O Deus do Sussurro espalhou a paranoia em cada recôndito da terra de Zhal; seus espiões se escondem em cada lugar, espalhando desconfiança e medo. Adam Osidis, um cavaleiro às portas da morte, de uma dinastia desonrada, tem que escolher entre se unir a uma ordem de guerreiros e mercenários mágicos na última tentativa de libertar o mundo do deus maligno ou aceitar a promessa do Deus do Sussurro que receberia tudo que sempre sonhou. Toda a humanidade abdicou da liberdade por medo; agora, o último clã livre deve escolher entre a sina do mundo e seu maior desejo.
Em Seven to Eternity v. 1: O Deus do Sussurro o roteirista Rick Remender — um dos responsáveis pela sucesso de Tokyo Ghost (DarkSide® Books, 2019) — cria todo um universo fantástico para contar uma saga familiar. O clã Osidis foi expulso do mundo que habitava por não concordar em entrar em uma guerra em que não acreditava. Mas a guerra se aproxima deles, é iminente, e agora é preciso fazer escolhas muito difíceis para que o clã possa sobreviver. Assim como muitos rebeldes se recusaram a seguir o governo tirânico, Adam Osidis recusa-se a se curvar diante do opressivo Rei da Lama e a obedecer à sua ordem ditatorial. Defendendo a liberdade de pensamento e de expressão, Adam pretende pôr um fim à tirania e, assim, limpar o nome da família e recuperar seu valor.
O artista Jerome Opeña ilustra a magia e a aventura da narrativa em tons detalhados e elegantes, o que aliadas às cores certeiras de Matt Hollingsworth leva o visual da história para a escala épica. A forma como Opeña desenha introduz o público na magia e no universo criativo de Remender, numa parceria tão equilibrada que torna Seven to Eternityuma obra instigante. Essa história leva o leitor para um lugar tão distante do nosso mundo quanto Zhal para falar de algo bastante próximo: ganância, tentação, honra e escolhas.
Rick Remender is an American comic book writer and artist who resides in Los Angeles, California. He is the writer/co-creator of many independent comic books like Black Science, Deadly Class, LOW, Fear Agent and Seven to Eternity. Previously, he wrote The Punisher, Uncanny X-Force, Captain America and Uncanny Avengers for Marvel Comics.
Although the artwork was good, I felt the story was a bit uninteresting and on occasion difficult to follow. There are some interesting ideas, but it felt like a strange mashup of Tolkien and R R Martin but not as captivating. Perhaps other enjoyed it more. Sorry but maybe just not my cup of tea...
The Mud King is psychically linked to millions of people under his control but that’s not enough – he really wants Zeb Osidis to become his slave as well because... uh… When Zeb is killed for defying his wishes, his son Adam must seek mercy in the King’s citadel of Zhal or his entire family will be massacred. However his pa’s not the only dissident in the land and a rebellion is stirring against his Royal Muddiness!
Seven to Eternity is a fairly generic Western story gussied up in sci-fi/fantasy clothing that’s overly complicated thanks to Rick Remender’s shoddy storytelling style, turning a potentially fun story into boring garbage. The only way I got the story straight was through reading the summaries at the start of each issue - I was barely following along with the story proper because Remender is such a shitty writer.
It’s not even a remotely compelling story: there’s Adam Osidis’ dull farm life followed by a big confusing fight between the goodies and the baddies which takes up a lot of space, and then they’re on the road. Remender also tosses in a few prose pages at random intervals, as if the book didn’t already have pacing issues. They’re really bad too - comics writers should not write prose; most, like Remender, simply aren’t up to it.
The story is full of weak characterisations. Remender’s main characters – Adam Osidis and the Mud King – are both one-dimensional. One’s good, the other’s bad, that’s it. The other five “characters” that appear out of nowhere are even less memorable and underdeveloped – I couldn’t tell you their names, let alone their motivations for fighting the Mud King besides him being the villain and that’s what good guys are meant to do!
