Just Fantastic: Johnny the Homicidal Maniac: Director’s Cut
Johnny the Homicidal Maniac is a comedy/serial killer book that explores morality and destiny. Its wild, almost incomprehensible drawings and plots are deranged. They twist back on each other in a terrifying gore-fest that ultimately left me feeling like I just read a piece of history. But it’s also funny and self-satirizing.
Johnny the Homicidal Maniac: Director’s Cut was published in 1997. It was written by Jhonen Vasquez, who also wrote Squee and I Feel Sick and created the cartoon Invader Zim.
This book is dark — very dark — and twisted: the type of thing parents send their teenagers to counselors for reading. Overall the work is genius, but there were some ups and downs. For example, in section four I was bored, and in section six the humor was so captivating I had to stop every few frames to crack-up laughing.
Johnny the Homicidal Maniac is full of great concepts and ideas. While those ideas generally feel underdeveloped and underutilized, they are amusing; other artists have been cannibalizing Johnny the Homicidal Maniac ever since.
Anyone who knows Donnie Darko will recognize the influence Nail Bunny, a Johnny character, had on the film. Plenty of moments and characters in the book gave me a similar reaction.
I honestly don’t have much else to say. A long and lurid plot description wouldn’t do this piece justice. It’s something you have read to fully comprehend; by the end of the first section you’ll love it or hate it. I love Johnny the Homicidal Maniac for all it offers and all it has inspired and will inspire.
Just Fantastic appears the second and fourth Wednesday every month.
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It is an excellent read/reread/rereread. The satire, the psychology, the gore, the ideas and insights, the schizophrenic mini comics. I didn’t realize there was a Donnie Darko connection. Invader Zim, of course, but Donnie Darko? I’m going to have to Google that….