Set in the world of Blade Runner, this is the officially sanctioned Omnibus edition of the first Blade Runner comic book series and based on the cult 1982 science fiction movie Blade Runner, directed by Ridley Scott.
This box set collects the final three volumes in the saga of Ash, first started in Blade Runner 2019 and featuring Aahna ‘Ash’ Ashina, the first female Blade Runner.
The astonishing saga of Ash concludes as she faces her greatest challenge yet.
20 years have passed since Ash helped a young girl and her Replicant mother escape from the clutches of her sadistic father – the business tycoon, Alexander Selwyn – to an Off-world colony. Now the heir apparent to the old Tyrell empire, Niander Wallace has ordered the capture of Cleo believing that her DNA holds the secret to Replicant fertility. Now former Blade Runner Aahna ‘Ash’ Ashina must once again return to Los Angeles and fight to save the city she loves from the insane machinations of Niander Wallace and his personal assistant, LUV, the Replicant Blade Runner, and fulfil a pact she made years ago to protect those she loves he most.
I'm a very big fan of Philip K Dick, his novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and the two feature-length Blade Runner movies (the original would probably make my top five favorite films of all time). I've not read any of the sequel novels by K. W. Jeter, nor, prior to this, have I read any of the comics or graphic novels. But given the expanding universe, I was very curious and wanted to give this a shot.
The story follows Aahna ‘Ash’ Ashina, the first female Blade Runner. It's been 20 years since Ash helped a young girl and her replicant mother escape off-world. But now the new leader of the Tyrell Corporation, Niander Wallace, is trying to bring Cleo back because he believes her DNA holds the secret to Replicant fertility - something that could completely change the course of Replicant evolution. Ash has to stay vigilant in protecting Cleo, warding off Wallace and his hired thugs and, perhaps most challenging, Wallace's personal assistant, LUV, the Replicant Blade Runner.
I definitely enjoyed this dive back into this world. The book creators, led by writer Mike Johnson and artist Andres Guinaldo, have done a great job in staying true to the look and feel of the world of Tyrell and Replicants. The mood and tone of the films, first created by director Ridley Scott, is still present here, brought forward through the art and coloring. It definitely helped for me to fall into this story by feeling like I was in the world.
The idea of a Replicant who might hold the key to the next (final?) step in being more human seems to be the natural progression of the story and it worked well for me. Though the character of LUV seemed to add more confusion to the story than interest. I'm not convinced we needed this added conflict to create tension.
The story jumps around a bit which disrupted my reading as it created some confusion ("Wait, why are we here?") and I'd have to page backward a bit to make sure I hadn't missed something.
And while I liked the tone created through Guinaldo's art and Marco Lesko's coloring, I'm not a fan of this style of art. I'm not sure what the term would be for this style, but I call it 'skewed realism' - it's realistic but it's missing depth. I think about a panel like this, that is, but isn't 'realistic':
Like a lot of graphic novels, the pages aren't completely taken up by story. Fifty pages here are taken up with covers, alternative covers, sample script pages, sketches, rough art, etc. I love seeing the process of a graphic novel, but I didn't need 50 pages worth.
Looking for a good book? The graphic novel, Blade Runner 2039: The Complete Series Omnibus, collects (and finishes?) Ash's story and definitely adds to the intrigue of Replicants and the quest to being human, but hits a few bumps in the process to telling the story.
I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher, through Edelweiss, in exchange for an honest review.