Metamorphosis Odyssey

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Metamorphosis Odyssey
The Price graphic novel, the second section of Metamorphosis Odyssey.
Created byJim Starlin
Publication information
PublisherEpic Comics
Title(s)
The Metamorphosis Odyssey
FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) Epic Illustrated and a set of ongoing series and graphic novels.
Genre
Publication date

Metamorphosis Odyssey is a lengthy

Vanth Dreadstar, who first appears in Epic Illustrated #3.[1][2][3]

Odyssey

The first part of Metamorphosis Odyssey was printed in the premier issue of Epic Illustrated magazine, which was published in the Spring of 1980.[4] The story was told in fourteen chapters and continued through the first nine issues of Epic Illustrated, climaxing in the December 1981 issue. The stories were initially in black and white but later transitioned into full color. The story continues in two graphic novels and finally a long-running comic book series.

Summary

The story begins with an immortal mystic named Aknaton, whose Osirosian race was the ancestor of all humanoid life in the Milky Way galaxy. The Osirosians were faced with a terrible threat, a race of destroying conquerors known as the Zygoteans. The Osirosians massed their power and confronted the Zygoteans directly, but failed to defeat them. The Osirosians withdrew to their heavily guarded world and considered other ways to stop the Zygotean menace.

As the Zygotean power only grew, and the Zygoteans conquered, enslaved, and exterminated more and more of the Milky Way, the Osirosians eventually concluded that they were not capable of stopping the Zygoteans, and that therefore the Milky Way was doomed to a long, slow, horrible death. The Osirosians, unwilling to let the Milky Way be slowly strangled by the Zygoteans, evolved a plan to destroy the Zygoteans, whatever the cost. Running the Zygotean blockade of his homeworld, Aknaton set various events in motion to mature over time into the elements he needed for their final plan. The most important actions he took were:

  • He visited a world populated only by mindless cannibal beasts and introduced the potential for them to develop intelligence and compassion.
  • He visited the planet
    proto-humanity
    .
  • He found an uninhabited forest-world and released proto-life of his own creation.
  • He created a powerful artifact in the form of an icy sword and left it on the planet Byfrexia.
  • The Osirosians created a mystical device, which they named the Infinity Horn, entrusted it to Aknaton who had it hidden in a cavern on a world called Dreamsend by an artificial immortal being he created in order to guard it until the time came to employ it.

Having done all these things, he returned to his homeworld and waited for the last stand. The Osirosians held out for a hundred thousand years, but in the end the Zygoteans overcame their defenses and destroyed them. Armed with all his race's power and his plan, Aknaton escaped, the only survivor.

Aknaton returned to the worlds he had visited a hundred thousand years previously, taking a single native from each one to fulfill their part in the plan: Za, the first of his cannibal race to achieve intelligence; Juliet, a fifteen-year-old girl from Kansas; and Whis'Par, the culmination of the artificial life Aknaton had created on the forest world.

Having gathered the three he needed, Aknaton returned to Byfrexia, where the icy sword had been found by a young Byfrexian named

Vanth
, who stumbled across it in the Arctic wilderness after ice bears devoured his family. The power of the sword preserved Vanth's life. In time, he came to find that it had other powers as well; it could absorb energy of almost any type and later redirect it as a destructive force; it gave Vanth great toughness and physical strength; it gave him the gift of tongues; and he was able to merge with the sword in a way unforeseen even by its maker, so the sword became a part of him that he could manifest at will. Vanth became obsessed with revenge, and spent many years hunting his world's ice bears nearly to extinction. The other Byfrexians, who depended on the bears for food, eventually leagued against Vanth and drove him offworld, where he spent some unspecified time as a mercenary. When the Zygoteans attacked Byfrexia, Vanth returned home and led resistance to them, becoming known as "The Cold Man".

Aknaton found Vanth and recruited him to be his pilot and bodyguard. Vanth leapt at the chance that there might be a plan to destroy the Zygoteans, though he was shaken when Aknaton revealed the exact nature of the plan to him and the others.

Aknaton had reasoned that since the Zygoteans were undefeatable, and the death of the galaxy could not be prevented, the only remaining kindness was to make the end as quick and painless as possible. He therefore created the Infinity Horn, whose purpose was to destroy the entire Milky Way. Appalled, but convinced that Aknaton's plan was the only option, Vanth and the others agreed. Fighting their way past an army of Zygoteans and their slaves (who had become aware of the plan and fought desperately to stop it), they returned to the cavern on the planet Dreamsend. As Aknaton and Vanth held off the Zygoteans outside, Za, Juliet, and Whis'Par entered the cavern and sounded the Infinity Horn, destroying the entire Milky Way in an instant.

The three who sounded the Horn were transformed into a new kind of being, carrying with them all that remained of the Milky Way, except for Aknaton and Vanth. Aknaton had used his mystic powers to encase himself and Vanth in a bubble of force and throw them into intergalactic space.

