Marvel Zombies 2


By Robert Kirkman, Sean Phillips & Arthur Suydam (Marvel)

ISBN: 978-0-7851-2545-7
With the nights drawing in and assorted haunts roaming the land I thought I’d follow-up a previous graphic novel review with another nervous peek at one of modern Marvel’s most successful niche-franchises: a canny blend of gratuitous sarcasm, knowing, measured respect for canonical comicbook lore and sheer necrophilic bravado starring the departed-but-not-gone denizens of an alternate Marvel Universe.

In Marvel Zombies: Dead Days a dire extra-dimensional contagion ravaged Earth, and heroes, villains and all creatures in-between were eradicated by fearsomely frightful and discomfortingly familiar flesh-eating superheroes who weren’t so different from the ones we all know – except for a rapacious, all consuming taste for living flesh that only paused when there was no-one and nothing left to eat…

Against all odds a small band of mortals and mutants survived the catastrophe and the subsequent manic hunts of the zombies for one last morsel of living meat… until an ill-considered visit by the Silver Surfer and Galactus. These cosmic paragons were, after a cataclysmic struggle, utterly consumed by the undead super-humans, but not before the walking dead’s ranks were reduced to six – Tony Stark, Luke Cage, Giant-Man, Spider-Man, Wolverine and the Hulk.

Engorged on the extra-galactic planet-eater’s cosmic power and with all other food sources apparently consumed the cosmic sextet abandoned Earth: for the next forty tears they scoured their entire dimension, killing and eating every thing and every civilisation they could find, on the way swelling their ranks with the dead infected carcasses of intergalactic powerhouses Gladiator, Phoenix, Firelord and Thanos who had all fallen in battle against the unstoppable horrors.

Now, with the universe emptied of all life, but still just as ravenously, insatiably hungry, the zombies turned back towards Earth, intending to use the Fantastic Four’s old trans-dimensional travel technology to find a new universe – and eat that too.

In four decades the Earth’s meagre survivors had developed into a small but by no means viable colony, led by the aged T’Challa, onetime superhero Black Panther. With the aid of mutant machinesmith Forge he had welded an uneasy alliance between Humans, Homo Superior and another more startling faction: zombies who had lost their appetite for flesh…

It would seem that if the undead don’t taste flesh for long enough the irresistible hunger fades – a fact that was slowly becoming apparent to some of the cosmic zombies making their way back home through a universe cleansed of all life…

Life on Earth was no picnic either. Despite the end of the world, species tension remained undiminished and a civil war was brewing, human against mutant, fomented by the insanely ambitious Malcolm Cortez, leader of the long-gone Magneto’s Acolytes. An assassination attempt on T’Challa precipitated a final crisis, but when the cosmic undead arrived, intent on escaping to fresh hunting grounds, they discovered one last tasty snack just waiting there to tide them over on their intended journey…

However some of the monsters, tempted by the sight of hunger-free zombies battling beside their proposed last meal, change sides…

By no means as bleakly black and comedic as the first volume, this story thunders along as a far more cohesive tragic adventure, with a diminished gratuitous death-toll, coherent characterisation, genuine dramatic tension and spectacular action replacing the shock tactics and mordant slapstick of earlier tales: more a “What If?” crossover than a stand-alone, exploitative event, and the gripping saga ends on a moody downbeat that promises more and even better to come…

This book, reprinting the comicbook miniseries Marvel Zombies 2 #1-5, also includes the wealth of alternate and variant cover reproductions by painter Arthur Suydam whose astounding pastiche images of pictorial landmarks from Marvel’s decades-long-history has done so much to make the series a commercial success.

Although still very much a one-trick pony, there seems to be no way to sate the avid appetite of fans for these tales, which depend greatly on a deep familiarity with the regular Marvel pantheon, a fondness for schlock horror and the cherished tradition of superheroes fighting each other. Not for the squeamish or continuity-purist hardliners, there are certainly loud laughs, poignant pauses and frissons of fear awaiting the open-minded reader…

© 2007, 2008 Marvel Publishing, Inc, a subsidiary of Marvel Entertainment, Inc. All Rights Reserved.