I’m not sure if I’m supposed to know who Doctor Aphra is, being a Star Wars fan and all, but I had no idea who she was before reading “Star Wars: Doctor Aphra, Vol. 1: Aphra”.
Written by Kieron Gillen and drawn by Kev Walker and Marc Deering, “Aphra” is, obviously, set in the Star Wars galaxy. The title character is a cute (Asian-looking, although clearly the Asiatic race does not compute with the Star Wars galaxy as it is set in a galaxy far, far away from Asia), bouncy, trouble-making rogue archaeologist. Think Indiana Jones meets Peter Quill (a.k.a Star-Lord from “Guardians of the Galaxy”) only in a girl form, and you basically have Aphra.
The plot is pretty much besides the point, although it has something to do with something called an “Ordu Aspectu”, which, according to legend, was integral to both the ancient Order of the Jedi and the Sith. Aphra’s dad, also an archaeologist, has been searching the galaxy for it for his entire life, and he’s close. Of course, the Empire wants it too, so it’s a race against time to see who gets to it first.
Yeah, so, if you just replace “Ordu Aspectu” with “the Holy Grail” or “The Ark of the Covenant” and “the Empire” with “Nazis”, you basically have an Indiana Jones movie, set in space.
Nothing wrong with that, mind you. Just don’t expect originality in this comic series.
Overall, it’s silly good fun, which is what one would expect and hope from a Star Wars series.
One of the coolest aspects of the series is the artwork. Beautifully inked by Walker and Deering and colored by Antonio Fabela, the series clearly pays homage to the legendary French comic book artwork of Jean Giraud, more famously known as Moebius. Not ironically, Moebius’s artwork was one of the main visual inspirations for George Lucas in his design of the original 1977 “Star Wars”. So, it comes full circle...
As silly and pointless as this series is, I will continue to check out future issues of “Doctor Aphra”.