Archive for the ‘Horror Comics News’ Category
Springtime For Horror!
Welcome to day four of the ongoing horse-pounding. We have gone through two stories and an introduction. One of those stories stank and one was an entertaining romp into the dark recesses of a legendary blues singer.
Side note here: I never even heard of Robert Johnson until this issue of Creepy TNG. I assumed everything was made up for the story. It wasn’t till I read another review of it that I got a hint that it was based on reality (sort of). Who would have thought that a horror comic could actually be educational?
That being said, there was a problem with the editing of this issue. Remind me about it when I am on the second last story. But today I am talking about the third. A snuggly little love-fest called Chemical 13.
In my original review of Creepy I blew past this one with the remark that it was a waste of ink and I didn’t want to write about it, because it annoyed me so much. But my attention was called to it by another review on another blog.
In that post the reviewer actually chose this story as his favorite in the entire book. Odd, since a few sentences earlier he praised the publication for not being just a collection of zombie stories (as are so prevalent these days), when the story in question is actually a zombie story! The only one in the book and not even a good one.
When I first got to this story I had mixed thoughts right off the bat. It was a Nazi story. I have nothing against those per se, but they tend to be done too often because they are easy. And, many times, they are not good. The authors seem to think that because the Nazis were interesting, then their story will be, simply because it includes them.
Yes, you and I know things don’t work that way, but inexperienced authors fool themselves all the time. They mistake a cool idea for a good story. A good story can carry a lousy idea, but the best idea in the world cannot carry a lousy story. It’s a fact folks. Don’t shoot me; I’m only the messenger. Chemical 13 fails on a few levels.
The waste of ink in this issue was overwhelmingly The Curse. Chemical 13 didn’t suck outright. It just wasn’t good. The lovely gray-scale art style used for it set a mood, and was the main reason I expected more from the story than it delivered.
It could have been much better. The basic plot is that the German’s round a bunch of naked men into a room and then gas them. The twist is that they are trying an experimental gas called chemical 13. The origin of the gas, and the reason for trying it are ignored. But it’s a short story so I give them that.
After the gassing is over, the naked men, we’ll call them Jews for short, are seen to still be alive. With no reason given, one of the soldiers totally freaks out when he looks in the room. They carry this freak-out across two pages before they finally get around to showing what he saw. Then what they show, looks merely like a bunch of naked Jews standing there.
I can’t speak for Nazis, but seeing live Jews when I was expecting dead ones is not very frightening to me. At the end of the day, this is a comic book. That means it is illustrated. Between the writing and the illustrations they should be able to convey the concept one way or the other. In this case, neither of them did their job.
At this point, I started not liking this story. When one of the officers peeks in, he announces that the stuff did not work and that they should flood the room with the usual stuff. But some Doctor argues with him and says that these men are actually dead, but standing anyway. And that he needs to examine them.
Here it comes…
They know that they have a room full of undead Jews. They know that they have a gas available to ‘finish the job‘. They know that something is very badly wrong, and that one of their soldiers is in complete mental collapse and that the officer present ordered them to use the regular gas (no I will not say the name of it. It’s historical you can look it up if you like), so what could make more sense, than to decide to open the door and have a bunch of guys walk into the room?
This bad decision is followed by much screaming and shooting and running and locking helpless pleading Nazis in the chamber to, no doubt, be devoured by a room full of angry Jewish vegetables.
This story fails on so many levels, it really seems as though no one involved really put any thought nor effort into it at all. The term phoning it in leaps to mind.
I rescind my original scathing indictment of this particular story. It is not an abomination. It is merely lame.
Come back tomorrow for the next exciting installment of Creepy or Crappy?
On the menu for tomorrow, kiddies, is All The Help You Need, a manic tale of food and loathing.
A High Point for Horror Comics (and hungry hell-hounds)
Howdy folks. Welcome to day three of the let’s-beat-Creepy-to-death marathon. Those of you with exceptional observational skills Might have noticed that this is actually day 5. It’s supposed to be 3 but sometimes things interfere with my ability to write. (Like not really wanting to.)
