Script and art: Bruce Zick
Good science fiction seems to be a rarity in the world of
comics. There's an abundance of mediocre-to-okay sci-fi books, but very few
that really stand out in a sea of uninspired newsprint. The Zone Continuum
stands out, not only in the field of science fiction but in comics as a whole.
The Zone Continuum spins the tale of The Dar, a long-lived
race that coexists with man, unbeknownst to the human race. Environmental
hazards and man-made catastrophe creates 'Zones' in the electromagnetic field
around the earth. They are invisible to man and will kill any Dar who passes
between the barrier separating the zones. Talon is the Dar who leads Zone 27
and endeavors to find a way to breach the barrier between his Zone and the
adjacent one containing his wife, Paris.
Forever separated by their respective zones, this true love
kept apart in Shakespearean tragedy is not a new theme but has certainly not
been done like this before.
Although much of the focus is Talon's quest to reunite with
Paris, he also has to contend with a fellow Dar seeking to usurp his
leadership. There's also some deeper themes of environmental responsibility,
the destruction of mankind and a dash of vampirism, making The Zone Continuum
one hell of a ride. The art and detailed world-building that Bruce Zick has
done really steal the show here. It has a dash of the Pulps in the way Batman
has a dash of the Pulps. It's all rooftops and brick facade and wrought-iron
ladders, laboratories full of canisters bubbling with mysterious green fluid
and slightly Lovecraftian beasts that attack from the aether of The Zone.
The book is somewhat retro-futuristic, not in a way that's
not so much computers with touch screen capability but more so vacuum tubes and
Giger counters.
It's not retro enough to be steampunk, it's not quite
dieselpunk or gothic. Sort of a Decopunk, I suppose is my best description.
A world where you can almost see Roy Batty talking about the
Tannhauser Gate on the next rooftop over. It would fit in Anton Furst's Gotham
City skyline.
The art is phenomenal, mostly (but not entirely) because it
reminded me of MÅ“bius' Airtight Garage, in a thematic sense at least. The
grimy, Art Deco look was right at home with the Mister X comic or, on a base
level, the Big O anime series.
But without the giant robots.
The Zone Continuum gives you a sense of alienation, juggling
hope and despair, and by the end of it all you're unsure where the story ends
up, because the balls are still in the air. Go buy this book, folks. It's got
some crazy, new ideas and some jaw-droppingly amazing imagery. There are Kirby
Devices ALL OVER this book, and the end of part one gives us the gift of
Talon's djinni companion showing up in true, "Come with me if you want to
live", fashion on a giant motorcycle that looks like it was designed by HR
Giger.
I'll leave you with that mental picture, dear reader,
because if that doesn't give you the ammunition to check out the comic, there's
something amiss. Dark Horse is selling this tpb for $15.99 and if your local
brick-and-mortar shop doesn't carry it, I'm sure they'd be more than happy to
order it for you.
I'm speechless. Thanks so very very much.
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