In the early stages of development, did you and Fiona would tell the story for this long?īrian K. Thrillist: In 2012, you told Wired that Saga was "a disease of mine" and not something you would necessarily share with anyone. The series’ 50th consecutive issue arrives March 28 (via Image Comics), and to commemorate, Thrillist exchanged words with Vaughan, discussing the series' progression, the duo’s fondness for "taking hard turns" from genre to genre, and how the Saga universe is just getting started. Vaughan and illustrator Fiona Staples, it’s just the beginning of a much larger story they need to tell. It’s heavy stuff and one that continues to induce Tumblr theses on "How Saga Made Me Feel And Threw Me Out Of A Fucking Window." For writer Brian K. There are bounty hunters, treehouse rocketships, bipedal seals with sweaters, and giant space fetuses known as "Timesucks." They’re all part of a bigger picture that tackles love, sex, family, racism, politics, and addiction. The space opera centers on two star-crossed alien lovers who give birth to a little, hybrid baby, and its highly stylized approach - think Star Wars meet Baz Luhrmann’s Romeo + Juliet - sets it apart from everything else in the sci-fi canon. For the uninitiated, Saga is batshit crazy.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |