6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The end of Comicdom's Number 1 Fear Magazine, 14 Oct 2005
This review is from: Essential Tomb Of Dracula Volume 3 TPB (Paperback)
Dracula first appeared in the Marvel Universe in the early 1970s when "The Tomb of Dracula" first appeared. Penciler Gene Colan, the perfect artist for the comic book, was there from the beginning, but Tom Palmer, who would ink the vast majority of issues did not arrive until the third issue, and writer Marv Wolfman did not take over the scripting duties until the seventh issue. By that point most of the cast of characters had been established: Frank Drake, the American descendant of Dracula himself, Rachel Van Helsing, the great-granddaughter of the professor in Bram Stoker's novel, and Taj, her mute servant from India. But Wolfman immediately added the final member of the core group, Quincy Harker, the son of Jonathan and Mina Harker, now an old man in a wheelchair (because of an encounter with the Count), who brings a scientific approach to vampire slaying.
More importantly, Wolfman took the long view towards the characters and the comic book. There is an inherent problem in that your basic comic book story for "The Tomb of Dracula" requires the heroes NOT to kill the villain, otherwise the comic book turns to dust along with Dracula. Wolfman and Colan portrayed Dracula as a vampire with a plan, who was out to do more than kill the vampire slayers before they killed him. This comic book took its time, a fact that was best indicated by the Doctor Sun plotline, where for issue after issue we were treated to a page or less of scenes showing Chinese minions acting out the orders of the mysterious Doctor Sun. Wolfman milked the set up for all it was worth before finally revealing the Doctor Sun was (gasp!) a disembodied brain. Wolfman also created off beat characters for a vampire comic book, such as Hannibal King, the Vampire Detective, Blade (#58, "Undead by Daylight!"), and the quirky nebbish Harold H. Harold, author of "The Vampire Conspiracy" (#56).
In the first story in this collection, "Where Soars the Silver Surfer" (#50), we have one of the few times that Dracula interacted with other characters from the Marvel Universe. Previously it had been the Werewolf from "Werewolf by Night" and Dr. Strange, both of whom make sense for a horror comic, while the Silver Surfer is the rare exception of a more traditional superhero. However, it is his purity in contrast to the vampire's cursed soul that makes their conflict particularly dramatic. In the end, the idea that "The Tomb of Dracula" is out of the mainstream of the Marvel Universe is preserved.
The end-game for the comic book that plays out in these issues has to do with Janus, the son of Dracula born to his wife, Domini. When Dracula got married and his new bride conceived a child as a result of an arcane ritual, that was certainly strange enough. But Wolfman was interested in playing out the battle between good and evil on a larger scale, which culminated in a confrontation between Dracula and Satan himself ("Life After Undeath," #64) at which point the vampire is turned back into a human being by the Prince of Darkness. However, do not fear: the final fate of Dracula will come down to a last battle between the Lord of Vampires and the humans who have been pursuing him for a half-dozen years in the pages of these comic books.
As good as Wolfman was in plotting these tales he was helped by having the perfect artist for "The Tomb of Dracula" in Gene Colan. Nobody could have illustrated Dracula's transformations better than Colan, with his swirling lines as the vampire morphed into a giant bat. Add rain into the picture, as Colan does on the cover and throughout #60, and you ample proof of this perfection. Palmer's best ink work was done over Neal Adam's pencils, but his partnership with Colan on this comic book is a more substantial body of work and when another inker stepped in, the results were always less impressive. Fortunately, in Volume 3 the only example from this is when Bob McCleod inks Colan's pencils for a "Tomb of Dracula Magazine" story, which ends up being arguably the best of the non-Palmer inked Colan stories because it was intended for a black & white magazine.
The cover art is taken from the cover of the final issue of "The Tomb of Dracula," #70. In addition to the final issues of the comic book (#50-70), there are also stories from the black & white "Tomb of Dracula Magazine," which, the back of this collection is quick to say, were "unrated by the Comics Code Authority!" Just so you know, Volume 1 of the "Essential Tomb of Dracula" contains issues #1-25 of "The Tomb of Dracula," along with a cross-over story in "Werewolf By Night" #15 and the "Giant-Size Chillers" #1 story that introduced Lilith, Dracula's daguther. Volume 2 has issues #26-49 of "Tomb of Dracula," a cross-over with "Dr. Strange" #14, and a quartet of less than stellar stories from "Giant-Size Dracula" #2-5. You really have to get all three volumes so that you can appreciate how Wolfman, Colan, and Palmer crafted what is still from a qualitative standpoint the best "fear" comic book since the days of E.C.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Was this comic the Sandman of the 70s?, 30 Nov 2006
This review is from: Essential Tomb Of Dracula Volume 3 TPB (Paperback)
I completely concur with the previous reviewer of this item (and indeed all 4 volumes of the Essential Dracula series) and so I offer this as something of a post script. It struck me that the 70 issue Tomb of Dracula series has a lot in common with the much-lauded Sandman comic of the late 80s and early 90s. Both series had the same writer for most, or all, of their run and deal with a character who is practically immortal. Indeed, Wolfman even threw in the occasional issue of Dracula in which the Count ruminates over his diary and reflects on past deeds in the five centuries of his undead existence, in the same way that Neil Gaiman interspersed longer narratives with single issues, often set in the past. Actually, one way in which Tomb of Dracula scores over Sandman is the unparalleled consistency of the artwork: Gene Colan draws every single issue and Tom Palmer inks the vast majority of them. Anecdotally, I read very few of these comics when they were first published, and so my enjoyment of these reprints was much less of a nostalgia trip than it may be for many others. Nevertheless, it was a very enjoyable and rewarding experience.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
The last issues of the Tomb of Dracula comic, 28 July 2008
This review is from: Essential Tomb Of Dracula Volume 3 TPB (Paperback)
There are some really great storylines and narratives within this book and, we have life, deaths and re-births aplenty.
Starting off with the Silver Surfer being led into a fight against the Count only for Dracula's wife to stand in the Surfer's way. From hereon there are occasional glimpses of a new side to Dracula, it by no means softens him though. Quincy Harker and his gang, along with Blade and Hannibal King are still on the Count's tail as he tries to build up a cult following whilst his supposed ally in evil Anton Lupeski plots against him.
This volume sees the resolution of the Blade/Hannibal King/Deacon Frost storyline, the birth and death of Dracula's Son and his resurrection as Janus, Satan even appears, as a plural entity, yet his son was seen in an earlier issue?.
In the last few issues Dracula loses his vampire powers and becomes human to his disgust which leads to a meeting with his daughter Lilith who refuses to help him and renews her hostility.
There's also comic relief with the novel by Harold H. Harold showing what a ham he really was and the "Forever Man" Gideon Smith faces his destiny.
The last issue of the comic #70 brought the end of one of Dracula's great foes and most fans would agree the idea of the same people hunting him and letting him off on so many occasions just could not go on.
He was resurrected in the larger black and white magazine style later that year for a short while, four of those issues are included here and some of those tales are just superb. Gene Colan and Tom Palmer's artwork is great throughout.
The last tales lift this volume up from 4 stars which is where it hovered around in the last year or so of its colour version.
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