Follow

    Electric Ant #1

    Electric Ant » Electric Ant #1 released by Marvel on June 2010.

    Short summary describing this issue.

    last edited by Hyjurocket on 06/03/21 08:44AM View full history

    FROM THE MIND OF LEGENDARY SCI-FI AUTHOR PHILIP K. DICK! Garson Poole had a pretty great life: good job, nice apartment, a sexy, flirtatious assistant. And then he wakes up in a hospital room…the doctors inform him that he’s been in a car accident…and they can’t treat him. Because he’s a robot. Specifically, Garson is an Electric Ant, a human-like robot created and programmed to serve a specific function. But what is Garson’s function? How will his friends and co-workers treat him, knowing that he’s a machine, and not a person? And how much of his world is real, and how much of it is part of his programming? Written by Kabuki scribe David Mack and illustrated by Pascal Alixe (ETERNALS ANNUAL).

    sizepositionchange
    sizepositionchange
    positionchange
    positionchange
    positionchange
    bordersheaderpositiontable
    positionchange

    Characters

    none of this issue.

    Teams

    none of this issue.

    Locations

    none of this issue.

    Concepts

    none of this issue.

    Objects

    none of this issue.

    Story Arcs

    none of this issue.

    User reviews Add new review

    5 (1)
    4 (1)
    3 (1)
    2 (0)
    1 (0)
    4.2 stars

    Average score of 3 user reviews

    So....not about Pym. 0

    It's a real shame, I've always been a big Pym fan if only to see how he screws up.  Honestly if this one was called Electric..... I don't know, electric bee I probably wouldn't of wanted to pick it up.  Though I'm glad I did, because this book does one thing that most comics don't.     It doesn't tell you everything.  Which is significant for a first issue, which usually have an overload of information.  Though this makes a lot of since considering that this book was adopted from a short story (...

    2 out of 2 found this review helpful.

    Electric Ant #1 0

    After having adverts thrown at me in 1602 part 3, this felt amazing to read. The artwork is stunning, there's the right amount of adverts and the plot sounds really interesting. I would never have picked up Philip's book before I started loving comics, they just wren't my thing. After reading this though, I will buying more of his comics and perhaps his books too. Right near the beginning there's an amazing two page spread of an amazing futuristic world that just took my breath away. Cheesy, I k...

    1 out of 2 found this review helpful.
    See all user reviews

    This edit will also create new pages on Comic Vine for:

    Beware, you are proposing to add brand new pages to the wiki along with your edits. Make sure this is what you intended. This will likely increase the time it takes for your changes to go live.

    Comment and Save

    Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Comic Vine users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.