Angel: After the Fall
Angel: After the Fall | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | IDW Publishing |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Publication date | 21 November 2007 - Present |
No. of issues | 17 |
Main character(s) | Angel Investigations |
Creative team | |
Created by | Joss Whedon |
Written by | Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon |
Artist(s) | Franco Urru (#1-#5) Nick Runge (#9-current) |
Angel: After the Fall is a comic book published by IDW Publishing.[1] Written by Brian Lynch and plotted by Joss Whedon, the series is a canonical continuation of the Angel television series, and follows the events of that show's final televised season.[2][3] Angel: After the Fall sees the heroic vampire, Angel, coping with the apocalyptic aftermath of the television series after he took over and subsequently betrayed the demonic law firm, Wolfram & Hart. The city of Los Angeles and the people Angel has sworn to protect have since been sent to hell by Wolfram & Hart as a result of his actions. The first issue was released on 21 November, 2007.
Originally intended as a 13-issue limited series, After the Fall expanded into a 17-issue Angel series and will continue from the seventeenth issue under the new title of Angel: Aftermath. In addition to this, Angel: After the Fall has also spawned one spin-off of its own, Spike: After the Fall which bridges the gap between Spike's "First Night" mini arc and his first appearance in "After the Fall".
Conception
Following the success of Dark Horse Comics' ongoing series Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight, an official continuation to the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer, series creator Joss Whedon wished to continue the story of Buffy spin-off Angel in the same medium. In September 2006, comic book writer Brian Lynch met Joss Whedon by chance in a restaurant near his home where he told Whedon about the imminent release of a spin-off comic by himself and artist Franco Urru, Spike: Asylum, published by IDW and based upon the character of Spike, a central character in both Buffy and Angel. To Lynch's surprise, Whedon was thrilled with Spike: Asylum, and Joss felt confident he had found a writer capable of capturing his characters' voices in the new medium, and was impressed with Franco's unique style.[4] Whedon would later email Lynch, asking to meet up with him again in the same restaurant. Working together, the two plotted the events of a now 15-issue limited series for a continuation of the Angel saga, drawing both from elements of a Whedon's plan for a sixth televised season of Angel, as well as several proposed by Lynch. Whedon gave Lynch the freedom to write the series himself, only overseeing the project as if in the role of an executive producer.[5]
On March 11, it was announced that there would be a 4 issue spin-off entitled Spike: After the Fall from July 2008, which will chronicle the time in between the events of the series finale "Not Fade Away" and After the Fall, continuing directly from the Angel: After the Fall issue "First Night, Part Three," focusing on the characters of Spike and Illyria.[6]
Writing and artwork
After the Fall is written by Brian Lynch with supervision by Joss Whedon and is designed as a twelve-issue maxi-series, with stand-alone "specials" published between the story arcs.[2] According to Whedon, the lack of budget constraints allows Angel’s world to expand in ways that were never possible with the television series, "It will definitely use Season 6’s proposed stories as inspiration, but it's not exactly Season 6".[7] At certain intervals, the main series takes a break for a month and special one-off or spotlight issues are published during the interim. The first special is entitled "First Night" after issue five of After the Fall.[2] The first issue introduces Betta George, a fish-like character from Brian Lynch's series Spike: Asylum and Spike: Shadow Puppets, into the series.[8]
The premise of the series is that Los Angeles is feeling the aftermath of main character Angel taking a stand against the demonic Senior Partners in season five, who have retaliated by sending Los Angeles to hell. The series picks up some time after the season five finale, "Not Fade Away" and shows that Wesley remains contractually bound to the sinister Wolfram & Hart and the Partners after his death, Gunn has become a vampire capturing victims under the pretense he is rescuing them, that Angel's son Connor, ex-girlfriend Nina and an old acquaintance Gwen are working to provide a safehouse for the people of Los Angeles under siege by demons, and that Spike now lives under the protection of Illyria who is no longer in control of her powers, unpredictably assuming Fred Burkle's appearance and personality at times. Angel himself, along with a dragon he befriended, is trying his best to remain a champion of good under the circumstances.
