Star Wars: Empire vol 6 In the Shadows of Their Fathers

Star Wars: Empire vol 6 In the Shadows of Their Fathers 

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-271-1

With stories set between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back, this volume of intergalactic derring-do (reprinted from the comic book Star Wars: Empire issues #29-34) returns to the events of the Battle of Jabiim (see Star Wars: Clone Wars Vol. 3 Last Stand On Jabiim).

The plot examines how that tumultuous debacle has affected the sons of the leading proponents, Anakin Skywalker’s son Luke and Nolan Gillmun, child and heir of the resistance leader Anakin abandoned there more than twenty years previously. After an enjoyable first chapter by Scott Allie and artist Joe Corroney highlighting Darth Vader’s unique diplomatic skills, the main action begins as the Sith Lord returns to the rain-planet after two decades, where the young Rebels Luke and Leia, have come a cropper whilst on a mission for the Rebellion.

Jabiim had resisted the Empire in a bloody guerrilla war for that entire time, and a link up with the Rebels of other worlds seemed an ideal way to increase pressure on their mutual oppressor, but then the Jabiimis discovered that Luke was the son of the ultimate traitor Jedi Skywalker…

Full of action and suspense, although less dark and oppressive than its Clone Wars precursor, this is still a powerful tale that offers fresh insights into the complex character of Anakin/Vader whilst delivering a whole bunch of escapist fun, and the script by Thomas Andrews is captivatingly illustrated by Adriana Melo and Michel LaCombe makes this book some good clean fun for a rainy day.

© 2007 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved

Star Wars: Empire vol 4 The Heart of the Rebellion

Star Wars: Empire vol 4 The Heart of the Rebellion 

By various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-029-8

This volume of the series, set during the time frame of the original triptych of film blockbusters, shines its spotlight on Princess Leia Organa, with four tales set at key points of her Rebellious life.

Set just before the opening of the original movie, ‘Princess… Warrior’ (reprinted from issues #5-6 of the Star Wars: Empire comic book) tells of the tragic events that stem from her half-hearted attempts to aid the Rebellion, and how she learns the hard tasks and responsibilities that leadership demands. Randy Stradley adapts Brian Daley’s radio script, with art from Davidé Fabri and Christian Dalla Vecchia.

‘A Little Piece of Home’ by Ron Marz and Tomás Giorello (issues #20-21) follows Leia’s search for a new Rebel sanctuary to the palatial planetoid preserve of an past boy-friend and where old feelings are rekindled. As so often before grim reality once again intrudes with heartbreak and disappointment the only rewards.

Issue #22 originally provided ‘Alone Together’ as Han Solo’s latest flirtation provides character insights into the nature of her perceived rival for the Correllian’s affections. When Deena Shan, Leia, Chewbacca and Solo are trapped on a world with a deadly monster her rivalry turns into something more positive in this fluffy change of pace tale from Welles Hartley, captivatingly pictured by Adriana Melo.

Star Wars: A Valentine Story was the original venue for ‘Breaking the Ice’ a sadly lacklustre offering from the usually excellent Judd Winick and Paul Chadwick. Set immediately before the Rebels moved to the Ice planet Hoth (The Empire Strikes Back) it depicts the gradual warming of the frosty relationship of the arrogant and insufferable Han Solo and the haughty and controlling Princess.

Although not a great issue by the impressively high standard of the franchise, this book is still a readable and pretty package foe readers and fans of al ages and persuasions.

Star Wars © 2005 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars: Empire vol 1, Betrayal

Star Wars: Empire vol 1, Betrayal 

By Scott Allie, Ryan Benjamin & Curtis Arnold (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-655-8

This intriguing series concentrates on tales of the Star Wars universe told from the perspective of the evil Rulers rather than the heroic resistance. In this first collection (issue #1-4 of the monthly comic), set in the weeks just prior to the events of the film Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, betrayal is in the air.

As the Empire’s greatest weapon nears completion, Darth Vader is dispatched to the galactic hinterlands in pursuit of an apparent survivor of the massacre of the Jedis, unaware that a different kind of revolt is brewing at home. An unhappy collection of generals have decided to assassinate the Emperor, and their plan seems perfect.

As their machinations proceed and Vader is diverted to the Death Star to oversee the final arrangements, the creators of this volume manage the nigh impossible task of instilling a sense of tension, despite the sure and certain knowledge we all share that this plan simply can’t succeed because it didn’t.

How the plan fails is a good strong yarn, with a chance to see the charismatic Vader at his scene-stealing best, and the close echoes of the plot by his own generals to kill Adolf Hitler lend the fantasy some much appreciated undercurrents which are so often absent from space opera adventuring. Scott Allie’s script is economical and Ryan Benjamin art is open and dynamic, making this a page-turning delight for fan and civilian alike.

