Sunday, August 18, 2013

Comic Covers Of The Week - Planetary









 
(click to enlarge)
 
Ellis intended the focus of the book to be the superhero genre, rather than the superheroes themselves. "I wanted to do something that actually went deeper into the sub-genre, exposed its roots and showed its branches." and stated in his proposal for the comic series: "[W]hat if you had a hundred years of superhero history just slowly leaking out into this young and modern superhero world of the Wildstorm Universe? What if you could take everything old and make it new again?"
 
One of the series main features is the portrayal of alternate versions of many figures from popular culture, such as Godzilla, Tarzan, Sherlock Holmes, and Doc Savage. This extends to comic book characters from both DC Comics (e.g. Superman, Green Lantern and Wonder Woman) and Marvel Comics (e.g. The Fantastic Four, Hulk and Thor).

Ellis also introduced the concept of a multiverse to the series, drawing upon the mathematical concept known as the Monster group for inspiration. The multiverse is described as "a theoretical snowflake existing in 196,833 dimensional space", a reference to the visualization method used by some mathematicians when describing the Monster group.

3 comments:

M. D. Jackson said...

I've never read this but the covers are awesome and the concept is really wild!

I've gotta track these down!

Kal said...

It's a great series. I read it all in one shot myself. It's familiar but different at the same time but really interesting and unique. It's hard to find something that doesn't leave me jaded these days.

Cap'n Carrot said...

A great comic. I've got both Absolute volumes on my shelf.