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ECW Press,Canada
Battis, Jes - It's Only Forever: Labyrinth
Battis, Jes - It's Only Forever: Labyrinth
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A wild, intimate, and political deep dive
into Jim Henson's 1986 classic starring
David Bowie and its cast of lovable,
gender-defying goblins.
In the 40 years since Labyrinth's release, Jim Henson's cult classic starring
a menagerie of goblin puppets, the conversation about it has only grown
louder. Fans are still holding viewing parties and masquerade balls, and
creating memes inspired by David Bowie's sardonic and sexy goblin king,
numerous Etsy crafts, and even a Japanese video game. But what makes
the film so enduring, beyond its technical mastery and clever script, is
how it presents childhood as something dangerous, heroic, and even
queer.
IT'S ONLY FOREVER explores Labyrinth as an '80s time capsule that both
reflects and challenges its era, offering its young audience an alternative
to conservatism and soulless economics, at a time when U.S. president
Ronald Reagan ignored the HIV/AIDS crisis, pushing queerness further
into the shadows. As Sarah, played by a teenaged Jennifer Connelly, faces
down the king and his destructive whims, she exclaims, “You have no
power over me,” and in that moment she is everyone who has ever felt
marginalised, who has instead turned to the goblins over social and
political toxicity every single time.
From the costuming to the twisting plot, this classic example of 1980s
fantasy shows us that the magic and comfort of childhood never need to
be discarded as we are forced to enter a world that may very well seek
to destroy us. Instead, Labyrinth reveals a universal and beautiful truth:
that our strength comes from what we have always known ourselves to
be – beastly, loving, and wildly joyful.
Jes Battis is a queer autistic writer and teacher, and the author of The
Winter Knight (ECW Press, 2023), the Occult Special Investigator series
(Penguin Random House), and the Parallel Parks (Penguin Random
House) series (as Bailey Cunningham). Their work has been shortlisted
for a Saskatchewan Book Award and a Sunburst Award, as well as the
Ralph Gustafson Poetry Prize. The Winter Knight was featured in the
Canada Reads 2024 competition and won both an Independent
Publisher's Award and an Indie Foreword Award. Battis teaches queer
and trans studies, medieval literature, and representations of
disability/neurodiversity in pop culture at the University of Regina. They
live in Regina and spend time with family in Vancouver.
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