Tag Archives: the deviant

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Origin Vol. 2

Wednesdays (and Tuesdays) are new comic book day! Each week hundreds of comics are released, and that can be pretty daunting to go over and choose what to buy. That’s where we come in

Each week our contributors choose what they can’t wait to read this week or just sounds interesting. In other words, this is what we’re looking forward to and think you should be taking a look at!

Find out what folks think below, and what comics you should be looking out for this week.

Avengers Twilight #1 (Marvel) – How do you assemble Avengers in a world that doesn’t want them? The concept sounds interesting in today’s world.

Cable #1 (Marvel) – With all of the time travel shenanigans in the X-world lately, the concept of Cable has been… confusing. So, we’ll see if this makes it any easier to comprehend.

Cobra Commander #1 (Skybound) – We’ve read the first issue and it’s amazing. If you’re a G.I. Joe fan, this is a must. A hell of a debut and direction.

The Deviant #3 (Image Comics) – The series has been amazing horror. If you like Silence of the Lambs, this is a can’t miss.

G.I Joe: A Real American Hero #303 (Skybound) – From the description, it sounds like the Joes, Serpentor Khan, and Cobra are all going to clash in Springfield!

John Constantine: Dead in America #1 (DC Comics) – John Constantine has cheated death once again—but his heart’s not beating, his body is decaying, and he, his friend Nat, and his son Noah are on the run in America, wanted for murder.

Justice League vs. Godzilla vs. Kong #4 (DC Comics) – The series has been silly fun and we expect more of it. Let’s face it, the Justice League punching kaiju is what we really want and this delivers.

Origin Vol. 2 (Vertical Comics) – From Boichi, robots with high-level AI, who will kill to survive, live among us. The first volume was awesome and we’re hoping for more of the great action.

Tokyo These Days Vol. 1 (Viz Media) – It sounds like an intriguing manga about creating manga, editing, art, like, and Tokyo.

The Deviant #2 continues the holiday chills

The Deviant #2

“The Deviant Killer was apprehended half a century ago. So who’s behind the grisly slaying of a young man in a Chicago department store…and why does Michael see so much of himself in the man locked behind bars for the original murders? The Deviant #2 continues a chilling holiday tale that’ll keep you guessing as to what’s going on.

Written by James Tynion IV, The Deviant #2 is an amazing second issue. The issue builds on the debut issue, and itself, so well, creating a chapter full of tension.

The Deviant #2, and the debut, make the case that this series is the heir to Silence of the Lambs. It’s themes feel like they build out of that masterful story asking more questions and continuing to make audience uncomfortable with its details. It’s a hell of a series that is making the case for it to be a “holiday classic.”

The issue does an amazing job of delivering an emotional punch as Michael struggles with how to approach the comic he may or may not want to write. Like Silence of the Lambs, it’s not a story about a potential killer but Michael’s connection to those events and the killer. We also get to see how the world has changed and hasn’t over the decades as Michael lives life with his boyfriend. And that’s where the story gets interesting.

Tynion adds some sadness to it all with that detail. It isn’t the clear unspoken homophobia and distrust Michael is subjected to when getting details from a victim. Where Tynion makes things interesting is the serial killer that is Randall. Michael’s connection with Randall shows a sadness about Randall and the life you can tell he wished he had. It’s a moment that makes what is a deplorable individual somewhat sympathetic. We can feel sorry for him, even so slightly.

The art by Joshua Hixson continues to be fantastic. Joined by letterer Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou, the comic oozes tension, sadness, and chills. The colors, the presentation, the look on a face, body language, it all comes together to create a horror comic that isn’t just about the gore and body count but is twisting psychological mindfuck. There’s a coldness and calculation that comes through the art that not only plays off the wintery holiday but the characters themselves.

The Deviant #2 is a hell of a second issue. It is up there with horror tales making readers guess as to where it’s going to go and if there’s not something more sinister and deeper going on. It’s an instant classic right now that every horror fan won’t want to miss.

Story: James Tynion IV Art: Joshua Hixson Letterer: Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou
Story: 9.0 Art: 9.0 Overall: 9.0 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Around the Tubes

The Deviant #1

It’s a new week and even with the holiday, we’re still rocking the news with lots to come! So stay tuned! We’re kicking things off with some news and reviews from around the web!

