The critiques I have about Cluster are not rooted in its entertainment, artistic, or story quality, but in its fast-paced narrative and its low episode count.
Cluster is a well thought out tale of soft science fiction, exploring future implications of colonizing the stars, the lies our leaders would use or tell us; and the depravity of obligatory service (draft, conscription, or selective). Ed Brisson, Michael Garland, and Damian Couceiro bring us a science fiction critique of colonization told from the perspective of antiheroes in a no-win scenario. Cluster challenges the narrative of hero's (heroines in this case) journey, "righteous" war, and if you look closely enough: crime and punishment.
SPOILERS AHEAD
Who is your enemy when you are obligated to fight for your freedom: When fighting those who are fighting for pure survival?
Who can you trust when your comrades range from petty criminals that would sell you out in a second: To murderers with strict codes of familial bond and loyalty? Where does moral compass and accountability lie, when put to the test of survival and trust in times of dire need?
When oppressed by society, when is siding with the enemy no longer treason in regards to your mandatory service: But valorous duty to those who are also oppressed and an act of selfless service?
Cluster never addresses these questions directly, but the story is there, when you read and ponder on the themes within it. Like many great graphic tales and comics: Cluster provides a fun and artistic experience that provides you with plenty of thought-provoking material if you have the mind and imagination to explore it.
With this said: Cluster is short and rushed, even for a graphic series. Characters are explored, but at a breakneck pace, and you barely have time to explore or enjoy them before the story comes to an open ended close or their lives are lost to the churn of warfare random chance. I truly believe the shortcoming of this comic must boil down to production costs and deadlines, and subsequent publishing drama, then a writers/illustrator will, to tell a well-developed story.
I give Cluster three stars, only for the fact that I wish the story in its 8 issue entirety had been told in at least double the amount of episodes. Further exploring its characters, motivations, rivalries and lore. Just because the material is rushed, does not mean that it is not enjoyable, or that there is not more to be explored upon.
If somehow, for some reason, any of this Comics' authors read this review: Return to Cluster, make a fully flushed series, find the money, the publisher, the time, to revisit this amazing setting; and make the story you wanted to tell in its full glory. Anyone who reads through this can tell there was more planned and little time to get it all into one shot, while doing the best you could. There's a masterpiece here in comic book story and all the ingredients to make it at least: a cult classic.
If you are looking for a quick read that has well done art, as well as intriguing story: Whether you've read a thousand stories telling the tale of a reluctant conscript, or this is your first bout into moral ambiguity and the critique of principles like "manifest destiny". There are certainly other tales that are longer that make a better point, and certainly historical reference and biography that bring harder gravitas. But no comic will bring an intriguing setting, gory glory, hard hitting action, well thought out character progression, in an easy to acquire and digest 8 issue romp that makes you scream: MORE! WHERE ARE MY OTHER ISSUES!? WHERE IS SEASON 2!?