Showing posts with label Dungeons & Dragon: Ravenloft Caravan Of Curses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dungeons & Dragon: Ravenloft Caravan Of Curses. Show all posts

Monday, 13 May 2024

Dungeons & Dragons: Ravenloft Caravan Of Curses #1 - IDW Publishing [Part Two]

DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: RAVENLOFT CARAVAN OF CURSES No. 1, April 2024
Whilst similar-sized tomes to this “Dungeons & Dragons” anthology might well sag somewhat in the middle, such an accusation surely cannot be levelled against Amy Chase and Casey Gilly’s genuinely gross story to begin this book’s second half. In fact, it’s apparent obsession with a man-eating goddess and her self-harming cult of wannabe mothers probably walks a very fine line between completely captivating its readers’ attention, and causing many to simply put the comic down in disgust; “You must understand that to a child of Viktal, an outsider is no different from wild game.”

Foremost of these disturbing plot threads is that all the women must apparently pluck out one of their eyes if they want to become pregnant, or, in the case of Hesta Sinclove, consider sacrificing a close friend’s baby in order to have one of her own. Coupled with luring strangers to the village so the hapless visitors can be feasted upon, as well as the expectant protagonist developing a craving for bowls of blood, and this yarn is certainly not one for the squeamish, or a bibliophile anticipating having any sympathy whatsoever for the curse’s victim.

By far this comic’s least ghoulish tale is its finale, which somewhat unexpectedly attempts to tie together some of the loose threads left unanswered in its preceding gore-fest whilst simultaneously bringing the crone’s own adventure to a surprisingly sickly-sweet close. Indeed, it’s arguably not until the halfling mass-murderer Wilkis Nettlekettle makes an appearance some seven pages in, that the co-authors’ penmanship thankfully stops waxing lyrical about a carnival worker’s life tending goats, and finally settles down to telling “a new nightmare”.

Intriguingly however, it would seem that the owner of a blade which causes his own body to be cut whenever it is used to even just slice cheese, is an entirely appropriate punishment for its evil owner. And yet that doesn’t initially seem to stop Shortcrust’s owner from ridding the fiendish fellow of his jeopardising jinx so she can trick him into accepting an even worse fate than bleeding to death. This subsequent, shocking transference of ownership of the Caravan of Curses rather neatly brings the anthology to an end, albeit many within the audience may well be left wondering what crime the now rejuvenated Zhyl committed to have “seen all these years of evil” herself.

The regular cover art of "DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: RAVENLOFT CARAVAN OF CURSES" #1 by Sarah Stern

Friday, 10 May 2024

Dungeons & Dragons: Ravenloft Caravan Of Curses #1 - IDW Publishing [Part One]

DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: RAVENLOFT CARAVAN OF CURSES No. 1, April 2024
Described by “IDW Publishing” as “an oversized one-shot containing four terrifically terrifying short stories”, this hefty anthology certainly seems to start off well enough, courtesy of a truly torrid tale by Amy Chase and Casey Gilly which is initially set within Tenebrarum Woods. Indeed, if the cackling crone and her decidedly disconcerting maggot baby don’t instantly raise the heckles upon the back of its audience’s necks, then the quite literal buckets of blood which soon follow after the “gang of misfits” encounter the blue-hued Yvelda Bonnefoy, surely will.

Fortunately however, such a grotesque curse as having to pour and drink numerous teacups over brimming with ruddy-coloured gore, hasn’t simply been penned just for its sickening impact upon any perusing bibliophile. But is surprisingly central to an intriguing storyline of royal court politics that depicts a malicious mother-in-law determined to ruin her son’s marriage when he falls for a woman supposedly far beneath him on the social ladder; “The true purpose of the gift is removing any threats to your security and station. I care not for that little opportunist’s feelings.”

Far more flowery word-wise, and ultimately rather disappointing when it comes to the tale’s somewhat uncertain ending, is this comic’s look at an arrogant Elven actor who initially appears to have become the prey of a werewolf-turned-understudy. This deadly threat to Aster’s future becomes increasingly bleak when it appears that the thespian’s foe has deliberately infected him with a deftly placed scratch upon his right shoulder, and many a reader’s heart will surely beat a little faster when his boyfriend finds himself confronted by a pack of potential hungry lycanthropes in the claustrophobic darkness of the understage.

Somewhat frustratingly though, the possibility of a man-wolf or four massacring anyone is eventually shown by the Vistana witch as being an infuriating red-herring, after she swiftly deduces the true cause of the now rapidly aging artist’s dire predicament. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the performer appears eager for the hag to rid him of his unsightly, wrinkly flesh. Yet in doing so it arguably becomes unclear as to whether he will for at least a short time re-tread the boards with both vigour and youth, or rather unconvincingly has agreed to suicidally die there and then with simply an ageless countenance for the worms to marvel at.

The regular cover art of "DUNGEONS & DRAGONS: RAVENLOFT CARAVAN OF CURSES" #1 by Sarah Stern