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Showing posts with label Krampus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Krampus. Show all posts

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Comic Review: Krampus: Shadow of Saint Nicholas by Michael Dougherty

Krampus: Shadow of Saint Nicholas
by Michael Dougherty
November 24, 2015

Paperback: 128 pages
Publisher: Legendary Comics; Mti edition

ISBN: 978-1937278847
AISN: B017L0J1MY
YOU BETTER WATCH OUT… KRAMPUS IS COMING TO TOWN.

Ancient folklore warns of a mythical counterpart to Santa Claus, who punishes naughty children every Christmas… his name is KRAMPUS. Michael Dougherty presents the official graphic novel based on his festive horror comedy, which expands the mythology of this iconic terror with an anthology of three deliciously twisted morality tales that will leave you praying you are not on the naughty list.

At the most wonderful time of the year, a drunken mall Santa comes under siege from some very mischievous Christmas spirits, a dysfunctional cop becomes trapped with the man who ruined his life and the wealthy town “scrooge” must face the shadows from his past as his home comes under invasion from the homeless. This Christmas, Krampus will make sure they all get what they deserve.

Michael Dougherty, the writer/director behind cult horror hit Trick ‘r Treat, is joined by a fantastic team of creators, uniting Krampus co-screenwriters Zach Shields and Todd Casey and artists Fiona Staples (Saga), Christian Dibari (Hoax Hunters), Maan House (Witchblade), and Stuart Sayger (Bram Stoker’s Death Ship) to deliver a twisted gift for the holiday season.


This is the comic anthology connected to the new movie, Krampus, releasing Friday, December 4th, , day before Krampusnacht (the night of Krampus). Besides Krampus, Michael Dougherty, is behind the Halloween horror flick, Trick ‘r Treat. Krampus has come to town one night, bringing to life monstrous toys and devils. The first story has a store Santa full of disillusion and alcohol who finds purpose again like he did back in Vietnam to battle some dark and not so human denizens. In the second tale, a cop becomes trapped with the man behind the hit and run death of her sister years before. The last one concerns what happens when a rich man has his home invaded first by the homeless, then something much scarier.

Still missing a good scary read? Still pining for Halloween? Don’t worry, for Christmas is also famous for scary stories. And Krampus: Shadow of Saint Nicholas will make you wonder if you’ve been bad enough for a visit from Krampus too. Gruss vom Krampus!

I give Krampus: Shadow of Saint Nicholas 5 ‘You Better Watch Out! You Better Be Good!’ sheep





Pamela K. Kinney

About the Author:
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Michael Dougherty is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter, known for his work with Dan Harris on the scripts forBryan Singer's films X2 and Superman Returns. He's also known for writing and directing the cult horror film Trick 'r Treat.[1] On October 28, 2013 at a special screening, it was announced to the surprise of the audience that a sequel will be produced byLegendary Pictures.[2] He is also the director, co-writer, and co-producer of the upcoming horror/comedy Krampus -wiki

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Book Review: Krampus: The Yule Lord by Brom

Krampus: The Yule Lord
by Brom
357 pages
Published October 30th 2012
by Harper Voyager
Santa Claus, my dear old friend, you are a thief, a traitor, a slanderer, a murderer, a liar, but worst of all you are a mockery of everything for which I stood. You have sung your last ho, ho, ho, for I am coming for your head. . . . I am coming to take back what is mine, to take back Yuletide . . .
—from Krampus

The author and artist of The Child Thief returns with a modern fabulist tale of Krampus, the Lord of Yule and the dark enemy of Santa Claus
One Christmas Eve, in a small hollow in Boone County, West Virginia, a failed songwriter named Jesse witnesses a strange spectacle: seven thugs cloaked in black attacking a man in a red suit with a sleigh. When Jesse steps in to help, the mysterious figures all disappear, leaving behind a large sack – a magical bag that will plunge the down-on- his luck singer into a twisted adventure. The bag is the property of Krampus, trickster, a devil who punishes the wicked – and who asserts that he is Jesse’s master, one who will teach him the truth about the cherry-cheeked, jolly old fellow who imprisoned Krampus for five centuries and usurped the pagan god’s own magic. Now, the former Yule Lord has broken free, and is determined to destroy his enemy and reclaim his holiday.

With wild magic running loose in the darkest corners of Appalachia, Jesse may be able to salvage his dreams and create a new future for his daughter…and all the children of the land.

Let's talk about this cover! I wanted to read this based on that alone and was thrown a bit when I actually read the blurb...Santa and Krampus drop into a small town town in West Virginia? Yup. But back to the cover. I got a perverse pleasure reading this one in public so people could see the cover. Oh, the looks. And not only is the cover great. There are color illustrations of the characters inside! Beautiful artwork by the author. Not sure how they translate on the kindle though. Here are three of the main characters. Check out Santa and his wife.

This story is a contemporary fantasy which is different from my normal urban fantasy. We can discuss the difference another time. Anyway...the story is a bit over edited in order to mainstream it for the masses, so it took a while for me to connect with the characters instead of just watching the events unfold. Except for Krampus. I immediately felt sympathy for this flawed anti-hero and how he embraced who he was, and then his heart break when he realizes there might not be place in this new world for him. I think we all have a little Krampus in us.

Brom takes two prominent folk lore characters, Norse mythology, Pagan beliefs and blends them up and then pours them on top of a small town with corrupt law enforcement. It was a little slow at first (except for parts with Krampus), but about half way through I was caught up in the old feud between Santa and Krampus and how our protagonist Jessie was going to survive the supernatural s*** storm that hits him at the same time his personal problems become life threatening.

I really enjoyed the afterword Brom included explaining how he came up with the idea. It is a clever and unique story and worth a read.

3 1/2 "Time to be bad" Sheep




SharonS

About the Author:
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Born in the deep dark south in the mid-sixties. Brom, an army brat, spent his entire youth on the move and unabashedly blames living in such places as Japan, Hawaii, Germany, and Alabama for all his afflictions. From his earliest memories Brom has been obsessed with the creation of the weird, the monstrous, and the beautiful.

At age twenty, Brom began working full-time as a commercial illustrator in Atlanta, Georgia. Three years later he entered the field of fantastic art he’d loved his whole life, making his mark developing and illustrating for TSR’s bestselling role-playing worlds.

He has since gone on to lend his distinctive vision to all facets of the creative industries, from novels and games, to comics and film. Most recently he's created a series of award winning horror novels that he both writes and illustrates: “The Plucker”, an adult children’s book, “The Devil’s Rose”, a modern western set in Hell, “The Child Thief”, a gritty, nightmarish retelling of the Peter Pan myth, and his latest concoction, "Krampus, the Yule Lord", a tale of revenge between Krampus and Santa set in rural West Virginia.

Brom is currently kept in a dank cellar somewhere in the drizzly Northwest. There he subsists on poison spiders, centipedes, and bad kung-fu flicks. When not eating bugs, he is ever writing, painting, and trying to reach a happy sing-a-long with the many demons dancing about in his head.