I could go through the book and point out the flawed world-building, annoyingly unexplained plot elements and myriad other problems but suffice it to say, though I can’t fault Remender’s ambitious vision, there’s too much here to take in at once and he’s not a good enough writer to lay it all out well. I’m not saying I need everything spelled out for me or that we should know everything in the first volume, but there are key elements to the plot that we should at least have an idea about to start with and the detail just isn’t there. And this is a problem with magic stories in general: without limitations and anything can happen, it’s really hard to care about any of it.
By far the best part of the book is Jerome Opena’s art. He was the artist on Jonathan Hickman’s Avengers and drew half of Marvel’s Infinity event and that experience of drawing large-scale cosmic action really shows here. The alien landscapes are absolutely beautiful and the alien designs are so imaginative. Matt Hollingsworth’s colours are the coup de grace – the artwork on this book is simply stunning.
The art isn’t enough to recommend this book though. In the hands of a talented writer, Seven to Eternity may have been an awesome title but with Rick Remender at the helm it becomes plodding, dull, convoluted and plain bad sci-fi/fantasy. Turrible reading!
The theme of this gorgeous art comic is dark fantasy mixed with some mystery and Western-like plots.
So far, the story up to Volume 1 is very promising. If this series has a satisfying ending, I could re-rate this comic into 5 star.
I found the explanation texts about the Zhal world as a minus. But that's me. Maybe others like some explanation in this admittedly confusing fantasy world.
Seven to Eternity, thanks to Jerome Opeña's undeniably great artwork also has the potential of being grand and beautiful. So I have very high hopes for Remender that he will utilize whatever stories the world of Zhal has into something worth reading and a comic series that is memorable and timeless. Pretty high expectations? Yes actually, because the first four issues of the series are consistently good.
Again, Jerome Opeña's work here is an absolute beauty. The way he delivers the action and war, there is some kind of color poetry that is happening. That Piper art is so sick! The story may be a forgivable "man on a quest to save family" thing which then things escalate very quickly, but god, the art is so good to look at that I frequently stop and postpone reading the speech bubbles just to admire the illustrations. Remender's words in this volume on the other hand need to be read for a few times before you can actually get what he is really trying to say. At times they are disjointed, something that slightly affected my reading experience.
Jerome Opena draws one sick Piper bastard.
Do yourself a favor and read Seven to Eternity. This series by Rick Remender is fantasy like no other.
If Sergio Leone made a fantasy film, this would be it. Remender and Opena have created a fantasy world with themes straight out of a Western. The Mud King has taken over most of the world and is now tying up loose ends by going after a family that was exiled long ago. At the same time, the last of a group of clerics make a last ditch effort to stop the Mud King and break his connection to those under his thrall. Opena's art and Hollingsworth's coloring are spectacular. The book is filled with alien races. Magic effects are glowing off the page.
Received an advance copy from Image and Edelweiss.
Seven to Eternity is way different, even for Rick Remender. This is dystopian fantasy, yes you read that right, and it blends common Remender elements like "evil ruler," "band of misfits," "quest fantasy," "family tragedy," "crazy aliens," and some hardcore fantasy world-building.
My main complaints are the heavy exposition and character development. It's a slower read with tons of exposition and dialog, and several prose pages at the beginning of each issue. More character development is definitely needed. I get a good feel for Adam Osidis and his family, especially his father Zeb, but the other characters, even the villain Mud King, fall by the wayside. I attribute this not to oversight but the fact that there's a huge story already stuffed into a mere four issues. So hopefully the exposition is dialed back and more story will further develop these fascinating characters.
The artwork is incredible! Jerome Opeña, whose illustrations I first enjoyed in Fear Agent, are breathtaking when combined with the color perfection of Matt Hollingsworth. And I mean that. The artwork is absolutely perfect. Bright and vivid and surreal, easily achieving that "other-worldly" feeling. It's a shame that so many panels are tiny, because the details get lost. But man, the splash pages are mind-blowing. I only hope there's enough material for a deluxe hardcover eventually, because the oversized treatment would be sublime.
That's it. It's different, a little slow at times, maybe rushed in terms of development. But Remender kills at fantasy, as do Opeña and Hollingsworth. So check it out.
2.5 stars but I am giving it 3 because of good illustrations. Writing is mediocre and there is nothing in story or in the setting that hooked me. Since image comics has lot of great ongoing series it's unlikely I will continue this one.
