In the first three Star Wars movies, Darth Vader was a fearsome, enigmatic archvillain. The next three Star Wars movies attempted to show Anakin Skywalker as an emotionally turbulent figure of tragedy. The new Darth Vader comic gives readers both of those interpretations and more, enjoyably complicating a villain who been around for a whole generation.
Out this week, Darth Vader #1 is the next installment of a wave of all-new Star Wars comics being created by Marvel. From the very outset, the comic from Kieron Gillen and Salvador Larocca has a tricky premise to negotiate. Villain-centric stories are full of pitfalls that can turn off readers. One danger is that a certain beatââboy, this character sure is evilââcan get hit over and over to the point it becomes boring and rote. Another danger: making the character too sympathetic and diluting the menace that seduced people into becoming fans in the first place.
From this first issue, it seems like Darth Vaderâs creators have heeded any and all Ackbarian warnings and are ready to avoid those particular traps.
Part of the creative teamâs success comes from casting the Dark Lord of the Sith as someone whoâs got an incredibly abusive boss. Return of the Jedi made it clear that Emperor Palpatine viewed Vader as a glorified henchman, a tool to carry out his plans and to be unleashed on the Rebel Alliance. That thread gets carried into this new comic, which follows the original Star Wars movie, A New Hope, as the storytellers deliver a few great scenes that underscore how Vader never enjoys his liegeâs respect.
Gillen also gestures back at the prequel trilogy and makes use of the half-baked political intrigue in Episodes I, II and III. You get a sense of the Empire as a political construct powered by the will of one very old, very evil man.
Itâs an incredibly odd thing to feel sympathy for Darth Vader. But when Palpatine talks shit straight to his face, you pretty much canât help it. Itâs a reminder that Vaderâs a broken man, one whoâeven before his turn to the Dark Sideâwas seeking a father figure.
That brokenness isnât just emotional, as the body of the man once known as Anakin was burnt away years ago. The damage hasnât stopped him from being a powerful enemy, though. Thereâs a great fight scene where Darth Vader takes out a whole room of Jabba the Huttâs thugs by barely moving. Itâs a great sequence by Larocca that makes Vader seem incredibly badass because of the economy of movement on display.
And the icing of the cake for longtime fans is seeing Vader perform this way while they know full well that his cyborg body isnât exactly nimble. He fights this way because he has to. But his enemies donât know that. It amounts a weird, satisfying reverse-FDR moment: a man-in-charge who must hide physical frailty to instill loyalty or fear.
Much of what makes Vader so intriguing as a character is the fact that he doesnât emote emphatically. That opaque helmet is a lid on top of a storm of conflicting feelings. All sorts of pride, regret, arrogance and sadness must be roiling under that mask. Larocca does excellent work in using lighting, camera angles and body language to imply the depth of Vaderâs emotional state. A tilt of the head this way or placing a clenched fist in the foreground of a panel are among the artistic decisions that sketch out a dejected, angry Vader.
Moments throughout the issue seem designed to seed the idea of Vader as more of a schemer than previously understood. An encounter with Luke Skywalker in the first two issues of the new Star Wars seriesâwhich featured Lukeâs thirst for revenge and Vaderâs snatching of the young Jediâs lightsaber, shown here from Vaderâs perspectiveâhave sparked his own personal agenda. He needs to know who this upstart Force-wielder is and must investigate without Palpatine knowing.
There are wheels within wheels here and Darth Vader #1 makes it seem like itâs going to be a wonderful experience watching them spin. Gillen folds in enough context to generate a modicum of sympathy but not so much that anyone thinks that redemption might be possible (not until Return of the Jedi, of course). This is Darth Vader, after all, and we know how his story ends. But the first issue of his new comic book series makes an excellent case for showing what else was going on as he marches towards his fate.