ppetropoulakis's review

Go to review page

4.0

The pulpiness continues, with space pirates, battle arenas and overall space extravaganza. The only issue that gave me a hard time was the sprawling overarching arc that was hard to follow at times.

bearded_ginger's review

Go to review page

5.0

More space hopping gun slinging fun from Heath Huston and his pals. Loved seeing moments from the first arc have pay-off here. Few things are more satisfying in comics then seeing proof that the story had been totally planned from the start.

jamesgoux's review

Go to review page

4.0

This is a great volume, some serious revelations go down, and serious shit happens. Really enjoyed it.

matt4hire's review

Go to review page

4.0

One thing that gets me about this book is about how easily characters die, and yet it's always shocking. I kind of love it.

stilldirty's review

Go to review page

5.0

This got a little heavy. And strangely, that made it harder to put down.

lukeisthename34's review

Go to review page

5.0

Avoided this series for so long just because of my faulty assumptions. I can't get enough now! After the last volume's gut-punch flashbacks, I didn't think we would see more loss and heartbreak, yet here it is. The characters are just so brilliantly varied and layered. The motivation behind what Maya does (that really tears apart the series) is amazing. The actions of everyone have real consequences and the entire story is playing out at a breakneck speed that I usually wouldn't like but somehow works here.

You know what it reminds me of? The Walking Dead early volumes before it turned into a 'let's watch your favorite beloved character get raped/butchered/eaten/racially assaulted'.

Just great.

theartolater's review

Go to review page

3.0

It was...okay.

This is the first time I've finished at Fear Agent trade and felt genuinely conflicted about it. The story is good, yes, but there's really little relationship to the original story that got me addicted. Instead of being a pulpy homage, it's something...different. Still good, but not great, and definitely not Fear Agent as I know it.

I've had some trouble getting my hands on the final two volumes, so I'm curious as to how it evolves from here, but I'm also not in a ton of a rush to find out. I don't ultimately know what that says about this series.

jgkeely's review

Go to review page

3.0

At this point the series seems to have moved off course from it's original intentions and fallen heavily into the realm of Cerebus Syndrome, where a series departs from it's origins and begins to rely heavily on interpersonal drama. Original, Fear Agent was meant to be an homage to earlier sci fi series, before the pseudo-scientific utopia of Trek and the spiritual journey of Star Wars.

The series began rather promisingly in that vein: episodic, weird, and with an emphasis on high adventure. However, Remender has slowly replaced those elements with melodrama, and his guaranteed plot twists have ceased resembling the twilight zone and started to resemble a soap opera.

There is still the background of New Weird sci fi, and this arc gives us both an arena scene reminiscent of L'Incal and the always delightful 'mysterious jungle world' subplot, but both of them are packed with long-winded, emotionally wrought expositionary dialogue.

Remender clearly has an obsession with character psychology, which he doesn't mind talking about at length in the letters page, but he isn't great at getting that psychology onto the page. His story construction is a bit haphazard, overly full and quickly paced, which is hardly complimentary to the high-adventure style that marks his inspiration.

He wants to play with the ideas of his chosen genre, with subversion and satire, and when he can get his point across, it proves enjoyable. However, his histrionic characterization is not played for laughs, despite the fact that its overwrought intensity makes it hard to take seriously.

He's combining different styles and inspirations here, but so far, he hasn't synthesized them into something new and interesting, he's just put it all together and let it fly, which isn't entirely unenjoyable, but it's also rife for eye-rolling. I wish Remender were in on the joke more often, because when he takes things too seriously, the quality drops.

What's interesting to me is that, so far, he's failed to explore the difficult questions that marked the Silver age of sci fi and its comic book adaptations. There isn't that constant question of 'what makes us human?' or 'what is the nature of the universe?' that lent those books a curious, ponderous depth, even when they were palpably pulpy.

In fact, the book hardly takes a moment for retrospection anymore, it's all battles, deaths, and dramatic revelations. I'm afraid I have to side with Hitcock when he said that you can't tell a story through constant escalation, you have to have contrasting moments of peace and introspection to help the epic moments stand out.

Remender is walking a fine line between all the things his comic could be, but doesn't really want to commit to any, which is unfortunate, because it leaves the thing rather without direction. He doesn't really want it to be as campy as old sci fi, yet he doesn't want to take it seriously, like the Trekkies and all their 'tech manuals'.

Remender's compromise isn't bad, but I keep getting the feeling that it could be so much more if it was more scrupulously constructed. He's trying to do a lot with it, which is admirable, but in the end, a lot of it isn't working, and the fact that he's settling on 'omg drama!' doesn't inspire much confidence.

The art is getting better, but there are still some really awkward panels here and there, and I still blame the inkers. The panel-to-panel structure is also a bit lackluster. They could stand to do some more artistic exploration in the bright, strange, alien worlds they present.

The high drama also feels like it might profit from some more cartoony reactions, at least then the words would better match the picture. If you're going to subsist on 'Shocking Secrets Revealed!', then I want the character's face to have the subtlety of a radio serial organ.

My Suggested Reading In Comics
More...