1. Due to the increased amount of spam bots on the forum, we are strengthening our defenses. You may experience a CAPTCHA challenge from time to time.
    Dismiss Notice
  2. Notification emails are working properly again. Please check your email spam folder and if you see any emails from the Cantina there, make sure to mark them as "Not Spam". This will help a lot to whitelist the emails and to stop them going to spam.
    Dismiss Notice
  3. IMPORTANT! To be able to create new threads and rate posts, you need to have at least 30 posts in The Cantina.
    Dismiss Notice
  4. Before posting a new thread, check the list with similar threads that will appear when you start typing the thread's title.
    Dismiss Notice

Review - Thrawn: Alliances #4 Makes a Baffling Choice That Threatens the Series

Discussion in 'SWNN News Feed' started by SWNN Probe, Apr 12, 2024.

  1. SWNN Probe

    SWNN Probe Seeker

    Joined:
    Aug 29, 2016
    Posts:
    9,970
    Likes Received:
    11,506
    Trophy Points:
    3,842
    Credits:
    12,446
    Ratings:
    +18,327 / 24 / -23
    Let's rip the band-aid off. Marvel, you're better than this. Thrawn: Alliances #4 contains the strangest and most baffling editorial choice from Marvel Star Wars in quite some time.



    Heading into this miniseries' final issue, I knew it had a lot of ground to cover after issue #3. At the same time, Timothy Zahn and Jody Houser's Thrawn: Alliances adaptation has progressed at a breakneck pace, so there was a chance they could bring it all together. Unfortunately, someone thought it would be a good idea to hide the fact that this adaptation was actually a trial run all along.



    There is no ending. Instead, this last issue ends at a random, non-distinct point without a sense of finality. It's a poor cliffhanger that doesn't have a guaranteed next chapter. The fate of this series now inexplicably lies in the hands of Marvel and whether they give Zahn and Houser more issues to finish their story. Confusing, concerning, and downright unnecessary.



    This is Thrawn. If you are Lucasfilm and Timothy Zahn, why would you be okay with this strategy regarding one of your golden geese? And I understand the comic industry is complicated, but if you're Marvel, why would you play games when these Star Wars adaptations already don't do gangbusters on sales charts?



    In addition, reframing the entire four-issue run has another unfortunate side effect, uncovering other problems I previously overlooked. Let's get this over with.



    [​IMG]



    Right away, it became crystal clear that this adaptation only works as a companion piece to the novel. In the last issue, Padmé was in the middle of a crash landing on Mokivj. But you can forget any dramatic tension associated with that as this issue opens with her already at the Separatist base. As I was reading this issue, I couldn't shake the feeling that if I hadn't read Zahn's novel, I'd have no idea what was happening.



    The series' flow has been chaotic, but previously, I thought it was to erase the fluff present in any book. Streamlining a Zahn novel is a herculean task, making the maker's input nice to have in the room. Looking back, I wish we could go back and let the dual storylines breathe a bit. The past dynamic between Thrawn and Anakin hasn't been explored enough, hampered further by a lack of intentionality in the present-day storyline. There is an evident lack of direction in these four issues. Why are the Grysk so dangerous? Their threat will sell Marvel on continuing this series, so what are they doing here?



    [​IMG]



    My favorite part of this comic remains the characterizations of Thrawn and Darth Vader. This Thrawn trilogy shines when it challenges his commitment to the Empire, and the Sith Lord is the perfect foil for that. The art continues to be strong, pitting each figure in a commanding position when they need to be. These are two tough personas to capture -- Vader's might against Thrawn's mind -- and Pat Olliffe and Andrea Di Vito will get their flowers from me no matter the struggles of the writing.



    Once again, the most frustrating part is the ending, which raises several questions. In the past, Duke Solha captures Thrawn and Anakin. In the present, Thrawn calls for a trip to Mokivj moments after a tense conversation with Vader. Then it's over... huh?



    [​IMG]



    Knowing you only have four issues to play with, why end here? As a writer, why pace your narrative to end at a point where character arcs are unresolved? It's confounding that neither Zahn nor Houser stopped to think about finding a satisfying thematic point to wrap things up, just in case Marvel doesn't let them continue.



    This situation with Thrawn: Alliances has to be a wake-up call. I understand taking a punt on something and seeing the response, but this is yet another Star Wars adaptation that Marvel has bungled. Badly. What makes it sad is the fact that things started with such promise. This is not a good look in an age where trust is waning, especially after the creatively bankrupt adaptations of The Mandalorian and Obi-Wan Kenobi. If more is on the horizon, I'll happily read it. That still doesn't change the fact that this fake-out finale strategy is a disgrace. All that's needed is another issue or two, so why are we playing games that don't need to be played? Why are we self-inflicting avoidable wounds?


    <p style='text-align: center;']RATING: 3/10</p>


    Click HERE to check out and comment on this topic on our main site
     
    #1 SWNN Probe, Apr 12, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2024
    • Like Like x 1
    • Informative Informative x 1
  2. Addi Ras

    Addi Ras MASTER TEA MAKER
    Staff Member

    Joined:
    Oct 8, 2015
    Posts:
    4,755
    Likes Received:
    67,600
    Trophy Points:
    171,477
    Credits:
    33,351
    Ratings:
    +71,783 / 13 / -5
    Well that’s really disappointing :( I was going to buy this when they released the collection edition ( I have the First Thrawn adaptation which was really good) but given how they have decided to finish this I don’t think I will bother :(.
     
    • Like Like x 2
  3. MBWilson

    MBWilson Force Sensitive

    Joined:
    Oct 20, 2022
    Posts:
    1,063
    Likes Received:
    4,229
    Trophy Points:
    11,867
    Credits:
    4,042
    Ratings:
    +5,274 / 1 / -0
    I actually read the comic adaptation of the first novel before I read the novels, and I found it to be a perfectly good summary of the novel. That being said, Alliances was probably my least favorite of the Trilogy and it really feels like fitting such an expansive and overly deep storyline into 4 comics would be impossible, not to mention that Alliances has TWO expansive and overly deep storylines running concurrently...

    I do think it's inevitable that they are going to adapt Treason as well and maybe the plan is to roll the remainder of Alliances into Treason somehow, maybe to tie them together? I can't remember off the top of my head how the two went together, but it seems they were closer in narrative than the first of the trilogy.

    I'm curious if comic adaptations of the Ascendancy Trilogy is planned because I do not see any way those are to be fit into a four or five issue run per novel. It would be a good way to make those novels more approachable to a wider audience.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • Great Post Great Post x 1
Loading...

Share This Page