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Genius Envy: David Welsh On Daria

Daria

“Minx is essentially real stories about real girls in the real world.”
Karen Berger, Senior Vice President of DC Comics

So a publisher not known for its dedication to its young female audience decides to make a conscientious effort to reach that audience in an intelligent way. It´s a welcome initiative, and I hope it succeeds (even though I hate the name and wish they´d found more women creators for their inaugural offerings).

It reminds me of what I think of as MTV´s last stab at intelligent programming that didn´t pander to or demean its audience as it tried to entice them. Daria, an animated spin-off of Beavis and Butthead, ended up being kind of miraculous for its ambition and intelligence, but most of all for its message that conformity is pernicious and that shallow, acquisitive value systems produce depressing automatons.

Now, those of you familiar with the current face of MTV might be staring at that last paragraph and thinking, “That can´t be right. Pernicious conformity and shallow values are in MTV´s mission statement, aren´t they?” I´m not going to argue with you about that, but take my word for it that Daria was MTV´s last stab at healthy cynicism before the avalanche of airheads began.

The series, which ran from 1997 to 2002, focused on the home and school life of its titular heroine, Daria Morgendorffer, who had escaped the orbit of Beavis and Butthead for the excessively manicured, significantly greener pastures of Lawndale, America. On her first day at Lawndale High, she´s assigned to a special class for students with that worst of turn-of-the-century afflictions, low self-esteem. She dryly insists that the results of her personality test were in order and that her self-image is just fine: “I have low esteem for everyone else.”

And how could she not? Her parents are overachieving stress junkies. Her younger sister, Quinn, ironically embodies every quality MTV now embraces, right down to the belly shirt. Her classmates, with few exceptions, are idiots, at least the ones who suck up most of the oxygen. Her teachers represent a range of dysfunction not usually seen outside of a therapy group. But time in the self-esteem ghetto does present a bright spot: an introduction to artistically Jane Lane, Daria´s spiritual sister in cynicism and, against all Daria´s expectations, new best friend.

What followed were several seasons of Daria waging a largely successful battle for her right not to engage – to be a conscientious objector in the popularity wars that drive so much of adolescent fiction. And while such figures aren´t uncommon, they´re generally swiftly positioned as an alternative to conventional social acceptance – counterculture figures who develop as much of a peer following as the head cheerleader or quarterback. Not so with Daria, who maintained her stubbornly dour mien through brushes with dating, family togetherness, enforced extracurricular activities, and even death.

The void was almost a special guest star in the concluding episode of the first season, where all of the show´s elements cohered perfectly. In “The Misery Chick” a former football star, morally loathsome as he is athletically impressive, returns to be honored by Lawndale High but dies in a freak accident. The Lawndale regulars, teachers and students alike, are thrown into a tailspin by the unpleasant reminder of mortality (and their ambivalent feelings for the deceased) and turn to Daria for advice and comfort. As dimwitted but surprisingly decent cheerleader Brittany puts it, “I mean, you’re used to being all gloomy and depressed and thinking about bad stuff… So I thought that maybe you can give me some tips.” Even generally unflappable Jane is unmoored by the death, resulting in a brief falling out with Daria which only serves to solidify their friendship in the end.

Not every episode was quite this magnificent in theme and construction, but lots and lots of them came awfully close, especially as the series matured. Unlike most animated series, the characters aged, with Daria progressing from the beginning of her sophomore year to graduation in the series-concluding movie, Is It College Yet? Daria loosens up enough to enter into her first serious dating relationship. Her parents become progressively more functional with their daughters and each other. Even Quinn, whose primary interests ran to dating and her vice presidency of the deeply Machiavellian Fashion Club, inched towards maturity, taking her studies more seriously and attempting to forge some kind of sisterly relationship with Daria (instead of pretending that she was a foreign exchange student who had taken up unwelcome residence with the Morgendorffers).

For the most part, Daria was a real girl in the real world. That she survived as long as she did on MTV is something of a miracle, and that the creators were allowed to see the series through to closure is certainly to MTV´s credit. Unfortunately, very little of the series is available for purchase, and no network is currently airing reruns. (The N, home of Degrassi: The Next Generation, did so for a while and even threw in the occasional marathon, though they edited some of the episodes for content and length.) The two movies the series generated, Is It Fall Yet and the aforementioned series conclusion, are both well worth watching, though no substitute for watching the series unfold over the seasons.

Though there´s little to be found of Daria in commercially available venues, at least we have YouTube:

» The Best Of Daria Pt1
» The Best Of Daria Pt2

Author Info ::
David Welsh blogs regularly at his own blog Precocious Curmudgeon. He writes Flipped, a weekly column for Comic World News and his articles have appeared in Print Magazine and other places; he is also reported to be nice as well as handsome.

Vera Brosgol (Awesome)

verabee

As the post title suggests, Vera Brosgol is awesome.

I´ve spent the last 16 minutes trying to come up with the ultimate one-sentence pitch;

“Victorian mangaka trained on fashion illustration and vintage cartoons.”

or; “Jane Austen sleeping with Andi Watson.”

Ermm… close, but no. In the face of her beautiful fluid style I´m drawing blanks.

And while I clearly love her artwork, the real spectacle is a little short film gem, tucked away in the animation section of her site.

