Star Wars: Underworld - The Yavin Vassilika (Paperback)

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Star Wars: Underworld - The Yavin Vassilika

Authors: Mike Kennedy, Carlos Meglia

Average Customer Rating: 5/5.00
Amazon Sales Rank: 235,704
Paperback Release Date: 12 October, 2001
Manufacturer: Dark Horse Comics

View on Amazon (ISBN: 1569716188)

Number of Paperbacks: 1
Availability: Usually ships within 24 hours
List Price: $14.95, Amazon Price: $10.47


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Amazon Customer Reviews of this item: (Average Rating is 5/5.00)

Rating: 5 [ One Of The Best ]
I passed by this Dark Horse offering several times as I generally get little enjoyment when characters that are so familiar are drawn almost to caricature. This visual treatment is very pronounced in, "The Yavin Vassilika", however together with a great story, the result is excellent. The visuals are not the only aspect that is changed. Virtually all of the players have been with fans since day one, and their personalities have become ingrained with readers. The usual lines that divide or consolidate groups get blurred and erased, for some very unusual outcomes.

Three Hutts make a wager and then hire a variety of familiar players to win the bet on their behalf. Jabba is in the middle of the action as are Fett, Solo, Chewie, Lando, and a host of others. Forget what you have seen in the past, this time the relationships differ. Lando is still hugging the Falcon he recently lost and still nursing a bruised ego. When he meets up with the man who took it at the Sabacc table, things get interesting.

The Vassilika is largely believed to be a myth. When the myth suddenly becomes as valuable as it is real, everyone involved forms alliances, breaks original groups, and generally the level of trust resides at zero. Add to this that Fett is present and is drawn as a hulking version of himself, which is in opposition to the others, and things get amusing as well as entertaining. His legs don't quite fit, but for that you will have to read the book.

On the surface this is not an installment that will seem familiar, and the cover art is like no other I have seen, with blank white space dominating all else. The book is well worth the risk, and I certainly hope the team that produced this compilation has more on the way.