Clearyl a labor of love, Kerry Gammill (as publisher, editor, writer and artist ) is all over Tales From the Grave from the first pages. |
Issue #1 cover credited to Basil Gogos. |
My own appreciation of Gammill's work began, during the hey-day of my Superman collecting, he shared cover pencilling duties on Action Comics with George Perez, eventually taking the role over fully with issue around issue #565. Gammill's efforts produced some beautifully classic cover work vaguely reminiscent of the zany lat e1970's covers and included the "Reign of the Superman" arc featuring the Super-stand-in who would later become the Eradicator.
Gammill's story (the first panel of which is posted above) "Unpleasant Side Effects" is bookended in Saturday Monster Matinee fashion by Lugosi. More playful (and little "gross") than scary, it is an effective and entertaining romance, the quality of which is elevated by Gammill's pencils.
Each subsequent story, such as the Western themed "Eyes of the Prairie" by Derek McCaw and Rafael Navarro, follows a similar structure. Lugosi creeps around the corners teasing the bad things to come and returns at the narrative's conclusion to tie up loose-ends before riding of into the sunset.
What would old fashioned horror be without a little (tame) cheesecake? |
A very entertaining piece of horror-comedy-nostalgia comic book creation, Bela Lugosi's Tales From the Grave #1, which was published in October 2012, was followed up five months later with the publication of the equally enjoyable issue 2. Both issues are very likely still available for purchase in your local comic shop and make for fine Halloween reading.
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