Publication
Issues
Title | Issue # | Release Date | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
After the Fall #1 | 1 | November 21, 2007 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
Los Angeles has been a demon war zone for months after Wolfram & Hart literally sent the entire city to hell in retaliation to Team Angel's actions in "Not Fade Away". Angel, having tamed a dragon, rescues citizens from the destruction and sends them to Connor, Gwen, and Nina for sanctuary. Meanwhile, the deceased Wesley is now an incorporeal representative of Wolfram & Hart, and Gunn has been turned into a vampire. | |||||
After the Fall #2 | 2 | December 19, 2007 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
Angel travels to Santa Monica to protect Connor from a demon lord whose son Angel killed. Gwen tells Angel that there's a new player in the game, and shows him a phrase written in blood. Angel realizes who the person is and heads to Beverly Hills, where he reunites with Spike, who has become lord of the area and lives surrounded by harem of humans and demons. Angel and Spike fight briefly, and Illyria appears in defense of Spike. Meanwhile, Gunn has kidnapped Betta George and reveals that he blames Angel for being sired and wants revenge. | |||||
After the Fall #3 | 3 | January 14, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
Angel is attacked by Illyria, and gravely wounded. The Hell dimension is playing havoc with Illyria's powers, and she is time-skipping as she did in "Time Bomb." Connor arrives revealing that he and Spike have been working as partners; Spike's "Hugh Hefner" lifestyle is part of his act. Angel confronts the Lords of Los Angeles, and challenges them to a battle for all of Los Angeles in two days. On the final page, Angel's inner monologue reveals his wounds are mortal, and he is no longer a vampire. | |||||
After the Fall #4 | 4 | February 20, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
At Wolfram and Hart, Angel is healed through mystic chants that fix his mortal wounds. Two demons arrive and beckon Angel to follow them, while outside, Gunn prepares for an attack on the building. Angel and Wes are taken to the town of Silver Lake, which is ruled by their old ally Lorne, who notifies them of his neutral stance concerning the upcoming battle. After Angel has a reunion with Groosalugg, Gunn and his vampire minions plant a bomb in the empty Wolfram and Hart building, completely destroying it. Wesley's ghost fades away as Angel prepares for the battle ahead. | |||||
After the Fall #5 | 5 | March 19, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
Wesley has been transported to a void, where he has an argument with a disembodied voice over his role of being the last representative of Wolfram and Hart. Angel's allies consider their options with Spike being the most vocal about his desire to depart. The battle begins with Angel and all his friends at his side, thanks to Lorne's last minute rousing. Spike asks Angel for help concerning Illyria, as Wesley is returned from Hell and joins his companions. Spike reveals he never would have come to aid Angel had he known Wesley would be there. Illyria turns her attention to the scene, notices Wesley's arrival, and reverts back to Fred. | |||||
First Night, Part 1 #6 | 6 | April 2, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Tim Kane, David Messina, Stephen Mooney and John Byrne | ||||
Bookended by images of Betta George in captivity, the 'First Night' stories of Spike, Connor, and Lorne are presented in three sections. In the first section, Spike switches from self-congratulation and thoughts of retirement into defending innocents — including Illyria, who initially appears as Fred. The second segment displays Connor's internal conflict as he considers rejoining the fight, and is then inevitably drawn into it. The third section is presented in a cartoonish rhyming style, showing Lorne's path from Lindsey's murder to becoming lord of Silver Lake. | |||||
First Night, Part 2 #7 | 7 | May 7, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Tim Kane, Nick Runge and Stephen Mooney | ||||
The second 'First Night' issue initially focuses on Wesley's after-death awareness, including a visit from an unnamed female temptress who is acting on the Senior Partners' behalf. She pretends to be Fred, but Wesley is not fooled. The scene then shifts to Connor's situation; Kate Lockley arrives, armed to the teeth, and "rescues" Connor, taking him to her well-armed lair. In the present day, Betta George is still held captive by Gunn's lackeys, and it is shown that Gunn's vampires have been training against captive Slayers. | |||||
First Night, Part 3 #8 | 8 | June 11, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon and Scott Tipton | Penciller: Tim Kane, Fabio Mantovani, Kevyn Schmidt and Mirco Pierfederici | ||||
In the first section Gwen is making out with a guy on the beach when Los Angeles is thrown into Hell. The change in scenery has caused the device regulating her power to stop working, causing her to accidentally electrocute her male companion. In the second section, a crazy guy is preaching about the end of the world when Los Angeles is sent to Hell. Finally, Gunn wakes up in a vampire's lair to discover he's been sired. Learning the vampires were ordered to turn him, he kills their leader and takes charge of the group. | |||||
