DDP is one of my favorite iterations of Voltron bc it's the first time we actually see these characters get fleshed out beyond just a name and an archetype, but I just can NOT forgive them for sending Keith's character on a downward spiral towards edgy and distant. Keith's natural form is a huge dork who makes dad jokes and picks flowers for his friends. It's like watching people selectively breed animals to be trainwrecks like they massacred my boy.
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So, @breadstickcat brought up my 2021 drawing of DDP Pidge. Yeah, I needed to revisit him and draw better.
But gods, his hair was a pain to work on. Pidges live to make their hair difficult to initially understand, don't they?
Anyway, I hope y'all enjoy this one!
Commissions are open and available on my Ko-fi.
Until next time!
A Review of Voltron DDP Comic: A Legend Forged (2008)
I knew the old Devil’s Due Publishing (DDP) comics for Voltron were lit…but the sequel, A Legend Forged, really resonated with me! This 5-issue comic series is DDP’s interpretation of the history behind the Voltron robot itself, and it wraps this lore within an adventure plot featuring our main pilots (Allura, Keith, Hunk, Lance, Pidge) in an alliance with Lotor.
I’ve meant to write a review about A Legend Forged for a while because I know that older Voltron comics aren’t always accessible. I think this one deserves some attention because it does things that I find just really refreshing after watching the 2016 Legendary Defender show. It also has some fun details that could have been source material for the world building and events in the 2016 VLD show.
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The basic summary of this comic is that Team Voltron and Lotor are accidentally transported 1,200 years in the past after some classified time travel tech destabilizes in the middle of a fight. Powerless from the blast, they crash-land on a nearby planet, and they’re soon captured by people on the planet who have exceptionally advanced technology. Lotor agrees to a truce with Team Voltron to help find a way out of their prison, and back to their own time.
In arriving through the wormhole, however, they catch the attention of a very powerful group who are missing an important piece to complete their special defense project (the Voltron robot). The robot is being built in part by King Altarus, Allura’s ancestor, to fight off the villain in that ancient past—Empress Jain IX, Lotor’s evil great great (10X) grandmother, who is a sorceress hellbent on intergalactic domination.
Ultimately, Team Voltron and Lotor get caught up in the efforts to stop Empress Jain and assist King Altarus’s Council…and they discover some interesting things about themselves and about Voltron along the way!
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I found A Legend Forged to be one entertaining, snarky shenanigan after another. Although it does source the 1984 character designs and backgrounds along with some references to Vehicle Voltron (which may be alienating to fans familiar only with VLD), I love that this comic deeply and openly explores what makes the Voltron franchise so identifiable and unique—its Arthurian legends/magic in the midst of an expansive space opera.
The comic is meant for slightly older audiences compared to VLD—it includes several instances of adult cursing, frightening images, some brief images of romance/non-graphic sensuality, and occasional graphic violence showing blood. I couldn’t find a publisher-recommended age for this comic on the book covers, but I think it might be T for ages 12 and older.
If you’re interested, a deeper overview of A Legend Forged is included under the cut!
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At a high level, there’s certain things that just really attracted me to this comic, even though I’m usually not much of a comic reader:
THE WORLD BUILDING
The whole timeline distortion that takes them back 1,200 years is a direct consequence of humans attempting to back-engineer the mysterious Voltron robot. Within that back-engineering, they’d stumbled into creating a time machine:
(Photo Description: The city of Toronto in the future. Someone asks, “Time travel?” Coran replies, “Devised using reverse engineered technology from Lion Voltron, no doubt.” An alliance official responds, “Come on now, how would that be possible?” A second official responses, “Coran’s right. The way that Lion Voltron summons energy and weaponry is a mystery. We learned how to mimic the ability with the vehicle units, without really understanding it.”)
So there’s a lot of undertow here about just what exactly all these different parties (Earth/Galaxy Alliance, space pirates, Lotor) were planning to do with a time machine to begin with before it gets blown up in a battle over it. But there’s also something interesting happening here involving Fate/Destiny and plasticity of time itself.
At the very heart of this comic is the concept that the Voltron robot could not have been completed 1,200 years ago if Team Voltron and Lotor were not accidentally tossed back in time to help complete the project. And idk, I think that’s just pretty cool. It ties these lives of these characters together in a way that I don’t think I’ve seen in any other Voltron iteration—that they were meant to pilot Voltron, because their presence helped to unlock the final missing piece to bring it to life.
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In addition, we get a really interesting look into the ancient past of the Voltron universe, back to the beginning of the first space empire. The comic’s big bad, Empress Jain IX, is an incredibly powerful and heartless sorceress of Drule heritage, from the planet Doon:
(Photo description: Empress Jain standing before the leader of a world she’s conquered, declaring, “And thus, the mighty fall! The powerful kneel at my feet! Behold the grandeur of your empress, and witness what happens to those who stand in her way!”)
