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Omega The Unknown (2008)

by Jonathan Lethem(Favorite Author)
3.66 of 5 Votes: 3
ISBN
0785130527 (ISBN13: 9780785130529)
languge
English
genre
publisher
Marvel
review 1: Reprints Omega the Unknown (Limited Series) #1-10 (December 2007-September 2008). Titus Alexander Island is raised and schooled by his parents, but suffers dreams of a man called Omega. When Alexander’s parents are killed in an accident, Alexander finds they are robots. Placed in the custody of a hospital worker and now finding himself in New York City, Alexander finds difficulty fitting in. Alexander works to adjust to his new life, and the being called Omega finds himself in the city being hunted by the self-proclaimed superhero known as the Mink and others. What is the connection between Alexander and Omega and what does it mean for the world?Written by acclaimed author Jonathan Lethem with Karl Rusnak, Omega the Unknown is a limited series modern version of the ... morecult ’70s Marvel comic of the same title. The series received positive reviews and an Eisner nomination for Best Limited Series and Best Lettering and has been collected in a hardcover version.Omega the Unknown is important to Jonathan Lethem and that helps this title. In his award winning novel, The Fortress of Solitude, the characters often talk about the short lived comic and with such an obscure character, it is obvious that Lethem probably read and liked the comic as a kid. That puts a lot of stock in the series since he is a fan and he’s going to treat the character correctly.It is interesting to read this series side-by-side with the original series (which has also been collected as Omega the Unknown Classic) in that it does follow certain aspects of the original story. Both series were ten issues and both series had the strange ties between the title character and the younger character (called James-Michael in the original series). Here, Lethem gets the advantage of being able to finish the series when Gerber was forced to bring in other Marvel characters like Hulk and Electro and the questions were never answered (until much later in Defenders)…It is more of a self-contained story in Lethem’s version thought the final wordless Omega the Unknown #10 is a bit hard to follow at points.The series as a whole is kind of “wacky”. I don’t necessarily love that, and some of the basic storyline is hard to follow. Much like the original series, it is unclear how the reader is supposed to interpret the story. Is it serious? Is it a comedy? I get a bit tired of the Mink part of the story and rather wish that they had stayed more focused on Alexander and Omega.I also think that Farel Dalrymple’s art is very interesting. The series has some great covers and fun interior art. Dalrymple’s style can’t work with everything, but it works great here with the bizarre story. He obviously has fun with the character and it is reflected in his art for the series.Omega the Unknown isn’t for everyone. Fans of the character must pick it up, but if you are just an X-Men, Spider-Man, Superman, or Batman type reader, you shouldn’t expect a real super-hero comic. It feels like a very independent title and if it weren’t for the preexisting Marvel Comic, you wouldn’t know it wasn’t an independent experimental series…Omega the Unknown was an oddity in the ’70s and remains an oddity today.
review 2: Having never read the original Omega comics (except for what is in the afterword), I can't really say if Lethem does it justice, judging by what I've seen I think he may, but despite good writing (with occasional overwriting) and capable art, the book failed to engage me. Can't quite decided if it was due to it being overdone to the point of occasionally convoluted or if it had to do with the weird angularity and lack of detail in characters' faces or just the basic plot didn't grab my interest completely. Lethem is a good writer, who has hits and misses, for me Fortress of Solitude was a definite miss, and this was failry on par, so it's possible I just don't care for his style of superhero story. Or maybe because of his hits, like the excellent Motherless Brooklyn, I had higher expectations of this book. It is an overall perfectly decent graphic novel, an updated remix of a somewhat obscure original, it just wasn't great. 2 stars. less
Reviews (see all)
kim
goofy, funny superhero book that I enjoyed but I'm not entirely sure I can tell you why.
tubthumping
I once made out with Farel Dalyrymple. My claim to fame.
Demydem
A good read, even if you never read the original comics.
Haris
Loved the art, loved the minimal story.
palmsprings
maybe i'm too dumb for graphic novels.
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