In the late Nineties, as the old century was giving way to a new one, WildStorm Productions had its most fertile period, producing seminal comics such as the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Authority and Planetary. A Warren Ellis and John Cassaday collaboration, Planetary was team with a mysterious fourth member and was billed as “archaeologists of the impossible.” This monthly book, it started monthly until it developed a pseudo-quarterly schedule because of lateness, was Ellis’s exploration of the superhero genre and its roots in fiction, cinema and other literary forms. I’ve read the first three issues, two I bought from a comic shop when it was released and the other years after and by sheer coincidence. In those first three issues, Ellis wrote about, pulp era heroes, Japanese atomic monsters and Hong Kong cinema. As a sampling it was an excellent indicator on the direction Ellis was going for the series. Mostly standalone issues, though each served to move a main story forward, no doubt in a climactic ending.
Since reading those three issues, I’ve lost track of the title. First it was having scheduling problems and its last issues were late and by then I’ve completely stopped buying comics monthly and updated myself on an occasional Wizard magazine purchase. Despite ending my monthly habit, I’ve often bought an occasional issue or two and I decided I wanted to try this graphic novel. Originally released in 2003, it recently got a reprint featuring twice the pages with extras in a hardcover. I managed to find a copy of the original prestige format graphic novel in a recent convention. This was Planetary, a book about the superhero genre taking on one of the biggest superhero icons, Batman. I knew the story was going to be big, and almost a decade later when I finally got my copy, I could say it was worth the wait.
The Planetary team was on the hunt for a rogue metahuman who was warping reality around him. As reality started to unravel around them, they encounter the Batman in his various incarnations through the years from Golden Age to Adam West. This was the perfect story for Cassaday to showcase his prodigious talent and he delivered. He drew Batman in his various forms, channeling great artists such as Neal Adams and Frank Miller, without losing his own artistic voice. His Dark Knight Returns Batman was beefy and scary as Miller drew him but though it had elements of Miller’s design, it was distinctively Cassaday.
Planetary is a title that should be on every comic bookshelf. I am looking for the collected edition of the entire run. An Absolute is perfect but expensive, I would be happy I could find one of the deluxe hardcovers instead.