• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Comic Book Herald

A Comic Book Reading Order Guide For Beginners & Fans

  • Reading Orders
    • Marvel
    • My Marvelous Year
    • DC Comics
    • All Comic Book Publishers
    • Most Recent
  • Beginner Guides
    • Beginner’s Guide To Comics In 2025
    • Marvel 2025: Where to Start?
    • DC 2025: Where to Start?
    • Best of Lists
    • Tablets for Comics
    • Guides for Digital Readers
  • Reviews
    • Marvel Comics
    • DC Comics
    • Comic Book Movies
    • Comic Book TV
    • Video Games
  • Podcasts & Video
    • My Marvelous Year
    • Best Comics Ever (CBH)
    • CBH on Youtube!
  • About Me
    • My Favorite Comics of All Time
    • Columns
    • CBH Email Newsletter
  • Support Comic Book Herald
    • Ways to support
You are here: Home / Featured / DARTH VADER #1 Review: “The Dark Lord of the Spin-Off!”

DARTH VADER #1 Review: “The Dark Lord of the Spin-Off!”

February 14, 2015 by Matt Lehn Leave a Comment

Capitalizing on the recent relaunch of the main Star Wars title, Marvel is building a linewide franchise around stories from a certain galaxy far, far away. First on the expansion roster is a solo series spotlighting the central figure of the six feature-length films, Darth Vader. One of the most memorably dramatic and ominous presences on the greater pop culture landscape, the (thankfully) former Anakin Skywalker is also on a very short list of characters to exist without any true in-depth attention. Writer Kieron Gillen and artist Salvador Larroca are seeing to it justice is done to the oversight.

Note: Crawl also doubles as official Imperial accident report...
Note: Crawl also doubles as official Imperial accident report… 

Although Vader informs the overall narrative of Episodes One through Six like no other, his actual character and motivations lie mostly beneath the surface. Sure, there’s the redemption at the climax of Return of the Jedi and sad little kid moments in Phantom Menace but by and large he is still an unwritten enigma. These are key points that this series wastes no time drilling down as it captures the Dark Lord at his most interesting personal juncture, metaphorically and literally exploring the dichotomy as its central thesis.

Oh no, he didn't...
Oh no, he di’n’t…

Vader is a character who wears two distinct faces. There’s the imposing albeit heavy-breathing black-cloaked badass that can choke man (or Hutt) from across a room and then there’s the knowingly broken and compromised human. The two main chapters of this installment examine this contrast and how the intersection creates a more well-rounded, yet still mysterious, personality.

Deja vu, the prequel...
Deja vu, the prequel…

The forward half of the thirty-page offering sets amazing tone. Like many scenes in Star Wars’ other small and big screen incarnations, there are nods galore to in-story motifs. Despite the familiar settings, there is also ample room for new and interesting interactions among the old cast. It is here that Vader commits a cardinal sin, betraying his emotional core as uneasy business ally Jabba the Hutt broaches a taboo subject. It is a vulnerability he does not wear well, needlessly escalating a situation otherwise in his control. Points certainly are awarded to color artist Edgar Delgado for work above and beyond during this passage as highlighting a protagonist dressed in all black in a low-lit dungeon-like environment is probably not the easiest assignment. By comparison, lightsaber slashes and laser blasts are super-accentuated in their deadly arcs.

What the Jackie Brown?!?
What the Jackie Brown?!?

While the next section is in many ways the inverse of Vader’s actions in Jabba’s Palace, it also heads into some uncharted water. As a mythos, Star Wars traditionally employs a fairly straight-forward approach to its delivery. The franchise’s opening gambit literally centers on watching a smaller spaceship getting overtaken by a larger one and just dumping the audience into it as is. It’s like a shark- ever moving forward. Therefore, the use of the flashback as a narrative device is a relatively foreign concept. That said, it’s uncertain how well this flies. Sure, the way Gillen structures the issue, it’s clear the opening and closing beats need to be what they are but the transition into the “before” may throw the purist on a conceptual level.

 

Support For Comic Book Herald:

Comic Book Herald is reader-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn a qualifying affiliate commission.

Comic Book Herald’s reading orders and guides are also made possible by My Marvelous Year club support on Patreon, and generous reader donations.

Any size contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Support CBH’s My Marvelous Year on Patreon for exclusive rewards, or Donate here! Thank you for reading!

Lightning isn't all this guy zings!
Lightning isn’t all this guy zings!

