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Ash and the Army of Darkness #7

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    Todd Jordan
    Smut is good.

  • Ash And The Army of Darkness #7


    Published by: Dynamite Entertainment
    Writer: Steve Niles
    Artist: Nacho Tenorio
    Cover artist: Justin Erickson
    Purchase at Amazon

    A very possessed Sheila continues her task of building a perfect Deadite soldier (and her husband to be), and with the help of her cronies she gets the body parts she needs…including a copy of Ash's big ol' head. One fiery pentagram and a spell later and Sheila has her well-built man who has but one agenda: destroy Ash. The new evil Ash is huge and talks like The Incredible Hulk did in the 70s, and he and Sheila make their way to set up the final battle. Hulk Ash will smash the good Ash, or maybe he'll chop him up. Whatever means to the end will work.

    Meanwhile, the big chinned hero from the sky pulls up a repressed memory from his youth with the help of a red headed hippie chick and some drugged up soup. It seems Ash has been fighting the dead since his youth, he just couldn't remember it until now. He's met the spirit that possesses Sheila, and he'll have to meet her again that very night in a fight to the death. The red-headed medieval hippie chick can help him, and writes down “faceless man” for Ash to remember. But he can't say it three times, being so pure of heart, or said man will be summoned and darkness will envelop everything. Guess how many times he says it? Not sure what this “faceless man” thing is all about, but he only has to say “faceless man” one more time and it's all over.

    The entertainment continues, and this dumb little book is actually kind of fun. Niles' take on Ash is true to the character, at least how Ash acted in Army of Darkness, and the addition of Ash vs. The Evil Dead going way back to his childhood is a nice addition to the story (legend? mythos?) of the time-displaced Michigan man. Nacho once again delivers appropriate and solid artwork to book, and the coloring is sharp. Nice looking pages and the creative team puts out a groovy book that doesn't take itself too seriously.
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