15 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The Color Has Been Re-Colored, November 23, 2005
Collector's will want to seek out any of the earlier graphic novel collections of Mage because for this new edition the original airbrush coloring has been taken out and replaced by new digital coloring. This is too bad because a big part of the appeal of the original Mage comics was the unique airbrush coloring by Matt Wagner. If you want to see Mage in it's original form, seek out the earlier collected volumes.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best, September 7, 2006
This review is from: Mage: The Hero Discovered, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
Ask any comic book geek to make a top ten list of the greatest comics of all time. You'll get the inevitable "Dark Knight Returns", "Watchmen", "Maus", "Sandman", but somewhere in there, Matt Wagner's Mage will make an appearance. From its somewhat clumsy beginnings to its amazing conclusion, Mage is a loveable shaggy dog of a story that has earned its place in the pantheon of great tales.
Kevin Matchstick was an ordinary man who wanted nothing more than to mind his own business. During a stroll one night (under the influence?) Kevin stumbles upon a rather eccentric homeless man, and they engage in a brief philosophical debate over happiness. The man hints that Kevin's life may be destined for something greater, and then he disappears, leaving Kevin flustered and confused. Soon after, Kevin finds himself breaking up a mugging. The assailant is a mystical creature in disguise: a grackleflint. Kevin dispatches of him and calls for help from the police. When he returns home, the homeless man is there waiting for him. He introduces himself as Mirth, and becomes a bit of a spirit guide for Kevin the reluctant hero. Kevin finds himself in the middle of a great war. Under the guidance of their father the Umbra Sprite, the five grackleflint brothers are hunting down the Fisher King, the being who represents the force of light in the universe. It's up to Kevin to stop them from reaching their goal. He's joined in battle by Edsel, a young lady wielding a mystical baseball bat, and Sean, a ghost of a recently departed public defender.
The Umbra Sprite throws everything he can at Kevin: ogres, dragons, and demonic armies of little RedCaps. Ultimately, Kevin must infiltrate the Umbra Sprite's lair at the Styx Casino and bring it down to finish the war. As he approaches his final destination, Kevin's friends disappear one by one, until he is left to face the challenge alone with the knowledge that he is the reincarnation of Arthur Pendragon, legendary king of England.
Matt Wagner makes deft use of mythology and Gods in his retelling of the eternal story of the Pendragon. It's amazing to see the correlations he draws in our modern society. While the first few chapters tend to labor under the weight of the massive epic to come, once Wagner gets up to speed, it's a sight to behold, a gauntlet laid down for future generations of storytellers. The second installment of this epic, Mage: The Hero Defined was finished ten years after the completion of The Hero Discovered. Fans anxiously hope that the conclusion, Mage: The Hero Denied, doesn't take another ten years.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Probably one of the best works of comicdom ever., August 11, 2005
This review is from: Mage: The Hero Discovered, Vol. 1 (Paperback)
You ever have a book or story that you've read at a certain age or point in your life, and the ideas and concepts in that story stay with you forver? This is the one that did it for me. I've always been intrigued with the idea of the hero who does not want to be hero. Someone who has power thrust upon them but does not want it - and this story is why. A great read that will be just as good today as it was then as it will be 100 years from now.
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