After the Fall #9 | 9 | June 18, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Nick Runge | ||||
Angel and his friends defeat the Lords of L.A., who have misunderstood the true purpose of the Hagan Shafts. Lorne becomes the new Lord of all Los Angeles, while Angel goes to back to the Hyperion Hotel to do what he does best; help people. Connor makes his feelings for Gwen known to Angel. Wesley takes Fred to his corpse, where she reverts to Illyria, who reveals that Fred is still within her. | |||||
After the Fall #10 | 10 | July 2, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Nick Runge and David Messina | ||||
Similar to episode 5.10, Soul Purpose, Angel has a comic-esque dream where a superhero version of Spike is protecting the city while the mortal Angel is now an old man. Spike is left looking after Wesley. Angel, Connor, Gwen, Nina, and Illyria questions a vampire over who killed the lord in #1. Illyria reveals to Connor, Gwen, and Nina that Angel is now human. Realizing that Illyria knew he was human through her ability to detect power, Angel tells Illyria to use her ability to search for the vampires "sitting on the power". Gunn has Betta George attacked by slayers, and eventually, a desperate George uses his ability to mentally freeze them. Gunn then has George attempt to contact help outside of LA, but George is surprised to learn that Gunn has tricked him, Los Angeles going to hell has been covered up. However, Betta George has also contacted Angel for help. Angel arrives, ready to attack, after Illyria detected Gunn's gang, "vampires atop a structure brimming with power". Angel is horrified however upon recognizing Gunn in their midst. | |||||
After the Fall #11 | 11 | August 13, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Nick Runge | ||||
Angel sends Fred away with Nina on the dragon, while he attempts to rescue Gunn. As Angel discovers that Gunn is now a vampire and his own life is in peril, Connor, Spike, and Gwen return on the dragon to help with the rescue mission. Gunn reveals his visions to Angel, then uses a magical talisman to reverse the spells on Angel: his glamour, and all the healing spells. Angel lies bleeding, broken, and dying as the cavalry arrives... only to be shocked by Gwen's apparent betrayal. | |||||
After the Fall #12 | 12 | September 4, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Stephen Mooney and Nick Runge | ||||
Connor and Spike confront Gwen on her betrayal. Wesley is taken from headquarters to the scene of Angel's impending death, which spurs Fred's transformation into Illyria as she approaches the scene of a battle between Gwen and the dragon, whose name is revealed as Cordelia. On another plane, Angel is reunited with an apparition of Cordelia, meant to ease his transition. Wesley arrives and confronts Gunn with information from the Senior Partners: the visions are their own, and all they have wrought is part of a larger plan for Angel. He reveals Angel (and Angel alone) is still entitled to the future in the Shanshu prophecy, and delivers Angel a glimpse of it. Angel sees an image of himself as a vampire, possibly Angelus, surrounded by dozens of dead bodies in the aftermath of an apocalyptic battle. This vision however, leads Angel to resign himself to death. | |||||
After the Fall #13 | 13 | October 22, 2008 | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Stephen Mooney | ||||
Spike finds Gunn's captured Slayers, but they overpower him and he is slain. The Senior Partners send their larger army (legions of dragons) to the scene of the rooftop fray, and Cordelia the dragon is killed. Gwen, seeking atonement, sacrifices herself to destroy this legion in an electrical discharge. Connor makes his way into the building, and defeats Gunn in combat, kicking him through the window. Connor's plea to a dying Angel help him realise he will never let himself be the man he saw in his vision, and Cordelia's spirit bids him farewell after reassuring him of his status as a champion of good. While the group desperately encourage Angel to keep fighting and survive, Spike re-emerges seemingly alive, promising them that it is not very hard at all and accompanied by the three Slayers who killed him. Gunn, on street level, encounters Illyria and through feigning sadness and remorse triggers her transformation into Fred, before he surreptitiously shoots her in the chest. | |||||
After the Fall #14 | 14 | TBA | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Stephen Mooney | ||||
The Alex Garner cover for this issue depicts Illyria's true Lovecraftian form crushing Angel. | |||||
After the Fall #15 | 15 | TBA | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
After the Fall #16 | 16 | TBA | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
After the Fall #17 | 17 | TBA | |||
Writer: Brian Lynch with Joss Whedon | Penciller: Franco Urru | ||||
Aftermath #18 | 18 | TBA | |||
After the Fall, which picked up where Joss Whedon's T.V. series left off, will become Aftermath in #18 and see the cast of characters dealing with the huge repercussions to come out of #17. Fantasy author, Kelley Armstrong, will join Lynch in this latest chapter.[9] | |||||
Aftermath #19 | 19 | TBA | |||