But there’s always been this larger question in the Voltron franchise around King Zarkon’s unique, fish-like features compared to other Drule characters like Jain, and this comic answers that.
This is what the OG Zarkon looked like:
Compared to the ancient people of Korrinoth, who have similar ears and coloring as he does:
(Description: Keith says to the team, “I think we may be witnessing the beginning of King Zarkon’s people’s assimilation into the Drule Empire.”)
The planet that our protagonists crash-land on 1,200 years in the past is called Korrinoth. The people here had been recently conquered by Jain and share many similarities with the visual features of Zarkon. So this comic establishes that Zarkon has both Drule and Korrinite heritage. Unfortunately for Lotor, the Korrinites of the planet don’t acknowledge his Korrinite blood because he looks too Drule in comparison. So this comic reaches back on the hints that Lotor struggles to fit in with his own people…and it helps to explain why he’s captured along with Team Voltron:
(Photo description: Team Voltron and Lotor stand together, having been captured in a purple energy field functioning like jail bars.)
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There’s also the concept that Voltron—just like the surrounding environment in Voltron franchise—is an amalgamation of science and magic. The comic’s big bad, Empress Jain, had discovered that her own dark sorcery arts could be challenged by the “lion gods,” who were demanding an increasing price be paid for her horrific conquering. In order to negate the lion gods’ power, Jain explicitly banned religious worship around them and any lion god iconography from her empire.
(Photo description: The dark entity Sarga says, “It is coming, and soon, that which may be your downfall. A twisted abomination of science and technology. The might of the Lion-Gods with the heart and mind of Man.” Jain says, “But I have banned worship of the Lions through the empire.”)
So the Voltron builders were reaching back to a very ancient, lost power that they were risking their lives to resurrect. The connection to a pantheon of lion gods helps to provide some logic around why the Voltron robot itself splits into lions—because it’s literally the symbol of these lost gods.
The visual design of Voltron is also reflected in the armor worn specifically by warriors fighting in the name of these banned gods:
(Photo description: A humanoid warrior wearing Voltron-based armor, coming to Team Voltron’s rescue at the command of the Council.)
So Voltron as a machine metaphorically stands as the Ultimate Warrior in humanoid form, supported by the individual lion gods.
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Within the comic, it hints at some pretty intense religious discrimination—that Empress Jain was willing to arrest and torment even her own daughter, Azakhi for becoming a Lion Priestess:
(Photo description: Jain’s daughter, Azahki, is revealed to be a dirtied prisoner captured by Jain’s forces. She tells Team Voltron, “Do not fear my Drule appearance. I am a devout follower of your ways.”)
This background battle supports why Team Voltron and Lotor are instantly targeted by Jain’s forces when they crash-land on Korrinoth, bearing the banner of the lion gods in the form of Voltron.
Later on in the comic, we also see that the colors themselves represented the various domains of these lion gods:
(Photo description: An image of Voltron as it’s being built, with King Altarus narrating in the background, ““Yellow for win, red for fire, green for earth, blue for water, and at the center…the might blackness of space which houses all of reality.”)
So we really see Voltron pick up a lot more backstory to explain the robot itself.
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We do get a deeper look as well into King Altarus and his Council.
King Altarus, Princess Allura’s ancestor, is the leader of the group. But the work involved in building Voltron doesn’t just rest with him like it did with Alfor in VLD. His council is just as equally if not more powerful than him in other ways.
In this panel, King Altarus introduces his four other team members as the most powerful scientists or sorcerers of their respective planet:
(Photo description: An introduction of the five council members of Altarus: “Cybrus hails from a world of sentient machines…More than a computer, he is also sorcerer to rival any other. The striking beauty to my right is Heket. Born of a nomadic race who travels the galaxy bestowing gifts of knowledge to primitive worlds. She is also the most brilliant scientist of her people. Phelos is a brilliant sci-mage from the neighboring solar system. If you are truly who you say, you may already know legends of our final ally. From a primitive world, but master of the most advance wizardry in the galazy: Merlin.”)
The combination of Altarus, Cybrus, Heket, Phelos, and Merlin all echo the 2016 Legendary Defender’s backstory—in which leaders of various people united together for the greater good of their galaxy. Once again, we have five unique planets represented in the Voltron effort—but in this case, it even includes Earth. This helps to explain part of why Voltron’s original design had very medieval attributes.
Maybe some would think it’s a bit hokey that the OG builders included the actual Arthurian figure of Merlin, the wizard? Idk, I think it’s kind of a fun way to connect Voltron’s ancient, magical past to Earth as well, and it suggests that Merlin was preparing or called by the others to help prepare for a future of advanced warfare. I’ve always wondered why the OG Voltron looked so medieval with the crests and the swords and such—and actually, it being built in part by a medieval human wizard would help to explain that!
