Tuesday, June 27, 2006

A dark and stormy night

I believe to understand another culture, you must familiarize yourself with its literature. I'm not quite up to reading Pramoedya Ananta Toer in the original yet, so I've been immersing myself in the works of Ganes TH, one of Indonesia's most renowned comic-book authors.




Ganes doesn't shy away from hyperbole ("a tale fully flowing with tears and blood!"). He likes a good plot twist. When you have to look up every second word in the dictionary, you need frequent rewards, and Ganes is rich in rewards.

Interestingly, A Visit in the Middle of the Night (above) is Christian: a handsome guy decides to kill his sickly wife so he can marry her pretty friend but (gasp!) She's Not Really Dead!!! and she develops the inconvenient habit of turning up at midnight wearing flowing white robes. But the evil husband gets saved by the local church and turns into a nice guy, and everyone lives happily ever after.



Ganes's most famous character is Si Buta dari Gua Hantu, the hero of Mystery at Borobudur. Si Buta appears to be Muslim, and he's blind; his name means the Blind One from Bat Cave. I'm only partway through Mystery at Borobudur, so I can't tell you much, but it involves a sweet girl, two evil brothers, a secret treasure, and the last wish of a dying man. Furthermore, it's set on and around Mt. Merapi ("terrifying Mt. Merapi!!"), which erupts halfway through the book, so it promises to be a humdinger.

According to one website, Ganes had a drama of his own. After art school, he developed some vague association with the Communist Party. Then, during the anti-Communist massacre of the mid-60s - a mass bloodletting that has largely been forgotten, and has never been properly investigated - he decided to give up "art" and focus solely on comic books, since artists with lefty associations often wound up in prison or worse. I won't speculate on what it means to be a stifled artist who draws a blind hero, but clearly Ganes' experience of evil and fear was not entirely imaginary.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mooohooohahahaa! the story to end all stories. this definitely lightened my being this morning. i can see that your blind hero created by struggling artist is definitely a restatement of the daredevil, lest i'm mistaken and/or completely restating the bleeding obvious.

OR, in MY comic, it's mild-mannered chad bouchard, aka the Poo-Slinger moonlighting in his underpoos and beating back the waves of ne'er-do-wells who seek...um.... to steal the actualities...of...um ...well, i've not gotten that far.
along with Towering Trish who wields her editorial powers with the greatest of ease, leaping tall columns of junior high english in a single bound, faster than a sarcastic bullet, somethinger than a sort of somewhat kind of ... um.... meh.

Trish said...

Hmmmm ... did somebody have an extra cup of coffee this morning?

Chad immediately thought of Daredevil too. And apparently the Blind Samurai is a stock figure in
Japanese epics. I'm not sure whether Si Buta has such heightened senses that he doesn't need his eyes; or whether his monkey friend acts as his eyes; or whether the books even address the whole issue at all.

At least one very cheezy-looking Si Buta movie was made in the 70s; I think we're going to have to chase down a copy and post some stills.