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Showing posts from September, 2021

Review: Orbiter

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"I don't think you're thinking weird enough." Ten years ago the space shuttle Venture vanished from Earth orbit, along with its crew of seven astronauts. No trace off them was ever found. As a result, the space programme was set back; only unmanned probes were sent into space. The Kennedy Space Centre is now an empty shell surrounded by a shanty town... Now the Venture is back. Falling out of the sky, wrapped in the flames of re-entry, it lands near the KSC. There is only one crewmember aboard and he is catatonic. And the shuttle, although it looks normal at first glance, has been...   changed... Orbiter by writer Warren Ellis and artist Colleen Doran is an homage to astronauts, in particular the seven who lost their lives when the Columbia burned up on re-entry in 2003. Their sacrifice is an inspiration to future generations who will follow "Because it is too important a thing to allow it to die in the sky." The US Space Agency brings in a team of speci...

Review: The Body

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Econo Motel, Middle of Nowhere, Arkansas, 12:51 am. Mac's phone goes off. He and Becksly get a call. Time to go to work... The job? A body to be disposed of. It's in the trunk of the car. Just a couple of complications: It's not human. Also, it's not dead yet. No problem for bald musclehead Mac and his young partner. Just find a place off the road and start digging... but then a guy in a pick-up truck arrives. A guy with bright green eyes... The Body by writer Billy Diamond Jr and artist Jay Red is a short, punchy one-off sci-fi thriller, 28 colour pages of pulp-noir (think Quentin Tarantio having a stab at X- Files ). It seems that we are not alone in the universe, and our cosmic neighbours are a little on the ugly side.. In more ways than one. There is not much in the way of backstory here, it's straight into the action with guns blazing. Red's style is free, loose and atmospheric, as a floating sense of dread gives way to sheer nightmare.  Have Mac and Beck...

Review: Dominion - Fall of the House of Saul

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Above the planet Gibeah, capital world of the Dominion, powerful battle cruisers patrol the skies. On the surface stands Castle Gibeah, home of the Dominion ruler King Saul. It is night time and the king is plagued by bad dreams: memories of the moment he fell from grace... Dominion - Fall of the House of Saul by writer and artist Dr Barron Bell is a space opera inspired by the Biblical story recounted in the First Book of Samuel. It's Old Testament meets Star Wars with a cast of anthropomorphic animal characters: Saul and his family are humanoid lions, the soldiers are cheetahs, panthers and wolves, the prophet Samuel is a very crotchety old crow and the enemy Philistines are sinister, warty toads. A year before, Saul had just defeated the Amalekites and was celebrating his victory. Samuel was none to happy, however, because the King had not obeyed the commands of the Almighty to not only visit total genocide upon the Amalekites, but to also destroy every last vestige of them. S...

Review: Not All Robots

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Florida, 2056: The Earth is an uninhabitable wasteland thanks to humanity’s disastrously poor judgement. Survivors live in pressurised dome cities, internal climate controlled by robots. Actually, everything is controlled by robots. Thanks to advances in artificial intelligence and increased automation, all services once performed by humans are now handled – much more efficiently – by robots. Government, judiciary, police: all automated. Where does this leave humans? As little more than pets. Some time ago it was decided – by a committee of computers – that humans required supervision, and so each household was provided with a live-in automaton to take care of them. These robots go out to work and are the sole earners; the human families – liberated from the drudgery of having any kind of occupation – spend their days in perpetual leisure. Sounds like paradise? Not exactly. Many people are unhappy with having machines in control of their lives, left with no meaningful activities and...

Retrospective: Six From Sirius (1984)

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Somewhere in strange light... ... a mind conceives. The Sirius Six is a large saucer ship from the Sirius Swarm, the largest human interplanetary federation in the galaxy. Its crew of six "freelance troubleshooters" are captain Jakota Lone, weapons specialist Starn, computer wizard Zematin (and her "solenoid soul"), explosives expert (and loquacious poet) Skreed, psychologist, anthropologist and diplomat LaMasque and grease monkey Grod (a green-skinned Rakosian). They receive a mission from Sirius Hub; to rescue an ambassador from an impenetrable space prison manned by deadly robot guards ('fax-men'). All in a day's work for this resourceful bunch...  Six From Sirius,   by writer Doug Moench and artist Paul Gulacy is a four-part series by a duo who worked together on Marvel's   Master of King Fu   in the Seventies. Here we have the same adventure saga feel, with a resounding  Space 1999/Blakes Seven   visual vibe. Like those iconic sci-fi TV shows, t...

Review: Beta

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"Is he the light?" "That I'm not sure of, but... he may be the darkness we need!" Jones is a successful business owner; very rich, very comfortable and very corrupt. In his large, opulent office he falls asleep at his desk after drinking a glass of water. He is rudely awoken by a tall, sombre man in a military uniform, wearing a cape and brandishing a flaming sword. The intruder grabs Jones by the throat and lifts him off the floor with superhuman strength. He tells Jones to confess all of his crimes to the police and to the media...or face judgement. The office bursts into flames. Then, in the blink of an eye, the stranger - and the flames - vanish.... as if they never existed. Hmmm.... Something in the water, maybe? Jones is arrested. Ben - who bears a striking resemblance to the flaming sword wielder - witnesses this with satisfaction. A virtual reality chat with his friend Zoe, who is studying criminal psychology, offers insights into why a man like Jones wo...

Review: Beyond The Breach

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Vanessa is driving into the great Californian outdoors, leaving her old life behind. That old life ended when her mother died of cancer, Vanessa at her bedside while her boyfriend cheated on her... with her sister... Cutting all ties, she speeds down the road.  And blacks out. Waking up in the wreckage of her car, a little battered but not seriously injured, she crawls free and tries to get her bearings. Her car hit a tree and turned over. As she clambers to her feet and looks around, she sees ... madness. Other cars have either crashed or stalled in the road. The people from the cars are being attacked by large, flying, carnivorous, alien creatures. Short furry humanoids stab at them ineffectually with strange metal spears.  In one car a child is screaming. His father is being pulled out of the driver side window by one of the flying things. Another one has already carried his mother away... Beyond the Breach by writer Ed Brisson and artist Damian Couceiro is a reality-smas...

Review: Phantom on the Scan

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"It's going to happen again. Tonight. Another is going to die." Twenty years ago a comet fell to Earth. Several people connected to the event have developed various psychic abilities. Recently, for some unknown reason, those people have started dying one by one. Matt knows this because Dorian told him, Dorian being the little dead boy that only Matt can see or hear; a personification of Matt’s powers. With Dorian’s help, Matt discovers that his therapist knows more about what is going on than he has revealed. Despite what he has said during their sessions, he knows that Matt’s unique perceptions are more than just delusions. He also knows the names of other gifted individuals. Dorian finds four of these people and brings them to meet Matt at a diner. The new arrivals are indeed psychic like him but are wary of Matt and his insistence that they are in danger… until one of them has a seizure that results in his head exploding. As if that were not horrific enough, a small al...