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We also see in the DDP comics a very heavy evolution to Allura’s character and to the world building within the Voltron franchise itself. She’s no longer just a princess who knows how to fight—she’s actively a Clairvoyant, with untapped power. King Altarus acknowledges, and the other Council members sense it, that Princess Allura has way more internal magic than she even knows about herself:
(Photo description: Council member Heket says to King Altarus, “I have a feeling about the girl [Allura]. Her aura is oddly similar to your own.”)
We also see that the dark entity Sarga recognizes this in her as well:
(Photo description: The dark entity Sarga says to Empress Jain, “The visitors…they each have a link to this monstrosity. However, the blood of only one of them pulses with the magic of Arus. The one called Allura! She is the one! She must be—” Jain cuts in, “The host!” And Sarga confirms, “Yes, with Princess Allura, Sarga will live in this realm once more. With her, we can control Voltron.”)
I feel like this magic probably helped to set the tone for the Princess Allura we meet in the 2016 Legendary Defender reboot, who ultimately got the opportunity to grow into the powers that are hinted at here in this previous iteration.
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I do also like this comic because the protagonists (with the exception of Pidge who is 16) are adults, and they’re a little more mature in their decisions and interests.
Like, for example, the Lance in this comic has a much more extensive sensitivity to and interest in culture. Instead of it being Hunk bonding with aliens through food, we see Lance as the diplomat, bonding with Jain’s daughter Azahki, just by asking her questions:
(Photo description: Lance and Jain’s daughter, Azahki, sitting at a table and eating. Lance says, “That hit the sport. I was frickin’ starving.” Azahki says, “After being held prisoner for so long, I had forgotten what real food tastes like. So much time was wasted…so much life. Just sitting in a cell because of my beliefs. I…I’m sorry, Lance. This should be a nice evening, and I’m bringing the mood down.”)
(Photo description: Lance replies, “Actually, I’m fascinated to learn more about the followers of the Lions, and about you. Like, where you come from. You feel free to talk about whatever comes to mind.” Azahki responds then, “You’re too kind.”)
I think along with this, we see a more nuanced view into the Drule themselves. Azahki, as both a Drule and as Empress Jain’s daughter, has turned away from the evil deeds of the empire and has suffered dearly for trying to do the right thing. This falls in line with DDP’s dedication in the worldbuilding to show that not all Drule are bad.
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We also see some very interesting, Honervian backstory relating to Empress Jain’s dark powers. Like VLD Honerva, Jain is in part backed by an ancient spirit/power she likes to “talk” to. She calls on it as the “Mother of Power.” This creepy creature is named Sarga in the comics:
(Photo description: Jain summons Sarga: “Mother of Power, Great Spirit, I summon thee.” The dark entity Sarga manifests and says, “Yesss, sweet Jain! You know my name! Feel free to speak it. Have you found the Host?” Jain replies, “Not yet, great Sarga. But the search continues. To date, my body is the only one that could sustain you in our realm.” Sarga says, “Jain. Do not be so simple-minded. It’s only your mortal shell.” Jain retorts, “One that I rather like, thank you.”)
Sarga is pushing for Jain to give up her mortal body entirely so that Sarga can walk the mortal plane, but they don’t see eye to eye on this. Jain likes having her own body. Even so, Sarga knows that she has to protect her investment in Jain, and so she’s the one who plants a devious idea in Jain’s head—that she could potentially use the Voltron from the future to destroy the Voltron of the past, and therefore reestablish her supremacy over the lion gods and their legacy.
Tbh, I visually get a LOT of vibes from Jain relating to VLD’s Honerva character? Down to the long stringy hair and gold eyes…and she really does look like a female version of Lotor, tbh, lol.
(Photo description: Jain leaning in a circle of candles, exhausted from summoning Sarga, who has referred to Voltron. Jain murmurs to herself, “Pow..power. There is power in that name.”)
I think what I like about Jain as a big bad, though, is that she’s legit just an evil person. She doesn’t have an abuse backstory, like what so many content creators like to reference as the reason for someone going insane/evil. She’s clearly very talented and very powerful and very in control, and she’s using those abilities in all the wrong ways just because she can.
Given DDP’s contributions to the Voltron franchise with its female villains (Merla, Jain), I almost can’t believe that the 2016 VLD show didn’t carry these characters forward but instead raised up the all-new Honerva as “needed female villain rep.” But I can definitely see the echoes of Jain in the Honerva that we see throughout VLD.
I also really, really see similarities in how Jain is willing to use her own daughter, Azahki, as a pawn for her own aims. And by the end of the comic, Jain eventually accomplishes bringing Sarga into the mortal plane by sacrificing her own daughter’s body. This pretty hauntingly echoes the lack of maternal instinct seen in Honerva in VLD and Honerva’s malicious interest in and use of Lotor, even post-death in s8.
