Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Tomorrows 1

Posted by Geek-o-Rama Admin on 2:00 PM

The future: Art is illegal. Everything everyone ever posted online has been weaponized against them. The reign of the Corporation is quickly becoming as absolute as it is brutal—unless the Tomorrows can stop it.

Tomorrows is the kind of comic you get if someone binge watches the movie Hackers after reading way too much Ayn Rand and Aldous Huxley.  The main character is Zoey an artist in a world where art is illegal.  Zoey is rescued from certain death at the hands of nazi-esque storm troopers by artistic terrorist Claudius who takes her to the hideout of the elusive Tomorrows, a group of artistic terrorist who even have an AI named Warhol.  They are trying to protect the world from a despotic tyrant who is building a computer that will allow him to take control of any human mind at will, allowing complete control, right down to a person’s thoughts.

Zoey narrowly escapes capture with the rest of the Tomorrows due to a dream that leads her into the testing chamber that will finalize her transformation into one of the Tomorrows when surprise raid by Claudius’s ex-lover turned enforcer for the Icarus project causes the rest of the team to be taken.  Fortunately, all she needs to break into the fortified tower holding her friends is a suped up Hypercycle and the elusive Warhol AI.  At the conclusion of issue one, the Tomorrows hijack the airwaves announcing that a new day is dawning to the masses of humanity held in thrall to an oppressive government.

This could be a great book, but if the first outing is anything to go by, it will take some work to get there.  First off the art was something of a turn off.  They were going for a total dystopian world with odd lighting, garish colors, and beaten down humanity.  It just seemed too contrived.  Also half the characters in the book always look like they had blue skin.  Presumably this is due to lighting, but it still just looks weird.  The whole thing reads as very derivative and I couldn’t wait for the end.

Another stepping stone for this series to get past, is also one of its marketing draws.  Every issue will be done by a different artist.  It seems like an interesting concept, but it also means that there could be a definite lack of continuity from one issue to the next.  I would only recommend this book if you are a fan of dystopian epics where a stalwart band of resisters is trying to overthrow a tyrannical government bent on suppressing free will from humanity forever.

For more information about other great titles from Dark Horse, visit their website:  Dark Horse Comics



Geek-o-Rama received a copy of this book for the purpose of this review. All thoughts, comments and opinions are those of the individual reviewer.

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