real prince of Persia, the characters in the games and the comic, in the old movies and old stories are all just iterations of some one, true prince lost to time; splintered aspects of some sort of Ur-Prince, shadows on a cave wall caused by the unseen prince walking before a fire.
In the graphic novel, there’s no definitive prince, but about five princes who are all the prince of Persia, and it’s there that I think this graphic novel bears the most in common with video games. They allow players—millions of them, over the course of almost a whole generation now, in the case of Prince of Persia—to at least temporarily become the protagonist, in a more immersive way then even the best fiction can.
You can read a comic or story or watch a movie about a prince and get swept up in the adventure, but it’s hard if not impossible to ever completely break the walls between character and reader and step inside them and become that character. But in a videogame, it’s as easy as pushing a button.
This graphic novel lets us follow the prince(s) without ever becoming them, of course, but it acknowledges that it’s a role open to many, rather than just one.
Just out of curiosity: Do any of you have any good based-on-a-videogame comics to recommend? If so, please do so in the comments section. I think I mentioned every one I’ve ever read, and I know there are plenty more that I never have, and probably aren’t even aware of.
RELATED: Hey, good timing! Michael C. Lorah interviewed most of the creative team for Newsarama.com, and asked Mechner about some of the things I wondered about while reading. You can check out the interview here.
*Although the Devil’s Due comics did feature some pretty cool gag back-up stories.
**You know what was completely genius though? Putting Dennis Hopper in bright blonde cornrows and a business suit to play the King Bowser character in 1993’s Super Mario Bros, where he held his his hands held like a T-Rex and kept referring to the heroes as mammals because he was a super-evolved dinosaur. That was awesome. The movie sucked, but I somewhat shamefully admit to having watched repeatedly due to my crush on Samantha Mathis.
***Okay, it was a home platform game not an arcade game, shut up I’m a Luddite I don’t care you know-it-all jerks!
The Super Mario Bros. movie IS totally awesome. It's not good, of course, but it's *fascinating* in the way it has to loosely adapt the game while looking nothing at all like it. They just had to make *something* that is in some way reminiscent of Super Mario Bros.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea how the movie was actually made, but I like to imagine a producer cornering two writers:
"Look, we've got the rights to make a movie based on Super Mario Bros., and I want you to write it. But it's going to be live-action and not a cartoon. And we're not going to put Dennis Hopper in a big monster suit, so he'll have to look human. And we'd rather it be children's sci-fi instead of children's fantasy. Also John Leguizamo will be Bob Hoskins' brother. Finally, we'll have a decent budget, but not a big one. We're going to lock you in this room for three days with nothing but cigarettes and champagne while you figure out how to actually film that."
And on the third day, the writers emerge from that room, red-eyed and half-mad, clutching a single piece of paper with "PARALLEL WORLD WHERE MAN EVOLVED FROM DINOSAURS? (ALSO FUNGUS)" scrawled on it in blood.
I hear some fairly good things about the Udon Street Fighter comics, especially the Sakura miniseries(Which is essentially a gag comic all the way through.) I was kind of annoyed at how they crapped all over Rival Schools though. Only fighting game I've ever cared about the plot and characters, and they handed it over to a crappy ass graffito artist. Comics aren't meant to be drawn in marker.
ReplyDeleteCome to think of it, most videogame based manga tends to suck as well, although Galaxy Angel technically qualifies and people love that.
Kingdom Hearts:Chain of Memories is probably required reading if you play KH2, as the game constantly references the videogame CoM was based on, which A: Was supposed to be just a handheld spinoff. and B: Has the worst game mechanics ever perpetrated on humanity.
Valiant put out some Mario Bros. comics in the early 90s that were fun. Not great, not Earth-shattering, but just kind of fun, like an Archie comic or something.
ReplyDeleteThe same is also true of early issue of Sonic the Hedgehog. Published by Archie, actually.
Again, neither of those things will blow your mind. But they're okay.
I find it somewhat hard to believe that Sonic the Hedgehog comics are still coming out.
