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Lost On Planet Earth #5: Not The Brightest Future But It’s Ours

8.6/10

This space soap opera by @MagsVisaggs , @claudiaguirre and @ZakkSaam arrives to its ending with an epistolar issue that promises nostalgia, criticism and delightful connection at the heart of it.

Lost On Planet Earth #5

Artist(s): Claudia Aguirre

Colorist(s): Claudia Aguirre

Letterer: Zakk Saam

Publisher: Joe Corallo, Comixology

Genre: Drama, Romance, Sci-Fi

Published Date: 08/18/2020

Recap

It’s been years since the events that took place on the Sojourner. Charlotte and Velda haven’t seen Basil since that time, but she hasn’t left their minds. A new lead may finally reveal Basil’s whereabouts, but Charlotte and Velda will have to put aside their differences and work together if they want to find out the truth.

Review

Not gonna lie: epistolary approaches to stories always get me in the heart, and Visaggio shines in this issue with the letters that come and go through the different characters at different moments in their lives, as we feel time pass in the story. Epistolar nostalgic beautiful feelings is something this comic excels at, with a combination of amazingly otherworldly art and fantastic lettering, especially with the contrast art, color and letter recreate between epistolar passages and regular scenes.

This constant delivery of otherworldly and beautiful surroundings in contrast to characters feeling too much emotion has served this story amazing, and here it puts it in perspective and makes criticism and fairness of the various difficult situations its characters survived. I gotta say it’s at this “recap” point that I feel the narrative falls into some clichés (like the queer woman married to a man for convenience, the revolutionary who’s really a hypocrite or stories surrounding falling in love over some mutual attachment), which I felt I needed more of this story to totally feel or believe fully.

Nevertheless those details, the execution is remarkably beautiful, the art is tense and on point through all of the issue, and the actual ending of the story is perfect in how it places almost all the characters in a believable place. The last page closes the circle of this complicated story about how space exploration scenarios widely seen as utopic will still fuck people up and isolate them, but with a twist of some hope in growth and connection from those difficult seeds that we have seen develop in the whole story.

Final Thoughts

Epistolar ending crafted beautifully to round up a story that makes criticism of itself and gets into some common places with a lesson to it, or at least a feeling of connection and love to take from it.

Lost On Planet Earth #5: Not The Brightest Future But It’s Ours
  • Writing - 9/10
    9/10
  • Storyline - 7/10
    7/10
  • Art - 9.5/10
    9.5/10
  • Color - 9/10
    9/10
  • Cover Art - 8.5/10
    8.5/10
8.6/10
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