It’s kind of amazing how many ideas seem to be good at the time we have them, but once we have to keep doing them for a while they loose there initial charm.
Well let’s get to it. Today I shall ream Hell Hound Blues.
Just kidding! This story was wonderful. It was written by Dan Braun and illustrated by Angelo Torres. I was not able to find out much about Dan. He seems to have done some editing on other Dark Horse stuff, but I was unable to find other writing credits. Judging from how well this story was written, I have to believe that he has done some writing before.
As for Angelo, it’s a weird story. When I first got Creepy issue #1 and started reading it, I was frankly appalled by the piece-of-shit opening story. When I got to the second story in the mag, Hell Hound Blues, I was expecting the worst. But I instantly liked the artwork. It looked very professional. Definitely done by someone who wasn’t just doing comics in their spare time. It also reminded me of the kind of art I had seen in MAD magazine, many years ago when it was still good. Just take a look a the accompanying images and you will see what I mean. These are all from this story.
I know some of you are way ahead of me here, but I need to write it anyway. After much researching and checking and such, (I had originally looked through old Creepy magazines to find him) I could not. I remembered him, but the copies I had on hand just didn’t happen to have his stuff in them. I have many others but didn’t want to dig through all of them.
To the point, I found out that he started out at (I swore I would never mention them, but…) E.C.! He worked on the horror comics that are generally credited with starting them all. (they didn’t really, but that is a different post. Yes, kiddies, he worked on Tales From The Crypt and Vault Of Horror and such. Additionally and the reason for why it reminded me of MAD, he worked on…MAD.
I will not say that this was the best horror story ever, but it was certainly the best in this book. And it was completely fun and entertaining. I hope to see more stuff from the two of these guys, they compliment each other well. Dan seems to be writing with tongue firmly in cheek and Angelo draws comics that look like comics. It’s a great fit.
If everything else in this issue had sucked, this one story would have made the magazine worth buying.
Fortunately there was other good stuff, and to find out what it was, you need to come on back and read the rest of this series of posts. I will be hitting every story in the book.
Tomorrow’s post is going to be about Chemical 13. It is the story of Nazi hijinks involving poison gas and a room full of naked test subjects. (just keep telling yourself—it’s only a comic book)
Creepy Or Crappy? A Long Journey on a Bumpy road.
See the way I did that? Casting The Curse under a new light? Get It? I am so funny it makes me want to hurl.(baby bunnies into a ceiling fan)
Now let’s get right to it, shall we. The first story in Dark Horse’s Creepy #1 is called The Curse and was written by Joe Harris and imaged by Jason Shawn Alexander. It is the spooky tale of a young man’s discovery of a special creepy power and the shocking family secret that his mother has been hiding. That’s what it is supposed to be. I feel a need to warn you that if you keep reading I will spill the beans, regardless of how few beans I have available for spilling.
Before I gnaw into this particular bone I want to tell you something of the people involved in making it. Joe Harris has a website at JoeHarris.net. Click that if you want to see it.
He has written for a while and has done some very cool shit. He wrote the screenplay for Darkness Falls! One of the coolest strange-type movies ever. So if you want my opinion of Joe’s abilities, I think he’s a talented guy, very creative.
The other part of the equation is Jason Shawn Alexander. Normally I get really annoyed by folks who use more than two names. But in this case it’s cool because without the Shawn he would be that guy from Seinfeld. So it’s ok that he use the big long name because he needs it, plus the fact that he is actually brilliant.
He has a site at www.JasonShawnAlexander.com and the other is his blog at BloodAndWhisky.blogspot.com. (which is great name) Again you can get to either by clicking on them. If you do, you will see that he experiments with different styles. He uses varied subjects and much of his stuff is good.
It’s depressing, but that isn’t a bad thing. He even has an artist statement that rambles on about goofy things involving “meaning” and “depth” and that sort of crap. Standard stuff for fine artists. Again I am not saying any of this is bad. On the contrary it shows that he has trained for real at some point and is trying to be as complete and professional an artist as possible. I know that I tend to be sardonic at times, and I want it understood that I like this guys stuff.
