Showing posts with label Mike Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Johnson. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Blade Runner 2019 #1

2019. It seemed so far away in 1982 with Ridley Scott's neo-noir dystopian view of Los Angeles. After the passage of 37 years, we still don't have any flying cars, android sheep or murderous replicants (okay, that last one is actually a good thing.) But thanks to Titan Comics' new series Blade Runner 2019, the future is finally here!

Blade Runner 2019 #1

Written by Michael Green, Mike Johnson
Art by Andres Guinaldo
Covers by: Stanley 'Artgerm' Lau, Andres Guinaldo, Syd Mead, John Royle
Published by Titan Comics
Pages: 24
Retail: $3.99


Blade Runner 2019 takes place right around the time that Rick Deckard has his hands busy apprehending Roy Batty's group of android fugitives. It focuses on the new character of Ash Ashina; a Blade Runner with an impressive kill list.

While Ash works with the police department of Los Angeles retiring 'skinjobs', she makes extra money selling the body parts of her retired replicants on the black market. With the number of illegal replicants dwindling on earth, Ash picks up a contract looking for a missing woman and her 4-year old child.

I wish there was more to say about the plot of this first issue. I'm absolutely thrilled that Titan Comics has brought back the return of the Blade Runner universe. Blade Runner 2019 is the first ever series comprised of all-new stories and characters which are all canon to the films. However, 24-pages really isn't enough to properly introduce a new main character as well as make the reader interested in coming back for issue #2.

I really think that Titan should have made this premiere issue double-sized. 24 pages was enough to make Ash intriguing. But I feel very little connection to the woman and child that the Blade Runner has been hired to find. But I must say that I am ready to return to this universe in the pages of the second issue!

Other than being obsessed with Blade Runner, another reason I am willing to continue reading this series is all thanks to the writing and the art. This story is written by someone who knows this franchise intimately, Blade Runner 2049's Michael Green. Along with Mike Johnson (Star Trek) and artist Andres Guinaldo (Justice League Dark), Michael Green takes the reader on the tour of vital and recognizable locales. As we view Ash's day, we are taken to the L.A. skyline, the aqueduct, the street markets as well as the never-before-seen setting, the archipelago of Santa Barbara. While the Tyrell family is mentioned in this book, I have a feeling that the Tyrell Corporation is going to be off-limits in this series.

The artwork of the characters wasn't as stunning as that of the settings and the technology. Guinado's image of Ash's police car hovering over the police station was so perfect, I thought it was an image straight from the 1982 film. I especially loved the effects given to the spotlights of the cars and cityscape. I was in awe of how they glowed and gave off a reflective halo. Clearly, the artist of this series has done his homework on how the Blade Runner universe is supposed to look!

I think that I am going to love Blade Runner 2019. But I think it's going to be as series in which one will get more enjoyment out of reading as a collected trade. A single issue just isn't enough time to be engrossed in a living-breathing franchise such as Blade Runner.

This is not a realm for quick trips. Honestly, I would be happy if Titan decided to forgo this series as a monthly and instead release it as a quarterly oversize book full of one complete story. per volume. We live in the future of Blade Runner 2019. This sort of publishing arrangement ought to exist in this turbulent present time of the comic industry's re-structuring.

Please consider this Titan. Blade Runner 2019 is one title I don't want to see retired!
Blade Runner 2019 debuts in print and digital platforms on July 17, 2019.
For more info on this awesome new series from Titan, check out the trailer for issues #1 here!

Worth Consuming!

Rating 8 out of 10 stars.

This review was originally published July 16, 2019 on Outrightgeekery.com.

Monday, November 12, 2018

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy

In the 1990s when Marvel re-obtained the rights to the Star Trek franchise, they created an all-new series about the cadets of Starfleet. Titled Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, the book was set during the time of The Next Generation. Nog, the Ferengi child from DS9, was one of the main characters. But other than he, it was pretty much an original concept. The series ran for 17 issues before being cancelled. 

Star Trek: Starfleet Academy from IDW Publishing is a continuation of that 90s series. That was my first thought when I saw this trade paperback at a recent swap meet. On this cover of this book is a Vulcan and an Andorian. Both species were main characters in the Marvel series. So with the faces of Kelvin timeline Spock, Kirk and Uhura, I assumed that this was the new timelines reboot of the book. Turns out, Star Trek: Starfleet Academy from IDW Publishing is NOT a continuation of that 90s series.

In this 2015-16 miniseries, the adventures of Kelvin timeline Kirk and company are intermingled with an all-new class of cadets. The new students' storyline takes place 3 years just after the events of 2009's Star Trek, in which the planet Vulcan is destroyed by Nero. 

