The Old Guard will get a star-studded sequel comedian: Tales Through Time

The Old Guard gets a star-studded sequel comic: Tales Through Time

In a 12 months when blockbusters have been in brief provide, Netflix’s The Old Guard made an enormous impression, introducing thousands and thousands around the globe to the immortal warriors of Greg Rucka and Leandro Fernandez’s comedian e-book collection. These characters have seen the world undergo seismic modifications, from the autumn of historic empires to the Crusades to the fashionable digital age. The Old Guard: Tales Through Time, a brand new six-issue anthology miniseries debuting in April, explores their expansive historical past with the assistance of a starry roster of comics expertise.

“I’ve been there alongside Greg and Leo because the starting, after we thought The Old Guard can be a good 5 points and accomplished,” says editor and author Alejandro Arbona, who joins artist Kano for a narrative set in 19th-century Paris. “Next thing we knew, each issue was swelling in page count, and we were plotting a sequel and a threequel, and it became a movie. We all got really attached to Greg and Leo’s immortals, and they inspired so much affection from us and from readers that we just couldn’t get enough.”

Rucka’s community runs deep after many years within the business, and he views Tales Through Time as a celebration with writers and artists he admires, a sentiment shared by the contributors. “I love Greg,” says author Brian Michael Bendis, who reunites together with his Powers collaborators, Michael Avon Oeming and Taki Soma. “I love his worlds. His writing. His spirit. I have watched him build these amazing worlds with good-hearted envy. And now to be a tiny part of one, even for a few pages, is a huge honor.”

Two women on horseback battle an army in The Old Guard: Tales Through Time

A black and white ink drawing of the battle scene from The Old Guard: Tales Through Time

Images: Leandro Fernandez/Image Comics

The idea of immortality opens philosophical doorways for the writers on Tales Through Time, who pull totally different meanings from the solid’s infinite struggles. “There’s been plenty of protection calling [The Old Guard] a superhero story, however what’s it that they do?” says author Robert Mackenzie. “They don’t die, until they eventually do. Well, that’s true of all of us. So rather than living or dying, I think of it as a story about aging — and how age turns all of our lives into history, even while we’re still living them.”

Mackenzie’s story with co-writer Dave Walker and artist Justin Greenwood takes readers to a monumental second on the finish of the 1960s: the moon touchdown. “It’s a period of profound change and conflict,” says Dave Walker. “The Chicago Seven, Stonewall, Vietnam, Woodstock, Manson, and of course, the space race — seem such a great lens for these world-weary characters who have to feel they had seen it all.”

“The world of The Old Guard, particularly when seen by way of the precise lens of this sort of anthology, offers us all the prospect to inform tales about these more-than-human characters all through the totality of human historical past,” says author Matt Fraction. “If what’s past is prologue, any story about where we’ve come from is ultimately a story about where we’re going. And I think these characters, in the specific, radiate out from a core of humanism: if dying doesn’t matter, then all that matters is how we live.”

“The characters are, by virtue of being immortals (and thus living through many cycles of beliefs), not bound by ‘regular’ human hangups (sexuality, nationalism, and to some extent racial bigotry), while still being deeply grounded in an empathetic moral code of their own,” says Vita Ayala, author of a present-day heist story with artist Nicola Scott.

From 13th-century Japan to the Old West to post-WWI Berlin, Tales Through Time ventures throughout varied time durations, settings, and storytelling genres. Writer Kelly Sue DeConnick, who reteams along with her Bitch Planet collaborator, Valentine De Landro, took the chance to veer away from the ’70s-influenced work on her earlier e-book. “Val mentioned Kurosawa and we settled very quickly on 13th-century Japan. I think it was about 10 seconds after that that we both groaned audibly because of the amount of research we knew we had ahead of us.”

“I’ve always been a sucker for a good Western,” says author Eric Trautmann on his collaboration with artist Rick Burchett. “There’s the mythology of all of it, however with characters just like the heroes of The Old Guard — type of everlasting outsiders — and with the good thing about hindsight, we get to tweak and twist that fantasy a bit.”

The Old Guard: Tales Through Time issue #1 cover - Nicky and Joe sit at a bar with a woman singing in the background during WWII

Image: Jacopo Camagni and Daniela Miwa/Image Comics

“Germany between the wars was a vibrant time for queer culture,” says author Andrew Wheeler, who follows lovers Nicky and Joe by way of post-WWI Berlin with artist Jacopo Camagni. “Our story is set at the twilight of that time, as the rise of fascism sweeps away the few institutions, supports, and freedoms that queer people had established for themselves. There is never a time for queer people when the victories don’t feel fragile.”

For the artists engaged on Tales Through Time, the dynamic between outsized motion and intimate character work is a significant draw. “The Old Guard is the sort of e-book that jogs my memory of how particular comics could be,” says Justin Greenwood. “The story exists across many centuries, walks between massive explosions and stark violence, but never misses out on the small moments that remind us what it is to be human.”

“The privilege to observe their relationships change and evolve over the centuries opens several interesting paths on a narrative level,” says Jacopo Camagni. “This is not as common as we may think.”

“Don’t get me wrong, I still enjoy the capes, but sometimes drawing the everyday-looking people doing cool heroic acts is just as rewarding,” says artist Matthew Clark, who tackles the American Civil War with author David F. Walker.

“The characters are a kind of guardian angel of humanity, and they take the work of justice further, trying to save humanity from itself,” says Kano. “The work of superheroes is usually quite poor, fighting local crime or supervillains, without getting involved in social plots. And this hardly makes a difference.”

The Old Guard: Tales Through Time: a snowy forest setting with a wood cabin

The Old Guard: Tales Through Time: a man hunts in the woods in the snow

Interiors from The Old Guard: Tales Through Time #1
Image: Image Comics

Other creators on Tales Through Time embrace Jason Aaron, Steve Lieber, and Horacio Altuna. All of the brand new voices bringing their very own views to The Old Guard affect Rucka and Fernandez’s strategy to the world they’ve constructed.

“I’m always a little stunned when people want to come and play with our toys, to be honest,” says Rucka, who reunites with Fernandez for tales within the anthology’s first and final points. “And it helps me with my own writing. It’s easy to get set onto a track with a character or an idea — having someone come in from outside for a visit, so to speak, allows a fresh perspective, and pushes me to rethink my own assumptions and conclusions about these characters.”

“It’s amazing, and a beautiful exercise, to see how other minds conceive, understand and even suggest something over what we’ve done from scratch,” says Leandro Fernandez. “This opens a new way to understand how these characters could be seen from other eyes. All of a sudden, they have a life, a voice of their own.”

Leave a Reply