Scott Pilgrim: Precious Little Life Review

Slowly Proving Worth

Scott Pilgrim: Precious Little Life Review 3
Scott Pilgrim: Precious Little Life Review

Scott Pilgrim: Precious Little Life

Brutalist Review Style (Version 2)

This series will kick your ass and collect the coin Written and designed by Bryan Lee O’Malley, Scott Pilgrim is a self-referential Canadian comic about one affable slacker’s passion for video games, live music, and sleep. Oh yes, and fight scene It has some pretty epic fight scene Sharing a dank basement apartment, our unemployed Scott Pilgrim is finally coming to terms with an emotionally messy breakup. For the first time in months, Scott is feeling better. His band Sex Bob-Omb sucks a lot less lately; he just remembered the cheat code for Sonic 3; and he is dating a 17 year-old girl named Knives Chau. No big deal. Then one afternoon, Scott falls asleep and dreams about Ramona Flower As this American Amazon.com delivery girl rollerblades through his subspace highways, readers are certain that Scott Pilgrim’s precious little life will never be the same. But in order to date this subspace dream girl, Scott must also do battle with The League of Ramona’s Evil Ex-Boyfriend

Don’t worry though. He only has to fight them sequentially. To say that this is the extent of the Scott Pilgrim plot would be both accurate and misleading. Although nothing much happens through the course of this volume, it is the charming way that O’Malley weaves us through the nothing that provides this series with its awkward intimacies and its genuine heart. In the end, the normally listless Scott is forced into action. Whether he reluctantly breaks up with Knives, hesitantly plays the next big gig, or eventually confronts Evil Ex-Boyfriend number one, Scott is slowly showing his worth. Then when he finally bests his foes, they leave behind some well-earned coins – Which is lucky, since he is still kind of poor.

Final Thoughts

REVIEW SCORE

This post may contain affiliate links. If you use these links to buy something, CGMagazine may earn a commission. However, please know this does not impact our reviews or opinions in any way. See our ethics statement.

<div data-conversation-spotlight></div>