Tired of amoral Superman parodies? The Batman ones are worse.
This coverās untouched by Photoshop or editorial. Meet Nemesis, one of my favorite things ever printed. I need pain to feel alive, putting Nemesis among the worst crimes preserved in ink. Somewhere between Cheneyās Visual Guide to Nation Building and The Punisher Breaks Your Arm in Real Life.
Itās a neurotoxic miniseries drawn by Steve āBetter Than Thisā McNiven and written by Mark āPerfect For Thisā Millar. Some writers are consistently good or bad, and Millar finds that shit boring. He has comics of every letter grade, generally concentrated around the Bs and Fs.
The first cover sets the tone:
Iāve never raised an eyebrow in real life, but that taglineās tempting. I liked Kick-Ass. It tapped vigilante fictionās appeal and pratfalls with a fresh voice. Hearing āI see you were into all that character stuff or whatever, but weāre done with that cuck shitā makes me nervous. Iāve lost kneecaps in the MillarWorld casino before.
That inconsistency grates more than outright incompetence. I know the author of Pick-Up Lines for Lost Souls couldnāt write Superman: Red Son. A Mark Millar fuck-up feels like a choice. When I read Nemesis, I know that less/more/better drugs could have elevated it to a B and spared Americaās brain another polyp.
The festival of edge opens in Japan, one of the six countries that exist in action media. The mysterious Nemesis gloats, unlike his later scenes where he is bragging and boasting.
This might take a while. Since weāre in a future film, letās fast-forward.
Give him a moment.
In the above mess, Nemesis executes a simple plan: commit Payday 2 heists across Tokyo, announce the police chiefās time of death, kidnap said chief, leak his location, blow up his fakeout location, hit the chief with a train, derail the train into an orphan factory, and explain every beat to awed minions and/or victims. Thatās a migraine-inducing sentence, but you need it to understand the concept: combining the plot armor of Batman and The Joker into one mistake.
I tell students thereās no wrong way to write, because Iām a liar. Itās the easiest thing in the world to fuck up. For example, the second worst way to make a character cool is having them declare their radness. The worst is having someone else do it. Every page of Nemesis does both.
After blowing up Japan, BatJoker turns his eye on DC. His gimmick is hunting elite cops, presumably as research for the ultimate drill album. Leading to our star:
Blake Morrow, the middle point between an electable Bush and mid-franchise John McClane. He even has a diversity sidekick. A second draftās title would be Batman vs. Die Hard. Hopefully DC gets to that idea before Discovery turns them into an NFT marketplace.
Only Blakeās not really our star. Heās a medium for BatJoker, who kidnaps the President from Air Force One.
Absorb this moment. Whether youāre in or out, the comic peaks here. Itās the purest power fantasy, with the least gloating or pointless gore. My inner child canāt reject a gunman surfing a plane. Iād even accept him kickflipping it.
Keep the 2010 publishing date in mind: the target is neither senile nor addicted to snow/Twitter/his daughter. For once, we donāt have to be told BatJoker is cool. He just does something interesting. Itās a hard beat to ruin.
There we go.
As the Cabinetās current supercop, Blake searches for information. This hunt has dramatic potential, so BatJoker directly exposits his origin.
Remember, Batman has the most widely riffed-upon origin this side of Batman. Parodies, tributes, and shameless copies of the Dark Knight anchor their own blockbuster franchises. Hotep Batman made a billion dollars in theaters, Depressed Batman saved Netflix, and Depressed Hotep Batman is my next book. If you commit to a 21st century Batman parody, you have to come correct. Hereās what Nemesis delivers:
The takeaway: Batman would be a worse person if his parents were death row sex criminals. This is a special species of dumb, rarely seen in the wild. The logic chain and conclusion are fine. The base question is so stupid that thinking about it hurts your headsponge.
While weāre on Batman: did you consume anything between The Dark Knight and The Batman? It was a golden age. Not for any nation on our dying planet, but for plans where the villain intended to get caught.
The world held an openweight cop-out tournament, and Mark Millar won. While mortal creatives waited five or six minutes before revealing their villainās genius, Nemesis gloats on the same page.
