Saturday, December 25, 2010

S:TAS reviews: Where's There's Smoke

For all of their virtues, Apokalips…Now! and Little Girl Lost seem to have put a near-permanent end to the Metropolis of A Little Piece of Home and Ghost in the Machine.Superman’s instantaneous traversals of space and the surfeit of citywide disasters often appear to diminish the stature of the city, which in the process takes on the dimensions of a playground. In some episodes, however, Clark Kent’s investigative reporting competes with the usual superheroics for our attention, and in the process Metropolis expands into an uncharted sea of underhanded deals, political oversights, mob mobilizations, and so forth.

Where There’s Smoke marks the end of these pulpy thrill-rides, and from start to finish it’s ridden with suggestive dialogue and comedic tidbits and moody ellipses. Volcana, the pyro-kinetic who is the episode’s putative villain, drips sensuality with the same ardency that she commands her powers and harks back to the femme fatales of Hollywood lore. Harvey Cohen sustains the innuendo with dollops of steamy big band jazz that accompany select scenes, maintaining just the right air of playful seduction. This character undercoating, together with Clark Kent’s suspicions as he wanders the deadly streets of nighttime Metropolis, provides a film noir gloss that, in its implicit paranoia of surreptitious operations and dealings in the dark, poses as a perfect setup for the episode’s eventual transition to hi-tech, politicized science fiction.

It turns out that there is a third party, a renegade offshoot of the government that took Volcana from an institute where she was learning how to control her powers, and that forced her to carry out orders against her will. Suddenly, we have left the hazy mysteries and black-and-white moral polarities of film noir and have now entered a head-on engagement with political conspiracy that expresses forthright skepticism of the nationwide political infrastructure that finds itself at odds with Superman’s basic humanist ideology. Unlike in similar episodes in which we find ourselves sympathizing with a so-called villain because of his or her suffering at the hands of a third party, Where There’s Smoke presents as the culprit neither a corporation nor the mob, but a faction of the government.

At the same time that Where’s There’s Smoke points forward to Justice League Unlimited in its interest in government conspiracies and other forms of corruption, it also keeps one leg firmly grounded in parody and pastiche. Even more impressive is that it blends its parody with its political agenda to fashion a pretty bold critique of the Marvel Comics universe, a target that would again crop up in Batman Beyond’s Heroes. The paranormal institute that housed Volcana as a child standing in for the Xavier Institute for Gifted Youngsters, Hilary Bader argues in her screenplay that such a place would be inevitably soiled by government regulations and interference. While this is being explained between Clark Kent and the doctor, Bader even throws in a brief exchange that comments both on the ignorance and misguided hatred of the American public and on the deception perpetuated by government higher-ups.

Furthermore, Kurt, the leader of the organization, has a counterpart in S.H.I.E.L.D. director Nick Fury. Yet while the latter is unmistakably noble and a chief example of the companionship that exists between superheroes and the government, the former is a manipulative egomaniac who stands firmly at odds with Superman’s ideological coda. While the aforementioned Heroes does a more thorough job of dismantling the tacit laws that govern the Marvel Comics universe, Where There’s Smoke remains a joy in its skeptical polemic against two of that universe’s heroic strongholds.

Most of the episodes that follow Where There’s Smoke involve interplanetary excursions, enormous superpower brawls, and other such explosive and fantastical material. Where There’s Smoke is the series’ last deliberate genre piece as well as the last appearance of Metropolis as a fully developed character in its own right. Though often overlooked, it deserves our deepest attention for marking the end of an era in the DC Animated Universe and for doing so with intelligence and pizzazz.

No comments: