Monday, 14 July 2025

Solomon Kane: The Serpent Ring #4 - Titan Comics

SOLOMON KANE: THE SERPENT RING No. 4, August 2025
It should be pretty clear from this comic’s frantically-paced plot just why “Heroic Signatures” were so keen to have Patrick Zircher on board for a Solomon Kane mini-series. For whilst the book’s twenty-four page narrative is arguably a little far-fetched in allowing all the central protagonists to miraculously survive a cataclysmic cave-in, it does still predominantly read like one of Robert E. Howard’s original short-stories from the late writer’s days penning pieces for “Weird Tales”.

Furthermore, whilst the Seventeenth-Century Puritan is most definitely at the centre of the American author’s yarn, blinding a gigantic serpent with some well-aimed pistol shots just as Ulysses once did with the one-eyed giant Polyphemus, the various villains of the piece are actually defeated by their own greed and hubris rather than by some extraordinary, superhuman effort by the deeply devout Englishman. Indeed, the sombre-faced traveller is even willing to limit his vengeance upon Rolando Zarza De Aragon to a solid smack upon the jaw, rather than gun down the cut-throat who left him for dead, because he realises their mission will need every able-bodied adventurer to succeed.

Likewise, it contains a brief moment of redemption for the rogue Nico Cassani, who despite his evident ungentlemanly lust for Diamanta Bensaid, bravely sacrifices himself for the female scholar during the height of this comic’s climatic battle sequence. Admittedly, the rogue’s uncouth advances towards Abramo’s daughter have proved pretty repulsive in the past. But the ne'er-do-well’s unthinking willingness to place himself between the woman and a deadly, Serpent warrior’s spear-point certainly makes his painful death far more poignant than it would have if he had merely been unceremoniously slain during the savage bloodbath beneath Set’s huge underground statue; “The devils have killed me.” 

Just as enthralling as this publication’s composition though, has to be its layouts, with Zircher clearly bringing his ‘A game’ to the table. Of particular note, has to be the artist’s ability to bring life to Sha-Kabet’s pet snake, which slithers about the wilderness outside the Temple of Set with hair-raising conviction. Furthermore, there’s a palpable sense of desperation in Kane’s final assault upon the serpent deity’s followers, as fiery death quite literally rains down upon him and his friends, as well as his scale-covered enemies, due to the supposed anger of the long-dead Stygian god.

The regular cover art of "SOLOMON KANE: THE SERPENT RING" #4 by Jessica Fong

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