sorrytodisturbyou's review

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funny fast-paced

5.0

ppetropoulakis's review against another edition

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3.0

The election results declare a new president that does not like Spider Jerusalem. Not much happens in this volume but still some good chemistry and character development between Spider’s sidekicks.

lunaseassecondaccount's review against another edition

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3.0

I'm glad the plot has finally settled into place. I do want to like this series, and now that the plot is starting to roll out and the worldbuilding and exposition has been done, I think I can get into the groove with this comic series. And Ellis does have a knack for creating characters you love to hate. I don't particularly favour any of the characters yet, but I know I find Spider to be a touch annoying. But I think that's most likely the point.

There's not much to say here other than I think I might actually start enjoying the series now.

shane_tiernan's review against another edition

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3.0

This is the fourth graphic novel in this series and I would have to say the weakest so far. Spider's ranting is still great, my favorite line, "Why do I like winter so much... it's not JUST because I like to see old people suffering." But the over all plot didn't seem all that creative. It's really a continuation of book 3 but it didn't have the cool stuff book 3 did.

So I'll probably read the next book (if I can find it cheap) but I'm a little worried.

spiffysarahruby's review against another edition

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5.0

This was created in 2000. Again, so much prognostication here. The Beast is Trump. Callahan is Trump. However, I like how the last story is actually, remarkably hopeful.

I think EVERYBODY should read this during 2019 while our own next presidential election kicks off, and if we get our hearts broken in 2020 like we did in 2016... everyone needs to read this again. Especially the last story about winter.

This was actually, really incredible writing. I'm adding this volume to my Favorites.

ayushk21's review against another edition

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adventurous dark funny informative lighthearted reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

some_okie_dude27's review against another edition

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5.0

"As with most of the future worlds in science fiction, you're not talking about the future: you're talking about the present. You are using the future as a way of giving a kind of...room to move." - Alan Moore

"I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me." - Hunter S. Thompson

I find that the best pieces of science fiction are often worried. As Charlie Brooker pointed out, science fiction is often a good way to illustrate the worrying trends that we've accumulated. This is becoming more and more apparent since the future seems to be becoming more of a reality as the years move along. I should also add that science fiction often works best when it's angry.

Transmetropolitan is a very angry, contentious book. It's a good comic to read when you're feeling angry about the world that we find ourselves living in and feeling like there's nothing, you can do. Transmetropolitan is Ellis at his most angry, and most politically opinionated and while I don't agree with everything Ellis has to say in here, I do find myself in enthusiastic agreement with his main thesis with this series: this system is broken, and it needs to change immediately.

Ellis isn't subtle in this series, and there's plenty of targets that he takes shots at with this series. Much of the humor in this is often uproarious and madcap, and the characters and situations that our main cynical bastard Spider Jerusalem finds himself in often proves to be a romp. But unlike his friend Garth Ennis, Ellis doesn't get lost in the crude humor of his series, it is merely a means to an end.

Unlike DeConnick or Andrews, who are content to blame the issues of society on an overarching evil bogeyman. Ellis is more interested in what creates a society that allows corruption to fester and infect the system that's supposed to be looking out for us. Much of his concern revolves around the complacency and disillusionment of average people, who are often led to believe that their votes and opinions don't matter, so why even try to engage. But Ellis seeks to beat the complacency and disillusionment out of his readers and get them to act to make true changes to our society.

We share Spider's frustration and hatred of the city, and his rage at the carelessness of the people around him. Spider isn't easily likable and in fact is a huge pain in the ass for anyone who is unfortunate to come across his path, for better or for worse. But the points that he makes are often right, and Ellis does just enough to make us sympathize with him, even as much of an ass he is to his 'filthy assistants' and everyone around him.

Much of the science fictional aspects of this series are often light, not focusing too much on how this stuff would work in the world but exploring how these technologies affect the people who live in the world. Like all great science fiction, it often questions how the future will affect the people who live in it and how it changes the world around us. I was reminded a lot of Philip K. Dick's work in how Ellis manages to combine the surreal and the mundane, where all these wacky sci-fi inventions are just another part of life, and Ellis never stoops to ogling over how cool everything is.

While being an entertaining, science fiction romp, it is also a great piece of journalism through fiction. Much like David Simon's The Wire, Transmetropolitan is a series that exposes the dark truths of the world we live in through a fictional lens, though unlike The Wire, it is much more of a madcap romp. Ellis isn't as committed to realism as Simon is, as Ellis takes more notes from Hunter S. Thompson's gonzo journalism. He sees that truth doesn't always have to be real to attain the intended effect.

Transmet has proven to be more poignant as we move into the post-Trump era of United States politics, particularly with his depiction of The Beast, who almost seems like a carbon copy of our previous president, though somehow, he's less sleazy. Transmet is one of those series that gives me fire as a journalist, I don't know if I want to be as confrontational or as bitter as Spider, but I would like to make a similar impact in my own work as a journalist.

But within its anger, I was surprised to find how compassionate and emotional this series proved to be. I often find that anger is a perversion of sadness, and Transmet is a prime example of that. Ellis' anger is masking the sadness that he has over the degradation of our society and the ideas of compassion and decency...and as this series has aged, I find that the message of Transmet to still ring true...and it shouldn't. The anger in Transmetropolitan often hides the vulnerability that is shown in its characters, and even reveals part of Ellis himself...even if he doesn't entirely mean to. For all the angry, puerile shit that Warren throws at us, there's an undeniable sense of humanity within Transmetropolitan, and that's what gives it charm after all.

At the end of the day, Ellis is a lot like Thompson. He surrounds himself with the ugliest parts of humanity to expose the ugly truth that surrounds us in our daily lives. Transmetropoltian is Warren Ellis off the leash, and I wouldn't have it any other way.

mihnea_cateanu's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5 really...after an uneven start this series just gets better and better. Although in the beginning Spider was an unlikable bastard, I`m starting to relate to him.

Lots of drama, tension, some laugh out loud moments, a plausible future world, great characters, a potent critique of the madness that is politics, and raising some interesting questions about the way we treat each other without providing any easy answers...what`s not to like?

Can`t give it 5-stars because the art just doesn`t do it for me...pretty bland background most of the time and the characters grin way too much.

sizrobe's review against another edition

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5.0

I love the contrast between the Beast and the Smiler. Both are bastards in their own way, and when those are the choices, there really is no winning. I especially liked the one-off at the very end. "The future is an inherently good thing, and we move into it one winter at a time."

orithyia's review against another edition

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challenging dark medium-paced

5.0