Kaleidoscope

Kaleidoscope

Adrastea: Volume 1 (Album)

Customer Review

Widely surprised and satisfied by the first work of Mathieu Bablet who presented a singular and original work "The Beautiful Death" and whose contours of a city industrialized gave me vertigo, this is therefore with great dimpatience that jattendais editing of this totally different diptych.

Different? Yes and no because Adrastée gets his eldest trait tortured and beautiful scenery that stretches on infinity and seclusion of his characters, finally "his" character.

Taking Greek mythology to better rewrite, Bablet sprinkles his world of forced and known references to present us a story conceived as a dramatic tale with an immortal king finding himself alone in his empty imposing city after 1000 years of rule.

Having long since lost some of his memory and all the beings that he loved, he did else than from objective to meet his creator to know the reasons for his fatal destiny and unwavering.

His walking odyssey will of course do meet some divine creatures or malicious amidst scenery teeming with thousands of details and colors. It really takes full the "mouth" by observing each box and these mute but dazzling landscapes thousand lights and it reminded me greatly the melancholy of the cult video game "Shadow of the Colossus" all the more that some dumb and aggressive entities remind each facet.

I must confess that I spent much more time on the mood mextasier graph on the script whose purpose méchappe. The various passages are all the more distinct in their colors bestiary of their own and I have a hard time distinguishing the scenario midterm of this adventure.

But the vastness of this man face the incredible diversity of environments that it crosses can not leave unmoved. Just some dialogues fall flat because few worked as the phrase "Enjoy The Silence" all the more reason quon could imagine that it comes dune comic adaptation of the famous clip of Depeche Mode.

Jose believe that the second and final volume will clarify certain points while boosting other thoughts and even if history is lacking in details, there is no doubt that this is a fairy of images of the most beautiful books of recent months. No doubt Mathieu Bablet goes saméliorant and that this is a copyright to monitor