Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Bitch Planet

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Schedule
  
Monthly (loosely)

Genre
  
Feminist Dystopian

Author
  
Kelly Sue DeConnick

Writer
  
Kelly Sue DeConnick

Format
  
Ongoing series

Number of issues
  
10

Publisher
  
Image Comics


Publication date
  
December 2014 to present

Main character(s)
  
Kamau Kogo (Kam) Penny Rolle Fanny Renelle

Similar
  
Pretty Deadly, Sex Criminals, The Wicked + The Divine, Rat Queens, Monstress

Bitch Planet is an ongoing American comic book created by writer Kelly Sue DeConnick and artist Valentine De Landro. The series is a feminist send-up of the exploitation film genre that takes place in a dystopian reality where non-compliant women are sent to an off-planet prison.

Contents

Bitch planet comic review


Publication History

DeConnick described the creation of the book as being "born of a deep and abiding love for exploitation and women in prison movies of the ’60s and ’70s."

The first issue was published in December 2014 by Image Comics.

Plot

The series focuses on a number of women who have been imprisoned at an off-planet prison known as the Auxiliary Compliance Outpost for being "non-compliant." Narrative arcs move back and forth through time, presenting how the women were arrested in the first place as well as their various experiences within the prison.

Characters

Inmates

  • Marian Collins
  • Penny Rolle
  • Kamau Kogo
  • Meiko Maki
  • Violet
  • Prison administration and bureaucracy

  • Roberto Solanza
  • The Model
  • Schiti
  • Reception

    Reaction to Bitch Planet has been generally positive. Susana Polo at The Mary Sue said: "Bitch Planet promised space prison, violence, a heck of a lot of ladies of various colors, and a reclamation of the “women in prison” subgenre of exploitation film for the modern audience. Its first issue delivers." Jeff Lake writing for IGN called it "an excellent comic." Chris Sims of Comics Alliance, reviewing the first issue, said "it’s thrilling, it’s violent, and it’s one of the best first issues of the year." The first volume of the comic got more mixed reviews from The Guardian, which praised the series as a "refreshing foray into the feminist exploitation genre," while also criticizing it for the use of "lots of ingredients...without much forethought," leading to muddled critiques of religion and politics.

    References

    Bitch Planet Wikipedia