ReplyDeleteThe first Street Fighter series Udon put out was pretty entertaining without being too vapid. and both Metal Gear Solid series for IDW are decent enough - I love the games, so comics can never improve them for me, but the Ashley Wood art sells it for me. They're so stylized that Konami actually adapted the COMICS into an "interactive comic" for the PSP.
ReplyDeleteAlso, you should play Kingdom Hearts, if only to play the magnificent Kingdom Hearts 2. It's just 40 hours of joy.
I'm surprised there's never been a decent Zelda monthly.
ReplyDeleteKingdom Hearts 2 is one of those things where someone wholeheartedly recommending it tells me they're a bad person; like Jim Jarmusch movies. MC Chris' review is entirely accurate, although he never got to the part where all bossfights can be won by jamming on the triangle button, or how they decided to fix the shoddy camera while jumping by making all the levels flat plains, or how they replaced all the Disney villains with Sephiroth clones.
ReplyDeleteOnly way I'll ever buy a Kingdom Hearts game again is if they find a way to keep Nomura from being involved.
"Kingdom Hearts 2 is one of those things where someone wholeheartedly recommending it tells me they're a bad person"
ReplyDeleteBecause you've played it? No, you haven't.
"all bossfights can be won by jamming on the triangle button"
Nope.
"they decided to fix the shoddy camera while jumping by making all the levels flat plains"
You're 0 for 2.
"they replaced all the Disney villains with Sephiroth clones"
And 0 for 3. They doubled the amount of villains by including more original characters.
Try playing a game before you make up crap about it.
My 9 year old daughter really likes the Sonic The Hedgehog comics.
ReplyDeleteShe also likes the Mega Man manga series.
I don't think either of those will ever be classics or thought of as literary in any way, but she likes them.
Great review. If I ever see the book at a bargain price I will pick it up without hesitation.
Viz is putting out Zelda comics later this year.
ReplyDeleteI have no idea how the movie was actually made, but I like to imagine a producer cornering two writers...And on the third day, the writers emerge from that room, red-eyed and half-mad, clutching a single piece of paper with "PARALLEL WORLD WHERE MAN EVOLVED FROM DINOSAURS? (ALSO FUNGUS)" scrawled on it in blood
ReplyDeleteI'm tempted to borrow the DVD and see if there's a making of featurette, because what you said actually sounds about right.
The same is also true of early issue of Sonic the Hedgehog. Published by Archie, actually.
Oh yeah, I totally forgot about Sonic. I've never actually read any, but have always marveled how long the series lasted. What are they up to now, like 500 issues or something?
She also likes the Mega Man manga series.
Oh, I liked the original Mega-Man game...I should look into that one.
Zelda sounds like a good idea too.
When I was in junior high (15 or so years ago now? Wow.), the magazine Nintendo Power had some serialized Mario Bros. and Zelda comics that I liked a lot. I don't know if Mario is any good, but the Zelda series was pretty nice, by a Japanese artist and based on the Link to the Past video game for the Super NES. I remember Jog linking to an online archive of the entire series a while back, but I'm too lazy to look it up right now.
ReplyDeleteOh, and I guess David would consider me a bad person as well, because I love love love the films of Jim Jarmusch. Down by Law is one of my favorites ever. Take that!
Ok...
ReplyDeleteI just finished the copy of Prince of Persia that I borrowed from my local public library a very short time after reading your review of it.
Thank you for a pretty brilliant review.
I am fairly easy to please. I like to find enjoyment in the things I spend my leisure time on, so I tend to look for it. This book is really amazing, and a great surprise find sort of thing.
The art is worth the cover price, and the excellent writing is a terrific bonus. The switching back and forth almost lost me once or twice, but it was certainly worth reading. I probably wouldn't have pulled this off the shelf if I hadn't just read your review.
I got to the final level before finally giving up on the whole mess due to the preponderance of black cloaks, overdone dialogue, homosexual subtext, and "SORA! DONALD! GOOFY!"
ReplyDeleteSteamboat Willy was the only good part, and any joy from that was easily counteracted from them turning The Lion King into a Quake II level.(I never knew there were quite so many shades of brown.)