I want this page in a museum. Itās a scene too attached to one power fantasy to set up another. Weāre at the end of issue two, the ancestral home of the cliffhanger page. For flow, Nemesis just needed one page without BatHogan resting a testicle on Godās forehead. Instead, he plants both.
Six pages later:
I canāt criticize a Dynasty Warriors rampage through Corrections. My rom-com pitch had two. But imagine the impact if BatJoker spent six pages on the ropes. Or two. Or a panel.
Then again, weāre not in the restraint game.
The magic of Nemesis (and the nearly identical Wanted) is that itās exactly what my Mom thought comic books were like. Decades after proving three homophobes in one suit invented the Comics Code, the industry produced this. IP violations kidnapping presidents, decapitating riot cops, and rigging womb bombs.
Hold on, rigging what?
Iām getting ahead of myself. Narratives are about the journey to the womb bomb. The quiet moments between genital implosions. In this case, a costumed game of Truth or Dare. Sleepover games are a little mature for this reading level, but itās good to challenge the audience.
After waltzing out of prison, BatJigsaw kidnaps Blakeās kids and demands the heroās darkest secrets. Which, to his credit, Blake nails. Brass balls are the only heroic trait Nemesis respects, and Blakeās clang together when he walks.
The abyss is staring back into me here. Itās hard to confess to our more forward-thinking readers, but Iāll be honest. In my heart, I assume most marriages work out this way. No matter how much you love and trust someone, BatLecter will steal your kids and make you both podcast about cheating. Itās the simple human truth.
Years later, I still canāt read this panel without choke-laughing. I wish I knew why. Itās not as regressive in context: Millar pins Blake as old-fashioned from the jump. Itās much less outlandish than Batman kidnapping the president. It might be the simple brevity, the stilted wording, or the one-two punch of āI canāt fuckā and āMy son can, but blasphemously.ā
Okay? Thatās not how escalation works. A bombless abortion canāt compete with the rest of this book. Pre-lunacy, the CDC reported 194 abortions per 1000 live births, and zero buildings gassed by Batman. Youāve set a higher standard for edgeāthree pages ago, someoneās teeth got punched out from the inside. This is like a Mortal Kombat sequel about coupleās therapy.
Now, letās get back to what matters.
āBut why?ā Strap in.
When I cover a book, I have one scene in mind. Hereās the Nemesis edition. While spamming the words womb bomb, Iāve left out āincest.ā Thank you, Lucifer Morningstar, for helping me type āincest womb bombā before a once-trusting audience. I enact your will in this world, master. The genitalia of the Elohim shall burn in your light.
Iāll never say that Mark Millar isnāt an artist. Art makes you think and feel. And Iām full of searing emotions and searing-er questions. Why a womb bomb? Was that a last minute idea, or is this entire comic written around the womb bomb? Why didnāt I come up with the womb bomb? Is this commentary on abortion, or just thoughtless? Are there real womb bombs? Are there testicle bombs? What is the CIA hiding? Am I one Lee Harvey Oswald joke away from my junk exploding like Mount Vesuvius, and not in the fun Spring Break way?
Thatās a stupid idea, because Iām stupid now. This comic made me stupid, and I needed to pass it on to you. With my junk shredded by bat-shrapnel, itās the only way I can reproduce.
Surviving Maury unlocks the last level. BatMengele holds the president hostage in the White House, which should be a commentary on something and isnāt. As the boss arena loads, Blakeās black sidekick emerges as a mole, gets shot, and falls back out of the story. Then the ensuing cutscene reveals the twisted, unimaginable, boring truth.
And more gloating. Thereās always more gloating. Nemesis would thrive if it stole Batmanās āstoic silenceā schtick.
That origin I dumped on earlier? Millar didnāt like it either. BatJokerās real origin is no origin. Which is the Jokerās origin. Heās the Joker with triceps.
This is getting complicated. Letās sketch this plan out.
Doable.
The president sacrifices himself to stop JokerJoker. That doesnāt sound dull, but life finds a way. Imagine gloating interrupted by a campaign ad and youāre there. Iām here to talk about the denouement.