I feel like I relived Honerva’s interactions with Lotor in s8 when I saw how Jain acts with her own daughter, Azahki:
(Photo description: Azahki has been shot in the battle. Jain kneels down to her and cries, “Daughter. My only daughter.” Azahki says, “Mother...you…you’re crying? I…I’m sorry…you didn’t give me… a choice.” Jain pleads, “You can’t do this, Azahki, not now. After being gone for so long and now…” But then Jain has a complete switch of demeanor. She stands up and declares, “Now you’ve ruined everything! Everything!” Azahki, bewildered, says, “What?” And Jain yells, “I should have killed you in your crib!”)
Another association with Honerva is that Honerva/Haggar killed the original paladins. Likewise, it is Jain who takes down the Council one by one:
(Photo description: Jain breaks into the Council, hand glowing with power and fallen warriors around her, saying, “How could someone with such feeble defenses have eluded me for so long, Altarus? I give you credit for that, at least.”)
(Photo description: Jane is surrounded by the dead bodies of Merlin and Heket. She says, “Now, to finish this.”)
So I guess I’m just fascinated by Jain as a villain and find her similarities with Honerva interesting. In Jain’s case, however, there’s absolutely nothing to be sympathetic with her on, lol.
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In terms of Lotor’s part:
I think this comic represents probably the most actively hopeful iteration of him that I’ve seen in the Voltron franchise? Like, Dynamite Comics had Lotor moving to ally with Team Voltron to bring down the rift creatures in a massive alliance, but those comics were canceled before we could see the whole story that Brandon Thomas intended. Here, we have a whole, complete story in which Lotor actively does good deeds and lives, wow.
(I didn’t think that was, like, allowed in this franchise, lol?)
I do think it’s really interesting that here, Lotor comes face-to-face with just pure, unadulterated evil—and it scares him. Just like in VLD, this Lotor is forced to watch Jain decimate an entire planet and enslave its people. Despite being canonically “evil,” Lotor does not take this level of destruction very well:
(Photo description: Empress Jain speaking to an underling, saying, “For now, rid this planet of its luscious environment and warp home.”)
(Photo description: The planet is set ablaze by Jain’s forces. Lotor is looking on from a different ship. He is unsettled by Jain’s power and says, “My god.” His prisoner that he’s watching on Team Voltron’s request (the space pirate Captain Stride), teases, “Nothing like a little global decimation to build character, eh, Lotor?” And Lotor warns, “Stride,” with an upset look on this face.)
His motivations for helping out and connecting with both Team Voltron and King Altarus’s council do start with just wanting to save his own neck. But as the comic progresses, we see him taking larger and larger risks to help protect the team, and he responds more emotionally to the stakes being faced by other allies.
Jain’s level of evil, and her later attempts to target Princess Allura as a host body for the dark entity Sarga, are what really push Lotor out of the antagonist/villain role into the position of antihero. And I like this exploration of him because Lotor is a really fascinating character in the franchise and usually always a wild card. Like, he has the capacity to play both sides and be unpredictable.
And it’s interesting too that this comic even opens up by acknowledging that. In the beginning, King Altarus and his council are watching Team Voltron and Lotor recalibrate from their crash-landing on Korrinoth. King Altarus notes that Lotor is evil, but that he’s capable of doing good…because of his love for Allura:
(Photo description: King Altarus judging the team: “The girl has a clairvoyance about her, but doesn’t even realize it. I sense something noble about all of them…save for the Drule who should not be trusted. Although his apparent fondness for the woman may cause him to fight his true evil nature at least for a while.”)
Later in the comic, it’s King Altarus himself who leans on Lotor when he thinks all hope is lost. And it’s Lotor who holds him up and tries to take down Jain:
(Photo description: King Altarus leans upon Lotor and mourns, “She’s…she’s done it, Lotor. She’s ruined our chances. Five generations…for nothing.” Lotor has raised a blaster and replies, “Not without going through me first.”)
So we really see this comic actively allow Lotor’s character to do things outside of the typical bounds of a villain. The very person who called him inherently evil is the one wailing to him and counting on him to save the day, lol.
We also see echoes of VLD Lotor’s pride in this comic. The DDP Lotor is also a man of mixed heritage and is very proud of who and what he is.
(Photo description: Lotor is on the battlefield, having slain an enemy who’d called them pathetic. Lotor responds, “Pathetic? My noble blood begs to differ.”)
So I liked that once again, Lotor is actually proud of who he is even though the world around him actively tries to devalue him. I think that’s been something meaningful about the Lotor character that a lot of people have connected to.
In his efforts to assist Team Voltron in reclaiming their own recharged Voltron lions (so that Jain can’t get them), Lotor is actually a very helpful ally as well, and a skilled warrior. So it was fun to see panels of Team Voltron and Lotor fighting together, side by side.