Eons later they crashed on a planet in another galaxy, where Vanth shot Aknaton in a fit of rage and guilt over the destruction of the Milky Way galaxy. Mortally wounded, Aknaton confessed that he had goaded Vanth into killing him because he could not live with the guilt. As he died, he told Vanth that he had saved him and brought him here because this galaxy was at a point where it might go down the same path as the Milky Way. Aknaton wanted Vanth to change the destiny of this new galaxy, and if he failed, to then locate the Infinity Horn to destroy this galaxy as well.

The Price

The second part of Metamorphosis Odyssey was a

Vanth Dreadstar
making a brief appearance at the end.

Dreadstar, the graphic novel

Dreadstar graphic novel published by Marvel Comics.

The third part of Metamorphosis Odyssey was the Marvel Graphic Novel #3, Dreadstar, published in 1982. It was printed in color, from paintings by Starlin.

This

Vanth Dreadstar leading the life of a peaceful farmer. The planet on which he lived was the site of an Instrumentality experiment to create a race of cat-human hybrid
warriors. The experiment was a failure, the hybrids were mild-natured and generally only suited to farming. Dreadstar married a human scientist and lived quietly for some decades, but this ends shortly after the arrival of Darklock when a fleet of Monarchy ships destroys his home village, killing his wife and all his friends.

Dreadstar, the series

Dreadstar #1 published by Marvel Comics.

Part four of Metamorphosis Odyssey was detailed in the Epic Comics series Dreadstar in the mid-to-late 1980s.

The comic series had several differences from earlier parts of the story. Previous parts were glossy-paper reproductions of ink drawings and paintings; the comics were colorized pencil-and-ink drawings on high-quality, acid-free paper known as Baxter paper. Also, unlike the previous stories, the comic series is episodic in nature, involving longer story arcs, subplots, and a fluid cast of characters. The overall story deals with the efforts of Vanth and Syzygy, and a crew of adventurers they have assembled, to force an end to the war.

The ground they gained in the Monarchy is lost when the Monarchy is betrayed from within by a high minister (who is revealed to be the last surviving Zygotean who followed Akhnaton's mystic escape pod into intergalactic space in hopes of revenge). The Monarchy is overthrown, and the war ends. The Instrumentality conquers the galaxy and begins a campaign of extermination, apparently following the will of their evil Twelve Gods. Vanth and his crew escape the ruin of the Monarchy and join with the remains of the Monarchic fleet to oppose the Instrumentality. Eventually, Vanth and Syzygy destroy the Lord High Papal, overthrow the Instrumentality, and destroy the Twelve Gods.

Collected editions

The series has been collected into various trade paperbacks and hardcovers over the years:

# Title Publisher Year ISBN Reprints
1 The Metamorphosis Odyssey Slave Labor Graphics Sept 2000
2 The Price Slave Labor Graphics Oct 2000
  • The Price
  • Dreadstar
  • "Dreadstar" from Epic Illustrated #15
3 Plan M Slave Labor Graphics Feb 2001
  • Dreadstar #1-6
4 The Secret of Z Slave Labor Graphics Aug 2001
  • Dreadstar #7-12
Dreadstar Definitive Collection: Part 1 Dynamite Entertainment Sept 2004
  • Dreadstar #1-6
Dreadstar Definitive Collection: Part 2 Dynamite Entertainment Sept 2004
  • Dreadstar #7-12
Dreadstar Definitive Collection Dynamite Entertainment Sept 2004
  • Dreadstar #1-12
Dreadstar: The Beginning Dynamite Entertainment 2010
1 Jim Starlin's Dreadstar Omnibus Ominous Press October 2019
2 Jim Starlin's Dreadstar Omnibus Ominous Press October 2019
  • Dreadstar #9-24
3 Jim Starlin's Dreadstar Omnibus Ominous Press October 2019
  • Dreadstar #25-40

Note: The full title of all volumes listed here, except the Dynamite Entertainment and Ominous Press editions, start with "Dreadstar: ".

Notes

  1. ^ Andrew A. Smith (2007). "CAPTAIN COMICS: October brings spookiness and death to the comics world". Lexington Herald-Leader. Archived from the original on August 1, 2007. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
  2. ^ David Paggi; Kiel Phegley; Rickey Purdin (2007). "Countdown Catch-All". Wizard Entertainment. Archived from the original on October 19, 2007. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
  3. ^ The Deseret News (August 22, 1990). "The Man who "Killed off" Batman's Second Robin". Archives - first paragraph only. The Deseret News / News Library. Retrieved October 23, 2007.
  4. ^ Michael Thomas (2000). "Jim Starlin Interview". Boiling Point Productions / Comic Book Resources. Retrieved October 23, 2007.

References