After surviving a Saw and Air Force One crossover, Blake Morrow retires to raise his inbred grandchildren. Until he gets a note with the real, original origin of Nemesis. Picture a nesting doll made of smaller and smaller brains. Now put the smallest brain on Air Force One and tre flip it into a mountain.
Nemesis is a vacation package for billionaires. A clever commentary on Batmanāsā¦nothing. This says nothing about Batman. Or society, beyond the fresh observation that āthe rich are less than pleasant.ā If Bezos tried ghost riding a plane, weād still be laughing at gifs of him hitting tarmac. With one page left, I canāt imagine making this dumber.
Ten years? Amateur hour. Iāve plotted my revenge for twelve.
Parodyās fun. I know a website with some solid ones. Yet Nemesis doesnāt touch Batmanās bizarre ideology or platoon of child soldiers. Itās laser-focused on preptime, an element that doesnāt matter. Even a little. This is a four issue deconstruction of Aquamanās haircut. Whether you love Bruce Wayne or think clowns have Miranda Rights, thereās more to work with.
As parody, Nemesis falls short of this:
Thatās assuming there is a real parody here. Vegas odds say thereās nothing smarter going on than āwhat if Batman killed people?ā An idea DC mined to death themselves:
We live in the best of all possible worlds, because a Nemesis screenplay is marching along. I believe in the project. I need that pain to not only feel alive, but transcend Godās failed creation altogether. The ritual begins. You nerds can enjoy dodging water thieves in The Wastes, Iām out.
Until then, Iām calling two shots. If in vitro incest makes it onscreen, itāll be the last meme. Bane canāt compete: weāll quote BatManiac until the sun and jokes are long dead. That said, if the rest of Nemesis makes it onscreen, itāll be the last superhero movie. Not because of the deconstruction, but simple failure as a story. Cats killed musicals by non-Spielbergs, and Nemesis may divorce capes from the American imagination. This is the stumble that buries spandex next to disco, arena rap, and bipartisanship.
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This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Max Baroi, who will forever be associated with the search terms “incest womb bomb.”
11 replies on “Nerding Day: Mark Millar’s Nemesis š”
Millar is the wooooorst, non-sex pest/even more overtly racist/homophobic division.
Someone went into 90s Vertigo shelves and mixed the last little bits of Ennis, Ellis, Morrison, and Milligan into a jar, left it in the sun for a year to ferment and then decided to give it all of the money.
Holy shit, it’s nice to find someone else who had the misfortune of reading this whole thing. I’m a little sad there wasn’t a sequel, I couldn’t wait to be disappointed by what happens next.
“The magic of Nemesis (and the nearly identical Wanted) is that itās exactly what my Mom thought comic books were like.”
That’s the key to Mark Millar: he writes comics the way he thinks people who don’t read comics think comics are written. He either has the mentality of a 14-year-old in 1991 and genuinely thinks the shit he writes is really cool (which would make him the Rob Liefeld of writers,) or he’s trying to satirize what he imagines is other people’s perception of superheroes. I honestly hope it’s the former, because at least then I can feel sorry for him. Unfortunately it’s most likely the latter, and he fucking sucks at it.
Why does Nemesis’ throne have so many nipples?
…I’d hoped I was the only one to see that curse.
This question bothered me greatly as well.
I was always worried that the vagina bomb in Metal Gear Solid V was purely a Kojima creation. Glad to see that he nicked it from another titan in the field.
I love that everyone got gore and violence but the misogyny was tweaked up just a little extra, in case anyone was worried comics might move all the way away from it.
The womb bomb was done by Stewie from family guy way back in 2001 as his ‘first act of violence’. Just FYI.
What’s going on with McNiven’s guns? He’ll have photorealistic downbarrel shots of firearms and then BAM, a shotgun made for ogres with all its parts facing in different directions drawn by someone who couldn’t google that the magazine tube isn’t a second barrel. If it were lumpier I’d have no trouble believing that it was drawn by Liefeld.
Oh man, any excuse to link ComicsAlliance’s old Mark Millar Valentines.
https://comicsalliance.com/mark-millar-valentines/