A young Vulcan cadet struggles with the decision to continue her studies at Starfleet or to resign and help the founding of New Vulcan. Her faculty adviser tries to persuade her to stay until the completion of a Starfleet competition against other academies of higher thought spread across the universe. Usually an Academy loner, the Vulcan cadet now must learn to work as part of a team of misfits. Meanwhile, three years into the past, Uhura uncovers a dark secret about the founding of Starfleet. What she uncovers and the adventures of the new class combine to make an epic storyline that I thoroughly enjoyed.

There's lots of great Easter eggs in this book. Mike Johnson (Star Trek/Green Lantern) crafts an intriguing story that spans 'generations'. But really, the magic of this book is all thanks to artist Derek Charm. The illustrator of the Star Wars Adventures series, also from IDW, Charm loves to add characters and elements taken from other parts of whatever franchise he is tackling. It really connects the story so perfectly. I'd love to share a few examples, but if you were to decide to read this book, I'd be spoiling quite a bit of fun.

One thing that irritated me was a small level of story inconsistency. In the first two issues, the story jumps back and forth 3 years. In issue #3, the story is said to occur back and forth only 2 years apart. If that was the natural progression of the story, I would be fine with this. However, in the fourth issue, it's back to a 3 years distance between Kirk's class and the new cadets. 

For a story that did some really amazingly unexpected things with the Star Trek franchise, that small error is a huge blotch! It's like someone put a pink mole of the Mona Lisa! Despite this, I'd really like to see these characters again. Another miniseries would be great. Since Chris Pine is supposedly done with the Star Trek films, a movie based on this new group would be freaking awesome!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Star Trek: Boldly Go, Volume 1

Story by Mike Johnson and Ryan Parrott. Art by Tony Shasteen and Chris Mooneyham. Published by IDW.

Go Your Own Way

Star Trek: Boldly Go immediately follows the explosive events of Star Trek Beyond. This miniseries continues the story of the Kelvin Universe after the destruction of the Enterprise. A new Enterprise is being constructed. But until then, the ship’s crew have undertaken temporary assignments.
Kirk has accepted the position of the interim captain of the Endeavor. Spock and Uhura have taken sabbatical to establish an academy on New Vulcan. The family Sulu undertake a 6-month long scouting mission. Meanwhile Scotty teaches safety protocols at Starfleet.
Once the reader has become familiar with the roles of the crew, the action takes a giant leap into… I’m sorry folks, but there is no way in the universe that I am going to spoil things. What I will say is that the cliffhanger at the end of chapter 1 left me stunned.

Potential For So Much More

I’ve been reading for some time now that there doesn’t seem to be a script ready for a fourth Star Trek film. The producers can’t seem to nail one down. Actor Chris Pine hasn’t seen a script. Actress Zoe Saldana is clueless as to if another film set in the Kelvin Universe will be made at all. Hello? Guys- your script is right here! Just have someone adapt this series into a script and get going on filming Star Trek 4!
Maybe series writers Mike Johnson and Ryan Parrott should do it. Star Trek: Boldy Go, Volume One only captures the opening rounds of miniseries.Yet, I am thrilled with the direction it’s heading. Johnson is putting ‘Holy Crap!’ moments into a franchise that hasn’t really surprised anyone for years! Meanwhile, Parrott is shaking the Kelvin Universe up in mind blowing ways. You might not like every change either are making in the alternative universe Trek. But at least they're reinvigorating it at warp nine speeds!

Spock Looks Like Spock

Equally as good is the artwork. There’s been quite a bit of debate on the internet about photo-realism in comics lately. For books based on TV/ Movies, should the drawings looks just like the actors or not? I am strongly in the camp of making James T. Kirk look like Jim Kirk. Witchblade illustrator Tony Shasteen and Chris Mooneyham do an amazing job in capturing the likenesses of the actors. But I think I like Shasteen's work a little better as it looks a bit less like it's Manga.
Plus, I like the extras he’s adding to the series as well. For instance, following a Trek tradition of having respected British actresses play high ranking Vulcan’s, Tony Shasteen cast Dame Judi Dench as the head of the Vulcan High Council.
Drawing Judi Dench as a Vulcan! This is an example of the nostalgic feel of the original series that the creative staff have put in the series. You can tell that they all equally love Star Trek. But the team also don’t want this book to be a repeat of already established story lines either. If the next volume is just a fraction as good as this one, I will boldy go wherever they take the Enterprise crew!

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

Review originally published July 27, 2017 on outrightgeekery.com.