"But no need to stand on ceremony. You may call me King Arthur!"
This book is a collection of the first comic book maxi-series, as claimed in the introduction by Don and Maggie Thompson. The series was written by Mike W. Barr who is probably best known for his writing on various Batman titles such as Batman and the Outsiders, the Year Two story in Detective Comics and the Son of the Demon graphic novel. The art was by British artist Brian Bolland who is more often associated, these days, with fabulous cover art but also worked on early Judge Dredd stories for 2000AD and DC's The Killing Joke.
It is the year 3000 and Britain is under attack by relentless aliens from the solar system's tenth planet. In it's hour of need, King Arthur, it's greatest defender, is reborn. His first act is to restore Merlin to his side followed by the reincarnations of his knights of the Round Table. They discover that Morgan le Fay is behind the alien attacks and so old conflicts are renewed.
I bought this book because it is one of the few examples of a comic series illustrated by Bolland whose work I love. Unfortunately the story did not match my expectations. For a comic that was DC's first for mature readers, it felt very immature - let's mix Arthurian legend with the future and an alien invasion and it'll be cool. It seemed very thin and being stretched over twelve issues did not help. This book has not aged as well as some of it's contemporaries from the mid eighties. It doesn't help that a number of later comics, such as Fables, deal with the updating of mythological or fantasy characters much better.
But I came for the art and the art was good but it didn't blow me away in the same way that his covers can do. Partly this is because it does not have the same detail as his work in black and white does - Bryan Talbot is another good example of someone whose work I prefer in black and white because so much more goes into it. I was also expecting more due to the problems that I know plagued this book as regards to deadlines however I don't feel that it necessarily shows in the finished page. So all in all a bit of a disappointment - maybe you had to be there to appreciate it.
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