Prophet #21 review
By Dan Horn
January 19, 2012 - 11:33
Image Comics
Writer(s): Brandon Graham
Penciller(s): Simon Roy
Inker(s): Simon Roy
Colourist(s): Richard Ballermann
Letterer(s): Ed Brisson
Cover Artist(s): Marian Churchland with variant by Rob Liefeld and Andy Troy
$2.99 US
![]() |
Churchland cover |
Prophet #21 heralds a brand new beginning for titular character John Prophet, and there's hardly vestiges, save the name, remaining of the original. This could easily be another series entirely and be just as effective. But, it's not billed as something else. So, that's just something I had to overlook, which wasn't difficult, considering the divergence. Although, this numbering business has "marketing blunder" written all over it.
This debut sees Prophet woken from a subterranean stasis with a mission already at hand. He finds himself at odds with a world radically different than the one he once called home, encountering strange wildlife aberrations and alien civilizations, a grounded and decaying jellyfish spacecraft that's been converted into a thriving metropolis, psychic indoctrination, and a vagina/chicken-foot creature with a voracious sexual appetite. John must adapt quickly if he hopes to survive. However, as he discovers, the mission itself, one involving a very Philip K. Dick theological twist, has only just begun and will require Prophet to put his life on the line to reestablish an empire he can no longer even remember.
Rob Liefeld could no more pat himself on the back for having a part in this book than Alan Moore could kick himself for the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen film. This is a wholly new creature, completely distinguished from Liefeld's Prophet of the 1990s and full of immersive weirdness and keen artistry. The issue starts off plodding, but by the end it's hard not to put your hand to your head and say, "Jesus Christ. That was something close to science fiction genius."
Simon Roy's artwork exists somewhere between James Stokoe's brilliant cartooning and Tony Moore's stylized illustrations, though it's noticeably looser and less refined than both, which isn't so much a drawback as it is a narrative asset, setting a whimsical and sometimes terrifying tone for the book. But, it's Richard Ballermann's versatile palette, ranging from earthy to vivid, that really elevates Roy's panels to fantastic heights.
![]() |
Liefeld variant |
Because of the excellent marriage between the unsettling, constructivist detachment in storytelling and the rough-edged cartooning, Prophet #21 feels like an underground comic from the 70s or 80s, and therefore there is this aura of unpredictability surrounding it that really surpasses anything recently published. It feels dangerous, and, dammit, that's a wondrous sensation. The comic book industry desperately needs more books like this. Here's hoping the rest of the Extreme Studios relaunch is just as brilliant.
Rating: 9/10
Related Articles:
Prophet #27 Review
Brandon Graham's Prophet from Image Comics
Prophet #21 review
Star Wars: Balance of the Prophet
Fragile Prophet
Red Prophet