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Something Epic #1 – Image Comics
Creative Team: SZYMON KUDRAŃSKI
Welcome to an all-new edition of Parlay Points, the comic book review blog to the ODPH Podcast on Nerd Initiative!
For this entry, we are checking out a brand new series from Image Comics that is generating a huge buzz heading into New Comic Book Day. Something Epic #1 from SZYMON KUDRAŃSKI (Spawn, Punisher) has a very unique concept behind it with some fantastic visuals to match. Readers will be challenged with “Is Perception really Reality’? What is so special about fourteen-year-old Danny Dillon? Let’s take a closer look at what all the hype is about, shall we?
*** POSSIBLE SPOILER WARNING ***
Another New Series From Image Comics
The issue opens up with a woman giving birth to a young boy she names Danny Dillon. Danny is inter-monologuing about imagination as the first thing created prior to when we are born. The story speeds up to when he is a young boy. As Danny is walking in a wooded area, he looks to the sky. Flying about him is a superhero that echoes the outline of a very familiar hero.
Danny gives a great insight on the concept of imagination, perceiving it as a “gift”. Danny goes to a doctor’s office to be checked out but he is diagnosed as “normal.” The doctor claimed Dany has an “overactive imagination” due to his elevated nervous system. No matter how it is defined, Danny is a special child with a “gift”. His drawings weren’t fake, they were his depictions of real life.
Another day, Danny and his mom are having a conversation about his schooling amongst other topics. During the talk, something grabs her keys. When looking around, Danny’s mom is confused about where they are. Danny senses where they might be as he looks through a mouse hole to find them.
A Shift In Tone
The story shifts as Danny moves through the house to the basement. On this trip, he comes across two figures that he knows all too well: an animated cat named Drill and a vampire named Marcus. Danny brushes by them and even at one point (via flashback), shows them to his mother who can’t see them. Only Danny can see the characters.
This leads to Danny further breaking down his world. He can see things few others can. In his words, Energy that is, Imagination is transformed into something else. Readers are walked through a guide of Danny’s life as the things he has seen cannot be comprehended as real.
As he progresses forward, the worlds start blending a bit more as the figures are appearing more and more in the “real world”. This comes to a dramatic halt as the final act brings Danny’s life back to a grounded place with an ominous feel taking readers into the next chapter with a looming shadow lurking on the young boy’s future.
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Story Review
KUDRAŃSKI provides a unique tale that poses many questions of what is real vs. what is imagination. Danny’s tale starts out as any young child would. Believing in “make believe” characters isn’t that outlandish. However, the theme of perception vs. reality never leaves readers’ minds. Danny is well educated in this area as the writing portrays him in touch with the aspects of his reality.
For being so young, Danny never appears scared or rattled at what he comes across. It is a “new normal” that he has become comfortable living in. The closing of the issue brings up some theories of what is unfolding that will challenge Danny’s world. Readers will have much to decipher heading to the next chapter.
Artwork Overview
The art is stunning throughout. The use of 12 panel pages jumps out right from the start, right down to the placement of credits mixed in within said pages. The full-page panels exemplify big moments when they appear. Nothing feels overused or forced to amp up a segment. Danny’s definition of his world via 2-page full panels is what fans will resonate with the most. It is a clear picture of what Danny sees and adds more to the argument of is his perception really reality.
Danny’s reactions are different from what readers might be expecting to see. There is never a sense that there is danger or fear when these characters pop up. Danny is portrayed as completely comfortable in this world. The only time there is a sense of doubt is the final pages, which challenges readers on what they see vs. what they think they know.
FINAL POINT: 8 OUT OF 10
The world of Danny Dillon is an eye-popping experience that will question what readers see vs. what they think. KUDRAŃSKI brings this to page with stellar artwork balanced out with a story growing by each page. The concept has only begun to step into focus, making this a book you want to keep an eye out for at the Local Comic Shops.
Hit me up on ODPH social media and let me know what you think of Something Epic #1. Thanks for reading Parlay Points on Nerd Initiative.