Star Wars: Age of Resistance - Villains (4/5)
You might recall awhile back how I reviewed the "Age of Resistance - Heroes" comic. This is the villains counterpart to the Resistance era in this sextet of graphic novels. The TL, DR version is that this proves the adage that bad guys have more fun, or something...yeah, I don't know if it's an actual adage. But, basically, I preferred this to its do-gooder counterpart. So on that note, I'm actually going to give quick rundowns of each short story.
FALLEN GUNS
This is Phasma-focused, but it's seen through the eyes of a stormtrooper - KM-8713. Plotwise, it's nothing special - First Order is taking a world, Phasma takes KM under her wing, has her toughen up, only fed up with Phasma's sociopathy, KM turns on Phasma, but her blaster is useless against her armour, and is shot in turn, and left among the corpses that Phasma used as a means to an end in a mass assault. Like I said, plotwise, it's nothing special, but this is far more character-driven rather than plot-driven. KM doesn't stay around long, but I find her as a sort of 'what if?' that Finn could have gone down. She laments her lack of an actual name, takes off her helmet despite regulations, despises Phasma, turns on her, but is still loyal to the First Order (or maybe she's just brainwashed). Also, I might be reading too much into this, but the use of "KM," for a human female of East Asian appearance...KM? Kim? I found myself calling her that in my head. Only unlike Finn, "Kim" doesn't get a happy ending, because the First Order has waves of disposable meat, and sociopaths like Phasma running the show.
MAROONED
This focuses on Hux. Again, the plot is simple. He and Kylo Ren are in a shuttle, but due to sabotage, it crash lands on a world, and they're the only survivours. What's more, Ren is knocked out by some kind of creature that a survivalist has tamed - one who's a former soldier of Alderaan. So, Hux has to pretend he's anti-Empire, while using Ben's status as Han/Leia's daughter to gain sympathy points, while speaking in double meanings to let the reader know how much he hates Ben, but fooling the survivalist into thinking he respects him. Eventually, First Order troopers come, slaughter the survivalist's beasts, and leave him to rot, in the knowledge that he'll die when this world is destroyed as part of a test firing from Starkiller Base. Returning to said base, Hux finds the man who betrayed him and executes him, getting vengenace for childhood stuff.
Mixed on this one. What's actually the most interesting is the author's notes. Apparently, the idea was to have Hux presented as he was in TFA, but establish the tension between him and Kylo Ren. Then, in TLJ, the idea was to have him be the whipping boy, and then subordinate to Ren without Snoke, cementing his hatred even further. Whether you like this development or not is up to you, but there was at least a plan that both films followed. However, Hux's backstory of being a bastard child to his father, and be emotionally abused? Yeah. Never in the films. I figure if I read this comic before TFA, I might have liked it more, but again, it's EU stuff.
FALL. OR KILL IT
One of the best stories in the anthology, and a case of fan service done right. This is Snoke-focused, but it's actually Ben that has most of the story. Snoke takes Ben to the cave on Dagobah - the same one that Luke went into. It's almost a recreation, but with lines and themes changed. So, for instance, when Yoda states that Luke doesn't need his weapons, Snoke stresses that Ben MUST take his weapon. And the result is that while he encounters a vision of Luke in the cave and slays him, when confronted with visions of Han and Leia, he can't bring himself to strike them down...yet Snoke thinks he does, because in his anger, Kylo's power destroys the whole cave.
Like I said, this is argably fan service, but it's fan service done well. Said it before and I'll say it again, Kylo Ren is easily the best thing to come out of the sequel trilogy, and the idea of being 'seduced' by the Light side is an interesting reversal. So it does tie things in nicely, with Snoke thinking that Kylo passed the test of the cave, while we, the reader, know that he hasn't. I'd say this is the strongest story of the bunch.
What's arguably weaker though is the author's note, which is very scant on Snoke, and states that "maybe there's things we'll never find out about him," or words to that effect. Bear in mind, this came out after TLJ, and it feels like an apology when, IMO, none is needed. Snoke isn't interesting, and TLJ did something creative when it cut him down like it did. I'm not saying Snoke should lack any backstory, but I'm not particuarly interested in him. Rise of Skywalker walked things back of course, bringing Palpy into things and giving Kylo Ren a redemption arc when none was needed, but that doesn't undermine this comic in of itself.
OUT OF THE SHADOW
This is the final story and arguably the weakest, but it still has things going for it. Basically, this is the Kylo Ren-focused story, where he leads First Order forces against a world that was previously conquered by the Galactic Empire, under Vader's command. Basically the whole thing of simultaniously stepping in Vader's footsteps, while also stepping out of his shadow by permanantly subduing the natives this time, whereas the Empire had to retreat in the end.
Again, nothing special plotwise here, but what elevates it is the artwork. A lot of panels are done side by side, where the artwork is framed exactly the same way, but things are replaced - Empire stormtroopers with First Order stormtroopers, Vader with Kylo Ren, etc. It's good visual storytelling. Also, in addition to the Phasma story, it really helps sell the First Order as an army of fanatics. Even more fanatical than the Empire. Reading this, I catch glimpses into what the sequel trilogy could have been, but alas...
Anyway, yeah. This hasn't shifted my view on the sequel trilogy, but I really enjoyed this comic. At the least, it's given me some appreciation for the First Order, even if that appreciation didn't come through into the films.