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Panya: The Mummy’s Curse #1: Chaos & Cats

6.3/10

Panya: The Mummy's Curse #1

Artist(s): Christopher Mitten

Colorist(s): Michelle Madsen

Letterer: Clem Robins

Publisher: Dark Horse Comics

Genre: Magic

Published Date: 07/12/2023

Recap

Thousands of years before Hellboy, the B.P.R.D., and Ragna Rok, there was Panya. As a girl in ancient Egypt, she witnessed the fall of a dynasty and was gifted-or cursed-with visions of the beginning, the end, and the coming of the dragon...

Mike Mignola and Chris Roberson join creative forces with artist Christopher Mitten and colorist Michelle Madsen to bring Panya's story to life.

Review

Panya: The Mummy’s Curse #1 isn’t a messy or poorly executed comic. It possesses a good sense of visual storytelling, a solid setting, and competent dialogue/structure. However, the book suffers from a case of the ‘setups’. As a first issue, it lacks any excitement and features generic uses of its setting and mythology, all without being supported by an intriguing main character.

Panya, the protagonist, is a young girl witnessing the world around her change and come to an end after her father and his men aid the Pharaoh of the era in ascending towards divinity, leading to the arrival of beings with power far too immense for this world.

She spends the entire book following the story as it unfolds, devoid of any personality or agency. The major plot events proceed to play out around her, but due to a lack of depth for any of the characters in this book, including Panya, the comic is unfortunately very dull. Thematically speaking, the book explores broad ideas that fail to connect to our characters in a relatable, substantial, or convincing manner. It seems to be present simply for the sake of being there, a poor consequence of inorganic messaging.

Many of the issues mentioned about characters and story stem from a focus on establishing significant ideas and themes, rather than allowing those elements to develop naturally from the characters of the book. By prioritizing the grand narrative over character development, the comic misses an opportunity to create a more engaging and immersive experience. When the characters lack depth and agency, the overarching ideas and themes lose their impact. It’s important for a story to strike a balance between its setting and its characters, enabling them to organically interact and shape each other’s journey.

There are small, dim moments of characterization that are restrained by an art style that can convey emotion but may not necessarily capture character. What the art does accomplish is fill the book with beautiful and stylistically unique representations of Ancient Egypt, which is the highlight of this issue. The colors stand out when laid atop penciling work that’s both historically inspired yet unafraid to take creative liberties.

Final Thoughts

Panya: The Mummy's Curse #1 has a solid setting and okay arc, but fails to draw readers into it's world thanks to a generic take on mythology and main character who's too passive and lacking in personality to carry the rest of the book.

Panya: The Mummy’s Curse #1: Chaos & Cats
  • Writing - 6/10
    6/10
  • Storyline - 4/10
    4/10
  • Art - 7/10
    7/10
  • Color - 8/10
    8/10
  • Cover Art - 6.5/10
    6.5/10
6.3/10
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