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Planetary: Crossing Worlds
Written by Warren Ellis
Art by John Cassaday, Jerry Ordway, and Phil Jimenez and Andy Lanning
2004
Available now from Islington Libraries
You can reserve this item for free here:
http://www.library.islington.gov.uk/TalisPrism/
Even if you've never actually read one I'm sure you still know what superhero "crossover" books are like. Team X meets Team Y or Superguy 1 meets Superguy 2: it starts with a misunderstanding which leads to them having a fight - there's posing and some destruction before they realise their mistake - make friends - and join up and save the world: Blah blah blah. I mean - yeah - the marketing guys love them: but after they're done no one ever really pays any attention to them [1].
Fortunatly for us Warren Ellis isn't much for sticking to established templates - and so in Planetary: Crossing Worlds (which collects 3 seperate Planetary cross-over stories: one with The Authority, one with the JLA (namely: Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman) and one just Batman on his lonesome) the stories told are rather different (ok - maybe not so much the first one [2] - but the definitely other two). And - as this is Planetary - (and even more so Warren Ellis) - the parallel universe underpinings of so many other cross-over stories (it's rarely the case that Team X/Y and Superguy 1/2 live in the same universe - most of the time when these people meet up it's because someone's come across a hole/bridge in space and time or whatever) is expanded upon and used to achieve some cool striking effects: less parallel universes as convenient plot point and more: my name is Warren Ellis and I have a subscription to New Scientist [3].
I wanna say tho: that for those of you thinking of giving Planetary: Crossing Worlds a try that haven't already read Planetary (the series that spawned it) then you should - only not all the way to the end (maybe just Vol 1 and Vol 2?) because (damn you Warren Ellis! *shakes fist at sky*) there's stuff that happens in Vol 4 of Planetary that is only going to make sense if you're read this first. Confused yet? (Ha - and we haven't even got to the multi-dimensional Batmans yet... yeah - you heard me: multi-dimensional Batmans).
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[1] I guess the only exception to that (and one that I have on this blog) would be the Batman / Judge Dredd crossover book (link below) and that's only worth checking out because of the yummy-looking fully painted artwork: not the cursory stories it's based around.
[2] Altho H. P. Lovecraft does rock up at the start - so it's not like it's a total write-off.
[3] And I'm not saying that as a bad thing yeah?
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Links: An Existential Nightmare Review, Acephalous Article: How to Teach the Interrelatedness of Historical Context and Audience via Warren Ellis's Planetary/Batman: Night on Earth, The M0vie Blog Review: Batman/Planetary: Night on Earth.
Further reading: Planetary, The Authority, JLA: Earth 2, Batman: Snow, The Batman/Judge Dredd Files, Marvel 1602, The Adventures of Luther Arkwright.
Profiles: Warren Ellis.
All comments welcome.
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