In Review: Man Plus #1

MAN PLUS #1
WRITER/ARTIST: André Lima Araújo
COVER A: André Lima Araújo – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com
COVER B: Ryan Stegman – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com
COVER C: Yishan Li – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com
PUBLISHER: Titan Comics
ON SALE: Now

The Book: On sale in all good comic shops now is Man Plus #1 from Titan Comics, the highly-anticipated Final Cut of the hit web-comics experience by artist/writer André Lima Araújo (Avengers AI, Ultimate FF, Age of Apocalypse) comes this high-octane dystopian thriller in which technology rules with a heavy hand, cyborg strike teams are commonplace, and the lines between man and machine grow hazier every day.

Welcome to Olissipo City: a shimmering metropolis where technology rules with a heavy hand, cyborg strike teams are commonplace, and the lines between man and machine grow hazier every day.

From artist/writer André Lima Araújo comes a high-octane dystopian thriller that whisks the reader into the thick of a robotic skirmish and the unsettling conspiracy that lies at its heart…

Man Plus #1 Cover A By André Lima Araújo

Man Plus #1 Cover A By André Lima Araújo

The Review: Considered a must-read for fans of Akira and Ghost In The Shell, fans of Titan Comics recent sleeper hit Surface Tension (out as a collection in March) will also enjoy this heady, beautifully drawn SF mystery tale that has more than a few tips of the hat to the Blade Runner film and some of the great bande dessine comic creators.

Creator André Lima Araújo – who’s both a comics creator and architect – has been teasing his many fans about this project for a while on his tumblr and it’s great to see the project finally on sale. It was worth the wait.

Opening with an action-packed sequence as a mysterious group of thugs pursue a confused and equally mysterious android – their mission unhindered by any consideration for the civilians of Olissipo City that get in their way – the story develops at a brisk pace. The underfunded police force begin a handicapped investigation (there’s barely enough in the budget for a helicopter search for the fleeing android) against the backdrop of a beautifully-realised cityscape and environs. This first issue builds to a tantalising climax that should have readers back for the next issue.

With stunning art and a richly-layered story, my only gripe with the book is the lettering which although by no means poor (the letterer will have been following an editorial brief, after all), lacks any emphasis to draw the eye through a balloon and punch up the story. This in turn exposes the occasional oddity of phrase, which given the futuristic setting may of course be deliberate, but I do think some more fine tuning is required to tighten the dialogue.

This is really minor criticism – don’t let me put you off taking a look at the book, because as a future police procedural, Man Plus has set out its stall with aplomb and more than enough intrigue to want me to follow it through.

Man Plus #1
COVER A: André Lima Araújo – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com
COVER B: Ryan Stegman – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com
COVER C: Yishan Li – Buy it from ForbiddenPlanet.com

• André Lima Araújo tumblr: http://andrelimaaraujo.tumblr.com | Follow André Lima Araújo on Twitter @erdna11

• The first 12 pages of Man Plus #1 are live right now on the official Man Plus website, www.manpluscomic.com – and here’s some preview pages

Man Plus #1 Cover B by Ryan Stegman

Man Plus #1 Cover B by Ryan Stegman

Man Plus #1 Cover C by Yishan Li

Man Plus #1 Cover C by Yishan Li

Man Plus #1 Preview 1

Man Plus #1 Preview 2

Man Plus #1 Preview 3

Not to be confused with: Man Plus, the 1976 science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl, which won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1976, was nominated for the Hugo and Campbell Awards, and placed third in the annual Locus Poll in 1977. Pohl teamed up with Thomas T. Thomas to write a sequel, Mars Plus, published in 1994.



Categories: British Comics, downthetubes Comics News, Featured News, Reviews

Tags: , , , ,

Discover more from downthetubes.net

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading