Copo Snow
has finally seen the light volume two of this essential series, written by Warren Ellis and drawn by John Cassaday.
much we had to wait but the wait has been totally worth it.
archaeologists of the impossible journey ends here, saving the world of Four, and leaving us with a memorable close.
is undoubtedly the most ambitious of its author, and also the best.
Perhaps the only complaint would be given, is that people are not grown in popular culture be pointless, since
Planetary is above all a tribute to the pulp genre in all its aspects. Thus
would remain in nothing if there were some most brilliant scripts back, and here there are.
There are many references and resources used by the English, so resutarĂa tedious to list them all.
The trick is to discover one by one, since they do not have to be very smart to see them.
is curious, and even rare nowadays, to find a comic book of this kind, since the current writers have a tendency, which is marked by publishers to tell the stories in several issues in order to then be compiled in volume. Warren Ellis
only needs 22 pages per issue to tell us what you really want.
And although each chapter can be read independently, the whole work is a puzzle where every piece falls into place, and which can not miss any, because this would be their souls are burning.
And is that the author, is leaving clues in each installment of what is to come, and if we miss some, do not understand its complexity.
I like to compare this masterpiece with the television series Fringe
, to which it bears some similarities.
A clear example is in the fact that in both, although it seems that some chapters are independent of the main plot, there is always some detail in them, which tells us otherwise.
We are, as stated on the back, with the most important work published in mainstream comics over the last decade.