Wednesday, 10 November 2021

Judas Breed #2 - PenInkColor Studios

JUDAS BREED No. 2, August 2016
Predominantly concerned with Connie Beaumont and her crewmates desperately struggling to save one of their own from an alien arthropod attack, Kenneth Brown’s script for Issue Two of “Judas Breed” does an amazing job of combining a person’s natural scepticism at such extra-terrestrial life actually existing with the far less forgiving perspective of them then using such a lethal creature as a weapon for the military. In fact, one of this twenty-eight page periodical’s many strengths is its storyline’s ability to move away from the nail-biting terror of Linda’s murderous metamorphosis as she literally starts tearing her friends apart to the more subtle Machiavellian machinations of Alex Hunter on board Olympus Base One.

Enjoyably however, there’s also much more to this comic than a simple case of an aggressive alien monster being sought after by the Armed Forces Intelligence Department, due to its author imbuing it considerably-sized cast with as much character as its panels allow. Arguably taking the lion’s share of this spotlight is the kind-hearted Tony and more matter-of-fact Kevin, whose somewhat contrasting reactions to all the death and destruction around them rather engagingly throws the unlikely duo together, and resultantly makes their shocking combined fate towards the very end of this publication all the more disconcerting.

Equally as effective is the penmanship behind Doctor Michelle Lee Walker and the aforementioned Hunter, which eventually establishes the pair as this narrative’s lead antagonists. Alex quite quickly settles into the role of a cold-hearted governmental killer who is prepared to go to any lengths in order to keep the extra-terrestrial’s existence a secret, even poisoning a tray of delicious donuts. Yet it isn’t until this comic’s distinctly disturbing conclusion that Kenneth cleverly reveals his storyline’s amiable, silver-haired scientist to be perfectly happy to disavow her medical morals so as to make “a lot of money in the process.” 

Likewise, the contribution of Ryan Best’s artwork to the success of this book cannot be overstated either, with the illustrator pencilling some genuinely chilling moments during Linda’s transformation into a walking machine of destruction. The savagely sudden deaths of Greg and Bradley show just how insanely vicious the alien arthropod can be, and this brutality contrasts nicely with the complete lack of emotion on Hunter’s face when he later nonchalantly orders Angela to ensure Tony and Kevin are permanently ‘cleaned up’.

Written by: Kenneth A. Brown, Illustrated by: Ryan Best, and Lettered by: HDE

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