Thursday 1 December 2022

DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army Of The Dead #2 - DC Comics

DC HORROR PRESENTS: SGT. ROCK VS. THE ARMY OF THE DEAD No. 2, December 2022
Featuring an undead fascist host which is not only almost unkillable, but also retains enough memory of their former life to drink, drive, converse and fire automatic weapons, Bruce Campbell’s narrative for Issue Two of “DC Horror Presents: Sgt. Rock Vs. The Army Of The Dead” unquestionably produces a genuine sense of deadly danger surrounding Easy Company as they reconnoitre behind enemy lines. Indeed, at one point it actually appears a sure-fire certainty that Dozer is about to be throttled to death by a grinning cadaver, when the unsuspecting soldier is surprised by a pair of Third Reich zombies being carried inside a canvas-covered German truck.

Enjoyably, such sincerely felt jeopardy isn’t palpable just for this one set-piece either, as the Michigan-born writer later places the veteran squad inside a derelict building which is suddenly swarmed full of almost bestial, gun-toting zeds. Moreover, ‘the Sword of Damocles’ is even shown dangling above the head of Doctor Theodor Morell’s second-in-command, when the villainous physician makes it abundantly clear to his sub-ordinate that the factory the terrified officer controls will increase its output of walking dead immediately; “Need I remind you that your employment -- and your very life -- depend upon it?”

Marvellously matching these pulse-pounding proceedings are Campbell’s frequent injections of dark humour, such as the putrefying, goose-stepping goons who decide to get drunk in Das Hafenzimmer and subsequently start gleefully shooting one another to bits in an attempt to see who can take the most bullets. This ‘tongue in cheek’ approach entertainingly extends even to Easy Company, as Sergeant Rock and his men make numerous quips throughout the twenty-two-page periodical.

Similarly as successful as this book’s prodigious penmanship are its sense-shattering layouts, with Eduardo Risso pencilling some incredibly animated corpses and seemingly spraying every panel possible with a hail of deadly lead. Indeed, some of the German zombies depicted within this comic convey such evident personalities of their own, especially whenever they’re about to strangle or shoot someone, that many readers might arguably find it hard to imagine even Joe Kubert’s co-creation being able to outfight the Fuhrer’s formidably strong machines of undying flesh and bone.

The regular cover art to "DC HORROR PRESENTS: SGT. ROCK VS. THE ARMY OF THE DEAD" #2 by Gary Frank

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