Decidedly less visceral than the altercation segment, the flashback actually does more to further the greater plot and feeds in wonderfully to Marvel’s “world building” designs for the franchise. While gratuitously cross-promoting Jason Aaron’s sister title, Gillen and Larroca also introduce a potential arch-rival whose look alone warrants a return appearance. However, it is Emperor Palpatine who positively owns this portion. In short, it lends amazing agency to all those Robot Chicken sketch parodies to the point that it’s impossible not to hear Seth MacFarlane’s voice! Seriously, if the Empire only harnessed the boss’s sick burns as a super-weapon…

It's like the Hollywood Walk of Fame but, you know, instead it's in a gangster's lair. Totally legit...
It’s like the Hollywood Walk of Fame but, you know, instead it’s in a gangster’s lair. Totally legit…

For all this issue solidly connects, though, there are a few bumps. The first occurs in Jabba’s Palace and involves the infamous secret trap door in the floor of the main audience chamber leading to the monster pit below. Waiting for Vader to step into place, Jabba is eager to spring his trap. However, Vader sensing something amiss, steps off the trigger plate. This alone isn’t confusing but how Larroca illustrates the action is surprisingly unclear as the significance of Vader’s lingering “ghost footprints” panels later goes without mention. It may have to do with Gillen’s script directions as there’s a particularly weird bit of dialogue toward the end as well. The writer introduces an all-new bounty hunter alongside the ubiquitous Boba Fett without the aid of a proper identifying caption. As such, the reader is left to their own devices to discern from context the character’s name. However, before that intellectual divide is crossed, Fett delivers a line that is absolutely a grammatical headscratcher. Once it becomes clear whom the actual pronoun of the sentence is, things make more sense but damned if you don’t read it four times questioning everything you ever learned in English class.

Know what helps? Talking about the guy like he's not even standing right there...
Know what helps? Talking about the guy like he’s not even standing right there…

Minor nitpicks aside, the series is off to a good start delivering more good than bad. Judging from the years of work he put into (Kid) Loki, expectations are high that Gillen must have quite the long game planned. From Marvel’s stable, he would be best to voice it. However, with so many of the character’s bigger defining moments already accounted for, it will be most interesting to see what future installments hold.

Filed Under: Featured, Marvel Reviews Tagged With: Darth Vader, Star Wars

Heroically Support Comic Book Herald!

If you like Comic Book Herald, and are able to donate, any small contribution will help keep CBH alive and full of new comics guides and content. Donate here! Or, support CBH on Patreon for exclusive rewards! Thank you for reading!

Become a Patron!

CBH Newsletter!

About Matt Lehn

Musician and freelance web denizen Matt Lehn has been living and breathing the Marvel Universe since 1985. Always a die-hard New Yorker at heart, he now lives with his wife, three boys and two cats in Portland, Oregon. Check out his Avengers-specific blog at: avengersaccessible.wordpress.com. Follow him on Twitter: @fierykillrock

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

The My Marvelous Year Podcast!

Apple PodcastsRSS

CBH Newsletter!

My Marvelous Year Podcast and Reading Club 1

Recent Posts

  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000) May 8, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man May 5, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025 May 1, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover D: Dave Interviewed Donny Cates & Chris Claremont! And Daredevil: Born Again Review! April 27, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 8: Daredevil: Shadowland April 21, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 7: Wolverine, Second Coming, & Uncanny X-Force April 14, 2025
  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 1 (2000) April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover C: Marvel Rivals Resurrects the X-Men’s Krakoa, Trivia & Jiggle Physics! April 7, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of March 2025 April 7, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 6: Hickman’s Fantastic Four: Three March 31, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 5: Realm of Kings & Thanos Imperative March 24, 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover B: Daredevil Born Again (Again) TV Series Review! March 17, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 4: Amazing Spider-Man: Big Time & Dave’s Favorite Black Widow Story March 10, 2025
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of February 2025 March 4, 2025
  • 2010 Pt. 3: Jonathan Hickman’s S.H.I.E.L.D. & Secret Warriors March 3, 2025

Popular Articles

DC Rebirth Guide

Batman Reading Order

DC New 52 Reading Order

Marvel Ultimate Universe Guide

Civil War Reading Order

Marvel Cosmic Reading Order

The Best Comics of All Time!

Deadpool Reading Order

Justice League Reading Order

Complete Thanos Reading Order

X-Men Reading Guide (Modern Era)

Age of Apocalypse Reading Order

Modern Marvel Universe in 25 Trades

Best Tablet For Digital Comics

Is Marvel Unlimited Worth It?

Footer

New to Comic Book Herald?

Hey there - my name's Dave and this is my comic book blog. It's my way of sharing my borderline obsessive addiction to the comic book medium, and I hope you like some of what's going on here.

Most people that come here are looking for my (WIP) Marvel reading order guide. You can probably also get a sense if CBH is for you by taking a look at some of my columns.

If you like what you see, let's connect on Facebook or Twitter. Or, leave a comment on the blog here, I'm always looking for new awesome people in the comic book community.

More on Comic Book Herald

  • Home
  • About
  • Support CBH
  • My Marvelous Year
  • Join!
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service

Recent Posts

  • Extra Issues – Lucifer Pt. 2 (2000)
  • 2010 Pt. 9: Thor: The Mighty Avenger, Bucky on Trial, & Invincible Iron Man
  • My Favorite Graphic Novels of April 2025
  • 2010 Variant Cover D: Dave Interviewed Donny Cates & Chris Claremont! And Daredevil: Born Again Review!
  • 2010 Pt. 8: Daredevil: Shadowland

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in