The Twilight Zone #1 Returns the Wonderfully Weird World of Horror and Delight
A terrified citizen regales a detective with a story about people suddenly frozen like statues. A once-bustling metropolis becomes quieter by the minute as people are replaced by featureless versions of themselves. Where one would have found hopes, laughter, tears, and struggles, one can now only find BLANKS…here in The Twilight Zone. The Twilight Zone #1 revives the classic property for more tales of horror, dread, sci-fi, and weirdness, all with some moral lessons underneath.
The Twilight Zone #1 kicks off with “Blanks,” written by Dan Watters and focused on a rich individual looking for immortality and a short time to find it. Like all stories of this variety, there’s things we look for, like a lesson underneath or an exploration of our current world. The Twilight Zone #1 delivers that teasing the horrors that will be unleashed upon the world by the rich and powerful who think what’s know what’s best and act out in their own self interest. The Fountain of Youth is a focus of so many in the tech industry, so the debut hits upon a reality and obsession that exists and it’s an obsession when you learn the details, you want to shake your head in disgust.
The black and white art by Morgan Beem is good. There’s some solid horror as what is unleashed is revealed. With lettering by Sandy Tanaka, it comes off as a weird dream that turns into a nightmare using visuals we’ve seen before but have a lot of meaning behind them. The art plays off of reveals and beats that have been done so many times before but it’s done well and the overall pace and key moments of the comic hit well visually. Like the story itself, the combo with the visuals create a fun sit back and enjoy it vibe of a story that feels like it’d be weekly television to tune in to.
The flaw of The Twilight Zone #1 is that it feels like a short read. Like it should be part of an anthology or a comic that features at least another story It’s not that it’s bad, it’s that we want more of it. This could work great as a graphic novel or manga-ish digest type release. As single comic issues, it becomes a bit dicey of feeling if you get the value to it. “Blanks” goes by quickly, but it’s really solid. Wanting more overall isn’t a bad thing right?
Story: Dan Watters Art: Morgan Beem Letterer: Sandy Tanaka
Story: 8.0 Art: 8.0 Overall: 8.0 Recommendation: Read
IDW Publishing provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
Purchase: Zeus Comics – Kindle

