I saw Dash Shawโs animated feature film My Entire High School Sinking into the Sea at last yearโs 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 Schoolโwhich features voice work from the likes of Reggie Watts, Lena Dunham, Susan Sarandon, and Maya Rudolphโfinds 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, โI 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-tipsโeven though doctors repeatedly tell us we shouldnโt. So of course when I got on the phone with Shaw, that was the first thing I told him.
I donโt know if she was talking to a friend in the stalls. There didnโt seem to be anyone.
What? Thatโs amazing! What a strange thing to say.
Yeah just, โI could see a Q-tip at my house!โ Maybe she was angry because people get angry when theyโre afraid. After spending an hour getting entrenched in your movieโs 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 saidโbe shocking and disruptive. Two, I knew the Q-tip would look really good on a long horizontal screen. When you scan a Q-tip, itโs 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. Itโs part of the sensibility of the movie where Iโm trying to make small, abstract things very exciting.
I love how the lunch lady character has these gradually ramping up super powers. At first sheโs in the background. Then you find out sheโs 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 thereโs a high school Dash in this movie. Heโs kind of a dick.
Well, heโs trying to warn everybody.
There were probably people in the audience that didnโt know this movie was directed by a person named Dash.
Well, it says my name at the beginning, but itโs true, most people wouldnโt notice or care. I went to see the new Tim Burton movie [Miss Peregrineโs Home for Peculiar Children], and the main character in that movie is a total Tim Burton stand inโa tall goth kid with a mop of hair thatโs lonely and wandering around. When I was leaving the theater, I was thinking, โWhat if that person was named
Tim Burton?โ
Thereโs an assumption with movies that the main character is the perspective of the audience but, in my mind, all movies are obviously the directorโs fantasy. We know that George Lucas created Indiana Jones and George Lucas loved archeology, but if he named that character George Lucas, heโd have crossed a line.
In a comic, it doesnโt seem strange to have a character that has the authorโs name. The joke of an autobio comic is that the person is obviously altering reality to favor them. Itโs like the long exhale of Justin Green or Julie Doucet. When I read autobio comics they always seem like theyโre more about the cartoonistโs perspective than anything real.
