In
July of 2005, Finnish high-school student Kimmo Lemetti began writing
and illustrating a comic about a post-apocalyptic world in which
three rival factions – Red, Yellow and Blue – are in constant
battle with no end, or goal in sight. Lemetti called this Web comic
(Webcomic)
Gone with the Blastwave
,
and it particularly follows the antics of two soldiers from the Red
army – a flamethrower operator and a sniper – as
they make their
way through the
war
zone often in search of
food, fighting their way through areas occupied by members of the
rival factions, trying to locate other members of their army, looking
for a way out of the city or just plain trying to overcome boredom.
The
amazing thing about
Gone with the Blastwave
is
that it takes war, and the common fear of a possible nuclear
apocalypse and makes them funny. The Web comic even took stabs at the
ethics and reasoning behind war right from the first strip, entitled
“Why Do We Fight?”, in which the sniper asks the flamethrower
operator what the whole point of the war is.
Lemetti's
art itself is stunning. Each of the strips has been digitally painted
in full colour, and he produces a world and characters that not only
complements each other perfectly, but also creates the type of
atmosphere one might picture when thinking of
soldiers in a
post-apocalyptic war zone. His writing is well executed too, as each
strip both starts and finishes a particular train of thought, without
requiring the reader to wait for the next strip. This is especially
important for the frequency with which Lemetti updated the Web comic
– rarely.
Unfortunately,
as of July 1
st
,
2008, the
Gone with the Blastwave
website became inaccessible to viewers, as the domain expired, and
Gone with the Blastwave
is now gone. Over three years of running the site, Lemetti only
produced a total of 39 strips. Updates became so infrequent that the
time between the publishing of strips could sometimes be counted in
months. However, within those three years, his strips, and his art in
particular, became so popular that he was able to sell a trade
paperback containing the first 32 strips.
Gone with the
Blastwave , Vol. 1
is still
available from Amazon.com today. Will we ever see a Vol. 2? Who
knows?

|
Lemetti
is still around, updating his blog
from time to time, and working on his skills, studying 3D
Visualization at the EVTEK Institute of Art and Design, in Finland.
In a recent post, he did make mention of another domain that could be
used for the Webcomic if he is unable to recover the original domain.
From the sound of things though, even if the Webcomic does go back
online, it doesn't look like Lemetti will be adding new strips any
time soon as he mentioned that he is currently in the process of
drawing a lot of random thing to improve his technical skills, but
nothing to do with
Blastwave
.
In fact, he has requested to be left alone on that issue.