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THE CLIMAX AND RESOLUTION
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Ultimately, the evil Empress Jain tries to take over the Voltron from the future, in realizing that Allura has deep, spiritual connections to the machine. She agrees that this makes Allura the perfect host body for the dark entity Sarga, and as their way to control the robot. And so she enacts the rituals to possess Allura:
(Photo description: Allura’s features are mutating unnaturally as Sarga begins to posses her. In the background, Jain calls, “Don’t fight it, child. Don’t fight the honor of becoming a god.” Someone in the background, revealed later to be Lotor, calls out, “No! You can’t do this!”)
With Jain threatening Allura’s life, Lotor steps up to defend her, still holding up the battered King Altarus:
(Photo description: Lotor yells, “No! Not Allura!” And he shoots Jain through the shoulder.)
(Photo description: Jain snaps, “Lotor! How dare you attack your own kind! I’ll smite my own daughter, let alone a pissant distant grandson!”)
Ultimately, Lotor’s decision to shoot his grandma (what is it with this franchise and matricide/patricide lol) results in Jain being distracted long enough for the combined spiritual/soul energies of Allura, the previous Council members, and Altarus to bring “life” to Voltron.
This completes Voltron as a spiritual being as well—that it’s sentient and not just a robot, but imbued with the hopes and impulses for a defender against the evil attacking them.
(Photo description: Voltron awakens as a sentient robot and stands to move against Jain.)
Realizing that she has lost, Jain flees in a poof of magic—with her daughter, Azahki, oddly disappearing too. The comic ends for them on an unsettling note that Sarga has in fact slipped through to the mortal realm…by choosing Azahki instead of Allura as her host body:
(Photo description: Jain kneels and cries, “Oh mighty Sarga, I humbly beseech thee. Forgive my failures. Forgive my ability to bring you into our world. I beg you to be given a second chance! I vow to you we will see this through.” From behind, someone says, “Don’t be so harsh, mother.” Jain turns around and asks, “Who dares?” A woman in a cloak appears and says, “You may have failed to give me Voltron’s power, my child. But do not fear.” The woman is revealed to be the possessed body of Azahki, Jain’s daughter. Through her body, Sarga says, “I found a body that will do just fine for now.”)
However, we don’t see this thread explored any further. Shortly after the battle, the Galaxy Alliance manages to rebuild a temporal manipulation device to lock in on the missing Team Voltron and Lotor, and pull them back through time.
(Photo description: A strange flying machine appears. Someone asks, “What…what is it?” Allura echoes, “What’s it doing?” Lotor peers at it curiously and says, “I believe it’s scanning us.” The comic panels show the device scanning and identifying people to send back to modern times.)
And so, eventually, this wayward team makes it back home, with the final panels suggesting the Garrison had to complete a couple of temporal jumps to do it.
FUN LITTLE PIECES ALONG THE WAY
The comic itself had some interesting and funny scenes in it, including the following:
Please enjoy this image of a boi having tamed a dinosaur in the middle of an active battle:
(Photo description: Prince Lotor sitting atop a large, dinosaur-like creature that he’s tamed, calling joyfully to the paladins, “You can put your toy away, Pidge. I know where to find the lions.”)
Pidge jokes about Hunk and Lance:
(Photo description: Hunk had saved Lance from a shot. In running past them, Pidge calls, “Keep moving, guys! There’ll be time for spooning later.”)
Some time-traveling paradox humor:
(Photo description: Lotor shooting an ancient Drule, “Hope you’re not one of my forefathers.”)
Some Keith and Lance badgering:
(Photo description: Lance complains, “Keith Kogane seriously isn’t going to lecture me about battlefield romance, is he?”)
Did VLD get the name Kaltor from this comic??? Because Kalthor sounds pretty darn similar to Kaltor from VLD:
(Photo description: Jain calling out for an underling, “Kalthor! Sigh. Kalthor, this effort is beneath me. Extract the information I seek.”)
ALSO BLESS, THIS COMIC LETS ALLURA CUSS:
(Photo description: Princess Allura raises a blaster to use, but it doesn’t work. She says, “What the--? Damn! Now is not the time for you to malfunction! And I do not know how to fix a 1,200-year-old—”)
This comic probably is also the singular place in the DDP comics that offers any evidence whatsoever that Lotor and Allura actually did have positive childhood experiences together prior to his father decimating Arus, helping to explain Lotor’s curious loyalty to Allura throughout:
(Photo description: Lotor standing before Allura and saying, “I knew you’d pull through, Allura. Speaking of treehouses, do you remember climbing the Arusion orchids in the royal gardens when we were children?” Allura responds, “Yes…of course I do. I…”)
And finally, this comic has no issues whatsoever with making fun of itself or the concept of robotic lions:
(Photo description: A space pirate complains to Lotor, “Think about it! How you think this place ends up looking like it does in our time? Looking like Planet Doom?! Meanwhile, the Kitty Cat Club up there gets out without a scratch!”)
