Planetoid #5
It’s total war, as Silas and his people battle dozens of the Ono Mao’s metal agents in the fight for their lives and their freedom in a final conflict that will scatter the ground with mechanical parts and stain the dessert floor blood red.
Garing’ s impressive drawings as always, are very impressive with pastel colours with a splash of red for the gruesome human deaths at the hands of mechanical monsters. There’s a 2 page aerial spread that focuses on the bloodshed & mayhem on the battlefield, painstaking details that will make your jaw drop like a sack of hammers.
If I have anything negative to add, is that I felt that the very ending about consumerism & a money obsessed culture was a little heavy handed, but it’s a just a modicum of how I feel for this series.
The Team
Written, illustrated and lettered by Ken Garing. Published by Image Comics.The Pros & Cons
Like a comic from Mark Millar, Planetoid’s long overdue, fifth and final issue is finely here (seriously I thought it would never come out). I shouldn’t be too hard on Ken Garing, I can’t imagine the hard work & pressure when it comes to creating & developing your creator owned mini series, especially when you do all the work. I was looking forward to the conclusion to this wild space cowboy story and although the way it unfolds doesn’t come as much of a surprise, it’s still a very satisfying ending to a terrific slice of sci-fi/fantasy comics.Garing’ s impressive drawings as always, are very impressive with pastel colours with a splash of red for the gruesome human deaths at the hands of mechanical monsters. There’s a 2 page aerial spread that focuses on the bloodshed & mayhem on the battlefield, painstaking details that will make your jaw drop like a sack of hammers.
If I have anything negative to add, is that I felt that the very ending about consumerism & a money obsessed culture was a little heavy handed, but it’s a just a modicum of how I feel for this series.