I read this in 2012 and didn't like it, didn't understand it. But in 2015 I had just read Fritz's story, High Soft Lisp, which I liked, and thought I should rerate the book and briefly review it. Now, in 2020 i read it again in 2020 after I have read others in the series and I really, really like it. Shouid it take seven years to understand a comic book?! What is this, Crime and Punishment?
This is a one of the several volumes Beto has now done based on the trashy pulpy, noirish films Fritz starred in. I couldn't get the tone at first, but this is like an homage to sixties B movies, this one especially a kind of grifter film tribute starring Fritz as Nala, who has the kind of body that can distract easy rich losers. Her sidekick is Wes, a failed rock singer, and then there is Vincene, a magician. These are the principal "troublemakers" who aim to get Dewey Booth's 200K. Vincene has a security guard who helps her that slo figures in. The plot is all back stabbing and double and triple crosses, so that it is not until the end that you see who is aligned with whom. And there's like a grindhouse level bloodbath. Involving an amulet or good luck charm which could possibly be cursed, could possibly be some indigenous magic or just some cheap fakery.
It's funnier than I initially thought of it, because now I better realize that ALL the films Fritz were in were trash. It's a terrible story. And yet. . . Beto LIKES pulpy, trashy stories. He both finds them ridiculously funny AND he also enjoys them. He has that kind of appreciation for those kinds of books and films, like any comics and popular culture fan, as he is. I mean, it's a B movie made into a comic book. Relax!
So this is funnier than I originally thought, and so deliberately bad it's good, that kind of story. Because I am also reading Criminal by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips, I appreciate this is a funny, Archie comics-style yet R-rated companion to the Criminal series.