Happy! Review - Grant Morrison and Darick Robertson
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After several years of writing Batman and Superman comics for DC, Grant Morrison returns to the grimy, dark side of comics with Happy!, his first swear-filled, gory, and truly unpleasant comic since The Filth - and who better to join him than Darick Robertson, artist extraordinaire of the cheerfully vulgar Transmetropolitan and ultra-violent The Boys? Set at that most corporate of holidays, Christmas, the family-centric festivities are subverted in this comic that portrays Santa as a junkie paedophile whos been kidnapping and murdering children without getting caught. Meanwhile down-and-out cop-turned-hitman and all-round human wreck Nick Sax (Saint Nick?) is the unlikely hero who must stop him. Except, bah humbug!, he doesnt care. So instead of being visited by three ghosts, a small blue goofy-looking unicorn called Happy shows up, the imaginary friend of one of the kidnapped children that only Nick can see. But can the upbeat and determined Happy convince the jaded, worn out Nick that not only is he real but so is the danger his friend faces - and can Nick save them in time from psycho Santa? Morrison wrote in his 2011 book Supergods, Things dont have to be real to be true and its a phrase that applies to a lot of what hes written in the last few years. In Joe the Barbarian, Joe is a diabetic kid home alone who enters a fantastical realm featuring items from his house - but is it real or is he experiencing an insulin-deprived hallucination that will kill him? Similarly in Happy!, Nick doesnt see Happy the unicorn until hes pumped full of morphine in the ambulance - so, the reader wonders, is Happy real or a vision brought on by drugs? Morrison keeps things deliberately unclear and the reader guessing to the end. The story hangs on Nick and Happys relationship and Morrison gives them some excellent back and forths with Nick becoming meaner the more Happy tries to buck him up giving them some great scenes. Through Happys insistence on most peoples innate sense of goodness and Nicks cynicism declaring the opposite, we see Nicks story of a once proud and, yes, happy man brought down by the horrors man wreaks upon his fellow man as seen through the unfettered eyes of a homicide cop. This is the redemption-at-Christmas-storyline popularised by Dickens and told in the unique way Morrison has of telling a story with heart while dressing it up in dirt. Its a potent combination and by turns the book is funny, depressing, and cynical though by the time you close the book and think about it, its a strangely upbeat tale. Nick may not be Batman or Superman but he is equal to them in his own non-superpowered way - theres a moral code lurking somewhere inside that battered body - and its what makes him an ultimately likeable character despite his many attempts to make us think otherwise. The book might put some people off especially in the opening few pages when the gangster dialogue basically uses the f word as punctuation and feels immediately excessive. And if youre familiar with Darick Robertson, youll know the guy draws violence very viscerally - the pages are filled with blood and violence of all kinds. So its safe to say this is definitely not a kids comic! Some might even say this story has been done before - the Christmas Carol angle, the tough guy on a mission - but I think Morrison and Robertson have done more than enough to set Happy! apart from any comparisons to other festive favourites (not least because of the adult themes and the blue unicorn!) and the Punisher, Marv from The Hard Goodbye and other stories of that sort. Morrisons written this story is a fairly straightforward and accessible way - his famous proclivities for warped storytelling that incorporates avant-garde literary devices are largely absent and the book is an accessible read, though he works in enough ideas and an interesting ending for you to still be thinking about the comic after youve finished it.