Batman comics just went all in on Last of Us’ fungal terror
Are you one of the many folks who’ve only just been introduced to Ophiocordyceps unilateralisParasitic fungus – The parasitic fungus in real life that takes control of the nervous systems of ants through The Last of Us’ HBO adaptation? Regardless of whether you’ve caught the CordycepsWhether bug has been around recently, or not. Can I tell you about one of the most innovative things comics creators did lately? Poison Ivy is Cordyceps powers now.
Writer G. Willow Wilson and artist Marcio Takara’s Poison IvyLast summer saw miniseries explode onto shelves, Pamela Insley infecting herself with the fictional strain. Ophiocordyceps lamiaIn a plan for the destruction of humanity, he commits murder-suicide. Wilson and Takara put the venerable villain through a six-issue cross-country road trip from despair to new self-actualization that’s the best Ivy story in just about forever.
Were there other things happening within the pages of comics we love? We’ll tell you. Welcome to Monday Funnies, Polygon’s weekly list of the books that our comics editor enjoyed this past week. It’s part society pages of superhero lives, part reading recommendations, part “look at this cool art.” There may be some spoilers. It may not provide enough context. However, there will be many great comics. You can also read the previous edition if you haven’t seen it yet.
Image: G. Willow Wilson, Marcio Takara/DC Comics
In a certain sense, the first domino to fall was Harley Quinn — seen here enjoying just a sip of Ivy’s hallucinogenic spores. You spend all day spending money on your girlfriend. PEAK lesbian culture.)
If Harley’s gonna be a character we root for — and it’s too late to take that back at this point — she’s gotta stop doing indiscriminate murder. But if she’s gonna be the committed partner a full-blown supercriminal, well, that’s tricky, isn’t it? When the moment comes, Harley QuinnThe animated series brought Harley and Ivy together. This became the main question of the show but in a Harley-centered manner.
DC’s Poison Ivy has been the true character feature that Ivy has needed for a while now, one that gives Pamela nuance without softening her; that celebrates the character’s sexiness as a full-chested embrace of a Last of Us-style, Annihilation-style botanic-fungal monstrous feminine; a story about how the cure for getting tired of the struggle is to form connections, with an unmistakable “eat the rich” throughline.
And, even better, DC just announced that the series will not end at 12 issues — this summer, Ivy will return to Harley and Gotham with combo mushroom and plant powers as Poison IvyGraduates from miniseries and ongoing. The list of Batman villains to hold down their own ongoing series is small, and it’s a testament both to Ivy’s appeal and to Wilson and Takara’s work that she’s joined it.
Image: Kyle Starks, Piotr Kowalski/Dark Horse Comics
Speaking of villains, I didn’t even know writer Kyle Starks had a new book starting up (with artist Piotr Kowalski) that’s about a homeowners’ association secretly by and for slasher horror villains. If the first issue is anything to go by, it’s series with some broad world-building to get on the page, alongside plenty of gore and guts, and even more winks and nods to the slasher genre. Starks is a must-read for me, so I’m already on board.
Image: Gene Luen Yang, Bernard Chang/DC Comics
Sometimes, I find myself thinking that Monkey PrinceA better YA graphic book than a monthly continuous would have been a more appealing choice. But then artist Bernard Chang and colorist Marcelo Maiolo remind me that they’re going extremely hard on the look of this book, and writer Gene Luen Yang does something like reveal that not only does our hero have Sun Wukong, the legendary Monkey King, on one side of his family, elsewhere on his family tree is Ultra-Humanite, the Superman villain who is a mad scientist who put his mind in the body of a genetically engineered ape with an exposed brain.
I’m not immune to that!
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