BOOK TITLE: Happy!
AUTHOR: Grant Morrison
YEAR: 2017
GENRE: Graphic Novel
SUBGENRE: Crime Fiction
GRADE: Pass
Disgraced detective turned contract killer Nick Sax
completes an assassination of mob boss Mr. Blue’s sons. During the final
moments of the confrontation, one of the sons tells Nick the password to a bank
account full of laundered mafia money. Just as Mr. Blue’s henchmen are about to
extract the password from him via torture, an imaginary blue unicorn haunts
Nick’s psyche and agrees to help him out dangerous situations on the condition
that he rescues small children from a porn studio. Will Nick Sax become the
hero he was meant to be or will he selfishly reject Happy the horse every step
of the way?
This graphic novel is incontrovertible proof that not all
protagonists have to be saints in order for the audience to cheer for them. Nick
Sax is a vulgar, selfish, negative alcoholic who would rather waste his life
away than use it for good causes. Seeing as how this is a redemption story,
Happy the Horse has a long way to go in order to convince Nick to see the
light. The two of them get into schizophrenic arguments that make outsiders
feel uncomfortable and downright frightened to death. When the big payoff
finally happens, it feels right. Some would criticize Nick’s newfound reasons
as being selfish yet again, but that just goes to show how stonehearted a
broken man like him can be. To me, that’s gritty and realistic, which is what
all detective novels should be like, imaginary horse aside.
Speaking of Happy, I enjoyed his characterization as well.
He’s a goofy, lovable, lighthearted ray of sunshine in a world covered in
darkness and beer. Sometimes the reader needs a break from all of the R-rated
horror and Happy will provide that relief through his personality alone. In
truth, Happy is the last line of defense for childhood innocence since he was
one of the kidnapped children’s imaginary friend at one point. Once he’s gone,
the whole world turns to poison. Imagination is the most powerful tool we have
and it took a lot of it to incorporate Happy’s character in a believable way. Good
job in that department, Mr. Morrison!
I don’t have many complaints, but I do have one about Nick
Sax’s back story as to why he acts as coldly as he does. While it is a tragic
story about his family that would make any reader tear up, it seems forced and
cliché, like it somehow excuses Nick’s behavior by virtue of its mere existence
in the storyline. I’ve seen this trope used many times before and it only numbs
me to the real tragedy of the much larger story. But as I said, this is a minor
complaint since it didn’t actually derail the story in any way. It’s just a
flaw that needed to be pointed out, that’s all.
All in all, this was a fun little graphic novel and I can
easily see why Syfy would want to make a TV show out of it. Sometimes it’s fun
to root for the antihero, especially when a magical flying horse evens him out.
That’s the trick with the antihero: he can’t be worse than the villains he’s
fighting. Otherwise, there’s nothing to believe in. Nick Sax’s redemption story
is believable to me and that’s why I’m giving this graphic novel a passing
grade despite his clichéd character history.
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