
One of my favorite moments in the Hitchcock movie Rope is when a rich, daffy old British lady arrives at the party, babbling semi-coherently about society nonsense as she pulls off her fancy-person gloves. When the kindly American housekeeper responds to the prattle with a bit of smalltalk, the rich lady reacts with a momentary look of stupefied disgust, outraged that here in America, the help speaks to the aristocracy.
Itโs a cute character moment, barely longer than a second or two, that reinforces the filmโs themes of class conflict and the inherent ugliness of those who think themselves superior to others.
I find it gratifying to see the wealthy portrayed as monsters, but whenever I experience that particular strain of glee I wonder why it feels so good. Are the rich truly disgusting, and Iโm glad to see my justifiable distaste validated? Or do I want to think of the rich as villains because I envy them?
Well, maybe it can be both, and perhaps Iโll get some clarity from a new comic out this week that portrays the rich in a particularly monstrous light.
EAT THE RICH

An excellent book to enjoy while you wait for the next Jordan Peele film to come out, issue #1 of Eat the Rich promises a gratifying satire of Our Troubled Modern Timesโข. Here we meet Joey, a pleasant young woman of average means whose boyfriend Astor is filthy rich โ though perhaps the word โfilthyโ doesnโt fully convey the extent of his worldโs depravity. As the book opens, Joey is arriving at Astorโs beach home where they are to spend the summer in the company of the wealthiest people in the world… but it quickly becomes clear that thereโs something sickeningly wrong with the one percent.
The beautiful, sinister art is particularly well-done, laying a foundation of horror and dread. A scene in which Joey meets the help nearly overflows with wry, Hitchcockian tension. The gory metaphor at the heart of this series couldnโt be more on-the-nose if it were a pimple, but sometimes subtlety is for cowards. I love the bluntness of this weapon.
Rating: ๐ฆด๐ฆด๐ฆด๐ฆด๐ฆด (5/5)
Writer: Sarah Gailey. Artist: Pius Bak. Main Cover Artist: Kevin Tong.
STARBEASTS

What if your dog was secretly the captain of a spaceship and also the galaxyโs last hope of salvation from an army of angry alien crustaceans? An adorable premise imbues this paperback with delightful charm, as Captain Bandit reluctantly leaves his beloved human to lead a crew of animal astronauts. What follows is a lighthearted space-romp with a silly, Muppety sense of humor thatโs likely to delight pre-teens and make older readers say โhaโ a couple of times. Though intrigue and adventure abound, the characters never quite achieve much depth beyond one or two notes. Disappointingly, a promising storyline regarding Banditโs feelings of inadequacy seems to taper out in the second half, falling short of what could have been a satisfying arc. But oh GOSH itโs cute, and the animal crewโs camaraderie is just the absolute sweetest thing ever. Itโs tender and wholesome, a lovely bedtime story to inspire pleasant, easygoing dreams.
Rating: ๐๐๐๐ (4/5)
Written by Stephanie Young. Illustrated by Allyson Lassiter.
KILLER QUEENS ISSUE #1

I donโt know how such a fascinatingly strange book landed a mainstream publisher, but Iโm delighted that it did: Killer Queens is an utterly queer space adventure blessed with a deliciously pulpy art style reminiscent of the 1950s by way of the 1980s by way of right now.
Alex and Max are two horny intergalactic assassins on the run from a mean monkey named Bieti and his crew of hench-otters. Wonderfully stupid fun abounds as our two heroic fuckups scamper from port to port, finding time for casual dates and hookups along the way. Iโm reminded of Vegas in Space, a bizarre โ80s camp classic made by a bunch of weirdo drag queens in San Francisco that uses the conventions of low-grade science fiction to create a bespoke form of no-budget camp. It doesnโt hurt that the sexualized gaze is distributed with surprising balance between male and female characters โ I felt like I was reading the worldโs most bisexual comic book โ and the costumes, ohhhh the costumes are a true delight, down to the silly flourishes like pointless Jetsony rings around Maxโs wrists and Alexโs gratuitous muscle-shirt. Whenever I see โitโs a gay take on [insert genre here]โ I roll my eyes, expecting something that feels forced and phony, but this book has a secret weapon that allows it to nail the landing: Itโs so, so, so weird.
Rating: ๐ช๐ช๐ช๐ช๐ช (5/5)
Writer: David M. Booher. Artist: Claudia Balboni. Colorist: Harry Saxon. Cover Artist: Claudia Balboni.
ALSO: VARIOUS FLAVORS OF HORROR & HEROS

Also out this week is a new Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, with a lovely art-decoish look, and God of Tremors, a gothic horror story with a lovely woodcut-looking art style. Thereโs also a new Junji Ito book, somehow โ how does this man work so fast??? โ with all the body and psychological horror youโd expect. Thereโs also Crisis Zone, a shockingly thick volume about โฆ uh โฆ well itโs kind of lol-so-random, which some people like, so if you see them be sure to let them know. Finally, thereโs a beautiful paperback of Run, the real-life story of civil rights hero and Congressman John Lewis.

“Whenever I see โitโs a gay take on [insert genre here]โ I roll my eyes”… But it is, I just read it and it’s literally Space Dandy with gay people… Comics are among the worst PC whores anymore. Just look at the new comics for Captain American, the author made him a homeless gay kid, because apparently that’s something lots of people can relate to? Nope. Because it’s edgy and new and inclusive. YAWN