Neither Joe nor Jason can be considered hacks, or amateurs. Dark Horse is also not a lightweight. They rank highest in sales over every other comic company outside Marvel and DC. The reason for that, is they know what they are doing. All these people know what they are doing. Which leaves no excuse for them to have done what they did, which is create and publish The Curse.
The Curse, flat out, stinks on ice.
Jason can do brilliant art. The art in this piece is at the bottom end of his stuff to begin with. Then it commits the unforgivable sin of detracting from the story. At least it would have, if there had been a story from which to detract. Which brings me to the next point.
It all started in English class…
Recall the basic structure of a plot—A person wants something, faces an obstacle and takes action to overcome it. That’s it. It’s not that damn tough. The Curse seems to get off on the right foot. A young man working in a printing shop wants to get off work on time. His nasty big fat ugly boss woman, hates him and won’t let him have off. Like I said, lame plot, but it is a plot, until the second page where she is eaten by a press.
That was the end of his obstacle. That was the end of his struggle. And that was the end of the plot. In order for there to be more story there has to be more standing in his way. There isn’t.
Then he realizes that he has this power that can make what he thinks, happen. And he proceeds to use it all over town, causing great harm to others and with no opposition at all. Also greatly absent are any feelings about it on his part. He is not even remotely horrified by the fact that he mutilated a woman, and maimed an innocent hot dog vendor. He just thinks it’s cool that he can get off work on time and save $2 on the hot dog.
This main character is about as deep as a rattle snake. No one is gunning for him. He has no foes, or resistance. And apparently no morals either. So when he finally wanders home after a long day of effortlessly torturing people and not even enjoying it, we don’t really care what he says to his headless mother. (She has a head, but they go to great pains to make sure that it is not in any of the frames. It is done so awkwardly that it is blatant. If it was intended to mask an oncoming surprise, it didn’t.)
Nor are her evasive answers in any way intriguing or suspenseful. The only emotion I felt at this point was—obviously they had to get the page count higher. What a freakin’ waste. It’s sad really.
When they have wasted enough space and get around to showing the “shock” image, (his mother’s ugly face) it sucked on so many levels I can’t list them all, but I will mention the big ones.
I had a spoiler alert earlier in this article. I apologize for that. I can’t actually tell you the ending because I don’t know what the hell it even was. After much kvetching they cut to his momma’s ugly puss and through a combination of poor writing, bad or no story-boarding, or a poor choice of rendering styles I honestly had no idea what it was showing. I could see it was a shrivelled puss, but beyond that I was sincerely clueless. Was she dead? Was she rotted? Was she really old? Was she from the end of the movie Psycho?
If any of these is what it was supposed to be, then… Did she die at that moment because he wished it? Or had he been keeping his dead mother’s body alive with his “power”. (That would be cool) Or did she just rot because he told her to stop using the power? Because of the head-out-of-frame trick, you have no way of knowing what she looked like before.
The first part of a series should raise more questions than it answers. And this piece certainly did that. Unfortunately I don’t think it raised the ones that the creators intended, like what happens next? Or, what will he do? But instead it raised questions like…
What where they thinking?
And, Why would two guys who have done so many cool things do something this shitty? And why do all these other reviewers praise this turd?
Well kiddies, I have some multiple choice answers for you. Take what you want and leave the rest:
Q-What were they thinking?
A-They were thinking it was good. No one deliberately sets out to do shitty work, and fewer people release it if they have. The episodic nature of this piece increases the risk of putting out shit. Because they know what’s coming in the entire series, and they know how cool it will get, it becomes easy to miss the lameness of the opening.
Q-Why would they do something this lame?
A-For the money. Most of the audience for this comic may not even know the difference between good stories and bad ones. They may have read comics in English class instead of paying attention. ( I know I did, but I made up for it later) So if the intended audience will lay their money down for shit and come back for more, Fuck ‘Em. Why should we put out something good, when we can make money with crap? Sad, but the way many entertainment companies think. ( I am not saying this about Dark Horse. It is merely an observation about entertainment business companies.)
