This week
on our October parade of “horror” comics we come to Fanboys vs. Zombies from
publisher Boom! Comics. The creative
team on this title is writer Sam Humphries, and artists Jerry Gaylord and Bryan
Turner. Let’s dive right in shall we?
Cover:
I picked up
Cover A (the one my shop had) and actually thought it was a cool
illustration. It obviously had nothing
specifically to do with the story aside from the fact that these people were
going to fight zombies, but the cover is impressive as an illustration. I like the use of the triangle design and the
coloring is muted but effective. It is
not as muddy as other colors but instead uses a subdued palette to give kind of
an old-timey feel to the cover (even though, again, that has nothing to do with
the interior contents). It took me a
second but I did notice the cameo appearance of Cammy from Street Fighter (though it’s a comic about fanboys so I suppose that
is probably just a cosplay girl). I also
enjoy the thin holding lines used by the artist in the characters. This lets the great coloring job shine
through even more.
8/10 - A good cover that doesn’t pop a whole lot on the
shelf but has a solid illustration with nice coloring and design.
Story:
The story
itself is a little hard to follow, especially at first. There is a guy on the first page named Drake
that looks a lot like Schwarzenegger’s character in The Terminator, but we don’t see him again, so his significance is
lost on me. This comic could have really
benefitted from a couple text boxes explaining what was going on, as we see a
woman surrounded by zombies and then immediately we see some Napoleon
Dynamite-looking guy opening up a comic convention. I thought, at first, that this was a
flashback to the beginning of the series, until you turn the page and see that
the convention is starting up a couple floors below the zombie apocalypse. Ummm, ok.
I’ll suspend my belief for right now I guess. In this comic convention is, naturally, a guy
that looks like Robert Kirkman of Walking
Dead fame. Ok, that’s cool. The pop culture references aren’t lost on
me. Case in point, the two main evil
henchmen look like Bebop and Rocksteady from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles! So, do we get to see these guys all fight a
horde of zombies to save themselves from becoming dinner? Nope.
They fight each other, all because Napoleon Dynamite wants the scoop on
where some girl that is now friends with our heroes, but used to be on a
sitcom. She is out amongst the zombies
and he wants her to be the main attraction at his show. A show that is taking place amongst a zombie
apocalypse. Yup, you heard me
right. It’s getting harder to suspend my
belief.
The fight
ends by a bad guy holding one of the heroes at gunpoint, until a female hero
shoots him in the head (remember this part).
She then runs away and everyone else is captured and thrown into a jail
cell that is not latched so, surprise surprise, the heroes escape. This is how Napoleon Dynamite wants it to
play out though so that they can lead him to the actress out fighting for her
life amongst zombies that have now turned into her biggest fans. Ok, we’ll go over this bit by bit. Napoleon threw them in jail so that he could
set them free and follow them. He
probably could have let them go anyway, and just saved a step, but whatever,
he’s no Bond villain. The zombies
recognize the actress? A nice moment of
levity I guess, especially since it’s the only way to explain how a defenseless
person can survive amongst a horde of zombies for an entire issue.
The
Kirkman, zombie comic writer character, that has been a whining sniveling mess
the entire issue, finally gets a backbone and lets our heroes know just why he
is needed in their little troupe of zombie fighters. This abrupt about face for the character is
either something that the writer planned and may have alluded to in the
previous six issues, or it is just an easy plot switch that the writer used so
that the survivors could all stay together.
I’m not sure which it is yet.
Then we
turn back to our defenseless TV star that is no longer defenseless as she has a
six shooter against a horde of zombies.
Yup. A six shooter. That means six bullets against a horde. Shit, they don’t even screw you over that
much in zombie video games. The zombies
flock into a mall though, instead of eating the dumbass with the pea-shooter,
hmm, how convenient.
We now take
a slight detour to the girl that shot the bad guy. She is actually having a moment of despair
because she took a life (I told you to remember that part). With so many heroes out there in the
comic-verse that appear to have no problem hurting or killing another human
being, this moment is a welcome revelation.
It is only one page, but it speaks volumes to the kind of character that
she is, and how “real” Humphries wants to write her as. Best part of the book, hands down.
5/10 – The lack of real, tangible motivation for these
characters throws a shadow over what could have been a pretty entertaining
story. Showing the actual effect that
taking a human life can have on someone is a high point, as well as the
pop-culture references, but the convenience factor of much of the plot just
feels a tad forced for me (almost as if it was a Marvel Crossover comic).
Art:
I love cartoony
art. Not only can you tell that it was
not traced (I think we all know of whom I am referring) but it seems to me that
more of the personality of the artist can show through when they can be more
expressive without having to worry about how many heads tall their characters
are. That being said, Gaylord looks like
he took a page out of the Campbell/Ramos playbook and drew it incredibly
fast. The art is not terrible at all,
and in some places (the zombies especially) I really enjoy it. Everything but the zombies tends to look
rushed. There are a couple standout
panels but overall the book has a feeling like it was cranked out in a
week. Part of this is a lack of
substantial backgrounds, but also the artwork itself feels sketchy and not
quite done. This could be more the fault
of the inker than the penciller, but regardless, the art has suffered.
Best part of the book: The Zombies!
Also there's Kirkman, Rocksteady and Bebop.
This is an example of a well done panel...
...Followed by one that looks like it was mailed in (look at those teeth)
This is a whole quality page, unfortunately other pages suffered.
And this is why I like cartoony books. Look at the expression!
5/10 – Some good, some bad.
The worst part is that it looks like they sacrificed some panels/pages
for others.
Overall:
5/10 – This may be better in trade paperback format as the
current “serial” styled comic has trouble making sense in the 22 page format.
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