Sunday 15 July 2012

Friday 6 July 2012

(...) FRIGHTFEAST IS LIKE GOING ON A COACH TOUR OF GLEEFUL SICKNESS WITH A BUNCH OF INTOXICATED CENOBITES (...)

When this comic arrived in the post for me to review, I hovered over the envelope and froze, sensing a putrifying evil presence within...Dare I open this unholy Pandora's Box (or rather, Pandora's envelope)? Of course I bloody did!...First thing to assault my eyes, was psychodelic carnage that is the front cover; a warning to the faint heart of just some of the twisted madness that lies within ..."SLEAZE,GORE...NOTHIN' MORE!...SIGHTS SO HORRIBLE, YOU'll HAVE FRIGHTMARES!". I tentatively opened the book and was immediately greeted with maggot-ridden dementia; the narrating character is introduced:huddled  by the bins of an alley, injecting substances into his rotten, pustule ridden flesh, recounting his past of the teacher who threw flaming shit on his face, and his cannibal parents who he blames for his own ghoulish behaviour... He confides that his drug-addled psychotic mind is so twisted, that his body has rejected it, and second brain has grown in his arse for the sole purpose of kicking himself in the head...the story then morphs into another nightmare scenario: is this a drug hallucination of the narrator's fevered mind, or is he awakening from a nightmare into a even darker reality ?...
The comic has now gone into the world of '70's exploitation horrors and '80's video nasties - the familiar terrain of the gorehound. A nazi scientist is conducting inhuman experiments on a tropical island somewhere; creating bloodthirsty zombies and hideous mutants to serve his twisted will. He send his thug subordinates to look for fresh 'samples' as he has almost exhausted his supply of playthings. On another part of the island a group of not very bright film makers and actors have arrived to make a movie, not realising the danger they are walking into... Well, you don't have to be a rocket scientist (or nazi one) to figure out what will happen when the scienist's creations develop a will of their own, and mutate in ways their creator could have ever imagined?
FRIGHTFEAST is like going on a coach tour of gleeful sickness with a bunch of intoxicated cenobites; You'll either be in heaven or in hell, depending on your tastes. For those of you who prefer complex, multi-layered stories, character development, high brow subtleties and the serious, atmospheric build up approach to horror, then this probably won't be for you. For those however who prefer to wade right in, enjoying all things splatter and the wantonly graphic, whose minds have been warped from many a late night orgy of shlocky, violent celluloid gorefest; then this will DEFINITELY be your cup of (bloody) tea. Me, I like both (depending on my mood) and to my mind, the comic can be enjoyed on the level of visual experience and pitch-black humor alone. At moments it's disturbing and the next knowingly OTT and absurd; giving a knowing wink to the genre fans it is made for. It's almosr like Allen's possessed, desensitised mind is not really concerned with a traditional plot, but rather exorcising itself onto the page, spewing up every gruesome influence that has crept it's way in there, mutating and adding to a collage of warped and savage creativity which certainly has a morbis fascination to it. Mark has edgy and interesting art style; pages are often montages which have a natural fluidity and dynamism to them, and great use of contrast and motion. There are references to the obscure Italian and Grindhouse horrors, to classic like The Thing, Cannibal Holocaust, I Drink Your Blood, Evil Dead and Hellraiser II, with the humour of early Peter Jackson (Bad Taste/BrainDead) in places. Plus there's a nice little 'reality check' and twist at the end.