Battlestar Galactica: War of Eden, Story by Comic Writer Rob Liefeld

By Jacob Malewitz, published Apr 03, 2007
Published Content: 317  Total Views: 53,446  Favorited By: 15 CPs
Rating: 1.7 of 5
Famous and controversial illustrator Rob Liefeld helped write the story for this first issue of the Battlestar Galactica series, telling the story called War of Eden.

A brief synopsis of the story is given on the last vestige of human civilization, a battlestar called Galactica, is given.

Humanity was growing exponentially across a dozen planets when the Cylon empire, Cybernetic beings who conquered worlds and stole technologies, nearly wiped out the whole race of man. Humanities last hope is the Galactica, all other battlestars were destroyed by the Cylons.

Led by commander Adama, the Galactica crew hope to find an ancient tribe said to have "migrated to a mythic world called Earth."

The comic opens with commander Adama on his death bed, and his son Apollo thought lost leaving no clear-cut successor to lead humanity to Earth. But Apollo returns, and finds that his father is dying.

Apollo had been abducted by a group called the Seraphs, who offered the technology needed to reach Earth called a Temporal Drive.

When Apollo finds his father dying of an incurable disease he writes that "It was the most devastating moment since the destruction of our civilization,"

The majority of the story is told from Apollo's journal and viewpoint. The Cylons are close to the Galactica, and Apollo decides the only chance they have to survive is to use a dangerous technology and reach Earth - humanity's last hope.

There is a strong use of colors in the comic which accentuate the story well. Right when the journal grows old, action is used to enliven the scene.

It is an ambitious comic that was published in 1995 (years ahead of the Battlestar Galactica's newest TV series), which is comparable to Star Wars in terms of scope, not to mention the deftly drawn fighter battles.

It could also be compared to the Babylon 5 series, as in Babylon it was the last of the star bases, and in Galactica the last of the battlestars.

The Battlestar Galactica TV series is now incredibly popular, but this comic tries to tell the same stories but in a different medium.

Credit: Courtesy Yahoo.com

Copyright: Yahoo

Takeaways
  • Rob Liefeld's popularity has gone down quite a bit since his early days at Image.
  • The Battlestar Galactica story was attempted one other time prior to this series
Comments
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Was there any proofreading or editing on this article? It's filled with typos in nearly every sentence, and the second paragraph makes no sense whatsoever. What's more, it's not even a review--just a very awkward synopsis of the issue. Only 1.7 out of 5 stars are given, with no explanation for the low score. And the caption under the cover image is incomprehebsible Sorry, but reading this pointless and extremely amateurish review was a complete waste of my time.

Posted on 04/26/2008 at 10:04:24 PM

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