I don’t read a lot of graphic novels, but when I saw some that revamp the Hanna-Barbera universe, I knew I needed them. I loved Jonny Quest when I was a kid, and it remains one of my favorite cartoons as an adult. I used to watch it with my dad and spend entire days reenacting it with my friends, and it’s hard to imagine growing up without it in my life. That’s not to say it doesn’t have its problems (severe lack of female characters, literally every villain is a POC or a white guy with an accent), but I think it was ahead of its time in the science fiction aspects. I’m also convinced that Race and Dr. Quest are extreme action boyfriends/first gay dads on TV, even if there’s little to no canon evidence to support that. Trigger warnings: death, abduction, guns, violence.
Future Quest combines characters from Jonny Quest, Space Ghost, and The Herculoids, together for the first time to fight an otherworldly evil called Omnikron that threatens to take over Earth. When inter-dimensional pockets start opening up on earth, timelines collide, leaving dinosaurs and saber-toothed tigers roaming the Florida swamplands. Jonny, Hadji, Race, and Dr. Quest are fighting with Inter-Nation to study and contain them, but they’re going to need help from Birdman, the Herculoids, and others to stop Omnikron, Dr. Zin, and his evil organization F.E.A.R.
This isn’t quite what I was expecting. I’m not that familiar with the other shows featured here, but my sense is that the novel is trying to juggle too many characters without enough plot. It feels cluttered with characters who barely get an introduction (if that) before we’re expected to know them, and there isn’t enough time to develop any of them properly. Birdman and Space Ghost look like the same guy in a different suit, so I was constantly confusing them. The timeline is also jumbled, and it jumps around to introduce new groups of characters without any obvious rhyme or reason. I don’t know if this is how graphic novels usually go, but it didn’t really work for me.
However, I do like the artwork a lot, and the dialogue (at least in the Quest characters) is believable. I could usually hear the characters’ voices in my head, but I was disappointed that they didn’t get more page-time. Jade, one of the only recurring female characters from the show, makes a very brief cameo, and it seems like Race is unconscious for half of the action scenes. I was also hoping that the comic might resolve some of the issues with representation that the original shows had, but no such luck. Dr. Zin, a person of color, is still the main villain, Hadji still has mystical powers (an Imperialist fantasy if there ever was one), and there are no major female characters. However, there are more females/POC within the side characters who are heroes, so that’s something. All in all, it’s not the way I would have chosen to revamp the series, but I enjoyed revisiting characters I love, and I’ll probably read the second volume to see how things turn out.
I review regularly at brightbeautifulthings.tumblr.com.