Comics
Review: ‘Blackacre’ #1
Blackacre is a new series from Image, which brings an unapologetic political slant to the typical post-apocalyptic scenario played out in many contemporary works of fiction. It’s an interesting and certainly bold take on the genre, and it gives the series something to distinguish it from the get-go. Beyond that, issue #1 smartly focuses on establishing characters and setting, and ends with a twist that will entice readers to pick up the next issue. All in all, it’s a textbook opening issue to what looks like an intriguing new series.

WRITTEN BY: Duffy Boudreau
ART BY: Wendell Cavalcanti
PUBLISHER: Image Comics
PRICE: $2.99
RELEASE: December 5th, 2012
“Blackacre” might be the first comic I’ve read to mention zombies and pirates within the first five pages, and then go in a completely different direction without either of these pop culture staples and be better off for it. Duffy Boudreau’s script opens with a lecture from a professor far in the future, explaining just what led to the collapse of the United States the century prior. It’s unabashedly political, with not-so-subtle references to the growing financial inequality within America and the “1%”, the paranoid obsession of the religious right, and the infamous private security force formerly known as Blackwater, which is undoubtedly where “Blackacre” derives its title.
All of this serves to give “Blackacre” its own identity within comics, but beyond the opening few pages this doesn’t really factor into the plot aside from setting up an apocalyptic wasteland. From there on, we are introduced to a world of privilege and a world of suffering, characters we can empathize with on both sides, as well as characters we’ll come to despise. By the end, there’s an evident conspiracy afoot, and that will be enough to make you come back for more. But it’s a fairly basic plot that be indistinguishable if not for the opening.
Wendell Cavalcanti’s art can be good, but there are a few too many instances where characters just look weird or disproportionate. His environments are good, and his sleek, crisp approach to his visuals fits in with the military themes of the script. By and large, his work on the characters is solid. But still, seeing a dude’s eyeball rise up to their forehead every now and then is rather unsettling.
“Blackacre” manages to establish the setting and characters of its plot rather quickly, which is to be commended. However, its strongest – or at least most intriguing – attribute is its connection to contemporary politics, and that was essentially abandoned after the opening speech. I suspect that this is because it simply isn’t possible to set up a good story and to engage in political commentary at the same time. That’s understandable, and hopefully upcoming issues will explore this element further. Few comics attempt to engage in political commentary, and even less do it well.
3.5/5 Skulls
Reviewed by – George Shunick
Comics
IDW Dark and Paramount Announce New ‘Smile’ and ‘A Quiet Place’ Comic Book Tales
IDW Dark and Paramount recently joined forces to launch limited comic book tales set in the worlds of Smile and A Quiet Place, and we’ve learned today that they’ll continue hanging around in those franchise universes with two brand new limited series tales.
Entertainment Weekly has exclusively revealed this afternoon that IDW Dark’s Any Given Smile debuts in September, while A Quiet Place: Rising Tides arrives in November.
First up, from writer Stephanie Williams and artist Pablo Collar, Any Given Smile puts a football-themed twist on Parker Finn’s successful Smile movie franchise.
The five-part limited series is “set in January 1995, during the American Arena League football championship game in St. Augustine, Florida. The rising superstar of the Sharks, backup quarterback Dupree, is feeling the pressure from his teammates, the fans, and also the city’s gambling underworld, to whom he owes a considerable debt. Meanwhile, a sports journalist investigates a string of suicides that may be connected to the big game. At the very least, they are connected to a sinister entity that preys on the minds of its victims.”
From writer Declan Shalvey and artist Luke Sparrow, A Quiet Place: Rising Tides will also be a five-issue limited story. The comic book tale “brings the creatures to the Florida Keys, where a father-daughter duo attempt to survive on water in a houseboat.”
EW further details, “This tense family reunion coincides with the arrival of the vicious creatures that hunt through sound. Grace and her dad find safety on the open ocean, but she’ll have to make landfall sooner or later; the father’s oxygen tank and their supplies are running low, while a hurricane swiftly approaches.”
Learn more about both comic books over on Entertainment Weekly.



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