Quantcast
Welcome to Silver Bullet Comics! Dateline: Sunday, 08-Nov-2009 08:53:02 CST
Silver Bullet Comics - The Internet's Most Diverse Comics Webzine
Silver Bullet Comics - The Internet's Most Diverse Comics Webzine
 

 

CURRENT REVIEWS

Saturday, November 7, 2009
Project Supepowers: Chapter Two #4
Phantom: The Ghost Who Walks #6
Jeremiah Cooper #1
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #30
Athena #2

Friday, November 6, 2009
Batman: The Widening Gyre #3
Great Ten #1

Thursday, November 5, 2009
Unknown: The Devil Made Flesh #2
Kill Audio #2
Unknown Soldier #13
Last Days of Animal Man #6
Blackest Night #4

Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Whatever Happened to the World of Tomorrow?
Harker: The Book of Solomon

Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Captain America: Reborn #4
Amazing Spider-Man #610
Ultimate Comics Spider-Man #4
Black Widow: Deadly Origin #1
Doctor Voodoo: Avenger of the Supernatural #2
Deathlok #1
Strange Tales #3
Starr the Slayer #3 (of 4)

Monday, November 2, 2009
Astro City: Astra Special
Archie & Friends #136
Ignition City #5
Hunter's Fortune #1
Sgt. Mike Battle: The Greatest American Hero #14
Gotham City Sirens #5

Sunday, November 1, 2009
Sunday Slugfest: Detective Comics #858


REVIEW ARCHIVE
TPB REVIEWS
MANGA REVIEWS
SUBMIT FOR REVIEW

 

 

Hellblazer: The Devil You Know

Posted: Wednesday, July 18
By: Stephen Holland
Print This Item

by Jamie Delano & Richard Piers Rayner, Mark Buckingham, Bryan Talbot, David Lloyd.
Publisher: DC Vertigo/Titan (ISBN 1845764900)

"Remember Newcastle, he said, and slapped me with a sudden chill of anger which now grows tentacles through me, like cancer, or death.

"Remember Newcastle. I wouldn't have given him credit for such subtlety -- but these words touch me as precisely as a dentist's steel probing the exposed pulp of a molar nerve."

Memory is very much at the forefront here, the second HELLBLAZER book from the late 1980s, as readers first discovered what was so utterly grim that happened in Newcastle in Constantine's greener days to send him to Ravenscar's Secure Facility For The Dangerously Deranged... looked back at the early 80s days of the Falklands War... remembered British holidays at the seaside... and were taken all the way back to old then ancient Britain as a mad, diseased and vainglorious abbot is told a tale by Merlin, his head-on-a-spike, and we discover said abbot's relative connection to thrice-born, Christian killing King Kon-Sten-Tyn of Ravenscar, who was a total bastard too.

You're right: that's the one Talbot's on. Not having read this material for some time, I was taken aback at how imaginative and vivid Delano was, particularly when daydreaming about the meltdown of a coastal nuclear reactor or flying the astral plane. He really does give the English language a damn good theatrical outing, with demons as loquacious as they repulsive. Rayner and Bucky's line are crisp and clear, and Vertigo's colourists hadn't yet blown out all the candles and left us choking in the post-snuff waxy vapour of more recent years.


Got some comments on this review?
Have your say at the In The Line Of Fire Message Board.






news | reviews | interviews | forums | advertise | privacy | contact | home