| The Umbrella Academy Volume 1 (Umbrella Academy) | 
enlarge | Author: Gerard Way Creator: Gabriel Ba Publisher: Dark Horse Category: Book
List Price: $17.95 Buy New: $9.79 You Save: $8.16 (45%)
New (38) Used (9) from $9.79
Avg. Customer Rating: 11 reviews Sales Rank: 3057
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 192 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 6.5 x 0.4
ISBN: 1593079788 Dewey Decimal Number: 741 EAN: 9781593079789 ASIN: 1593079788
Publication Date: July 16, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New! Save 30 - 50% off of retail prices on our wide selection of comic book graphic novels, manga and anime, role playing games, DVDS, Osprey military history books, and more!
|
| Customer Reviews:
Artistic Team Makes "Umbrella Academy: Apocalypse Suite" Greater Than Its Parts August 23, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I tried. I really tried...but no matter how many story angles I slide in and out of to gain a foothold on this beautiful, melodic jam of funny pictures, at the end, it's hard to steer clear of musical comparisons when talking about Gerard Way and Gabriel Ba's The Umbrella Academy.
In the first place because the trade collecting the first six issues of the series is sub-titled, Apocalypse Suite; next, because one of the heroes turned main evil dudette is a living, lethal musical instrument hellbent on destroying the world with her music; and lastly because Gerard Way is the lead singer of My Chemical Romance.
But it doesn't stop there.
When you stop sucking in the story in separate layers of pictures, words and color, and really let the thing coalesce in your noodle, what is heard high above the campy noise of pseudo-steampunk-end-of-the-world-heroics is how well the creative team riffs off one another. That near perfect jam is so rare in comics, it's worth getting this collection to witness it, even if you're not a fan of doomsday storylines.
To begin with, consider Gabriel Ba's artwork. Clearly taking stylistic cues from Mike Mignola, Ba takes what could have been one-dimensional characters created to invoke the ludicrous nature of superhero teams and turns in character designs and sequentials that grab you sometimes by the shirt collar (if not your cojones) and at others by your funny bone. Either way, his linework is clearly in the service of his storytelling mojo and they don't let go. And honestly, you don't want them to either, which is why this story works so well as a graphic novel.
The artwork in black and white is stunning. But it's not until Dave Stewart joins in the storytelling that the characters and the emotional undercurrent begins to rise. Stewart is an accomplished colorist, and really, an artist with few peers. Hellboy stories, for example, owe plenty to Stewart's genius for translating emotional tension into color. But he isn't an artist because he can use Photoshop really, really well. In The Umbrella Academy: Apocalypse Suite, Stewart blends his brand of magic to extend Ba's kinetic linework. Take a look at any action scene in the collection and you'll see that Stewart doesn't simply lay down flats that are color-appropriate to the scene. He goes far beyond the production work to draw with the color, echoing and amplifying Ba's line. And if you think that's Stewart just doing what he always does, you'd only be half right. As a counter measure, take a look a his work on Hellboy: Darkness Falls. It's just as powerful, but he let's Duncan Fegredo's complex and nuanced linework take lead. In TUA, Stewart is front and center with Ba in transforming the high concept into an emotionally resonant story that gives credence to Way's tight script and characterization.
Which leads me to consider the story itself. Being a newbie, you'd forgive Gerard Way if he had taken himself too seriously in this first story arc and tried to convince us with a straight face that it's a story of aliens born through human female hosts and trained from birth to save the planet. The rest of the book is so strong in art, color and lettering (kudos to Nate Piekos for knowing how to treat words as art without pushing Ba and Stewart offstage to get all the attention), it would still have been worth buying. But Way didn't go there. Instead, Way seems to stand confidently under the spotlight (as surely he is used to) and with the mash-up allure of a lead singer channeling P.T. Barnum, tells us his outrageous premise through characters that seem to have backstories to fill ten graphic novels -- characters so fully formed and relationships so exquisitely dysfunctional, you want to buy into the spectacle, for it's one grand show.
Way, Ba, Stewart and Piekos have achieved something rare in comics. In an industry that models itself around "production lines", this bunch of beautiful anarchists have managed to create a work that transcends all of them. It's not perfect, but you want to see and hear more. Get me a lighter. Anybody got a lighter? Suddenly, I feel the urge to be a groupie. Anyone...anyone?
Ommus Editor, Indiepulp.com
Editor's Note: As we finished sprucing up this piece for publication, it was announced at the San Diego Comic-con that The Umbrella Academy: Apocalypse Suite won the Eisner Award for best limited series. Dave Stewart won for best colorist. Gabriel Ba and his twin brother, Fabio Moon won for best anthology, 5.
"There's just nothing special about you." August 3, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
A rocker writing comics? What's that about? And, yet, Gerard Way, of the rock band My Chemical Romance, comes up with a humdinger of a comic book in THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY: APOCALYPSE SUITE, a wonderfully strange and inventive six-issued limited series published by Dark Horse Comics. It's an auspicious debut, really, and, now, count me as completely sold on Gerard Way, comic book scribe.
So what's this thing about? Well, some time ago, around the globe and in the same instance, at 9:38pm, forty-three gifted children were born to women who had before shown no signs of pregnancy. An extraterrestrial masquerading as a human adopted seven of these children and trained them to save the world. But theirs was a cold and callous father, so it's no surprise that the kids grew up as a dysfunctional family. However, the training took hold and the kids did become superheroes.