VOLTRON IS THE KITTY CAT CLUB, 2008 CONFIRMED
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CONCLUSION
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The 5-part comic A Legend Forged (2008) adds an incredible amount of history and lore to the Voltron franchise. It gave me some things that I personally was really craving out of this franchise—including some logic behind the lion imagery, a legit alliance between previously warring groups that doesn’t just end in catastrophe, some adult snark and some good-old fashioned silliness, some deeper exploration into dark entities/spirits, and also just a really powerful villainess that you can love to hate.
I think the comic ultimately took on the theme of Strength in Unity and fulfilled the concept that people really can work together. Even if the Team Voltron and Lotor and Council alliance was all just temporary, it was still nice to see that alliance come through for the greater good of the universe, instead of leading to more mass insanity like it did in VLD….
I liked that in this iteration, Voltron stood as a collective effort on the part of various worlds who were oppressed by Empress Jain. That helps to tone down the savior complex inherent in the franchise, that at least here, Voltron wasn’t one nation’s attempt to play police for all other people.
From a critical perspective, if you read carefully, there are some instances where you can tell that various alien races are prejudiced against each other and discriminate on the basis of appearance and religion, and even Team Voltron feeds into this at times in their initial assumption that Korrinites are a barbarian race when in fact they’re very intelligent and advanced. These aspects are just not fully reflected on within this comic, but they definitely feed into the conflict as we experience it 1,200 years in the past. Interestingly enough, the comic also makes fun of Team Voltron members who are from Earth as being “primitive” too. So I guess the DDP world does function in a “problematic” state where all of these alien races are struggling with how to interact well with one another. I’m not sure if that baseline would be a potential trigger for someone just entering this series, so I wanted to call it out here.
I do also occasionally find comics hard to read because of the all-caps print and because comics will switch back and forth between past and present, with only small visual markers to warn you. So I don’t think these comics are designed in the most accessible way. But that could just be me.
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Overall, I think A Legend Forged ranks as one of my more favorite comic iterations of Voltron. It definitely has some differences from both the 1984 and 2016 shows, but it pulls on enough shared content to remain accessible. And while it was a quick read, it felt pretty tightly constructed. I would have liked to see more aftermath and epilogue, but I feel thankful that the story got an ending and that both Team Voltron and Lotor are shown being transported back home. The comic’s similarities and differences compared to VLD made it fun to read and analyze as well.
So yeah, if you get the chance to try reading it yourself, I recommend it! And if you’ve made it to the end of this very long post, thank you for reading!
PRIMER POST DEL AÑO Y continuamos con los análisis en español con esta pregunta. ¿Alguien lee esto?
No ya en serio, en esta ocasión me toca poner el análisis a uno de mis personajes secundarios favoritos y el cual tiene una curiosa historia detrás de el. No dentro del canon de la serie si no en todo en este curiosa franquicia.
A SIMPLE VISTA
En fotos y flashbacks mirábamos a un joven no mayor de 20 años bastante delgado y con toda la facha de ser un nerd estereotípico, incluso se inventó un “código secreto” para poder comunicarse con su hermana sin que los regañen por eso. Pero esas cosas no importan en un mundo superficial, o en el peor de los casos, en una arena de combate, pues a simple vista se trata de un tipo débil físicamente hablando y bastante inútil para estos casos.
Un montón de capítulos después vemos que Matt ya no es esa persona débil de antes, ha cambiado un poco en apariencia, la cicatriz y el cabello más largo indican que ha pasado por varias cosas difíciles, pero sus ojos claros demuestran que muy en el fondo sigue siendo el mismo nerd con una personalidad bastante payasa, simpática y abierta, aún así, la inteligencia y el pensamiento rápido ha crecido junto a él.
Definitivamente es digno hermano de nuestra querida Katie.
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ANTECEDENTES
Antes de empezar: Por lógica de quienes veíamos las series anteriores, muchos pensábamos que Matt era la actual encarnación de Chip, hermano gemelo de Pidge. Me decepcionó un poco que la referencia a “Voltron Vehículos” saliera hasta el final, pero peor es nada. En el ultimo Poster que se nos mostró, podíamos ver un robot o autómata el cual resultó ser una especie de experimento que nuestra Pidge estaba realizando, incluso ella misma lo nombró. O sea... ¿Qué en esta realidad Pidge es algo así como la “mamá” de Chip?
Chale, esto es más confuso que las diferentes encarnaciones de Haggar.
Bueno, por el momento, continuemos como estábamos, después de todo, en cualquier versión en la que Pidge tenga un hermano, esta se preocupará por el, y para MÍ, Matt y Chip vienen siendo la misma persona en diferentes realidades.
