I'm not trying to be snarky, I'm honestly curious.
After hearing a bunch of people I respect and tend to agree with raving about Warren Ellis for so long, I recently bought and read a whole bunch of comics having never read them growing up at all. And I have to say: I'm sold on Warren Ellis. I could not be more excited for the soon-arriving conclusion to Planetary, for instance. But most of the rest of the comic medium that I've tried... I dunno, it just feels like I'm missing something.
Blood Will Tell is an excellent example. I spent like $20-something on this thing, and I read it in just under 45 minutes. It ostensibly shows us some interesting alternate points of view by showing things from the Klingons' perspective, but I didn't learn anything new about the Klingons as a whole or specific characters by reading it. I mean, what new info was there? That some people were adverse to Gorkon's proposal? That Klingons made a big show but were occasionally impressed by Starfleet's willingness to fight? How were either of those not readily apparent from the source material already?
So: nothing new about Klingons. Ok, so howabout character arcs. Well, I don't feel like the length was sufficient to generate characters I cared about, so when the twist came at the end I just didn't care at all and it didn't mean anything to me.
So: nothing new about Klingons, no character arcs that are interesting. How about artwork? That's the one thing comics have that prose doesn't. Well, again - how did this show us anything new? I have a pretty active imagination, and I didn't see anything in here I couldn't have imagined myself, with the possible exception of a couple of pretty beautiful panels after the old dude's fight with the girl towards the end. But that was like 2 pages max.
I basically feel like I spent $20 on storyboards for a bunch of largely irrelevant deleted scenes from the TV show.
So - why is this worth spending money on?
Like, I didn't like Troublesome Minds very much, but I did understand why other people loved it. I honestly don't get why this is appealing to anyone. I am puzzled.
After hearing a bunch of people I respect and tend to agree with raving about Warren Ellis for so long, I recently bought and read a whole bunch of comics having never read them growing up at all. And I have to say: I'm sold on Warren Ellis. I could not be more excited for the soon-arriving conclusion to Planetary, for instance. But most of the rest of the comic medium that I've tried... I dunno, it just feels like I'm missing something.
Blood Will Tell is an excellent example. I spent like $20-something on this thing, and I read it in just under 45 minutes. It ostensibly shows us some interesting alternate points of view by showing things from the Klingons' perspective, but I didn't learn anything new about the Klingons as a whole or specific characters by reading it. I mean, what new info was there? That some people were adverse to Gorkon's proposal? That Klingons made a big show but were occasionally impressed by Starfleet's willingness to fight? How were either of those not readily apparent from the source material already?
So: nothing new about Klingons. Ok, so howabout character arcs. Well, I don't feel like the length was sufficient to generate characters I cared about, so when the twist came at the end I just didn't care at all and it didn't mean anything to me.
So: nothing new about Klingons, no character arcs that are interesting. How about artwork? That's the one thing comics have that prose doesn't. Well, again - how did this show us anything new? I have a pretty active imagination, and I didn't see anything in here I couldn't have imagined myself, with the possible exception of a couple of pretty beautiful panels after the old dude's fight with the girl towards the end. But that was like 2 pages max.
I basically feel like I spent $20 on storyboards for a bunch of largely irrelevant deleted scenes from the TV show.
So - why is this worth spending money on?
Like, I didn't like Troublesome Minds very much, but I did understand why other people loved it. I honestly don't get why this is appealing to anyone. I am puzzled.