Afbeelding auteur

Enrique Alcatena

Auteur van Hawkworld

13+ Werken 87 Leden 1 Geef een beoordeling

Over de Auteur

Werken van Enrique Alcatena

Hawkworld (1991) — Illustrator — 47 exemplaren
The Batman of Arkham (2000) — Illustrator — 20 exemplaren
El Libro Secreto De Marco Polo (2007) 4 exemplaren
Hallucinations - Drawings (2003) 2 exemplaren
Dugong y Manatí (2013) 2 exemplaren
Pesadillas 1 exemplaar
Esquilache En Xibalba (2017) 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Batman: Four of a Kind (1998) — Illustrator — 52 exemplaren
Convergence: Crisis Book One (2015) — Illustrator — 27 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Gangbare naam
Alcatena, Enrique
Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Alcatena, Quique
Geboortedatum
1957
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
Argentina
Woonplaatsen
Buenos Aires, Argentina (birth)
Beroepen
Illustrator

Leden

Besprekingen

Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

Hawkworld is definitely of its time. Like Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters (1987), rel="nofollow" target="_top">Black Orchid (1989), Adam Strange: The Man of Two Worlds (1990), Twilight (1990-91), and probably others I don't know about, Hawkworld was a miniseries of three double-length issues that dusted off a slightly moribund character (or characters) for a new era, by going darker and more intense. All of these series except Man of Two Worlds resulted in follow-ups, if not ongoings, so clearly something about this formula worked.

Hawkworld is a little different from the formula, though. Longbow Hunters, Black Orchid, and Man of Two Worlds all acknowledge the history of their characters, even as they tweak it-- they're more what we might call re-origin stories, crucibles that take pre-existing characters and give them a new set-up for ongoing adventures. Hawkworld, however, presents a new origin for Katar "Hawkman" Hol. In fact, strictly speaking, there's no superheroics in this book at all, as Hol adopts no secret identity; the book is entirely set on his homeworld of Thanagar.

I don't know much about Hawkman, to be honest, but this is the most intrigued I've ever been by him, and I found the depiction of Thanagar much more interested than what was seen in some of the 2000s space comics I've read. Thanagar is the capital of an interstellar empire, but one where cultural rot has set in. It's a morally complex set-up: our protagonist is the one who's afraid of outside cultural influences! The Thanagarian elite no longer produce anything worthwhile themselves, but depend on other worlds for their food, music, and entertainment, especially mind-altering drugs. They also import slave labor, but when the laborers have served their purpose, they get dumped onto the surface, the "Downside" away from the towers where the elite fly. Katar is a Thanagarian police officer, the son of Thanagar's foremost scientist, who asks for a job patrolling the Downside even though he could have had a cushy desk position. Unlike others, Katar cares about the history of his people-- a consistent mark of the story are monuments to Thanagar's past that only Katar cares about.

As you might imagine, Katar discovers more and more about the rot of his civilization, even as he rots himself, tempted into taking alien drugs by the attractive Shayera, the intriguing daughter of one of his father's friends. The story itself is pretty standard stuff, to be honest, but writer and penciller Timothy Truman elevates it by telling it well, with lots of details of writing and art alike. We actually don't know a whole lot about Thanagar beyond the broad strokes, but it feels like a fully lived in, real world. My only real objection is that Katar's principal opponent, Byth, seems a little conveniently too responsible for all the evils of an entire decadent civilization. Though one of the things I did like is the extent to which Katar himself is shown to be culpable, and how he spends a long time coming to terms with that culpability and making restitution for it. Until he's forced to fight again, Katar doesn't want to take down the government or anything; he wants to supply medicine and food to the inhabitants of the Downside.

The story ends with a set-up for new adventures; Katar and Shayera learn Byth has escaped to "some small green planet far beyond the borders of the empire." It also ends with Katar attempted to improve the plight of the Downside by working the society from the inside. All of this was followed up on in the Hawkworld ongoing; I've read the first issue thus far, and I look forward to seeing how the world introduced here is developed, though I'm disappointed that Katar heads off to Earth in issue #1, as I'd like to see more of this Thanagar. I know Hawkworld is notorious for its continuity issues, but as a story on its own merits, it's a solid re-imagining of a character I didn't care about, and I can see why a follow-up was commissioned.

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Stevil2001 | Aug 31, 2018 |

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Statistieken

Werken
13
Ook door
2
Leden
87
Populariteit
#211,168
Waardering
½ 3.5
Besprekingen
1
ISBNs
13
Talen
2

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