The Harrower proves difficult to kill, but killing comes easy for him. With the group split in two, no cell service, and the police being suspiciously useless-someone won’t make it out alive. Harrower #3 ups the body count and both answers questions and deepens the mystery as to exactly what’s going on.
Writer Justin Jordan delivers twists and turns in this third issue as the fight against the Harrower continues and some of what has been shown gets a deeper look. It all comes together to deliver a comic that begins to tease exactly what’s going on and makes the series even that much better.
From the beginning of the series, we’ve known there’s some deeper conspiracy that involves the Harrower and the town but we don’t know exactly what. There’s some long history and clearly some “cult like” activity but the details have been few. Harrower #3 starts to answer that aspect of things as the group of kids do their best to escape the Harrower’s killing spree while stumbling upon answers as to some of the killer’s tricks.
The series has been great for a whole host of reasons. It’s mixed classic slashers with a more modern aesthetic and the more modern horror releases we seen as far as characters and pacing. But, this issue also has a bit of fun with moments that remind me more of Scooby-Doo than anything else. There’s a sense of the comic that it takes itself seriously but also have a bit of fun with the genre overall in how everything rolls out.
Part of the solid aspect of the series is the art by Brahm Revel. The comic is horror and a slasher, so you expect a body count and blood, but Revel’s art never crosses the line so it distracts. The specifics of the kill and gore can be a focus on times in other stories but this one keeps it simple, focusing on the act and the who than zeroing in on the how and lingering on the blood and guts. With lettering by Pat Brosseau that combined with the body language tells so much, the visuals really help with the pace and in this case adds to the fun spookiness of it all.
Harrower #3 ends things with a nice what the hell moment. It plays into some of what has been hinted at but we’ll finally get a better sense of things. The issue leaves things in an exciting place and one hell of a final page that’ll leave readers wanting to find out where things are going and get to the truth of it all.
Story: Justin Jordan Art: Brahm Revel Letterer: Pat Brosseau
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.5 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy
BOOM! Studios provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review
Purchase: Zeus Comics – comiXology/Kindle
Source: Graphic Policy