Monkey Vs. Robot and the Crystal of Power

For many comic book readers, James Kochalka is the dividing line between art and genre comics.

The Vermont cartoonist has been prolific and ubiquitous: popping up in alternative comics anthologies (during the recent Free Comic Book Day, his work appeared in both Alternative Comics sampler collection and his own Peanut Butter and Jeremy freebie), then appearing in mainstream titles like last year's Incredible Hulk annual (with a two-pager that showed the mighty green monster raging comically and ineffectually against a downpour) and finally in his own graphic novels and annual Sketchbook Diaries. Kochalka's an artist recognized by comics fans who wouldn't be caught dead reading non-superhero fare, but he's also a hero to lovers of autobiographical strips.

That he's able to do this utilizing a drawing style that is minimalist and thick-lined - joyfully handmade in an era where computer crafted short-cuts abound in the field (just read this week that DC Comics, for instance, is abandoning hand lettering for computer fonts) - is a testament, in part, to Kochalka's tireless low-key self-promotion. (In his small way, he's alt comics' answer to Stan Lee.) Add a capacity for playfulness too often lacking among genre and art comics folk alike, and his appeal becomes even clearer.

Kochalka's simple drawing style hearkens back to some of the earliest comic book artists (I see a lot of Captain Marvel's C.C. Beck in him), but for such a seemingly childlike artist, he can be remarkably evocative, especially when it comes to capturing the New England woods around him. His newest graphic novel, Monkey Vs. Robot and the Crystal of Power (Top Shelf), is a peak showcase for these less-is-more visualizations - a follow-up to Superstar Kochalka's earlier song/video/graphic novel, Monkey Vs. Robot, that can stand by itself. Set in a primeval forest that we first see in the book's opening aerial view full-page panel (showing pine trees, jutting rocks, river and waterfall that will all play a part in the action), Kochalka makes his setting a stronger presence than either of his two titular competitors.

The nature of the conflict is established quickly: the opening panels depict a lone monkey as he sniffs a solitary flower in the middle of the woods; he's frightened into hiding by a clunky looking robot who uproots the flower to take it back to a Mother Computer for "knowledge extraction," a process that utterly destroys the flower. The monkey is similarly scooped up by a second specimen-gather 'bot, but the simian escapes before he can be fully extracted, disrupting the big computer's Cognitive Reactors and causing a power surge that destroys one of the computer's energy crystals. (Sure it's all gobbledegook, but so's much of the jargon parleyed in serious s-f comics!) The Mother Computer sends out a troupe of drone robots to gather a replacement crystal; they discover one in a monkey burial ground and remove it - only to face the wrath of a full tribe of outraged chimps.

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Article Author: Bill Sherman

Bill Sherman is the Comics & Graphic Novels review editor for Blogcritics. With his lovely wife Rebecca Fox, he has recently co-authored a sudsy size acceptance novel entitled Measure By Measure.

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  • Monkey vs. Robot & the Crystal of Power Monkey vs. Robot & the Crystal of Power

    This thought-provoking story is told almost completely without words, relying on Kochalka's expressive illustrations of the title characters. For all the book's humorous and charming appearance, beneath ...

  • Monkey vs. Robot Monkey vs. Robot
  • Monkey vs. Robot Monkey vs. Robot

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