«Cinq enfants dieux naîtront, rassemblés, de leurs mains, des univers créeront, quatre seront bons, un ne le sera pas, l'âme du Kookaburra en eux s'éveillera et les appellera. » Telle est la prédiction, vieille de 20 000 ans qui sillonne l'espace. L'Alliance terrienne, les Amazones et les dangereux Dakoïds se livrent à une guerre intergalactique pour maîtriser ce pouvoir. Dans cette lutte, le space sniper Dragan Preko, son acolyte Skullface, la belle et dangereuse amazone Taman Khâ et le dernier des Chevaliers-sorciers vont s'unir pour retrouver les enfants de la Prophétie. L'aube du Kookaburra est proche...
Crisse is the pen name of Didier Chrispeels, a Belgian comic book author who is well known in the world of Franco-Belgian comics.
Born in Brussels, he began drawing on canvas in Lyon at age eighteen. His career in comics started with Ocean's King for Spirou Magazine in 1979 and an issue of Tintin in 1980. He moved to France and published several successful series, including Kookaburra, Atalanta, and Luuna.
Ouin non. Je comprends que ça date de la fin des années 90, dans le sillage du Fifth Element, mais ça emprunte trop d’affaires (tout ?), c’est vulgaire, macho, ça essaye d’être drôle et ça l’est pas, mais surtout, c’est sans la moindre once d’originalité. J’avais pris les trois premiers volumes à la bibli, mais je vais retourner les autres sans les lire. C’est raté.
I read this with the help of a French-English dictionary and Google translate so I accept that I may have lost some of the nuances to the story in translation. This was a fun, if disjointed, space adventure. Kicking off doing a thing that was not clear for quite some time and then sporadically introducing 3 of the 5 key children of the series and only informing the reader at the very end of the tale why, did make it a little harder than the language barrier alone to get into. Once I did get into it, I loved the artwork and the banter between the characters. I finished this wanting more, so it did its job.
Fast-paced space pulp that seems to parody a whole slew of sci-fi classics (Dune in particular). One of the main characters is a Snake Plissken look-a-like, a 'Manly Man' who defies all the odds. It's the first issue, so expect a lot of lore dumps and generic sci-fi buzzwords. I've read worse.