(Perdón por esta reverenda idiotez, pero si no lo exponía me enfermaba de algo).
Anime/Serie 80´s
A diferencia del resto de los personajes antes analizados, el personaje de Chip no proviene de GoLion, sino de Dairugger XV. El personaje en cuestión es Yasuo Mutsu, piloto del Rugger-Air #4 un vehículo parecido a un helicóptero, el cual coincidentemente forma el brazo izquierdo del robotsote. En apariencia es el más joven del escuadrón Rugger.
No hay mucho que decir sobre su personalidad, excepto que es también muy enérgico y aparentemente es muy cercano a Manabu Aki (conocido en este lado del mundo como Jeff). Seguro, el mocoso es alguien maduro para su edad, pero tiene ciertas inquietudes de la pubertad que todos hemos tenido. ¿no? Y aparte, hay algo relacionado con su madre que lo tiene inquieto ¿Extrañarla? Lo más probable, pero no he visto el anime y la versión americana cambia mucho el contexto.
Para su conversión a personaje de Voltron, los productores vieron que estaba chiquito y usaba lentes como el otro chaparro de GoLion y seguramente dijeron “No pos se parece, hagámoslos hermanos y halá, relación nueva en franquicia nueva” XD. Les inventaron una relación para acomodar bien todo este huateque en el mismo universo (me recuerda a Dana Sterling en Robotech). Aún así, hay varias cosas en la continuidad que nadie ha resuelto.
En la wiki de Voltron se insinúa que “Stoker” no es precisamente el apellido de Chip, pero si la información indica que una familia si adoptó al par de dientones cegatones, entonces esa información es confusa. :/ Bueno, en ese tiempo no se dignaron en dar apellidos a ningún personaje, así que no hay mucho problema.
(Ya nomás nos faltan Frodo y Sam y el resto y ya tenemos a la comunidad del anillo XD)
EN FIN, en la película “Fleet of Doom” los de Vehículos y los de Leones se juntan, se arma la pachanga y los hermanitos cegatones se reencuentran, dándonos la perturbadora revelación… de que Chip es 4 cms más alto que Pidge. Pero aun así, a ambos les faltan vitaminas.
En fin, para terminar este apartado, aunque este par viene del planeta Balto, aparentemente crecieron y se adaptaron en la Tierra.
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[IMAGEN NO ENCONTRADA]
COMIC
No hay mucho que decir porque los dos equipos no se llevan… Pero curiosamente, el joven Chip se encuentra con un tal Pidge y se dan cuenta de que existe la posibilidad de que sean parientes, digo el parecido es interesante y su ADN coincidía…
A diferencia de las versiones anteriores, este par son enteramente terrestres.
Y de Dynamite... pues parece que se salvó.
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En “The Third Dimention” se brincaron y olvidaron de muchas cosas (cofcofSvencofcof), por lo que el detalle de Chip tampoco fue mencionado.
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( ¿Soy yo o Chip tiene un aire medio a la Ben 10? )
VOLTRON FORCE
En “Voltron Force” por el contrario, el pobre Chip terminó como carne de cañón junto con un montón de gente bonita de Balto convirtiéndolos en unos como “zombies” vía infección con haggarium. No se preocupen gente, toda la bola de ninjas tecnológicos lograron curarse. ^^
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ACTOR DE DOBLAJE
En Dairugger XV, la voz de este personaje es interpretada por Satomi Majima, para la versión USA es Neil Ross y en español latino es de Yamil Atala (el “malvado” Pilaf de Dragon Ball)o por lo menos la wiki dice que fue un capítulo.
Para esta nueva versión la voz queda a cargo de Blake Anderson, mientras que en español es de Eduardo Garza (Krilin en “Dragon…” ‘¡¡¡GOKUUUU!!!!´ [PUUUM!!!!!!!!]) X__x
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(Top 10 Encuentros más emotivos del Anime)
EL ESTEREOTIPO QUE REPRESENTA
Pues la neta la neta, la mera mera neta, es más que obvio que es el nerd pero luego me puse a analizar... No, no solo eso. Matt es el perfecto ejemplo de un tropo que es muy común en las series de demografía juvenil (o en idioma weeb, los shonen): el personaje débil que conforme avanza la historia regresa como fuerte.
Y el único ejemplo que se me viene a la mente es ese sujeto llorón de lentes que muchos vieron en el primer capitulo de One-Piece.
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DE SHIPEOS Y COSAS PEORES
Pues resulta que nuestro querido nerd se encontró una parejita en sus años como rebelde de la Alianza Rebel... digo, el bando de los buenos. Lo malo es que 1: la olvidadiza de yo olvidó el nombre de la robotina y 2: No encontré el nombre del shipp. Nah como sea, a este ship le llamaré canonshipp, quieran o no.