Seven to Eternity was a nice surprise. Beautifully illustrated, it tells a dark tale of a strange world.
This is the story of the Osidis family. Hated by the populace they spend their time far away from people. But one day their father is attacked by a powerful foe called the Piper who says "Hear his offer". When Zebidiah Osidis refuses he is killed. This starts an epic tale about revenge and redemption of a family name. I will not spoil any more of the plot. This is a good one.
The artwork is truly well done. But it is the story and the complex plots that intertwine the stories of all the characters. The conflicts are done well and are a believable basis for ill will. It is a complex story and as you read you realize nothing in this plot is easy. By the end I was wondering who the good guys were. The God of Whispers is an excellent and complex character. Eschewing brute force he relies on exploiting inner frailties. The bargain he offers is interesting as it changes from person to person. He is truly insidious and Remender does a great job with the individual characters.
A surprisingly good and epic tale. I look forward to Vol 2. Well done!
Quality art mixed with mysticism and fantasy in a world where the king is a mystic called the god of whispers. If you hear his offer he has control over you.
This is a story of rebellion. This look like one of Remenders better stories so I'm looking forward to more. I just hope the story turns out to be as epic as the art!
Impressive. Remender has built a fantasy world where the hero is defined solely by his convictions, which is something I'm a believer in, so I'm already attached to the character. While there is the cliché of an oppressive ruler who is the nemesis of the hero, their dynamic has already changed in the first arc, which says to me we are in for something different. Opeña's art is outstanding and I've loved whenever these two get together. Very excited to continue reading this.
I had not heard of this before but saw it was written by Remender. This is a perfect blend of science fiction and fantasy that totaled with the world building made for a fun read. It seemed a bit rushed through the story and I wished it would have had more character development. I would definitely read more of this series.
I read this a second time just today. It was really so much better a 2nd time. The fantasy western element was awesome. The art work especially the battles were amazing from Opena. Will definitely continue this now.
I stopped reading comics, although I was a huge fun. Lately, everything I tried was very much shallow. A friend of mine recommended me this series (17 issues) and I have read it in one breath. Fantastic artwork, and a meaningful plot. The dialogues are good but sometimes they are artificial and insufficiently developed. There are, however, a lot of interesting comments on political and social issues. I hope that Hollywood will soon start to produce at least a couple of decent films a year that I can return to movies as well :)
High fantasy rendition of 310 to Yuma. An evil conqueror is captured by bickering heroes (the eponymous Seven). Their plan is to spend six months transporting him cross-continent while chased by his army of devotees, then execute him. (In defense of this idiotic plan is the fact that millions of innocent-ish victims will die if he's executed before they can be magically unlinked from him, and for contrived reasons this can only be done halfway around the world.)
A standard Remender reading experience. Phenomenal art with terrific colors and detailed creature designs; wonderfully inventive world-building with a great magic system (particularly love the huge metal-jawed lizardman who can teleport people by swallowing them); and standard issue shoddy, disappointing Remender writing.
Supposedly tough, badass characters posture like insecure teenagers. The plot hinges on coincidences to manufacture cheap drama (what are the odds that the rebels break into the Mud King's inner sanctum five minutes after our hero arrives, allowing exactly enough time for some menacing exposition and not a second more?) Hero warns Captive-Villain-With-Talking-Powers to stop talking, then lets him drone on for two pages until SURPRISE he makes bad stuff happen. Weak sauce writing.
Incidentally, the evil conqueror's modus operandi involves taking (food, medicine, prospects) from the simple masses and then scapegoating minorities and refugees. Maybe Remender was just drawing on historical fascist methodology to create his villain, but given the timing he may be commenting on the 2016 presidential election.
Wow!!! What a great read. This world Remender has created is highly original never seen anything like this, and the artwork is amazingly beautiful, definitely top notch the way the characters and other beings and world are conveyed on page is mind blowing, fantastic creativity on display.
We're kind of thrown into this world and lore is dispersed a little in each issue, A "hit the ground running" instance occurs. I was a little confused at first but hey I was curious to put the pieces together.