WCAX – Non-Fiction Comic Festival teaches comic books are more than cartoons – Cool to see this coverage.

Kotaku – New Walking Dead Game Looks Uh… Not Great! – Ooph.

ICv2 – Asmodee Sales Up, Dark Horse Down – With the purchase by Embracer, we’re getting a better idea of how Dark Horse is doing.

Reviews

CBR – Deadpool: Seven Slaughters #1
CBR – The Deviant #1
The Beat – Where the Body Was
The Beat – Witch Hat Atelier Kitchen Vol. 1

Around the Tubes

The Deviant #1

It was new comic book day yesterday! What did you all get? What’d you like? Sound off in the comments below. While you ponder that, here’s some comic news and reviews from around the web in our morning roundup.

The Beat – The Goodreads Choice Awards eliminate comics category – Booooo!

Kotaku – Suicide Squad Game Resurfaces With Big Map And Live-Service Plans – Well ok then.

Kotaku – Suicide Squad’s Seasonal Content And Characters Will Be Free – Cool.

Reviews

Comicbook – The Deviant #1
The Beat – How to Love: A Guide to Feelings and Relationships
Comicbook – Outsiders #1
Comicbook – Superior Spider-Man #1

The Deviant #1 gifts blood and gore for the holidays

The Deviant #1

 As snow falls over Milwaukee in 1972, a blood-stained Santa Claus commits unimaginable atrocities against young men. Fifty years later, a troubled young writer interviews this so-called “Deviant Killer,” who still maintains his innocence from behind bars. And as Christmas approaches once again, the past returns, wielding a sharpened ax. The Deviant #1 delivers some ho-ho-holy shit in a blood soaked debut.

There’s been a string of “holiday horror” stories in recent years, with Christmas being one that has seen multiple takes. The Deviant #1 is a new one that feels like part slasher and part psychological horror of Silence of the Lambs.

Written by James Tynion IV, The Deviant #1 takes us through multiple decades. First, it builds up to gruesome murders that leave little to the imagination and from there the present day as a writer attempts to get material for a project while also dealing with his own connection to the town the murders took place in. But, the man behind bars might not have been the actual killer as it looks like the murders might be beginning again.

There’s a lot to take in with this debut. On its surface, it’s just a solid slasher horror story that takes place during Christmas. But, Tynion takes things further with the original “Deviant Killer.” We learn a lot about him during an interview where the character comes off more as Hannibal Lecter than anything else. Tynion lays the cards on the table, this original killer is a pedophile, having taken photos of young boys. But, he swears he did nothing beyond that. There’s discussions of the introduction to being “queer” for some are the killers in real life or those in entertainment. Ed Gein is mentioned as an example, but there’s a long list including Lecter. There’s a little bit of a statement for the need of more positive queer characters by that little bit alone.

But, the comic also is uncomfortable in that way as well. In that extended scene, Tynion will surely reinforce negative perceptions about those who are “deviants” and queer in some readers. They will equate pedophilia, and murderers with those who are LGBTQ+. But, for a long time the media did this anyways, and that may part of Tynion’s point.

Some of that unease is delivered by Joshua Hixson. Yes, there’s a hell of a lot of gore and some solid moments beyond that but it’s the back and forth between a writer and a prisoner that’s most tense. Tynion’s dialogue is a perfect back and forth but Hixson delivers a tight visual ping pong as well. You can feel the volley as the two adults go back and forth, one clearly playing more than the other. It adds to the unease of what’s said, creating a scene that’s memorable beyond the comic and evokes the back and forth of Agent Starling and Lecter in the film. The lettering by Hasan Otsmane-Elhaou is key throughout the comic really nailing down the emotional moments throughout and helping enhance the back and forth of the interview.

The story as a whole is intriguing with some gruesome murders and two characters who are more psychological than slasher. You can see the influences for The Deviant #1 and it takes what works from them and uses them really well. More importantly, it’s just entertaining horror that promises to slash through the cheer of the holiday season and deliver a bloody good time.

Story: James Tynion IV Art: Joshua Hixson Letterer: Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.5 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Image Comics provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Graphic Policy’s Top Comic Picks this Week!

