Nazi Zombies #1

Nazi Zombies #1

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VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
(W/A) Ben Dunn, Joe Wight
Achtung, citizens! The 1000-year reign of terror has begun! Following the terror-filled tenets of Mein Korpse, the Master Race and their decayed dictator have risen from the grave, and they have you dead to reichs! Ghoulish goose-steppers are marching your way, so get those potato-mashers and flamethrowers ready before it's too late!
Date Available: 02/22/2012
BONUS REVIEW by John Schaefer

Anyone who knows me knows me, knows that I believe that the current trend of Zombies in comics has been beaten to death (pun completely intended!) . Zombies, along with vampires, have recently been overexposed worse that a pop singing star from the Disney channel. So another zombie book hitting the stands is just more mindless 'jumping on the bandwagon' nonsense, right? Well, not exactly. See what we got here is a gimmick,baby. (Yea baby, a gimmick, that's it! I'm making gravy without the lumps!) And this gimmick is one that is near and dear to my heart. These zombies are Nazis! Ever since seeing classic films like Oasis of the Zombies and Zombie Lake, Nazi Zombies have always seemed more evil, more frightening, more macabre than your regular run of the mill zombies. And with the water-colory black and white art of the first story, the creepiness builds. Now, this book is not for everyone. There is some gore and some violence, I mean this is World War II and these are zombies. This book has potential. The short stories presented in issue one seems to be setting the stage for a future storyline. The problem I fear is that the focus of the story will change. So far, the writer has managed to avoid the obvious cliche. Thanks to a brief preamble, we get to skip a lengthy and unnecessary origin of the zombies. And most of the initial secondary characters are either killed or eaten, leaving one or two survivors that will be vital to a future storyline. I know what you're saying. An independent zombie book in black and white that gives no detailed explanation of the zombie plague, sounds familiar. But dude, really, these are Nazi Zombies! Way different! Go rent Oasis of the Zombies, then read this book. You'll see the difference between Walking and Nazi..
7 out of 10 Grahams
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
(W/A) Ben Dunn, Joe Wight
Achtung, citizens! The 1000-year reign of terror has begun! Following the terror-filled tenets of Mein Korpse, the Master Race and their decayed dictator have risen from the grave, and they have you dead to reichs! Ghoulish goose-steppers are marching your way, so get those potato-mashers and flamethrowers ready before it's too late!
Date Available: 02/22/2012
BONUS REVIEW by John Schaefer

Anyone who knows me knows me, knows that I believe that the current trend of Zombies in comics has been beaten to death (pun completely intended!) . Zombies, along with vampires, have recently been overexposed worse that a pop singing star from the Disney channel. So another zombie book hitting the stands is just more mindless 'jumping on the bandwagon' nonsense, right? Well, not exactly. See what we got here is a gimmick,baby. (Yea baby, a gimmick, that's it! I'm making gravy without the lumps!) And this gimmick is one that is near and dear to my heart. These zombies are Nazis! Ever since seeing classic films like Oasis of the Zombies and Zombie Lake, Nazi Zombies have always seemed more evil, more frightening, more macabre than your regular run of the mill zombies. And with the water-colory black and white art of the first story, the creepiness builds. Now, this book is not for everyone. There is some gore and some violence, I mean this is World War II and these are zombies. This book has potential. The short stories presented in issue one seems to be setting the stage for a future storyline. The problem I fear is that the focus of the story will change. So far, the writer has managed to avoid the obvious cliche. Thanks to a brief preamble, we get to skip a lengthy and unnecessary origin of the zombies. And most of the initial secondary characters are either killed or eaten, leaving one or two survivors that will be vital to a future storyline. I know what you're saying. An independent zombie book in black and white that gives no detailed explanation of the zombie plague, sounds familiar. But dude, really, these are Nazi Zombies! Way different! Go rent Oasis of the Zombies, then read this book. You'll see the difference between Walking and Nazi..
7 out of 10 Grahams