Q-Why do all these other reviews praise this piece of shit, as though it is a glittering gem amongst scum-covered stones?
A-It could be because they like it. It’s possible. It could be that it is they who did not pay attention in class. They could be idiots. They could be writing reviews for their own agendas. Like maybe they are just filling up their blogs and aren’t really trying to help. Or they don’t really care about horror comics. There are many reasons. Perhaps they didn’t really read the thing. Or maybe they just like these two guys and are therefore giving them a pass. Any of these things is possible. I have no great insight about any of this. Which brings me to the best reason of all…
I may be wrong.
Join us again tomorrow folks as I delve deep into the depths of Hell Hound Blues.
Something Creepy This Way Comes!
Welcome to today’s post. In yesterday’s post I mentioned that today’s post would be about something that Dark Horse comics was doing. And it is. To avoid rambling on and on, which I am known to do, I’ll just say it flat out. Dark Horse comics is printing a new series of Creepy magazine.
I only found out about it very recently. I’m sure they were planning it for quite some time. I’m also sure they probably had a lot of press releases or some such about it already. But I didn’t take up the whole blogging thing until just recently. I therefore did not make newsgathering or research an ongoing part of my existence, as it is now.
I don’t have a lot of information about the new production. I will share with you what I know right now, and I’m sure there is a lot of stuff out there on the net about it already. The main reason I wanted to get this blog post out, was to let you know that I am watching this magazine. And I’m going to tell you about how I feel about it. As of right now I feel very excited about it.
Some of the things that make it very exciting for me include the fact that some of the original artists from the 1960′s series are on board for, at least, issue number one. And issue number one is going to actually be in the store. In two days, that is Wednesday July 15, 2009. That I’m excited is an understatement.
My feelings about it are, of course, mixed. If it’s good, it’s exactly what I’ve been wanting. If it’s not good, or more precisely, does not meet my personal expectations, then there’s a good chance I’ll be unnecessarily hard on it. Very much the way, Star Wars fans were unnecessarily hard on episode one.
So, what I know for sure about the new Creepy, is that it’s going to be a quarterly publication. It will have a cover price of $4.99, and some of the writers working on it are original writers. Some of the artists are original artists too, by that I mean artists from the original Creepy magazine. Angelo Torres and Bernie Wrightson being among them.
According to Dark Horse’s own website writers for issue number one include Neil Kleid, Joe Harris, Dan Braun, and Mike Woods. The artists for the new issue include Angelo Torres, Bernie Wrightson, Jason Shaun Alexander, and others. I hate to say this but as of this moment, I don’t know if Richard Corben is alive or not. (note-I checked, and he is still alive.) He was one of my favorites, and I hope he shows up in this thing at some point. Whether he does or not, I will be doing some posts about him in the future and some of his other works, not the least of which was in Heavy Metal magazine.
So if you’re wondering where I’m going to be for at least a few minutes on Wednesday, July 15, 2009. It will be at the local comic shop snarfing up a copy of this magazine. Once I get home I’ll shut all the doors and windows take the phone off the hook, make sure I’ll be undisturbed for awhile and dive in. If it’s any good. I’ll probably go back to the shop the next day and buy the rest of them. (Just to encourage Dark Horse to make more.).
So check back on this blog on, or shortly after, the 15th to get detailed reviews and opinions of this magazine.
Oh, I almost forgot, the image included in this blog post is from a copy of comic shop news. It’s a complimentary newspaper, which is printed to be given out at comic shops. I wasn’t sure at the time, if it would be, but it turns out that this image is actually the cover of the new creepy issue. The image you see here was cropped to remove the graphics that were placed on it. They said. “Comic shop news, Summer preview”., across the top. And then at the bottom of the page. It had the word creepy, using a standard typeface. If you want to see what the actual cover will look like go to Dark Horse’s website. And if you’d like to see the actual cover of the comic shop news Summer preview issue, go to your local comic shop and pick up a copy. It’s free.
Thank you so much for reading this. I will see all you people, on Wednesday!
PS — I forgot to mention the cover painting is done by Eric Powell.










