Fear the Empire!!!
This is the first Annual of the new canonical “Star Wars: Darth Vader” comic book. It features a stand-alone tale about Darth Vader visiting a planet under Imperial control.
Creative Team:
Writer: Kieron Gillen
Illustrator: Leinil Yu
THE RISING OF THE DARK SIDE
…the Empire is both a powerful friend… …and a dangerous enemy.
When Star Wars got into the popular culture in 1977 was a game changer for several reasons. The one that I want to comment here is how it helped to change the way that people see villains.
I don’t know you, but when I was a kid, and we were playing in group, you didn’t want to be the villain. The villain would lose! You want to be the hero! The hero would win! It was an easy choice. Naive, but easy and even logical at that age.
Always there has been villains, and certainly before Star Wars there had been many cool villains. However, I think that the status quo that heroes always win was still quite strong, and since losing isn’t any fun, I guess most of the people wouldn’t find appealing to support in any way to the villains of the story. After all, not only the heroes win, but also they were the ones that look cool.
The expanded universe of Star Wars proved to be fruitful in prose novels and comic books focusing in villains such as Darth Vader, Grand Moff Tarkin, Darth Maul, Asajj Ventress, Boba Fett, Jango Fett, Darth Bane, Darth Plagueis, General Grievous, etc… and not only one-shot rare opportunity, but several times for each villain, in both formats of publications. The villains had their names in the title of the books, they were the very reason why readers were eager to read the books, and in many, many cases since the they were the protagonists of the stories… they went out triumphant.
The game changed.
Star Wars changed it all and it lead the way in the 80’s to other franchises like Transformers, G.I. Joe, Masters of the Universe and Thundercats to create villains that they were as appealing (if not more) as the heroes, and kids then weren’t only interested in the heroes but also in the villains. Even other franchises like Doctor Who have an anthology dedicated to the Daleks; and in Star Trek, you can find a trilogy focused in the life of Khan Noonien Singh, for not saying of a book series focused in the Mirror Universe; and of course, Buffy, the Vampire Slayer have novels and comics dedicated to Spike & Drusilla.
The game changed and now you can play the villain…
…and who knows? Maybe you’d win.
DOUBLE-CROSS THE EMPIRE AT YOUR RISK
What is the need for so much ore so swiftly?
The Empire is building. It is always building.
The Rebellion made a hard blow against the Empire destroying the dreaded Death Star.
Some planets under the rule of the Empire started to think that challenge it was possible.
That was…
…a very, VERY dangerous thought.
Darth Vader is sent by the Emperor Palpatine to Shu-torun, a world with a rich ore mining operation, to make the necessary changes, in order to keep up the requested ore quotas, along with crushing any slim foolish attempt of insurrection.
Darth Vader traveled in his Advanced Tie Fighter, but not alone…
…He concealed the droids: 0-0-0 (Triple Zero) (a protocol droid who enjoys to torture) and BT-1 (Blastomech with a deceptive look of astromech), which had been tasked with a secret operation to secure the success of Vader’s missions.
Shu-torun’s Royal Family will never forget Vader’s visit and they will keep a little souvenir to ensure that.