Site icon Comic Watch

Lost On Planet Earth #4: Monsters Of The Human Project

8.8/10

Lost On Planet Earth #4

Artist(s): Claudia Aguirre

Colorist(s): Claudia Aguirre

Letterer: Zakk Saam

Publisher: Comixology

Genre: Drama, Sci-Fi

Published Date: 07/14/2020

Recap

Once Basil’s dream assignment has be-come her living nightmare. Forced to enlist in the fleet as a low ranking crewman on the ship she dreamed of serving on, the Sojourner, has placed Basil firmly under Captain Maine’s thumb. Her old friend/ mutual crush Charlotte is aboard in the hopes of rekindling with Basil, but the crew has other plans. Can Basil survive this life she was so close to escaping?

Review

We’re very near the end of Lost Of Planet Earth and this one is a difficult issue. Not cause of the art, that is still a fitting contrast between the beautiful space scenarios and the cartoonish, all emotion and expression characters. And neither cause of the characterization of those, that are profoundly credible, fitting and present some dynamics that drive us towards in the story. But because of the underlying theme of this issue: sexual harassment.
Of course this comic is about so much more. It’s still a criticism of humans placing ourselves in these futurist societies free of prejudice and hatred, as if we were gonna arrive there by some “natural progress” that requires no effort. It’s still a harsh look at organizations searching to colonize (or “discover”) the galaxy. But, in this issue, there’s not one, but two scenes of sexual harassment (one with stances of homophobia too). Which is fitting having in mind harassment is a big theme right now in the comic industry.
The instances of two differently powerful men posing a threat to women in this issue are real, well-paced and, honestly, scary and disgusting. In contrast to an industry that has sometimes normalized too graphic stances of violence against women in the page without weight or a thoughtful intention, this issue places it in the right place, not recreating itself on the violence but in how uncomfortable, sick and demanding of change the characters’ harassing look. Of course, this is a book crafted by queer women creators.
I did miss the rest of the characters that are absent here, and, in retrospect, this issue is one of the weakest in narrative flow, which also is too closer to the end and doesn’t present a lot of exposition. But it’s constantly saved by great art and intense scenes that carry true meaning (also romantic queer intense scenes, not all is suffering!), and I can’t wait to see where the story ends, which I hope goes back to the other characters we left behind.

Final Thoughts

This comic puts in front of us difficult realities about persistent problems in our society, placing them in the context of a futurist sci-fi vision too usually associated with utopias. And, yetwith all the knots left to tie in before the last issue, they make a relevant point that needs to be heard.

Lost On Planet Earth #4: Monsters Of The Human Project
  • Writing - 9/10
    9/10
  • Storyline - 8/10
    8/10
  • Art - 9.5/10
    9.5/10
  • Color - 8.5/10
    8.5/10
  • Cover Art - 9/10
    9/10
8.8/10
User Review
0 (0 votes)
Comments Rating 0 (0 reviews)
Exit mobile version