As often happens in Hernandez’s stories, the basic setup is a complicated chain of frustrated and sublimated desires, although in this one everyone’s sublimating them by getting it on. The stripping team of Bang Bang and Inez (who’d previously appeared briefly in early issues of Love and Rockets) are both carrying on secret affairs with sexually inexhaustible lawyer Mark Herrera.
Every woman seems to desire Mark, except for his wife, Fritz, a psychotherapist who has sex with her patients while they’re under her hypnotic spell. Fritz’s sister Petra unrequitedly lusts after Mark, too, but she’s been carrying on a years-long affair with Mark’s brother Simon, who in turn is erotically fixated on Fritz and, specifically, her lisp, although he’s also sleeping with Inez. And so on. Eventually, the aliens who abducted Bang Bang as a child get involved, and transport the whole cast up to their ship for a pansexual orgy.
Yes, this is the kind of porn that requires a dictionary to catch everything that’s going on. A few years ago, Marc Sobel convincingly argued in a multi-part essay that Birdland is a satire of Wilhelm Reich and his theories about sexuality and “orgone energy,” by way of Patti Smith’s song “Birdland” — the story never mentions Reich outright, but the connections are everywhere — and that it’s full of other subtleties for the careful reader. (The bodily-fluid sound effects in one of the final scenes, Sobel points out, are all Spanish words relating to the story of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste.) It’s not often that a story pretends to be nothing but stroke material but is actually a bit deeper than that.
Hernandez has returned to a lot of Birdland‘s characters over the years, in very different contexts. Buff, tireless Mark Herrera eventually becomes a failed motivational speaker with an awful ponytail and a string of ex-wives. Petra’s gotten older and had a daughter, whose G-rated exploits will be collected in The Adventures of Venus later this year. Fritz has become the central figure in a lot of Hernandez’s more recent work, especially High Soft Lisp, in which the ways she appeases her sexual drives are much grimmer.
Another suggestion of Birdland‘s title, though, is that it happens in a kind of protected utopian zone, where everyone’s youthful and beautiful and up for more, and sex is always a source of happiness for everyone involved, even when it’s psychologically fraught for one reason or another. Every character in it ultimately gets a happy ending, both euphemistic and literal.
By Douglas Wolk comicsalliance 2012
Tjek out the next blogs containing the afore mentioned essay of Mark Sobel on Birdland.
By Douglas Wolk comicsalliance 2012
Tjek out the next blogs containing the afore mentioned essay of Mark Sobel on Birdland.
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