Comic Wars: Episode 5
January 10, 2010 by David Smith
Filed under Articles, Rants and Raves, Reviews
Welcome to the fifth chapter of Comic Wars. From looking at the cover, you might get the impression that the rather more smooth-surfaced cousin to the Death Star actually strafes Rebel bases, picking off people and ships, rather than exploding entire planets, like the real Death Star.
While that does sound like a really awesome subplot that was never in the movie (I’m imagining some sort of cross between the Death Star and the Imperial Interrogation Droid that’s about the size of a meteor, manned by a couple dozen guys all wearing identical spherical helmets with little slits to see out of. And they go around the galaxy solving mysteries. Maybe they have a pet Ewok for comic relief. Coming this fall on the CW!) nothing like that actually happens in this issue. The cover is more like an impressionist collage of elements from the book, rather than a realistic depiction of any one scene.
In the scene, Luke and Chewie seem to be best buddies now, since Luke is barking orders at him, leaving Han out in the cold, and making him even more nihilistic than ever, thus leading him to exclaim, “It’s too late, kid! We’re finished!”. Whatever happened to, “Never tell me the odds!”?
On this next page, the human characters have a stunning lack of detail, while we can practically count every hair on Chewbacca’s face, and the inaccurately drawn TIE Fighter pilot is bursting forth from the minimalism of the page with his stunning realism.
Is the artist finding much more inspiration in the non-human characters in the story? (and the Imperial troops might as well be called non-human with their portrayal in the movies as faceless drones who couldn’t hit a wall from six feet with a shotgun. And aren’t they all clones of Jango Fett, anyway (if the prequels are to be considered canon, which I’m not sure they should be)? If he’s been cloned over and over again for the past twenty years, surely the latest generations have lost whatever humanity once embodied their physical beings. And if they stopped using clones after the Clone Wars – which is what I kind of assumed all along – then the poor saps who sign up for trooper duty only to enslave entire cultures deserve nothing less than to be called inhuman). Are the lines of dialog that started out being pretty banal when Lucas penned them and got even worse when the comic writers pissed all over them turning the poor artist against humanity in general and siding with those in the story who never even speak English?
This sequence is also notable for the sheer quantity and intensity of thought balloons. Back on the Death Star, Han spoke aloud every thought that flitted through that smuggler’s skull of his, but now everyone seems to be holding their thoughts closer to the vest. Which is good, because their thoughts are those of a MySpace drama queen.
But Leia’s despair pretty closely matches Han’s from the cover. I guess that’s why they ended up together.
I’ve talked before about the introduction of silly religious exhortations into the dialogue of this comic – usually when someone says “Holy–!” – but this is ridiculous: “… and Han Solo finds out that space-mercenaries, too, can pray!” Of all the characters that might pray in the entire story, Han is the least likely. He openly scoffs at even the quasi-religion of the Jedi; he mocks the beliefs of everyone and doesn’t believe in anything supernatural, even his belated, “Hey, Luke, may the force be with you.” is strained and insincere. There is no way he was praying just because a couple TIE fighters were hassling him.
This scene in the movie is a great character-defining moment. In most movies, once the main characters have been through hell together, they predictably fall into an all-for-one sense of camaraderie. But after our heroes escape certain death many times over in the Death Star, Han retreats to his baser instincts and makes sure that Leia knows that all he cares about is the money. It sets up the final scene where he comes back to save the day, beginning his character arc from selfish smuggler to genuine hero and all-around pansy.
Apparently, the comic writers didn’t think the movie was heavy-handed enough in this scene and gave Han a couple extra lines: “What else is there? Well??”, underscoring just how much he loves the Benjamins in exclusion of all else, even freedom from tyranny. Meanwhile the artist makes Han look like a very young Randy Quaid.
Oh, there’s so much going on on this page, I hardly know where to start.
First of all, how did the Falcon’s cockpit get to be the size of an Arena Football stadium? I mean, really. The claustrophobic confines of the Falcon set not only are way more realistic – have you ever been in a plane or a (non-cruise) ship? Space is at a premium in any sort of vessel like that.
But besides that it very literally brings the characters closer together – they’re constantly reaching over each other to fiddle with knobs or get in and out of seats.
Somehow the inside of the Falcon’s cockpit has now swollen to Vegas casino-like proportions, with a large, polished floor and a windshield that looks like it was stolen from the Emperor’s throne room on the second Death Star. Heck, if that’s the cockpit, they could house the entire Rebel fleet in the cargo hold.
This is also another wonderfully ham-fisted scene, thanks to the comic writers. In the movie, it’s a great little scene where we get to see Han and Luke doing some verbal sparring about Leia and suddenly realizing they’re in a bit of a competition with each other for her affections (all together, now: ewww).
First of all, Luke, seriously. Do not sit like that.
Then we have a gigantic close-up of Luke thinking “I care!”, holding his gargantuan left hand up to his chin and looking soulfully at Leia’s retreating form.
Then, after a bit of back and forth with Han, Luke boils over into a furious rage, his teeth fusing together in a mass of enamel, the better to resist breaking when Han inevitably punches him right in his beautiful pearly whites. Luke looks like he’s about to turn into the Incredible Hulk.
Meanwhile, Han just chuckles, knowing that he can toss Luke out of the airlock anytime he needs to. Because he’s a murdering bastard, that’s why. Just ask Greedo.
The comic writers couldn’t have known at this point that Luke and Leia were siblings, since I don’t think even Lucas came up with that until he sat down to bang out Return of the Jedi (otherwise, I don’t think we would have had the kissing scene in Empire), so I can’t really fault them for throwing in another incestuous kiss as Luke is about to go save the galaxy. I’m sure they thought it would just add to the tension factor with the whole love triangle thing going on. They had no idea that Lucas would turn this into a Greek tragedy.
But still. Eww.
The final page in this issue once again has the narration box talking directly to a character, in this case “Blue Leader”.
But before that, we have Blue Leader saying, “Approaching target at 1.3 parsecs”, which is great because, taken in context, this use of “parsecs” seems to be a rate of speed, i.e. “approaching target at 350mph”, rather than a measure of distance (as in the real world) or a measure of time (as in Lucas’s world).
It’s as if the writers figured “parsec” was just some generic space-term that had no real-world meaning and they could do whatever they wanted with it.
But then he says, “Now–it’s do or die!” and the omniscient narration box responds with, “Or perhaps both, blue leader … perhaps both!” What does that even mean? To my mind, the “do” in that statement is “stop the Death Star from destroying the 4th moon of Yavin” and the “die” part is, well, the death of the Rebellion. Sure, we all know that they do destroy the Death Star, and most of the rebel pilots do end up dying (except for Luke and Wedge), but the Rebellion survives, so I don’t think this really applies.
Also, did they hire the guy that did Dr. Katz to ink this last page? Why are all the lines so squiggly?
Well, now that you’re all riled up and ready for the exciting conclusion to the greatest space saga of all time (hint: the good guys win) we’ll need to break until next issue, where you’ll see (according to the cover) Luke Skywalker have a lightsaber duel with Darth Vader, which is going to be tough, what with the spaceships and dogfighting and all. But hey, we’ll see.










Quint on Mon, 11th Jan 2010 10:06 am
Wow, Luke’s face looks a LOT like HeMan in this issue…