"I am just a weak-minded child trying to survive in a culture where the highest thing a person can aspire to is knowing a lot about music."— Unwinder, a possibly non-canon, but still pretty accurate, self-assessment
Unwinder's Tall Comics
is a
metafictional Magic Realism Slice of Life webcomic by Wilson "Eli" Parker, also known as the creator of
Powerup Comics. The comic is a satire of modern youth culture—particularly the oversaturation of trivialities and entertainment—and an
Affectionate Parody of suburban Minnesota.
At the heart of the comic is Unwinder, a kid who's clearly a little too
Genre Savvy for his own good: wildly inventive, yet completely incapable of recognizing the fine line between creativity and idiocy. He thinks rock bands should play pranks on the audience instead of music. He consumes entertainment solely so he can reference it in his conversations. He sends unsolicited scripts for TV ads to Taco Bell. He invents internet memes, then invents webcomics solely to spread these memes. He is, in short, a product of the Information Age
Gone Horribly Right.
Rounding out the central cast are Unwinder's eternally cheerful girlfriend, Mildred; his friend and punching bag, Barbecue Sauce; and the
Only Sane Man, Horse-Man.
There is no overarching plot, though the humor is becoming increasingly dependent on
continuity. The comic updates irregularly, usually on Saturdays.
It also features what may possibly be
the best parody of TV Tropes, ever
.
Provides examples of:
- Alt Text: Added when Parker revamped the website.
- Art Shift: Honestly, it would be easier to list all the pages that don't feature this.
- Anti-Humor: Unwinder's box of rejected ideas includes "Normal Al", who parodies "Weird Al" Yankovic by doing straight cover versions of every song that Weird Al parodied as well as rewriting Weird Al's original songs to be completely serious.
- Back to Front: "The Accident".
- B Side Comics: Apocalyptus: Thrift and Peril, Your Guess is as Good as Mine.
- The Bechdel Test: Parodied in #100

Unwinder: Ever heard of the Rastov test?
Barbecue Sauce: Is that like where a book or movie is only good if it has less than four warring factions, and they have to say at least one sentence that isn't full of
made-up space jargon?
- Beyond the Impossible: How metafictional can the comic go? How tall can the comic get?
- Canon Welding: Many prior works by Parker have been rolled into Tall Comics: Shadow and Chug, Sonty Mick, and a brief appearance by the cast of his old sci-fi comic Too Far.
- Cerebus Syndrome: In universe example: Nutflix, the (fictional) webcomic Unwinder reads in this comic,
is centered around nutcrackers reenacting scenes from movies. By this comic,
it has "jumped the whale shark. THE LARGEST SHARK ON EARTH", and become a serious drama that rarely even touches on its original premise. - Character Blog
- Continuity Nod
- Conversational Troping: To the point of having a fake TV Tropes page
appear in-comic. - Cool Old Guy: Horse-Man is one of the few people whom Unwinder actually respects.
- Dying Alone: Barbecue Sauce's greatest fear.
- Faux Symbolism: As seen here
, Tokyo Delta Jetlag D is rife with it. - Fictional Media: So, so many. The most-often referenced ones include:
- Tokyo Delta Jetlag D, a weird anime that Unwinder and Barbecue Sauce enjoy.
- The War of the Seven Stars, a Space Opera novel series. Incredibly epic, and incredibly dull.
- After Dark, a wildly successful series of teen novels featuring romantic zombies.
- Foe Yay: In-universe; after watching a few episodes of Tokyo Delta Jetlag D, Unwinder starts shipping Jaded Lament and Colonel Gunarm.
- The Greys: Unwinder resembles one of these, but Parker is deliberately vague regarding his true nature: "Basically I tried to choose a name that would not settle the issue of whether he is an alien, or just Swedish."

- Halloween Cosplay: Here
and here
. - Hatedom: invoked Unwinder has a complicated relationship with Gary P. Rastov's novels. He has a lot of criticism for the books' shortcomings and professes to hate them... yet he's read the entire series three times, and even read the autobiography of Gary's son, Warren, in hope that it would shed some light on who Gary was.
- Impossibly Cool Weapon: The katagun, a gun whose moving bullets trace the path of the blade. It's the preferred weapon of Jaded Lament from Tokyo Delta Jetlag D.
- Improbable Weapon User: The Apocalyptus characters fight with windmill blades and clock arms.
- Infinite Canvas: They're called Tall Comics for a reason.
- Intercontinuity Crossover: With, of all things, Marmaduke. Also with Hitmen For Destiny (Sonty Mick appearing in Hitmen, and several Hitmen characters appearing in Tall Comics).
- I Take Offense To That Last One: Here.

Unwinder: Reading some manga there?
Barbecue Sauce: No.
Unwinder: Reading some non-canon comic continuations of old, canceled, BBC science fiction shows?
Barbecue Sauce: No! I mean, most fans consider them
canon, since they got some of the original writers.
- Klatchian Coffee: "The Huffy Dimension".
- Little Miss Con Artist: Amy, preteen cracker.
- Metafiction
- Mundane Ghost Story: The dreaded Dying Alone Snakes.
- Narrative Filigree: Cranked up to eleven by the in-story novel The Gun and the Grapes, a mystery story where every relevant detail is buried under a mountain of irrelevant ones.
- Noble Demon: Spondulio Wealthmonger claims to be thoroughly selfish, and that his many extravagant acts of charity are just the first steps in elaborate schemes to make himself filthy rich.
- Posthumous Character: Gary P. Rastov. He died before the comic began, but his legacy lives on in the War of the Seven Stars novels he wrote.
- Only Sane Man: Horse-Man.
- Our Zombies Are Different: The zombies of the After Dark series are super-handsome basketball players who can fly.
- Refuge in Audacity: Deliberately invoked by Unwinder here
. - Scare 'Em Straight: Horse-man tries to dissuade Unwinder from smoking pot by showing Unwinder his stoner brother's blog.
- Schedule Slip: Egregiously.
- Shout Out: Dr. Minivan shops at
The Green Grocer. - Something Completely Different: Apocalyptus: Thrift and Peril, a story based on a Steam Punk tabletop RPG session.
- Stuff Blowing Up: Unwinder dismisses director Nathan Blaine as "some guy who directs by pushing an 'explode' button."
- Stylistic Suck: A lot of metafiction is deliberately (and hilariously) horrible.
- They Changed It, Now It Sucks: In-Universe. Even though he admits that Dawn's Glory was an insufferably dull novel, Unwinder still feels obligated to complain about the upcoming movie adaptation turning it into "Transformer poop".
- Troll: Unwinder is an oddly dedicated internet troll (he once trolled a Linkin Park fanboard... after first spending over a year establishing himself as a constructive fan) and aspires to be a real-life troll as well.

Other guy: OK, is it like a dream of yours to get booed off of a stage?
Unwinder: No, see, the real music is the jeers of the angry crowd! They are the true instruments, and you have been playing them from square one!
- Where The Hell Is Springfield?: After avoiding revealing where Unwinder lives for 49 pages, Parker eventually gave the name of the town: Garen, a Ghost Town in Real Life.
- The Wiki Rule: Yes, there is a wiki for that
.