I love the deadly class run, So I can say I went in trusting Remender.
I'm looking forward to continuing on with this series vol.3 will be out soon so looks like this series is up and going again
Trite plotting, insipid writing, and the sophomoric use of laughably clichéd fantasy tropes all conspire to ruin a beautifully illustrated comic. With worldbuilding so convoluted and inconsistent, this book is like the comic version of the worst Zack Snyder movie. 😑
I rarely pick up a random book (or comic) that I've never heard of, but my husband's coworker gave it to him to read, so obviously I read it first! ha.
While it was somewhat confusing at times plot wise, I see a HUGE potential in these series and I'm really hoping that it will shine through in later installments. I also just found out that so far only two parts are released so no binge reading for me, boo! It is a bit on the short side as well, which is a minus - because I wanted more of it for sure.
The art is quite good and the plot is one that can be turned into something very intricate and fascinating, so once again - fingers crossed. Or it could just sizzle out into boring old nothing, so you know the odds are really 50/50.
Also, do you know how hard it is to find an adult fantasy comic that is cleanly written?? Impossible, really!! Very refreshing. Very!
Wowzers! For some reason or other, I shit the bed on collecting these single issues as they came out. When I finally decided that I wanted them, they were like a bazillion dollars for first prints.
Life is hard, hey?
Oh well. All is well. At least I will have the TPB's on the shelf and you can bet your biscuits that I'll be picking up any deluxe collections they come out with for this title.
Seriously, this one had everything that a geek like me loves. A seriously cool world with tons of messed up backstory, a fantastic cast of characters, cool magic and a pretty kickass villain.
The art is phenomenal!, Jerome Opeña killed it with every single page. I was blown away over and over again with how awesome each and every panel looked. He brought life to a world that I could have never imagined on my own. Remender's words in this one are pretty dense, and the story the two of them have come up with can be a little confusing - so sometimes I had to read some of the pages more than once so my brain could keep up with what my eyes were taking in. But I didn't really mind because the pictures were just so damn breathtaking!
All 4 issues presented in this volume were an easy 5 stars for me. From start to finish I was completely taken in and carried along with what was going on. Seven to Eternity is EPIC in scope and I am so down with where this story is going!
If you have any interest in a dystopian, sci-fi/fantasy, western feeling road trip of a story...you should probably give this one a go. I only wish I had had the foresight to pick this one up monthly as it was coming out. Can anyone spot me a couple hundred bucks to pick 'em up?
It's weird and it's hard to say where the story is going BUT the art is gorgeous and the world fascinating. I'm definitely reading the next entries in the series.
Highly visionary graphic novel that blends multiple genres ranging from dark fantasy, sci-fi, to a bit of Western. The concept is imaginative, and the character designs are unique and intriguing, but they lack any individual depth. The main issue being the story itself is choppy, and the pacing is way off. In the end, that was its ultimate downfall.
Розпочав читати «Seven to Eternity» Ріка Рімендера та Жерома Опена, яка виявилася із класним фентезі світом.
Мова іде про Адама Осідіса, людини, яка все життя бігла від Зла, яке заражає кожного, хто йому поклоняється. Бог Шепоту чи Грязьовий Король — деспотичний воєначальник, який проникає у свідомість своїх послідовників, як тільки вони погоджуються на його пропозицію, дозволяючи бачити і чути, що вони роблять, при цьому поневоляючи їх. Сім'я Адама була зганьблена і вигнана, коли його батько зіткнувся з ним й відмовився піддатися злим спокусам Грязьового Короля. Адам жив кочовим життям, проте його спокій руйнується, коли на його сім'ю раптово нападає один з опікунів Бога. Він усвідомлює, що не може продовжувати бігати вічно, і натомість вирішує нарешті зіткнутися зі злом.
Цей мальопис — це також про слабкість людини до власних бажань, і про те, як Грязьовий Король може скористатися цим. Також і про батьків і їхніх синів і що кожен може зробити заради один одного, про сім’ю і те, що плата за безпеку може бути дуже важкою. Про біль втрати і мужність ступити крок до своєї долі, щоб змінити все на краще.