But the story really begins years after the team, called the Umbrella Academy, had disbanded as most of the siblings reunite for their father's funeral. I say most, because one had perished (we don't know how), while another is too bitter and disinclined to pop in. During this sad gathering, a world-threatening menace promptly surfaces, forcing these bickering capes to quit the bellyaching and work together...except that, of course, they don't quit the bellyaching.
For those looking for something different, something original and wonderfully off-beat, THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY: APOCALYPSE SUITE will fit the bill. I don't know how much of Gerard Way's experiences and life style influenced him in his writing, but his stuff reads as from an askewed perspective. APOCALYPSE SUITE is inventive and surreal and keeps on surprising. For a first-time writer, Gerard writes with startling confidence and with wit and a certain airiness. To quote THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY's artist, Gabriel Ba: "For me, it's not important anymore that it's his first comic, or that he's a big rock star, because the story is really interesting and well told."
Even thru the bizarre takes, Way infuses a layer of complexity and tragedy which grounds the stories. A key moment surfaces early on when eminent scientist and entrepreneur Sir Reginald Hargreeves (the alien's guise) impersonally tells one of his adopted daughters, "There's just nothing special about you." This heartbreaking indictment would have devastating repercussions years later for the Umbrella Academy. By the way, Sir Hargreeves is so detached that he tends to refer to his children as Numbers One thru Seven. Likewise, he insists that his children call him The Monocle, instead of "dad." Dang, that's cold. You could see why the kids grew so messed up.
Way peppers his story with a diverse cast of personalities. I have my favorites. How could you not dig Spaceboy (Number One, and team leader), whose head years ago had to be transplanted onto a gorilla's body. Or the time-travelling boy (Number Five) now forever stuck at the age of ten? Or Rumor (Number Three), who has the neat ability of telling a lie ("I heard a rumor...") and have it come true. These characters happen to inhabit a quirky world in which apes have gained intellect and where supervillains are regularly featured guests on television talk shows. Man, I love it!
This trade comes with very decent bonus material: the intro written by Grant Morrison, who is a huge influence on Gerard Way; an afterword by Dark Horse Comics editor Scott Allie; rough concept designs and bonus art by Ba, cover artist James Jean and, yes, by Gerard Way, himself a graduate of New York's School of Visual Arts (although his stuff here is pretty sketchy); and two out of print short stories - the two-paged online teaser "Mon Dieu" and the 16-paged Free Comic Book Day story "...But the Past Ain't Thru With You."
A bit now about the artwork, because Brazilian illustrator Gabriel Ba's significant contributions shouldn't be neglected. Dude's style is expressive, angular, and semi-exaggerated; it deftly captures the off-kilter essence of this comic book. Dave Stewart's colors complete the visual look, while James Jean's covers are terrifically evocative (and not at all reminiscent of Ba's artwork, but it works). All in all, a near perfect storytelling team. I hope they stay together for more UMBRELLA ACADEMY stories (although rumor has it that cover artist James Jean might be simply too busy to stick around for future issues).
THE UMBRELLA ACADEMY is off to a roaring start, garnering props left and right from fans and critics. If you like being nudged off your comfort zone, then give this one a try. This is simply too good to pass up. The cheery news is that Way is chock full of ideas and has promised a limited series per year for the next busload of years. So, me, I'm desperately waiting on the Academy's next set of adventures, projected to be titled THE SCARECROW BLUES.
And, by the way, Gerard Way's rock band isn't bad, either.
An Awesome Collection! July 19, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I had become a fan of the Umbrella Academy when it had come out last year. It was smart, it was vivid, and it had this humor about it that drew me right to it. This collection of the original comics was wonderful, but there are a few extra stories (the online preview and the free comic book day) and concept art made by Gerard Way followed by completed sketches by Gabriel Ba that made this graphic novel even better. This is a wonderful story and any fan of classic, grotesque comics, Gabriel Ba, or Gerard Way (and/or My Chemical Romance) should get their hands on!
amazing June 26, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Umbrella Academy was one of the best books i've read this year. Way writes a hyper dense story full of ideas and wonderful character moments. If he throws all of these wonderful concepts at you but not so much where you are overwhelmed. Its a simple story but its perfectly executed. Also Gabriel Ba art is outstanding, His layouts are dynamic, i already liked him in casanova by fraction but this is a whole new level. The colors by Stewart only make the comic superior to most new books on the market. If you like weird, fun, and well plotted, paced story buy it.
A Real Review June 17, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
When I first heard about Gerard Way writing a series of comics based on superheroes I was shocked. I enjoy how he has written lyrics, they are amazing. And his writing is amazing and the form in which is drawn in is fantastic. When I read this a couple of months ago I was hooked but I could not find the rest in the series. And now they in a nifty volume and I can resume where I left off. For any fan of the band this is a must have and it isn't just for fans either. It really is amazing and colorful driven by a cool story with unique characters. It is truly remarkable in the way it's presented and I hope you will purchase this amazing collection. It is a nice change of pace from the volumes of DC and Marvel comics that seem to overflow on to the bookstores. It is nice that a new series as appeared and we have a chance to read something amazing. The umbrella academy is really good series and now we have the entire collection to read. It is the coolest comic I have read.
|
|
|