Aftermath #20 | 20 | TBA | |||
Aftermath #21 | 21 | TBA | |||
Aftermath #22 | 22 | TBA | |||
Aftermath #23 | 23 | TBA | |||
Spin-offs
Title | Issue # | Release Date | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spike: After the Fall #1 | 1 | July 16, 2008 | |||
Spinning out of Spike's First Night story, the first issue of Spike: After the Fall shows Spike and Illyria watching over a group of citizens. Illyria keeps turning back into Fred, and Spike is forced to keep turning her back into Illyria, to protect her. Spike questions whether he may have feelings for Fred, and the group of women that Spike is with during Angel: After the Fall make their first chronological appearance. | |||||
Spike: After the Fall #2 | 2 | August 6, 2008 | |||
The issue opens with Spike meeting the dragon: while Spike considers ways of killing it, the dragon communicates that Spike should mount it. Once together, the dragon takes Spike to Wolfram & Hart, where a figure whom Spike does not recognize is suspended inside an energy field, writing in pain. Meanwhile, the civilians are at the mercy of the group of women. Spike encounters one, commandeers her truck, and finds the hostages, then tries to run down their leader of the group of female demons. She throws Fred in front of the truck, and Fred reverts to Illyria on impact. Illyria and Spike begin to melee the demon women, but their leader uses life-draining magic to turn the hostages into zombies and knock out Spike and Illyria. Spike awakens chained in a dark room filled with his zombified wards, and the demon leader tells him she is keeping him alive for his connections. | |||||
Spike: After the Fall #3 | 3 | September 17, 2008 | |||
Non, the head of the female demons attempts to bargain with a Gunn to return Spike to him. Her power is revealed to be control of humans. Gunn beats her down and lets her go leading her to decide to kill Spike and all the humans with him. Non attempts to behead Illyria, but the ax shatters on contact. Illyria breaks free and starts killing all the female demons. Non prepares to kill the last human hostage before Connor appears and stops her. | |||||
Spike: After the Fall #4 | 4 | October 29, 2008 | |||
Reception
Initial reviews have been generally favorable. Troy Brownfield of Newsarama believed the most enjoyable aspect of the first issue "was seeing members of the extensive cast turn up again in surprising ways" and was pleased to see the return of minor characters from the television series. He described the reveal of Gunn as a vampire as "rather startling" and a "new injection of life" for the character.[10] IGN's Bryan Joel believed that the first issue wasn't as accessible for new readers as that of Buffy Season Eight, claiming that it read "less like the season premiere of the next season of Angel and more like episode 23 of season 5". He felt that the tone and characterization remained "true to its source material and fans will be happy to know Whedon's trademark dialogue knack is, for the most part, intact", but warned that the elaborate visuals of Angel flying through the hell-bound Los Angeles on a dragon may be too far removed from the television series for some readers. In an "Additional Take" review, Joel's colleague criticized the dialogue for lacking "the trademark witty banter" and worried that the hellish new setting might detract from the reality of the characters, describing it as "an interesting turn for what was once a very grounded fantasy series".[11]
The artwork by Franco Urru was described as "reasonably good" by Brownfield, who claimed that while it captures the likeness of the characters, Urru's work lacks sharpness and "the weight of that terrific Tony Harris cover."[10] IGN believed Urru is talented when he "lets loose" creating demons, but less impressive when it comes to matching characters to their respective actors.[11]
The series has been a success for publisher IDW Publishing, who report that it has become the company's highest-charting comic book release ever.[12]
References
- ^ Angel: After The Fall page at IDWpublishing.com.
- ^ a b c "SDCC '07: IDW PANEL REPORT". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
- ^ "SDCC '07: BRIAN LYNCH ON ANGEL: AFTER THE FALL". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-07-30.
- ^ "BRIAN LYNCH TALKS "ANGEL: AFTER THE FALL"". Comic Book Resources.
- ^ "Fade In," Chris Ryall (Editor-in-Chief). Angel: After the Fall #1. 21-11-07.
- ^ "Spike Gets An Official Story in Spike: After the Fall"
- ^ "STRAIGHT FROM SAN DIEGO: THE 12 CLIPBOARDS OF JOSS WHEDON". Wizard Entertainment.
- ^ "First smidgen of info from IDW's 'Angel:After the Fall' panel at Comic-Con". Whedonesque.com. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
- ^ Kelley Armstrong - "Angel : Aftermath" Comic Book - Q&A
- ^ a b Troy Brownfield (2007-11-20). "BEST SHOTS EXTRA: ANGEL: AFTER THE FALL #1". Newsarama. Retrieved 2007-11-21.
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(help) - ^ a b Bryan Joel (2007-11-22). "Angel: After the Fall #1 Review". IGN. Retrieved 2007-11-22.
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(help) - ^ "Angel: After the Fall Rises to the Top for IDW". www.idwpublishing.com. IDW News. 2007-11-28. Retrieved 2007-11-29.
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