Review: Captain Nemo, Vol. 1
originally written for and posted on Comicsnob.com [Dec ’06 – May ’08]

Captain Nemo, Vol. 1
Published by: Seven Seas Entertainment
Art: Aldin Viray
Story: Jason DeAngelis
192 (166) pages.
Original Language: English
Orientation: Right to left
Vintage: February 2006.
Tones: Roland Amago
Letters & Graphic Design: Jon Zamar
Editor: Jason DeAngelis
Publisher’s Rating: Teen
Rating: 4 out of 5
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Premise: Napoleon beat Wellington at Waterloo in this alternate history, and now the Son of Nemo seems to be the only one who can fight a French Empire on which the sun never sets.
Synopsis:
At our opening, we join French Vice Minister Pierpont (and his hot daughter, a stowaway) as he sets out on a mission to find and nullify whatever the cause that is sinking so many French ships.
The cause, of course, turns out to be the dread pirate Nemo. After a brief action interlude, our Young Nemo rescues Camille Pierpont from a shark (or course) and varied and sundry dramatic tensions and relationships are set up between the newly arrived outsider and the members of the Nautilus crew.
Character and background exposition follow, though this is done with a Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea backdrop and a bit of life-and-death-jeopardy, along with the set-up and introduction of a new villain and the conflict foreshadowed for volume 2.
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Review:
While after the first third you could perhaps accuse this volume for forgoing story in favour of set-up for the whole series, that’s hardly something to complain about when we’re only in the first book.
While a bit sketchy, there is enough of a plot to keep the action moving forward through what are basically character introductions, and the story setting is nice bonus. We may just be walking through sets on our way to act two, but the scenery is nice: Sea monsters, sunken continents, along with the whole half-remembered backdrop drawn from both the book and numerous movie adaptations; all these help flavour a story that might otherwise seem a bit slow and clunky.
There is a lot of promise here. The character designs are a bit generic, but nicely executed and different enough one from another that each will stand alone in the context of these books. The original source material is given enough of a twist that the reader has no idea what to expect next– while at the same time it is all comfortingly familiar. And any story where we get to hate the French? Classic villainy is always a nice extra.
I look forward to future releases (…see next) and hope the writer and artist can live up to the promise of their first volume.
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So let’s back up a step: Take a look at the credits cited above. Here we have an American take on Japanese manga. These guys are obviously students and big fans of the genre. They even went so far as to draw it backwards, right-to-left, though there is no particular reason to do so. I’ve heard various terms for this sort of creative endeavour, though the one that makes most sense to me is the boringly-descriptive Original English Language (or OEL) manga.
Not that manga really means anything but “comic book”. But I won’t get into that argument here; there are in fact enough differences in style and execution that manga is a meaningful term when applied to comics. Here we just so happen to have some Americans doing the manga-styled-thing.
I won’t fault them for that. In fact, the only complaint I might bring to the table is that some of the grand underwater scenes could, in fact, be grander. There are a couple of panels that are just too dark– but maybe I’m nitpicking. It is set underwater, after all. But a beam from a helmet light picking out a patch of detail on some ancient sunken ruins in a double-page spread, now that would have been a nice touch and also some good artistic contrast.
(on the flip side: panel layout over two pages with decently rendered sunken ruins. what am I complaining about?)
Seven Seas Entertainment is a smaller company who has made the laudable decision to not only license some good-but-overlooked Japanese titles, but to also find American artists and writers and publish the best of those good-but-overlooked efforts as well. That can only be a good thing, in my opinion, and I think Captain Nemo is as convincing an argument as any to that point.
The only complaint I have about OEL manga releases is that they are sloooow. About one a year, give or take. While I might prefer a monthly fix, I guess I can wait the time it takes to fill a hundred and some odd pages with story and art. From the looks of things in this first volume, Nemo will be one worth waiting for.








