El caos se apodera del Imperio Galáctico. Después de la destrucción de la Estrella de la Muerte, el lord sith Darth Vader ha caído en desgracia y el emperador Palpatine lo ha degradado. Ahora, tiene bien claro que no se puede confiar en nadie.
A espaldas del Emperador, Vader persigue sus propios fines: dar con ese misterioso piloto que destruyó la Estrella de la Muerte y en quien tan poderosa es la Fuerza, y descubrir la identidad del desconocido que está conspirando con el Emperador.
Pero, para ello, va a necesitar sus propias fuerzas secretas. Con dicho motivo, Vader recluta a la doctora Aphra, arqueóloga de androides, que lleva al jedi caído a Geonosis, una antigua zona de guerra…
Por Kieron Gillen y el español Salvador Larroca, dos autores reconocidos en Marvel por sus trabajos en Thor o Iron Man.
I am starting to pity Kieron, how the fuck do you write a story about a nine verbal like Darth Vader? Aphra is talking away, and he isn't even commenting on her entire rant, bloody hell. And the issue he is the lead of this comic. If Aphra sticks with him, and triple zero we might have some hope at remaining in the loop about the happenings of this story. At one point I was going to give this 2 stars, but by the end I felt better about it, honestly I could probably still give it 3 stars but whatever, I like the events enough to remain entertained.
Betrayal unravels as the plot thickens in Star Wars: Darth Vader!
The (nostalgic) trip to Geonosis proved one thing: the BT blastomech is scary as hell, packing one serious firepunch that would literally fry its targets. The Triple zero droid is insane too, it is capable of torture and sarcasm! They, my friends, are not R2-D2 and C3PO.
We also get some serious conversation between Vader and Aphra, the droid archaeologist. I know, in Vaders heart, he doesn't want to kill this charming girl. But let us see, let us see.
Dialogue was a bit clunky at times in this issue. That is an unfortunate thing since I am liking the series very much. But overall, issue four is a satisfying read.
This issue cleared up a lot of questions that I had after issue two.
Aphra is a droid archaeologist and is forced to help Vader build a droid army. So she suggests going to the droid factory on Geonsis, which is run by the hive queen.
Compared to the sparse character they painted in the original movies, and the angsty teen in the prequels, Vader comes around in these. He's further explored in this one, and it only gets better.
Quite an interesting relationship developing between Dr. Aphra and Darth Vader. Although this issue isn't as good as it could have been, it's still pretty good.
This was good, not great. Lots of backstory to get Vader a robot army and set up the last two issues of this series. I like where this is going, hoping for a worthwhile payoff. Looks to be a solid story arc.
I think i cracked the code on why people like Darth Vader in spite of him being a genocidal monster- it's gotta be the confidence. Same can be said of Batman and Dracula and any other badass in a black cape. They're good at what they do and impossibly suave while doing it. It's when you look into the implications and his dark history where he starts to just be scary. But that probably plays into too. When someone scary is on YOUR side there is something kinda comforting about it.
But I digress. This issue was 🔥 👌 From the ominous opening to the amazing fuckin art. (Best art in the series so far i do declare motherfucker).
That and it was really damn interesting to watch Aphra call Vader out on his casual insistence on murdering all the people who help him when he's done using them... Character growth may not come to pass as a result of this interaction, but damn if it wasn't satisfying to watch Vader take pause.
Its always kind of interesting when they have Vader fall back on locations from the prequels to showcase his previous life as Anakin. Although the action segments/cells/frames/scenes in this were quick and not too descriptive/easy to make out, I thought it was kind of lacking. Did like the follow up to how Geonosis was sterilized, but that apparently it didn't work on the "immortal" hive-queens hidden far below ground. The idea of hybrid Battle Droid-Geonosians was kind of.... 'eh'.
Not sure where they go with the cliff-hanger ending, hopefully its not just another "Emperor's Hand" or some such thing. Never particularly cared for the "Emperor's backup plan to Vader" type storylines that proliferated in the old-canon and sadly has even reappeared (in a couple of places) in the new canon as well.
