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Star Trek: DS9 – Too Long A Sacrifice #1 : A Tribute To Our Past & Future

9.2/10

"Too Long A Sacrifice" ( @Scott_Tipton , @dentontipton , @therealsobreiro , #GregScott ) is a mystery noir story with more than meets the eye, and it also is a beautiful posthumous tribute to René Auberjonois, done with care and love.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Too Long A Sacrifice #1

Artist(s): Greg Scott

Colorist(s): Felipe Sobreiro

Letterer: Neil Uyetake

Publisher: Chase Marotz

Genre: Mystery, Sci-Fi, Space

Published Date: 07/15/2020

Recap

Death casts its shadow as Constable Odo searches for truth amid a web of treachery and lies. Everyone on the Promanade has a motive for this murder, be it vengeance, justice... or old-fashioned greed. Legendary Star Trek scribes Scott Tipton and David Tipton team with noir artist Greg Scott for the first Deep Space Nine comic book series in a decade!

Review

The past two weeks have been eventful and joyful for DS9 fans. For once we got the release of the documentary What We Left Behind and the Virtual Trek On. We’re also having the fanfic Alone Together read by Alexander Siddig & guests in Sid City Social Club, this last one touching on the bisexuality of both Julian Bashir and Elim Garak, as kind of a love note to what we couldn’t have in the 90s. In fact, “Too Long A Sacrifice” begins with Bashir and Garak having one of their regular dinners, and from the beginning we know two things for sure: this is a dark mystery story and our characters, in comic page, feel real.
The central figure, and narrator of this noir crime story, is, obviously, Odo. From the tense, beautiful and magnetic cover by Ricardo Drumond, to his presence on moving the story, this story a case of Odo’s rationality (that one that relates him to other Trek figures like Data or Seven of Nine) against the too emotional, too vile surroundings that he needs to manage. This comic really feels like a love letter to René Murat Auberjonois, in how it manages to mimic and develop his acting, his poses and the heart of his character.
In fact, what we see when we look at the art is like a window to an unreleased DS9 episode. Greg Scott, who also penciled the last issue of the Deep Space Nine (1996) run more than 20 years ago (a marvelous Garak-centered mystery drama), paints our characters and their reactions and relationships at detail. When there’s an emotional outburst, the art makes it so. When we have a moment of realization, or a moment of stress, or even at the same moment as the attack that surrounds the story, the art feels like that. Felipe Sobreiro’s coloring makes the perfect case for a noir style that yet doesn’t shy away from using bright colors, explosions and bright lights when it’s needed.
The issue is not risky storyline-wise, but the places it goes in so few times with the characters and the art are. Which works perfectly, cause the Tiptons know what they’re writing about. In this sense, if you’re a fan you’re gonna enjoy this story deeply. If you’re not a fan, the precious things that make these characters shine will catch you, and, be aware, you might wanna binge watch the series too.

Final Thoughts

"Too Long a Sacrifice" promises, like the series is based on, a lot for past and future. It is a mystery noir story with wonderful character work that vibes with the dialogues. It has conflict that promises to be way more than what meets the eye. And it definitely is a posthumous tribute to René Murat Auberjonois' brilliant role that is done with care and love.
Star Trek: DS9 – Too Long A Sacrifice #1 : A Tribute To Our Past & Future
  • Writing - 9/10
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  • Storyline - 8.5/10
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  • Art - 9.5/10
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  • Color - 9.5/10
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  • Cover Art - 9.5/10
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9.2/10
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