
By: Joshua Hale Fialkov (writer), Andrea Sorrentino (artist), Marcelo Maiolo (colorist)
The Story: Apparently, magic is the high-potency acid of the vampire world.
The Review: In some ways, I don’t find this series groundbreaking as I find that it breaks away from the preconceived notions it invites you to make about it. Think of the first time you heard the premise: a slender vampire with heartthrob looks pitting himself against his own lover, whom he turned himself. Who knew you’d get a story about two individuals with incompatible views on life, yet who are attracted to each other all the more even as they vie for each other’s deaths?
Even more appreciably, the series has avoided all the usual nail-biting brooding you usually expect from these semi-romantic vampire tales nowadays, focusing more on the more violent, morally questionable qualities of the creatures. In this issue, Fialkov truly dabbles in angst for the first time as Andrew uses the luxury of non-existence to reflect on his actions: “I’ve done more harm than good.” But even here, Andy doesn’t ruminate for long, rejecting the notion that he’s destined for greater things with a dismissive, “Destiny is for teenage girls. I spew death.”
You might wonder whom he’s scoffing at so boldly, but not even death-spewing Andrew can get that answer. We can deduce a few things by simple observation. This off-page voice must have some prime role in the balance of the universe, since he recounts the primordial origins of Cain (“Before there was light or dark or heaven or earth, there was blackness.”) with authority. And since he can keep the slain Andrew from whisking off to the afterlife, and hints that he can restore Andrew to the world of the living, he must be pretty powerful as well.
Yet for all that, we still don’t know how Cain and Andrew’s lives are tied together, considering the former predates the latter by eons. We only get a hint that an “army of great mystical warriors,” most likely the Demon Knights, had something to do with using Andrew as the “seal” on Cain’s imprisonment.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Andrea Sorrentino, Andrew Bennett, Batman, Bruce Wayne, Cain, DC, DC Comics, I Vampire, I Vampire #7, I Vampire #7 review, John Troughton, Joshua Hale Fialkov, Justice League Dark, Madame Xanadu, Marcelo Maiolo, Mary Queen of Blood, Rac Shade, Tig Rafelson, Zatanna, Zatanna Zatara | Leave a comment »