Vampirella: The Dracula War (1993)
Writers: Kurt Busiek and Tom Sniegoski
Artists: Louis Small Jr., Jim Balent, and Matt Banning
Rating: Four of Ten Stars
When Harris Comics relaunched "Vampirella" in the early 1990s, they did so with a four issue black-and-white deluxe format series "Morning in America". The series featured carefully and beautifully rendered art by Louis La Chance and John Nyberg, and a multi-layered storyline that brought a darkness and sense of horror to the Vampirella strip that had never been present before. The story by Kurt Busiek used the ever reliable Cult of Chaos as villains and deployed the supporting cast from the old series with an effectiveness that hadn't been seen since Archie Goodwin was writing the stories.
But once that mini-series was over, things started to go wrong. Immediately.
"Vampirella: The Dracula War" collects the first four issues of Harris' monthly "Vampirella" color comics title. The story picks up after the end of "Morning in America" with United States Senator Adam Van Helsing using his political power to wage war against the world-wide forces of the Cult of Chaos and Vampirella and her friend Pendragon serving as his foremost shock-troops. Vampirella and Pendragon travel to Europe where they discover that Chaos's tendrils reach to the highest level of the European Union's leadership, and that their old foe Dracula is poised to seize control of the Continent on behalf of the Mad God he serves.
In concept, it seems like a worthy Vampirella story, one that continues the threads of "Morning in America", but adding back in some of the high adventure and genre-bending action that marked many of the tales of Warren era--in this case, vampires meet international intrigue ala Hammer's "The Satanic Rites of Dracula".
In execution, things are a little less appealing. The story never feels like it quite finds its direction, meandering from encounter to encounter, none of which feel like their building toward anything in particular. Instead of growing excitement, I felt growing boredom as I progressed through the book; I became less interested in how things were going to turn out rather than more with each turn of the page. Worse, the few interesting moments in the book--such as vampires relying on hi-tech to overcome the fact that sunlight is lethal to them--are undone by efforts to strip Vampirella of the things that made her and the series in general such a fun and unique property and reduce her to a run-of-the-mill, ass-kicking, monster-fighting one-note Bad Girl character. Where the post Goodwin and Englehart Vampirella started very quickly to rely too much on camp, the Harris Vampirella started running too far in other direction. While Busiek continues to stay more true to the original Vampirella stories than those who followed him--the return of Vampirella's bat-wings in an example of this--the goal for these references is primarily to expand the notion that much of what we thought we knew from the old series was a Chaos-created lie and that Vampirella's past was so much fantasy. (This approach reached its height with the final gasps of the Harris Vampirella with "Vampirella: Revelations" and "Vampirella: Second Coming", a mini-series that not only wiped out most of the original Warren continuity but most of what Harris had established as well.)
But watching Vampirella be turned from a fun, genre-striding babe to a generic mid-1990s Bad Girl comic book character isn't the worst aspect of "Vampirella: The Dracula War". The biggest disappointment is the artwork, particularly after the great stuff featured in the "Morning in America" series. The layouts are messy and hard to follow, the panels are flat and devoid of any sense of movement even during action scenes, and the coloring is amatuerish to say the least; all three major artists on this book went onto do far better work than what is on display here. (In fact, whoever took Balent's brush away from him and made him the penciller on DC's Catwoman did him a tremendous favor, career-wise.)
Perhaps a new decade and a new publisher will restore her to the glory she once knew (or at least to the level of fun found in the Balent-penciled crossover with Catwoman from 1997)--especially since the early issues have been written by the very talented Eric Trautmann--but as far as the past is concerned, "Vampirella: The Dracula War" should be consigned to the dustbin of comics history.
--
For more on Vampirella, click here to read reviews of some of the classic stories from the Warren Era at Shades of Gray; or here to view some great Vampirella artwork, as well as her Saturday Scream Queen profile, at Terror Titans.
Currently Showing at Cinema Steve
-
-
NUELOW at Christmas: Day Twenty-One - Here's a Christmas-flavored adventure idea for a modern setting that contains magic. *THE ELF ON THE SHELF MASSACRES* Someone is murdering the families of...19 hours ago
-
Tuneful Tuesday with the Melodicka Brothers - The annual Halloween celebration here at Terror Titans got brought to a screeching halt by the horror show that is real life. So, instead we're going to be...1 month ago
-
'Knives Out' is a great Who-Dunnit - *Knives Out (2019)* Starring: Ana de Armas, Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Don Johnson, Michael Shannon, Christopher Plummer, and LaKeith Stan...5 years ago
-
'Evil Bong: High-5' is low quality (but an improvement over the last entry) - *Evil Bong: High-5 (2016)* Starring: John Patrick Jordan, Sonny Carl Davis, Mindy Robinson, Bob Ramos, Chance A. Rearden, Rorie Moon, Amy Paffrath, Robin Sy...6 years ago
-
A Franco foul-up that's kinda saved by unintentional comedy - *Neurosis: The Fall of the House of Usher (aka "Revenge in the House of Usher" and "Zombie 5") (1982)* Starring: Howard Vernon, Robert Foster, Lina Romay, J...12 years ago
-
Peter Cushing... baddest of the bad-asses! - Here's hoping everyone has a happy Halloween and Monster Month!13 years ago
-
One of Universal's best horror efforts from the 1940s - *Man Made Monster (1941)* Starring: Lon Chaney Jr., Lionel Atwill, Anne Nagel, Frank Albertson, and Samuel S. Hinds Director: George Waggner Rating: Seven o...13 years ago
-
Happy Birthday to Boris Karloff - On this day in 1887, the great Boris Karloff was born. To mark his birthday, here's a review of one of his many films that deserve more attention than it g...14 years ago
-
Time has left this Lugosi drama behind - *Postal Inspector (1936)* Starring: Ricardo Cortez, Patricia Ellis, Michael Loring, and Bela Lugosi Director: Otto Brower Rating: Five of Ten Stars When a n...15 years ago
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Hey, don't blame it on me! I quit halfway through #2 over various payment and editorial matters, and my script for #1 had already been editorially-rendered incoherent.
ReplyDeleteI forget who they gave the book to, but wherever they went with it had nothing to do with my intended plot.
Double-checking the credits, I see I made a mistake in the review! And I apologize for that. (This is doubly embarrassing, given some of the grumbling *I've* done over the years over projects I've written chunks of but never been acknowledged for!)
ReplyDeleteI'll correct the header AND do a couple of minor revisions on the piece.
Thanks for stopping by and setting me straight! For what it's worth, I will have nothing but nice things to say when I get around to reviewing "Morning in America" over at Shades of Gray. :)
I'll look forward to seeing it, sir.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, my hints about Vampi not understanding her origin were more about rearranging it a little, as part of a cosmology for the series that built on characters and concepts from the Warren series rather than just chucking it all out. Had I completed it, her origin would have been throughly recognizable but with a few tweaks and more texture. I have no idea what they wound up doing, though.
I didn't follow everything Harris did in great detail, but they took the "revamping" quite a bit further than just a little tweaking and fine-tuning.
ReplyDeleteIt's too bad that they didn't stick closer to the original idea, because I think that all the Vampi-verse needed was a little tightening up here and there.