I saw Dash Shawโ€™s animated feature film My Entire High School Sinking into the Sea at last yearโ€™s Portland International Film Festival, where I was pleased to see the personable humor and torsion of reality that I always expect from his work. Shaw is a well-respected indie comics artist whose graphic novels, like Bottomless Belly Button and Cosplayers, mix entertaining, well-written stories with cool ideas that threaten to conceptually blow the doors off the whole biz. My Entire High Schoolโ€”which features voice work from the likes of Reggie Watts, Lena Dunham, Susan Sarandon, and Maya Rudolphโ€”finds teenagers facing a couple of different disasters.

As I was thinking about My Entire High School at the festival, a lady next to me in the bathroom line blurted out, โ€œI could see a Q-tip at my house!โ€ She was referencing a part of the film that discusses the illicit thrill of using Q-tipsโ€”even though doctors repeatedly tell us we shouldnโ€™t. So of course when I got on the phone with Shaw, that was the first thing I told him.

I donโ€™t know if she was talking to a friend in the stalls. There didnโ€™t seem to be anyone.

What? Thatโ€™s amazing! What a strange thing to say.

Yeah just, โ€œI could see a Q-tip at my house!โ€ Maybe she was angry because people get angry when theyโ€™re afraid. After spending an hour getting entrenched in your movieโ€™s 2-D world, I will admit that suddenly seeing a huge, real
Q-tip on the screen was terrifying.

I thought the Q-tip would do a few things. One, what you saidโ€”be shocking and disruptive. Two, I knew the Q-tip would look really good on a long horizontal screen. When you scan a Q-tip, itโ€™s just a shape, so I hoped for a second it might not even look like an actual object. It might just look like a shape. Itโ€™s part of the sensibility of the movie where Iโ€™m trying to make small, abstract things very exciting.

I love how the lunch lady character has these gradually ramping up super powers. At first sheโ€™s in the background. Then you find out sheโ€™s been putting stuff in the cafeteria food to make the kids really strong. Then by the end she can fly.

I took that from my younger self. I looked back at the comics I made in high school and, for whatever reason, there were a lot of lunch ladies in there.

And thereโ€™s a high school Dash in this movie. Heโ€™s kind of a dick.

Well, heโ€™s trying to warn everybody.

There were probably people in the audience that didnโ€™t know this movie was directed by a person named Dash.

Well, it says my name at the beginning, but itโ€™s true, most people wouldnโ€™t notice or care. I went to see the new Tim Burton movie [Miss Peregrineโ€™s Home for Peculiar Children], and the main character in that movie is a total Tim Burton stand inโ€”a tall goth kid with a mop of hair thatโ€™s lonely and wandering around. When I was leaving the theater, I was thinking, โ€œWhat if that person was named
Tim Burton?โ€

Thereโ€™s an assumption with movies that the main character is the perspective of the audience but, in my mind, all movies are obviously the directorโ€™s fantasy. We know that George Lucas created Indiana Jones and George Lucas loved archeology, but if he named that character George Lucas, heโ€™d have crossed a line.

In a comic, it doesnโ€™t seem strange to have a character that has the authorโ€™s name. The joke of an autobio comic is that the person is obviously altering reality to favor them. Itโ€™s like the long exhale of Justin Green or Julie Doucet. When I read autobio comics they always seem like theyโ€™re more about the cartoonistโ€™s perspective than anything real. recommended