
By: Scott Snyder (writer), Marco Rudy (artist), Sean Parsons & Michel Lacombe (inkers), David Baron (colorist)
The Story: Swamp Dinosaurs versus Zombie Dinosaurs. For real.
The Review: Honestly, once Snyder and Jeff Lemire made the connections between the Red and the Green, they were a conceptual hop, skip, and a jump away from developing a force for the non-living. The Rot may be fairly intuitive as an idea, but its development both here and in Animal Man has been insidiously slow and steady, much as you’d expect any rot to be. From the shock reactions it produced in the debut, the Rot has become ever more disturbing and darker.
Last time, we saw Billy put his rather nefarious powers to very effective, if gruesome, effect. But watching a person choke on their own lung would be little more than a gross visual without context, and Snyder’s morbidly poetic explanation of Billy’s abilities leave you with a bit of a bitter taste in your mouth: “Everyone has a little death inside them. A rotten tooth. Dead skin cells, shattered veins… Whatever death is in you, he can make it bloom.”
The real question is how much of this is really Billy’s doing. Initially, he projected a sad, preyed-upon air, which only turned twisted after giving in to the insistent voices he heard in his head. Seeing him ask for a vanilla milkshake here (only to wreak bloody havoc after the cook mistakes his order for chocolate) makes you think somewhere, Billy’s personality still exists. So is he taking a back seat to inflicting this horror, or does he have his hand firmly on the wheel?
Most likely, Billy may have no control in all this. The Green considers Abigail’s succumbing to the Rot as all but inevitable, even though she’s putting all her effort into making sure that never happens. But Abby herself hinted that when push comes to shove, she may be unable to resist the fate that awaits her, which means a very ugly confrontation for Alec should he insist on sticking with her. Right now he may think of her as “the closest thing I have to home,” but she won’t seem so homey once she pulls the same shenanigans as her brother on Alec.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Abigail Arcane, Alec Holland, David Baron, DC, Green, Marco Rudy, Michel Lacombe, Parliament of Trees, Rot, Scott Snyder, Sean Parsons, Swamp Thing, Swamp Thing #4, Swamp Thing #4 review, the Green, the Rot, William Arcane | Leave a comment »