If Marvel Comics’ Star Wars titles were limited to only the main title series, “Darth Vader”, and “Doctor Aphra”, life would be good. Thankfully, there are dozens of titles within the Star Wars line, some of them great, some of them mediocre. I give Marvel credit for trying.
We’ve been blessed with dozens of mini-series based on beloved well-known characters (“Princess Leia”, “Lando”, “Han Solo”, and “Chewbacca”) along with newer characters (“Kanan”, “Poe Dameron”, and “Cassian Andor”). Thankfully, Marvel has yet to publish a “Jar Jar Binks” series. (I think. I hope.) Personally, I would rather have them resurrect the old “Ewoks” comic book series, but I don’t see that happening.
I recently picked up “Obi-Wan and Anakin”, a five-issue series that came out in 2016, written by Charles Soule and drawn by Marco Checchetto.
I should preface this review by mentioning that I was never in love with the prequel trilogies. I know that’s not shocking, as most fans would probably agree. While I liked Ewan McGregor’s portrayal of Obi-Wan Kenobi, I was never impressed with Hayden Christensen’s Anakin Skywalker. This is, of course, neither here nor there, as we are talking about comic books not movies.
My point is that I was not expecting much from “Obi-Wan and Anakin”, which was ultimately good, because I wasn’t that disappointed.
The story takes place between “Episode I: The Phantom Menace” and “Episode II: Attack of the Clones”, in the missing years of Anakin’s life when he went from looking like Jake Lloyd to Christensen. Obi-Wan and Anakin arrive at a planet called Carnelion IV after a mysterious distress signal is sent to the Jedi Temple. Little is known about the planet as it is not an official member of the Republic.
They arrive in the middle of a war between two factions calling themselves “Opened” and “Closed”. It is never adequately explained why they call themselves that, although it doesn’t really matter: the point is that they have been fighting so long, nobody really knows the original reasons why the war started in the first place.
Interspersed throughout the story are flashback scenes in which Senator Palpatine takes young Anakin under his wing. We see the embryonic beginnings of Anakin’s flirting with the Dark Side, which doesn’t seem like much, as Palpatine is quite clever in couching his “lessons” in terms of right and wrong and the “greater good”. I liked this aspect of the story, as it helps to reinforce the idea that Anakin’s path to the Dark Side was built on good intentions, or rather, what he viewed as good intentions.
The rest of the story, however, isn’t that stellar. It’s not a complete failure, as I was still entertained by the story, but it simply felt a little flat.
That’s okay, though, because for every “Obi-Wan and Anakin” there is a “Han Solo” series or “Doctor Aphra” issue or the latest “Star Wars” issue that blows me away.