Aquaman Vol. 1: The Drowning
| Writer | Dan Abnett |
| Artist | Scot Eaton, Philippe Briones, Oscar Jimenez, Mark Morales, Wayne Faucher |
| Paperback: | Jan 11, 2017, $16.99 |
Aquaman, the King of Atlantis, has never found a true home in either of the worlds that he was born of. In these tales from AQUAMAN: REBIRTH #1 and issues #1-6 of the new series, the King of Atlantis attempts to broker a peace between Atlantis and the surface, but this noble quest might force Aquaman to choose whether to live his life above the waves, or below them. Plus, Black Manta makes his bloody return and seeks to destroy everything and everyone Aquaman loves!
ISSUES
Back to Top| Rating | Collected Issues | Reviews |
|---|---|---|
| Aquaman #1 | 39 | |
| Aquaman #1 | 33 | |
| Aquaman #2 | 19 | |
| Aquaman #3 | 15 | |
| Aquaman #4 | 8 | |
| Aquaman #5 | 10 | |
| Aquaman #6 | 14 |
USER REVIEWS
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8.5
Back matter: variant cover gallery plus character sketches
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8.5
The characterization of both Arthur and Mera are done pretty well, a solid straightforward plot that shows how reasonable a king Aquaman is... There's pretty well action and art, also The Big Blue pops in a cameo.
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8.0
Aquaman Vol 1 is a very straightforward interpretation of the titular hero, but it's one that does a familiar concept with such gusto that it's hard not to love it. The plot centers around Arthur Curry attempting to create new ties between his undersea nation of Atlantis, and the rest of the world. However a familiar face emerges to hinder the king's goals and... of course it's Black Manta. Again, despite this book falling short on surprises, it handles its characters and themes in a refreshing light. All the characters, despite not being very witty and some being straight-up boring, are pretty well written. Dan Abnett, while his plot may suffer from tiredness, is great at writing dialogue. The imagery, which bounces between a few diffe more
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8.0
i love how they continuously bring up how everyone thinks he just talks to fish
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7.5
Aquaman is a midly interesting character and that's for me the biggest problem on his comics. While some authors, like Geoff Johns, managed skillfully to make him bad-ass and complex, other authors, like Dan Abnett, can't write extraordinary stories. The problem here isn't the author, it's the restricted capacity of the protagonist.
The idea of Aquaman as "an enemy of the state" is interesting but too déjà -vu. Another thing that bothers me is the return of Black Manta because, with Ocean Master, they're the only villains of the protagonist and I feel like the modern authors don't create new villains. Also, Black Manta's characterization is too close to the Joker (he says that he has a unique relationship with Aquaman but they'll neve more -
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6.5