From the writter/director of the upcoming film "Immortal,"THE BEAST TRILOGY is a haunting and captivating tale that explores the dark side of human nature. In the year 2023, the man called Nike is a memory expert who remembers his every experience with perfect clarity. For Nike, this is more of a curse than it is a blessing, because the pain of his past never fades. Follow Nike as he uses his gift to try to understand his link to two children, orphaned beside him in war-torn Yugoslavia, as well as his violent and chaotic present, where manipulation of the truth remains a powerful tool for governments worldwide. In this world, a man who can remember everything is invaluable to whoever controls him.
Enki Bilal (born Enes Bilal) is a French comic book creator and film director.
Bilal was born in Belgrade, then the capital of Yugoslavia, to a Czech mother, Ana, who came to Belgrade as child from Karlovy Vary, and a Bosnian Muslim father, Muhamed Hamo Bilal who had been Josip Broz Tito's tailor. When he was five years old, his father managed to take a trip and stay in Paris as a political émigré. Enki and the rest of the family followed him, four years later.
Enki Bilal has no sense of belonging to any ethnic group and religion, nor is he obsessed with soil and roots. He said in one interview: "I also feel Bosnian by my father's origin, a Serb by my place of birth and a Croat by my relationship with a certain friends, not to mention my other Czech half, who I am inherited from mother".
At age 14, he met René Goscinny and with his encouragement applied his talent to comics. He produced work for Goscinny's Franco-Belgian comics magazine Pilote in the 1970s, publishing his first story, Le Bol Maudit, in 1972.
In 1975, Bilal began working with script writer Pierre Christin on a series of dark and surreal tales, resulting in the body of work titled Légendes d'Aujourd'hui.
He is best known for the Nikopol trilogy (La Foire aux immortels, La Femme piège and Froid Équateur), which took more than a decade to complete. Bilal wrote the script and did the artwork. The final chapter, Froid Équateur, was chosen book of the year by the magazine Lire and is acknowledged by the inventor of chess boxing as the inspiration for the sport.
Quatre? (2007), the last book in the Hatzfeld tetralogy, deals with the breakup of Yugoslavia from a future viewpoint. The first installment came in 1998 in the shape of Le Sommeil du Monstre opening with the main character, Nike, remembering the war in a series of traumatic flashbacks.
In 2012, Bilal was featured in a solo exhibition at The Louvre. The exhibition, titled "The Ghosts of the Louvre", ran from 20 December 2012 to 18 March 2013. The exhibition was organized by Fabrice Douar, and featured a series of paintings of "Ghosts", done atop photographs that Bilal took of the Louvre's collection.
This is an edition of TWO BOOKS- not three ->The third book does not exist in English- why call it a "Trilogy"?
Bilal's writing sucks. It's desperately confusing and overreaching in it's attempts to sicken you to the the bitter taste of the war that went on in Serbia.
His art can be stellar- but only in segments. He cannot fill an entire book without oversketching his boundaries.
Inventive and deeply disturbing, while highly disjointed. This is a world where clones can be created, and people can be controlled by implanted electronic flies. Our protagonist along with two others has survived being born in the Bosnia war, and is now living in this futuristic world, with flying cars and the like.
My main criticism is that we are given little of who the characters are, personality wise. Nearly any character could have been replaced with any character (except for the main baddy) and the story would hardly have changed.
The art style well fits the dystopic plot lines, and lends itself to the uneasy horrific feeling. There is some gratuitous nudity. Violence is occasional, but quick and not drawn out. Will definitely have to re-read this one. Would not recommend to most people because they would not enjoy this type of plot with confusing purpose.
I don't understand why they would be willing to kill Nike, when they clearly want to use him later. Why not simply go to the specified coordinates?
I bought this thinking I had the three books not realising the third was to follow. This cyber-punk rush type story and art are exceedingly imaginative. The story revolves around 3 primary characters Nike Hatzfeld, Layla Mirkovic-Zohary, and Amir Fazlagic, who were all born in Sarajevo 19s Kosovo Hospital, The reverse chronology (Nike is aware from day 1 with complete recall) is fascinating and the world is so Bladerunner/Fifth Element but with out the latter's humour
Regarding the rest of the trilogy: Bilal has completed the final volume, Rendez-vous a Paris, and it 19s available in Europe in french but not yet in English
While I generally do not read this kind of comics due to explicit violence which searches to specifically emphasize the visual gore, I did kinda enjoy the story and the visuals (except the excess of blood). At times, the art might remind of Bill Sienkiewicz's, which in itself tells a lot. Basically, this is action-filled story with lot's of violence and even some sexual elements, and while it aims to explore the dark side of human nature, I think the book has a little too much focus on an entertainment perspective and less on a philosophical one - and still, this is more than your average comic book.
Good art. Typical hedonistic apocalyptic paranoid sub-culture conspiracy-theoristic shallow-grave crap. Its a real shame to see teens subjected to this kind of material. The Christian based Matrix is the way to do this sort of thing.