© 2004 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars: The Comics Companion

Star Wars: The Comics Companion 

By Ryder Windham & Daniel Wallace (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-108-1

Now here is a smart idea. The Star Wars franchise has spawned an awful lot of comic books and this lavish coffee table volume lists them all, both as comic series and in their graphic novel compilation form. Stuffed with illustrations and usefully categorised by the continuity’s main narrative eras (from 25,000 years prior to 25 years after the first film – now irrevocably designated Episode IV: A New Hope). There’s also a section for anthologies and Manga editions, lists of all the pertinent information a new reader or Trivial Pursuit nut might ever need from plot summations to creator credits, and even spoiler warnings so you can quench your thirst for information without spoiling the thrill of the eventual read.

Obviously there’s no real attention to the individual quality of the stories, so there’s always the risk that you might not like what you eventually do read, but that’s a risk you take every time you buy a book or comic. At least you’ll have some idea of what to look for in the first place and as the illustrations are taken from the comics themselves you can also get a feel for what the things will look like.

Hopefully this will lead to a plethora of such editions, not just for such media-based Dark Horse managed properties as Aliens, Predator or Robocop, but for the unbelievably convoluted major comics players from other companies. Wouldn’t you like to see an overview of Batman, Spider-Man, Superman or X-Men at a glance?

© 2006 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved

Star Wars Clone Wars Vol 3: Last Stand on Jabiim

Star Wars Clone Wars Vol 3: Last Stand on Jabiim 

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-837-2

The dark and nasty corners of the Star Wars universe get an outing in this grim war story originally printed as issues #54-59 of the monthly Star Wars: Republic comic. The conflict, set on the eponymous monsoon planet, becomes one of the most fiercely contested prizes of the civil war instigated by Count Dooku. Both Imperial and Separatist forces desperately need the resources of the rain-soaked mudball, leading to an entrenchment situation identical to the trench warfare of Earth’s Great War. But slowly the balance of power is shifting…

With the loss of their Jedi leaders, the Padawans, led by Anakin Skywalker, are increasingly pressed by Jabiimi natives and their droid enhanced Separatist allies. Falling back to a last-ditch position they can only fight on and pray that a rescue mission will evacuate them in time. Skywalker’s subsequent – and unwitting — manipulation by the nefarious Palpatine is one of the final triggers that will lead to his inevitable rebirth as Darth Vader.

This grim and powerful tale of betrayal and regret is one of the better Star Wars adventures to spring from the second round of films, and one of the very few to create a truly epic resonance out of all the derring-do and glittery swash-buckling. This actually reads like a real war story, thanks in no small part to the deft scripting of Haden Blackman and low-key illustration of Brian Ching and Victor Llamas

© 2004 Lucasfilm Ltd & ™. All rights reserved.

Star Wars Boba Fett: Man With a Mission

Star Wars Boba Fett: Man With a Mission 

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-464-1

Boba Fett is called ‘the Galaxy’s Greatest Bounty Hunter’ and I suspect it’s the profession rather than the character that makes this anti-hero so popular with Star Wars aficionados. This collection of his adventures (garnered from the one-shot comics Overkill and Agent of Doom plus issues #7 and #28 of Star Wars: Empire) just highlight what a shallow character he is even by the low standards of the Star Wars franchise. I’m convinced that the key to the success of Lucas’s baby is that very archetypical nature of all the participants and even scenarios.

‘Sacrifice’, by British veterans John Wagner and Cam Kennedy, set just after the destruction of the Death Star, has the faceless killer hired by a planetary Governor to capture the leader of an opposition group stirring dissent in the mines that make up the planet’s only source of income. Obviously, fate conspires to place Fett on the right side by story’s end, and it’s a tribute to the creators’ abilities that such a hackneyed yarn reads quite well. Of greater interest is ‘Wreckage’ by Ron Marz and Adriana Melo where the bounty hunter finds himself outmanoeuvred by an Imperial Admiral during a sabotage mission. Especially impressive is the practically wordless nature of the narrative.

‘Overkill’ by Thomas Andrews and Francisco Ruiz Velasco practically reduces Fett to a supporting role in a battle of political will and family rivalry as an ambitious Imperial officer makes a power-grab on an important refinery world. Cam Kennedy returns to illustrate John Ostrander’s excellent ‘Agent of Doom’ as Fett takes a cut-rate job killing two genocidal slavers in an attempt to reclaim his tarnished reputation (ruined in the wake of his defeat in the film Return of the Jedi).

Boba Fett is by nature a cipher, and his missions pretty much write themselves. There’s lots of action; he never fails; bad guys get punished. So it’s a tribute to the creators that the walk-on characters carry most of the narrative and carry it quite well.

