Friday, February 22, 2019
Sonic Super Digest: Issue 8
Sonic Super Digest: Issue 8
Publication Date: August 2014
With issue 8 of the “Sonic Super Digest,” Archie would begin the habit of periodically inserting new Sonic Comics Origins into the book. This move, I suspect, was probably done to drive some faithful readers to the largely reprint filled digest series. If that was the plan, I’m gonna say it was successful. The Digest series ran for another two years, an additional eight issues, which is a pretty good run for a quickie cash-in series made mostly of old content. It probably would’ve continued to, if all Archie “Sonic” content hadn’t mysteriously ceased publication at the end of 2016.
This move might’ve been good for the “Sonic Super Digest” series but, for me personally, it was fucking annoying. When it was first published, I never read the Digests, assuming they would just always be made up of reprints. So I totally missed the Origins stories when they were new. As someone invested in these characters, learning about their revamped history was fairly important to me. To have that shuffled over to some side book, when it should’ve been in the main line, was baffling to me. You’re telling me Flynn couldn’t cut “The Great Chaos Caper” or “Champions” or some bullshit like that short so we could learn where our heroes actually come from? It’s just another way how it’s obvious to me that the reboot’s priorities were all fucked up.
So, ahem, anyway... “Little Lost Soldier” details Antoine’s origins. While the Freedom Fighters continue their way through Nicole’s digital training simulation, battling the weird first two bosses from “Sonic Spinball,” Antoine reflects on his past. We see how he came to the Kingdom of Acorn as a child. How he began life as a coward and became infatuated with Sally. And how, eventually, he would meet Bunnie, develop feelings for her, and see his life completely change.
Of the comic’s original cast, I’ve always said that Antoine underwent the most character development. This guy started out as comic relief, someone who acted like he was big shit but was actually a giant jack-ass. He was essentially there to be Sonic’s friendly foil, which amounted to him getting teased and picked-on by the blue hedgehog. Over time, he would become a brave soldier, a vital member of the team, and even be allowed to marry his love interest. (Not to mention gaining a robot dad, being replaced by an evil doppelgänger for a while, and almost dying tragically.) That would be a lot to cover in only five pages.
Surprisingly, “Little Lost Soldier” actually does a pretty good job with this. Flynn manages to reduce Antoine’s history down to its most essential elements. His ridiculous accent is explained as being sent to the Kingdom of Acorn by an unseen father from another country, to be trained as a royal guard. Antoine’s original status as a coward is explained by him only being a child, and only into the beginning of his training, when Eggman’s coup occurred. This immaturity is nicely tied in with his crush on Sally, another symptom of him being a kid who didn’t know any better. Flynn thankfully skips Sonic bullying Antoine too, as the Freedom Fighters and the blue hedgehog have largely separate childhoods, in order to maintain Sega’s bizarre mandate of never revealing Sonic’s origins.
The only element of Antoine’s new origin to slightly rub me the wrong way is the importance Bunnie plays in it. Now, don’t get me wrong, Bunnie was a huge part of Antoine’s progression from coward to hero. But in the original continuity, their relationship and Antoine’s strength grew gradually and naturally over time. Now, it looks like the coyote saw the cyborg rabbit once, was immediately crushed on her, and decided then-and-there to stop being such a jerk-ass. Their growth is tied directly into each other in a way that doesn’t feel natural. But I guess this is a side effect of showing someone’s history in five pages, versus showing it over more than one hundred comic books.
Lamar Wells continues to draw the Sonic Comics Origins five-pagers. I suspect he probably drew these back-to-back over a short period of time, as the artwork is very consistent. I like how cute he makes the Freedom Fighters as kids. Little Antoine looks adorable with his small red cap. Wells also excelled at character expressions. The shot of a distraught Antoine, walking in the rain after he gets friend-zoned by Sally, is fittingly pathetic. I also like a little gag at the end. After detailing his evolution into a brave man, Sally startles Antoine, causing him to react in a very comical way. It’s a good moment, showing that Antoine hasn't totally changed, and Wells’ art is a big reason why it works.
A digest being what it is, the rest of “Sonic Super Digest: Issue 8” is filled with reprints. Compared to the magazine, which is full of all sorts of bonuses and extras, the Digest just throws in a few “pin-ups” and “coloring” pages, all of which are made up of old cover art. At least the editors saw fit to theme most of the reprints around Antoine and Bunnie. There’s some classic stories reprinted here, like issue 10’s “Twan in the Wind” (the first half-decent Antoine story), issue 23’s “Vol-Ant-Tier,” and issue 37’s “Bunnie’s Worst Nightmare.” Newer and fitting stuff like 232’s “Fragile” and the first two parts of “Tails’ Adventure” are also included. The book even throws in some really old, random shit, like the one-pager gag “Antoine’s Vain Refrain” and “Bugged Bunnie,” from issue 4 and the “Sonic Blast” one-shot respectively.
But let’s not give whoever put this thing together too much credit, as both parts of the “Sonic Riders” adaptation and issue 167’s “Hedgehog Day” are included for no particular reason. Then again, I can’t blame them too much as there hasn’t been that many Antoine themed stories over the years (especially once you exclude anything Ken Penders had a hand in) and 119 pages is a lot to fill. Anyway, this digest remains a mandatory read for hardcore fans due to its first story, which is solid enough. [6/10]
The first 4 of the 5 Sonic Comic Origins stories that had Lamar Wells on art did get published in the same trade as issues 257-259 (to pad it out to be 4-issues long, given that those three issues were awkwardly between two 4-issue arcs), so those who only read the trades (which didn't end up getting too far: One of the things that was announced but never got published thanks to archie losing the license was the trade for Champions) didn't miss out
ReplyDeleteSomeone get Antoine some proper armor. He accidentally raided the sexy cosplay drawer when the coup started.
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