Tuesday, 15 September 2015

Star Wars Shattered Empire/We Stand on Guard

The new Star Wars Shattered Empire Force Awakens series and the latest offering of We Stand on Guard.



In general my opinion of 'filling-in-the-gaps' and 'flashback' story arcs, let alone a series where that aspect is the entire premise, has been quite low. Journey to Star Wars: The Force Awakens might just be the exception. 

The story starts in the maelstrom of battle that takes place over the forest moon in Return of the Jedi. We follow Green Squadron and an A-Wing pilot named Shara (Green Four) as they try and survive Emperor Palpatine's well-laid trap: a fully armed and operational battle station (if you just said that in Ian McDiarmid's voice have an internet cookie).

The abrupt 'ending' in Return of the Jedi was obviously necessary for the cinematic experience but in the context of the Galactic Civil War the destruction of the second Death Star was to Star Wars what Normandy was to World War II; yes it was a huge tide turning event but it was the beginning of the end, not the end itself and all of the real work now had to be done. There was a huge amount of fighting to do after this and that is the path that this series starts down.

The drawing is detailed, muted and epic all in one go and well-suited to space combat. For the recent wave of gamers getting serious about X-Wing Miniatures Game from Fantasy Flight Games this first issue is worth your coinage for sure.

It also includes something that I always played out in the back of my mind: what happened after Luke loaded his dying dad onto that shuttle in the Death Star II hangar bay. Snippet below, full scene in the comic.


We Stand on Guard is a series I spoke of previously. It is written by Brian K. Vaughan (of Lost and Saga fame). My local comic guru in Dublin warned me that the last issue was a bit graphic and he wasn't underselling it either, this issue (#3) is hard to read at times as the writer and artist go into some detail about the true horrors of what it's like to get interrogated in wartime and how much easier it is to break the rules of prisoner treatment than it is to have them enforced.

After reading it, the cover image becomes haunting and iconic for the characters in the series so far.

Both well-written and outside the main-stream, if you haven't tried it yet and you're looking for something to distract you from the impending Marvel revamp, look no further.

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