Suspended Animation Review

Speed Demonz #1/32 pgs. & $3.99 from Angry Viking Press/words and art by Gabriel Lamberty/sold at comics shops and at www.angryvikingpress.com.

Let’s do the math. Comic books in the early 1930s were 64 pages of art and story at about 12 panels per page. Most stories were eight pages in length. That equals about 768 panels for 10 cents, or a tiny fraction of 1 cent per panel.

Speed Demonz is 32 pages and most of those feature one, two, or three panels per page. There are 77 panels in the first issue. Cost: $4.00. That’s 19.25 cents per panel.

Is Speed Demonz worth it?

The Speed Demonz is “an underground street racing syndicate painting the city streets with death and violence.” It took less than two minutes to read it.

What happened?

A bunch of tough guys and gals pointed big guns and challenged each other to a race in fancy cars. I don’t know their names or anything about their personalities. There isn’t even a hint at what will follow in the second issue beyond a car race. The whole issue felt like the opening three minutes of a television show. If it were a television show, I wouldn’t be tuning in next week.

Sure the art is nice, anime influenced, and dynamic, but just slightly better than average. Without a story, however, it wouldn’t have made any difference to me if it had been drawn by Michelangelo.

Comics aren’t about art alone. We have lots of art galleries offering art for art’s sake. Comics aren’t only about story either. We have lots of short stories and novels that satisfy that need.

Nor is a comic book a television show or a motion picture. Comics is the marriage of art and story.

Speed Demonz isn’t even a first date.

Michael Vance

Check out Dark Corridor #1 for two Michael Vance short stories at www.mainenterprises.ecrater.com.

Interested in the exciting Oklahoma Cartoonists Collection & Toy and Action Figure Museum? Try www.fourcolorcommentary.com and www.youtube.com/watch ?v=eCARtM5BvvU