This review will be the same for Darth Vader, Volumes 1-6 & Skywalker Strikes, Volumes 1-6.
I picked up these comics at the library. I spent about 30 minutes with each one. They are fun. I think the stories mesh well with the films. These volumes need read in order as Vader and Luke are characters in each and the timeline only makes sense if they are read chronologically. I enjoyed most of the artwork, the one exception being Han, the artist just didn't quite capture Harrison Ford. Right now our library only has these volumes, when and if more arrive I will read them as well.
Book 4 in this graphic novel series about Darth Vader, follows the period after the ending of "A New Hope".
Vader, Aphra, and the droids are on the planet Geonosis exploring an old droid factory to see if there is anything there they can utilize. While there, a bounty hunter informs Vader that the Empire is planning to replace him.
28 page comic. Illustrations are appropriately dark. Star Wars fans will enjoy.
Best of the Darth Vader (2015) comic series thus far.
I really love Dr. Aphra and her droids. Lord Vader is just the cherry on top here, and he is actually behaving like the Vader I've come to admire, respect, and expect.
Amazing issue, but you do need the backstory of the 4 to the left (Vader Down counting as one of those). Definitely not something you could just jump in to without missing a ton of understanding.
Guillen y Larroca demuestran aquí por qué son el tándem perfecto para Darth Vader. Y ojo, que sólo serán veinticinco números. Una maravilla del entretenimiento con un Vader desatado y una Aphra que todavía ha de demostrar todo su potencial. Potencial que le llevará a tener serie propia en el futuro. Aquí se palpa el inicio de una gran historia.
The group of Vader, Dr. Aphra, Triple Zero, and BT-1 head to Geonosis in search of an army. Once there, they discover a little resistance, which BT-1 handles very quickly.
We discover that the group came in search of a brood Queen who is connected to a giant sack, similar to the xenomorph queen in the Alien series. However, what comes out of this sack are functional robots.
Vader makes quick work of cutting off the sack and having it airlifted out before the brood queen can really start to resist and they are on their way.
Later, Dr. Aphra is tweaking the output of the sack to the exact specifications that Vader has listed when Vader is made aware that Black Krrsantan has returned with the requested man.
He tells Vader that he can hold up to anything, however, a quite chipper Triple Zero is happy to test the hypothesis. Later, he emerges with good news and bad news.
The good news is that he was able to get all the intel the needed from the man. The bad news is that he perished in the process. Again, he is quite happy about everything overall.
This is a really fun issue where everyone gets a little room to flesh out their characters a bit.
Now that all the major characters are in play and setup to go, the next couple of issues could be something special. We shall see.
Darth Vader returns to Geonosis, where he encounters a Geonosian queen who, unable to reproduce biologically, has created droids whom she considers to be her "children." Luckily, Vader and Aphra have droids on their side: the flamethrower-wielding astromech droid BT-1 and the torture enthusiast protocol droid 0-0-0. The setting does, of course, remind Vader of the kiss shared with Padme prior to entering the arena in Attack of the Clones. I love how Aphra is intelligent enough to know the risks of working with Vader; she knows that there is a chance that he may kill her when the job is finished and even tells him how she wants to be killed if it does happen. Luckily, Vader believes that she is still of use. Regardless, she reiterates that it is unwise for him to let her live and that he should kill her with his lightsaber when the time comes. Once again, we see Wookiee bounty hunter Black Krrsantan, who has brought Vader the stranger hired by Emperor Palpatine. After he is tortured and killed off-page, his name is revealed to be Doctor Cylo-IV. Vader then learns about the location of his supposed rivals whom Palpatine is considering to replace him. I am very eager to see who these rivals are and how Vader will face them.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
In the right hands, Vader is a compelling character. writer gillen does a great job of reminding the reader why Vader is so interesting (especially when not burdened with Hayden Christensen-face)