
By: Brian Maruca & Jim Rugg
Review: “Alan Diesler, a frail, humble janitor in Hardwood Elementary, awoke to his true calling the day jerk aliens invaded his turf. While trying to protect the student body, Diesler used the only weapon at his disposal – an old beat up cane – the magical pimp stick, Mackjolnir. Slamming it on the ground for emphasis magically transformed the meek, crippled janitor into the legendary… AFRODISIAC!
This is but one of the many origins that Maruca and Rugg give as the origin of their hero in the awesome original graphic novel, Afrodisiac. Although they were deadly serious at the time, 1970’s blaxploitation movies have become the kings of unintentional comedy and this book pushes very hard to ramp up the unintentional comedy factor while NEVER knowingly making fun of itself.
In terms of presentation, Afrodisiac is 94 pages of 6″x9″ fun. The book is presented as a compilation of silver age comic material, so you get a series of shorter stories (5-6 pages) with random covers interspersed throughout. The only downside to this presentation is (alas) Afrodisiac was not a real silver-age comic and unfortunately you cannot go buy the back-issues. Maruca and Rugg made it up. Sigh…..
Although I and most others have lumped Afrodisiac into the blaxploitation-spoof genre, the stories really are not pulled from that type of source material and that is why this book really shines. I’m not sure if there were blaxploitation comics in the 1970’s or not…… But, if there were, they wouldn’t have been able to do more than a story arc or two about the hero protecting his turf from slum lords or white drug dealers who were selling heroin/guns/booze in their neighborhood. Pretty soon those comics would have moved onto the types of situations you see in Afrodisiac: fighting aliens, staking vampires, dealing with kung-fu guys, thwarting killer computers, etc.
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Filed under: The Graphic Novel Reader | Tagged: Adhouse Books, Afrodesiac, Afrodisiac, afrodisiac graphic novel, blaxploitation, Brian Maruca, Comic Book Review, Dean Stell, Graphic Novel, graphic novel reviw, Graphic Novels, Jim Rugg, review, Weekly Comic Book Review | Leave a comment »