Animal Pound Ashcan

Wednesdays (and Tuesdays) are new comic book day! Each week hundreds of comics are released, and that can be pretty daunting to go over and choose what to buy. That’s where we come in

Each week our contributors choose what they can’t wait to read this week or just sounds interesting. In other words, this is what we’re looking forward to and think you should be taking a look at!

Find out what folks think below, and what comics you should be looking out for this week.

Alien #1 (Marvel) – A world is infected by the universe’s greatest killers, Weyland-Yutani sees a payout even if it costs a few human lives.

Animal Pound Ashcan (BOOM! Studios) – Get a look at the new series from Tom King and Peter Gross that’s a new reimagining of George Orwell’s classic. How it’ll stand out from that other recent take, Animal Castle (which is amazing), will be intriguing.

Batman and Robin #3 (DC Comics) – The series has been fun so far as it balances the superheroics with Bruce and Damian attempting to be a normal father and son.

Dark X-Men #4 (Marvel) – The series has been fun so far remember the dysfunction within the X-Men that can be so entertaining.

G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero #301 (Skybound) – Larry Hama continues his epic run with artist Chris Mooneyham!

Lotus Land #1 (BOOM! Studios) – Something about technology that promises to end entropy itself and an attack on that program brings out a retired Detective. It sounds intriguing and the art looks great.

Outsiders #1 (DC Comics) – The Outsiders are back in this stealth launch of something bigger… something more… Planetary.

Rose Wolves Vol. 1 (IDW Publishing) – This wordless two-color graphic novel is an enthralling fable about disability, companionship, and transformation, set in the haunting beauty of the wild.

Speed Force #1 (DC Comics) – DC’s expanding the world of the Flash and we’re intrigued where this aspect of it all goes.

Star Wars: Visions #1 (Marvel) – Peach Momoko does Star Wars.

The Deviant #1 (Image Comics) – As snow falls over Milwaukee in 1972, a blood-stained Santa Claus commits unimaginable atrocities against young men. Fifty years later, a troubled young writer interviews this so-called “Deviant Killer,” who still maintains his innocence from behind bars.

The Ministry of Compliance #1 (IDW Publishing) – Writer John Ridley with artist Stefano Raffaele? Yes please! Thirty-seven years ago, Earth was secretly invaded by an alien force known as the Devolution, and they have been shaping the direction humanity has been going in ever since to prepare us to be assimilated into their empire.

James Tynion IV and Joshua Hixson’s The Deviant gets a trailer

As snow falls over Milwaukee in 1972, a blood-stained Santa Claus commits unimaginable atrocities against young men. Fifty years later, a troubled young writer interviews this so-called “Deviant Killer,” who still maintains his innocence from behind bars. And as Christmas approaches once again, the past returns, wielding a sharpened ax.

Eisner-winning writer James Tynion IV and acclaimed artist Joshua Hixson unite for a pitch-black holiday horror story.

The Deviant #1 is in stores November 15, and you can pre-order at your Local Comic Shop!

Celebrate some holiday horror with James Tynion IV and Joshua Hixon’s The Deviant

Writer James Tynion IV and acclaimed artist Joshua Hixson, and award-winning letterer Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou unite for a pitch-black holiday horror story in The Deviant. This chilling, nine-issue miniseries is set to launch in November from Image Comics.

As snow falls over Milwaukee in 1972, a blood-stained Santa Claus commits unimaginable atrocities against young men. Fifty years later, a troubled young writer interviews this so-called “Deviant Killer,” who still maintains his innocence from behind bars. And as Christmas approaches once again, the past returns, wielding a sharpened ax. 

The Deviant #1 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, November 15:

  • Cover A by Hixson – Lunar Code 0923IM309
  • Cover B by Hixson – Lunar Code 0923IM310
  • Cover C by Simmonds (1:10 incentive copy) – Lunar Code 0923IM311
  • Cover D by Sorrentino (1:25 incentive copy) – Lunar Code 0923IM312
  • Cover E by Phillips (1:50 incentive copy) – Lunar Code 0923IM313
  • Cover F by Ward (1:75 incentive copy) – Lunar Code 0923IM314
  • Cover G by Bermejo (1:100 incentive copy) – Lunar Code 0923IM315
The Deviant #1
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