What starts off as a typical “loner kid finds friendship in an unlikely place” takes one of the nastiest, unexpected turns in recent little short film gem memory.

It´s like the Nickelodeon version of Dawn Of The Dead.

» Snow-Bo


Small + Fuzzy Samurai

Three Legged Legs - Samurai

Just when I thought “Hell, I like my samurai small, cute and fuzzy” – along comes a new Three Legged Legs video, giving me just exactly that.

Restrained celebration ensued.

Coz, while the character design, the colors, the animation are of usual stellarness… heck – the whole darn thing is so freaking beautiful I think I can forgive the fact that skill and smooth punch writing and pacing in the face, kicking back with a bottle of beautiful while dishing out the cute.

As an animation it doesn´t leave much to wish for, as a narrative piece though, I wish they´d hook up with a writer and tackle something with a little bit more substance one of these days.

Three Legged Legs » Samurai


Code Hunters

Ben Hibon - Codehunters

Codehunters is a bold piece of CG animation directed by Stateless Films´ Ben Hibon and animated by Axis Animation; juggling ideas, characters and atmosphere; maintaining the tension but also giving nothing, really nothing, away; alternating bursts of cool and beautiful with balls as big as New Haven; equal parts Firefly and Bilal.

Initially conceived and produced for MTV Asia´s 2006 music awards, there was talking and thinking of expanding it into a longer format, but if this actually happens will remain to be seen.

Until then it´s just a tasty bit of nothing.

And, hey! So that´s what the Stupid Stupid Rat Creatures did after the end of Bone.

»


No Santa Today

Cecil and Britches: No Santa Today

When Santa fails to make an appearance, Cecil and Britches – a sock monkey and a wooden donkey – decide to take matters into their own hands paws hooves whatevs…

A nostalgic, charming and, dare I say, just plain lovely little stop-motion animation by Paul Corrigan.

Cecil and Britches » No Santa Today


Don´t Die Ding

Curiosity Group: Don´t Die Ding

An idea is born; and fights and struggles; and runs for its life. Enter: Giants, Demons + a naked Fairy Godmother floating in a bubble.

If nothing else: A fabulous piece of eyecandy; at least; indeed;

Curiosity Group » Don´t Die Ding


I´m Never Gonna Eat Dodo Again

the tale of how

Ever wondered what that unaired Steampunk episode of The Muppet Show directed by Terry Gilliam and Edward Gorey with setpieces designed by Maurice Sendak on LSD looks like?

Well; wonder no more; it must be something like this animated short by The Black Heart Gang – a group of talented people from South Africa who apparently like to slave away in their free time on the weirdest animated operas that side of Tim Burton.

Just; breathtakingly good.

» Tale Of How (69MB Quicktime)


Will The Real Untalented People Please Stand Up?!

burning safari

Holy Fuck. And that´s putting it mildly.

Just take a look at this short film created by students from the Goblins animation school for the 2005 Annecy festival. Such sense of pacing; angle; punchline.

Just take a look and tell me this is not great » Burning Safari

Many more; shorts; every single one bristling with craft and sheer imagination, even if not all hit the intended mark in my heart – these are just students, right? – can be seen in their » animation gallery

found @ bannister´s


Wonderful Human Beings

Humans

Humans! // sometimes the oldest stories in the book have the bestest animation.

Made by Three Legged Legs; again
found at Drawn!; again


Snailz

snailz

Cute, cute, cute little animation. Can´t beat snails; no sir.

I can hardly wait til LJ is old enough for stuff like this…

» David´s New Snail


Related:
To Understand The Killer, You Must Become The Killer

Frazer Irving - Beneath

This is… mood. Mood as in… atmosphere. As in; linear, fuck linear!

And it is… scary. Unpretentious and scary. From the outside, of course, you fail to see the point. But from inside it´s entirely logical; flawless.

It is… in here…

Frazer Irving draws; Si Spurrier writes; Audi pays. The brilliant serving the bland; as it´s part of their Sinister Beauty campaign.

Add dollars well spent: Beneath

(via The Beat)


A Blockhead For Cutie

Jeffrey Brown vs. Death Cab

I may not be the biggest Jeffrey Brown fan around, but his video for Death Cab´s “Your heart is an empty room” as part of their Directions project is simply great; soo Indy, soo Zine, soo Death Cab; an eerily fitting visualization of everything bittersweet.

This is, in essence, what would have happened if Charles Schulz had been an indy rocker.

Up till March 5th.


They Live

threelegged legs

Imagine if John Carpenter had hired Jeff Soto as a set designer for his “alien invasion/subversion social critique with the longest and pointlessest just-like-the-musical-numbers-in-indian-love-movies fight scene in the online pokies history of western cinema” flick “They Live!”.

Imagine if Nada, played by the equally grim and talentless wrestling icon Roddy Piper, had seen this instead of what he eventually saw; he wouldn´t have ended the way he did.

Poor Roddy.

Los Angeles – Let´s Be Friends

Made by Three Legged Legs; found at Drawn!; and just for the record, as well as completeness´ sake: Jeff Soto


Like, Amen

Supermoine

If you´ve got nothing to say you better make sure it looks damn good: Supermoine (.mov)


Everybody Likes To Fuggy

Fuggy Fuggy

cute very nice, like » Fuggy Fuggy by The Brothers McLeod.

// found at; and, yeah, also great; the mighty drawn.ca.