Shatt: es el Shiro X Matt. Es normal shipearlos, después de todo, fueron compañeros en la Misión Kerberos. Y no, no tengo nada en contra, pero por alguna extraña razón se me hace raro que no shipearan a shiro con el señor Holt.
Eh pasado DEMASIADO tiempo en internet...
Latte: Matt x Lance... suena raro, pero si, ¿Por qué no? Yo lo llamaría la versión yaoiesca del Plance.
No dudemos en que tenga mas shipeos y se incluyan los hetero, pero en lo que llevo de este fandom he visto que le tienen más cariño a estos dos.
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OPINIÓN PERSONAL
¿La verdad? No pensé que el personaje en cuestión me fuera a caer tan bien. XD Cómo no era una “figura paterna”, no pudo ser idealizado (cosa que ocurría con mamá o papá ausente que se busca en una historia), y se agradece. No sabía que esperar del hermano mayor, porque a todas luces se vé mayor que Pidge… como 10 cms.
Ya en serio, me encantó que a Matt le pusieran una personalidad más… ¿Cómo decirlo? ¿Infantil? ¿Juguetona? ¿Exagerada? Esas características de tu amigo el friki que tiene la sangre ligera… digo, se “chulea” y se “echa porras el solo”, es decir, no se victimiza por ser inteligente. Hasta parece que se presentaría orgulloso en un baile de graduación aún si está lleno de alquitrán y plumas y exclamaría algo como “Ya llegó su galán”. XD Personalmente es un Lance, pero más inteligente y menos (valga la rebuznancia) lanzado.
Va, tiene sus momentos serios (todos los personajes los tienen), pero se agradece que el mocoso en cuestión sepa comportarse según los acontecimientos. Necesitamos más muchachos así en un manga shojo promedio.
Eso si, me hizo sentir mal cuando casi le da un ataque histérico cuando lo iban a aventar al coliseo, digo, así actuaría cualquiera de nosotros en esa situación, no se hagan, y aparte, da a entender que en ese tiempo no era alguien precisamente fuerte. Si fue por lo que pasó después o por lo que vivió en la rebelión que se volvió un hábil peleador, pues se agradece, y se demuestra que las personas vamos cambiando a través de nuestra vida.
Regresando al ruedo… aún recuerdo esos días en que las teorías y fanfictions nos quitaban toda esperanza de ver a los hermanos Holt reunidos de nuevo. No sé que tiene esa gente pensando en cosas trágicas en un programa para niños (Va, si fuera anime, anime en los 90 si les creo). De hecho, siento que aun no puedo cantar victoria aún… tengo miedo de que el proyecto Kuron no se refiera completamente a Shiro.
Pero esos ya son pensamientos temerosos de una fan muy mayor. Regresando a las comparaciones entre el pasado y el presente, lo que viene siendo Chip no lo tengo muy presente. Si, tiene su momento drama (todos en esos animes lo tienen), pero lo que fueron las secuelas no pasó mucho. Así a simple vista se miraba muy serio, así que se agradece que en esta adaptación, “Mattito” sea todo un… ¿Dorkie? Oh, y se agradece que no sea el típico hermano mayor sobreprotector que espanta los pretendientes… o al menos no se ha visto, o que se la pase regañando por todo. En cuanto se enteró que su tierna hermanita era un paladín de Voltron, Matt se mostró más emocionado que otra cosa (igual fue la adrenalina del momento o todo el trauma pos-Kerberos), como sea, no se opuso, sabe de lo que es capáz su hermana.
Otra cosa, su crush con Allura (nonono, solo lo estoy mencionando, Lance, baja ya esa escopeta) me recordó mucho el mini-crush que Pidge/Hirsoshi en la serie original tuvo en los primeros capítulos con su respectiva princesa. Por ahí leí que parte de la personalidad de este pequeño ancestro fue a dar en Matt (me acordé de eso, chicas ^^).
De verdad, este muchacho es un completo amor, probablemente es una amalgama de las características de los hermanos gemelos que vimos en las series anteriores. O será solo mi afición por los personajes nerds, el caso es que Matt es un amor con patas. Y pobre de aquel que quiera hacerle algo a él o a su hermanita, pues ambos son mucho más fuertes de lo que aparentan.
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Well, I’ve shown appreciation for a few different Pidges. VLD, DotU, and VF. Well, I wanted to show appreciation for another Pidge.
Devil’s Due Publishing Voltron: Defender of the Universe’s Pidge! Okay, I’ll just call him DDP to keep it simple.
And! He has one of the little mice with him! Like in VF, DDP’s mice are robotic. Okay, I may have accidentally drawn that one a bit big, but oh well. That’s what I do apparently.
Anyway! I hope y’all enjoy this appreciation for this precious green baby. While I want to hug the different Pidges, this is one Pidge I feel really needs a hug.
Well, until next time!