Absolute Planetary Book Two
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Product Description
The long awaited finale to Planetary is now available in an Absolute format.
As the series hurtles towards its conclusion, Snow initiates the second part of his comeback plot to stop The Four, makes a startling revelation about his past, and uncovers information on the world’s first moon shot…in 1851! Will Snow be able to draw the last of the Four out of hiding, and can he act before his teammates lose their faith in him?
Collecting issues 13-27 of the original series as well as 14 pages of additional content which includes:
Alan Moore’s intro to Book One, plus the original trade paperback take in art
Joss Whedon’s intro to Book Two, plus the original trade paperback take in art
Who’s Who spread featuring a block-color version of the take in to issue #27, with first-appearance and significant issues.
A creation of DC Direct action-facts spread, and a creation of the Snowflake page by colorist Laura Martin.
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When Planetary first launched sometime in 1999, it was a small like the less boisterous and far more cerebral younger sister of the additional paradigm shifting Ellis book, (for the time,) the Power. Basically a tale about superpowered “archeologists” of the weird, Planetary is a clever literary vehicle that is at once highly original and to some extent borrowed: it’s a literary (and therefore fictional contrivance) for looking into the well loved fiction of the last century. Or, it’s using fiction to “investigate” fiction (the concepts, characters, tropes and worlds we know). And it’s bloody brilliant.
This second volume advances the ongoing conflict between our three main protagonists, (Jakita Wagner, the sexy, super-powered muscle of the group; “Drums,” a machine empath who’s a small like an idiot savant; and Elijah Snow, a century ancient heat-extractionist/subtractionist, believed to be a sentient version of the planet’s white blood cells,) and a group of dark, incredibly treacherous and sadistic people, known only as “the Four,” (a sly and deliberately not too well hidden allegory of Marvel’s Fantastic Four.) Elijah, like others born in the year 1900, is believed to be a “spirit of the 20th century,” – people who were born into the world at the very beginning of the last century to protect and keep the world alive and safe into the next.
The tales here significantly ratchet up the tension and mystery surrounding the enigmatic Four and the Planetary organization. At the end of the last volume, Elijah discovers that he is indeed, the “Fourth Man,” of Planetary, in fact the grandfather figure behind the Planetary corporation, which has been archiving weird and weird information about the world for many years. Learning that his memory was selectively blocked by the leader of the Four, Randall Dowling, Elijah becomes obsessed with his desire to bring these people down.
But in doing so, Ellis takes a grand sweeping slide through well loved 20th century myth and pop culture, giving us honestly recognizable versions of Tarzan and the mythical, hidden, golden city of Africa, among many things. He expands on the backgrounds and origins of Jakita and Drums, explores the background of Elijah himself, posits conspiracies and relationships between characters like Dracula and Sherlock Holmes, and offers scientific explanations for concepts of the soul and the afterlife.
I won’t get into the details of the tales to allow additional readers to experience the process of discovery I went through myself, when reading the series the first time, but Planetary’s that kind of ride. Basically like psychedelic drugs in the form of sequential art and text, the tales in this volume are a kaleidoscopic trip through the spirit of well loved culture and fiction, with an unapologetic admiration that does not border on being reverential. They also have the benefit of being (a) officially authorized, (b) not harmful to your health in any way, and (c) really logical and simple to recollect afterward. The series highlights all of Ellis’ strengths and his fixations; a talent for marrying compelling fiction with real or hypothetical science, an enduring fascination with space travel, and an admirable skill at building conspiracies. Perhaps one of the greatest achievements here though, is that what appeared to be disparate and random occurrences and tales in the first volume finally blend together into one certainly coherent whole that satisfies in many ways. Even apparent coincidences in the tales contained in Planetary Volume 1 find explanation and or deliverance here. And this too represents one of the many strengths of reading Planetary. Every chapter was as different from the previous as the one that followed. But Ellis is able to make one coherent whole of the lot, and while some of the relations are surprising, none ever strain credulity past the point where suspension of disbelief breaks… An exception to the “done in one issue” format and a standout tale here, is a two part “mystery in space” saga, in which the team remotely explore a fascinating object in space while dealing elegantly with one of the more powerful members of the Four.
Although Ellis is an accomplished and talented writer, one of his main weaknesses is an inability to end things well. He’s incredibly excellent at building tension and making characters that sound real. His endings though rarely deliver the “oomph” tales of the type he likes to tell, probably should. I suspect it’s cos Ellis is too smart to allow himself to rely on cliché’. Perhaps if he were effective in a different medium, this might be a excellent thought, but in any ancient fashioned “excellent versus evil” tale, readers need that emotional catharsis of seeing evil doers suffer!! So the final confrontation between Planetary and the last remnants of “the Four” slightly underwhelms here, at least on that emotional, visceral level, but it is nonetheless clever and ironic. The very last tale though, provides a to some extent endearing, if overly sciency “pleased ending,” the reader does not even realize they want, until they get it.
For all that, Planetary 1-27, now collected in two of these “Absolute” editions, probably represent one of Ellis’ best works in the medium. This volume is also cool for two very glowing essays by Alan Moore and Joss Whedon, as well as a speech from one of the issues.
Two final observations about the volume itself – My major disappointment with it is that, for a series that was clearly reasonably vital in the last decade, DC comics has gone bone cheap on the extras, a common sin they’ve been committing with additional Absolute volumes. There’s no extra material from artist John Cassaday, no interviews from Ellis and Cassaday about the series itself, which I find is criminal. If you’re going to call something “Absolute,” it should really be the last word as it were in format, providing as much insight into the material, content and process, as you possibly can. How hard could it be to reprint some interviews with Ellis or Cassaday about their recollections and intentions for the series? This was clearly an vital series for DC; it was produced when letters pages were still included in issues and introduced a new language of storytelling into mainstream American comics. Many of the techniques Ellis developed or employed here soon became the standard for the industry. Now everything looks and reads like Planetary or the Power in pacing and layout. Also, look out for the very soft covering of the actual hardcover. You’ll want to be very gentle with the edges of the book itself. Although heavy and of rumor has it that high quality, the material used on the hardcover itself seems to bruise easily at the edges, exposing an nearly chipboard like material bottom. So watch out.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5