Після першої арки у мене було враження, що я прочитав з 6-7 номерів, настільки інформаційно насиченим у плані світу, сюжету, героїв і динаміки був цей том. А виявилося, що тільки 4 номери у збірці. Заісно, що потрібно набагато більше часу, щоб встановити героїв та світ, в якому вони мешкають. Та все ж за таку малу кількість номерів — Рімендеру вдалося зробити все, щоб захопитися цією новою фентезі історією.
In a fantasy world where the King of lies (not his actual name) rules, a bunch of misfits warriors kidnap him and plan to go over half the world to get the magic that'll help get rid of him once and for all.
Ok. Doesn't sound like the book of the year but why not? There are some interesting elements here and there, though sometimes heavily handed (rumors can kill), and a fascinating world-to-be-revealed over there.
Problem is Remender's pacing is choppy and the first two issues were somewhat hard to come by before I finally got the gist. His prose his rather boring and the dialogues are a bit sedative. That seems to be a recurring problem with Remender: good ideas, poorly expressed.
I imagine most of you are gonna woe me but Opena's art didn't impress me much. Too many hatches and details that rend some scenes barely legible. I think he's a great artist but overdoes it too much for his own good.
The story is kind of a mess. I've really grown tired of comics that start the story mid-action and then delay filling in the details necessary to understand what the heck is going on. And this comic is a prime example of that tendency. It wasn't until midway through the 3rd issue that I even started to get an inkling of what was happening. Plus, it doesn't help that the characters are so poorly developed. Fantasy is hard to do, but it's even harder when you don't give your readers a reason to buy into it and care about what's happening. The one thing this has going for it is some truly beautiful artwork on the part of Jerome Opena. I hope Remender can get a better handle on this in the next volume--now that things have settled down into a journey narrative, the story should be easier to follow and perhaps enough background can be filled in to make this a worthwhile endeavor.
(3,8 of 5 for the maybe too rich world of this futuristic fantasy) I love Remender's worldbuilding. Is rich, populated with characters, history, interesting places and a fine plot struggle. With 7toE that all fits. But maybe too much. The start was a little bit too much, too intense, and too overwhelming for me to navigate. And (of course) text-heavy. So I struggled at least half of this book with that. And Opeňa's art didn't help at all in that. Rich and quite chaotic (especially in action), even if it looks good and fits the story. Especially with Hollingsworth's colours - he's a great colourist (but I more enjoy him in a combination with some other artists). 7toE is a fun, enjoyable read. Even if it's heavy, grim and dystopian. Dark notes to every decision or action. And it takes good strong wind to its sails at the end of this book. So godspeed to the next one!
EPIC art, with a storyline and dialogue that lets it down. A story of rebellion, battling inner demons sprinkled with mystery and magic.
With visuals that completely and utterly outweigh the narrative it is hard to rate this above three stars. The visuals are have such a distinctive style which is hard to master in the graphic novel universe.
I found many parts of the text alienating, making it not very accessible:
“Here is my time for harmonious cataloging. The Black well, where only spirits transverse the circumference of a collection”
I mean... what the hell is that supposed to mean?
If only the story and the dialogue lived up to the artwork this would be a staple graphic novel.
I really hope Volume Two proves me wrong - otherwise I’ll be abandoning this series.
Comecei Seven to Eternity, Vol. 1: O Deus do Sussurro não entendendo nada do que estava acontecendo. Digamos que não seja uma edição muito amigável para quem esteja começando a leitura sem ter algum conhecimento do que se trata a história. Mas depois do segundo, terceiro capítulo as coisas se ajustaram na minha cabeça e entendi a dinâmica do mundo da história. É uma construção de mundo bastante interessante, exótica, porém instigante. Muitos pontos para a arte de Jerome Opeña, que cria conceitos visuais e de personagens bastante embasbacantes. Vale notar também como Rick Remender trabalha muito melhor as séries independentes e autorais que realiza do que aquelas que ele faz para a Marvel Comics, por exemplo. No final do volume, a história não se completa, fica a necessidade de ler outro álbum, mas não saberia dizer se eu teria a vontade de continuar lendo essa história em quadrinhos ou não.