© 2007 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars: Visionaries

Star Wars: Visionaries

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84576-110-3

In most creative endeavours, there’s a bittersweet edge that comes from what’s been made but which is left out of the finished piece, whether it’s a comics script or a motion picture. The fascinating premise here is that a group of talents involved with the pre-production of the Star Wars films have been asked to turn those inevitable runners-up concepts into comic strips.

Ranging from the magnificent to the just plain weird, Visionaries is a pictorial treat for fans of the franchise and simple science fiction followers also. Twelve creators from the Lucasfilm art department and from Industrial Light and Magic make a seamless transition to the sphere of graphic narrative in nine stories and two visual essays, based on the events of the Star Wars universe, concentrating particularly on the time between Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith.

By far the most memorable are Aaron McBride’s “Old Wounds”, “Entrenched” by Alex Jaeger and M. Zachary Sherman and the balletic, wordless, splendidly dark exercise in the nature of evil “Sithisis” by Derek Thompson.

As much a coffee-table art book as graphic novel, there’s plenty for all readers to digest here.

 © 2004 Lucasfilm Ltd & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars Infinities: Return of the Jedi

Star Wars Infinities: Return of the Jedi 

By Adam Gallardo, Ryan Benjamin and Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-990-5

Here’s a third outing for the concept of alternative stories from “A Galaxy Far, Far Away…” This Infinities sub-brand uses the more familiar film canon as the basis for “What If?” tales extrapolating different events and outcomes from a pivotal change in the original storyline.

So what might happen if the scene in Return Of The Jedi where our heroes rescue Han Solo from imprisonment in a block of Carbonite goes hideously wrong? If you care you’ll want to buy the book, no?

At least you won’t feel cheated for quality, as the publishers always ensure a high standard of product. It’s all quite competently done by writer Gallardo and Ryan Benjamin’s art team, but I do wonder at the somewhat defeatist nature of the whole enterprise.

Surely there’s still a story to be told that adds to what is obviously a cherished franchise, before you have to depend on hackneyed gimmicks like “let’s pretend…” Once or twice is fine but eventually it does begin to pall and the reader has even less emotion to invest in the story if it’s not ‘true’. Or ‘real’ or … well you know what I mean.

© 2004 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars Infinities: The Empire Strikes Back

Star Wars Infinities: The Empire Strikes Back 

By Various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-990-5

There are a lot of stories from “A Galaxy Far, Far Away…” still to be told and some of them never happened. The Infinities sub-brand uses the more familiar film canon as the basis for “What If?” tales extrapolating different events and outcomes from a pivotal change in the original storyline.

Here the basis for this good-looking but unsatisfying concoction is the death of Luke Skywalker from an attack in the snows of the ice planet Hoth. With the death of the young hero Han Solo and Leia must undertake his fore-destined journey to Dagobah but there’s still that bounty on the ex-smuggler’s head and the Empire is marshalling its forces…

Although an earnest effort this story doesn’t offer the same thrills and rewards as either the film on which it’s based or, more importantly its own predecessor in this series. Perhaps a less obvious plot concept might have yielded better results. Still and all, the art is very effective and not everybody wants “War and Peace” every time you crack a book.

© 2003 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars Infinities: A New Hope

Star Wars Infinities: A New Hope 

By various (Dark Horse Books)
ISBN 1-84023-432-6

It would appear that there is an inexhaustible demand for stories from “A Galaxy Far, Far Away…” but this time as another tale of noble rebels and dastardly Empires unfolds there’s a big difference. Taken from the first four issues of the Dark Horse comics series, this tale explores what would have happened if one simple, but key, event had been changed in that first movie all those years ago.

When Luke Skywalker blew up the Death Star he did it by firing a Photon torpedo into an exposed vent tube. But what if that torpedo failed to detonate? Asking that question, and providing a rip-roaring answer are writer Chris Warner, artists Drew Johnson and Al Rio, ably assisted by colourists Dave McCaig and Helen Bach, and Steve Dutro provided the lettering.

With the super-weapon still in Imperial hands the Rebellion is crushed and Leia becomes an acolyte of the Emperor. Luke and Han Solo must find a lost Jedi Master before the last hope for the galaxy is lost forever…

It’s easy and fun to play the “What If” game. It has been a staple of comic strips since the earliest days, and frankly, those tales often range from the inane to the insane, but here the creative team has pulled out all the stops, encapsulating and even topping the first three movies (I’m speaking chronologically here) in one go. Especially satisfying is the role by Yoda in a quite spectacular climax. I know that fans of all types are essentially purists but this is a book that all aficionados should read.

© 2001, 2002 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.