Bible stories are nothing new to comic books. All-American
Publications (and then Educational Comics) published "Picture Stories from
the Bible" as early as the late 1930s. When Max Gaines died in 1947 and
his son William took over Educational Comics, EC went from godly to ghastly. But
William Gaines never attempted to cross the genres of crime/horror and bible
story in his newly named Entertaining Comics. Jason Aaron and R.M. Guera do cross
the genres in "Goddamned."
"Goddamned" is about as far from a bible picture
story as one might get and still consider the "good book" as source
material. But issue #1 is definitely born in the bible (Genesis 4 to be exact).
For those gentiles who skipped that day in Sunday school, Genesis 4 is the
story of Adam and Eve's children: Cain and Able.
According to the Bible, Cain was the first to commit fratricide
when he killed Able. There are many myths as to what happened to Cain after
Genesis 4. For the sake of brevity, we can look at the popular myth that Cain
was cursed to forever be a vagabond who would be murdered over and over again
but unable to die (though the text of Genesis 4 doesn't imply any of that).
Aaron has taken this myth of an unkillable Cain and run with it.
"Goddamned" #1 starts out with Cain waking up in a
literal deadpool -- a pool of rotting corpses and human excreta. Guera's art is
sufficient for some of the more gentile readers to be gagging in their mouths
with his "picture stories" inspired by the bible. The rest of the issue
is Cain exacting vengeance upon those who killed him, sevenfold (that actually
is a line from Genesis 4). Cain's vengeance is just as gruesome as his
beginnings in the issue. The issue ends with big reveal that the unkillable
main, is in fact Cain, the first murderer, just as Noah enters the story.
In an interview with Vince Brusio, Aaron explains that this biblical-noir is
wholly new, but does nod to previous work he's done with Guera.
"I'm quite confident in saying that there isn't another
book quite like this one on the stands at the moment," said Aaron. "This
series is a punch in the face and a kick in the gut but also a serious
exploration of character and setting in line with what Guera and I previously
did in the pages of Scalped."
In the aforementioned interview, Aaron expounds on the sand
box of the pre-Flood setting he's playing in.
"I've always been fascinated by the story possibilities
of the antediluvian world, of the world before the Flood," said Aaron. "Not
so much from a perspective of faith or religion, but simply as a storyteller.
There's good fertile ground. Bloody, but fertile."
If you feel this first issue of "Goddamned" is too
in-your-face or too irreverent that's by design. Aaron doesn't want readers to
be lead astray into thinking this comic doesn't deserve a parental advisory
just because it's based in biblical history. Regardless of what your religious/historical/political
views are of the Bible, if you want a primal crime comic that doesn't hold any
punches (or decapitations that even William Gaines might have considered
"in bad taste") then don't miss this title.
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