The Fly: Outbreak, by Brandon Seifert
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The Fly: Outbreak, by Brandon Seifert
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- Years ago, a scientist had a horrific accident when he tried to use his newly invented teleportation device and became a human-fly hybrid. Now his almost-human son continues to search for a cure for the mutated genes.
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1977422 in Books
- Published on: 2015-10-20
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 10.10" h x .30" w x 6.50" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 120 pages
About the Author Clive Barker is the worldwide bestselling author of the Books of Blood, and numerous novels including Imajica, The Great and Secret Show, Sacrament and Galilee. In addition to his work as a novelist and short story writer he also illustrates, writes, directs and produces for the stage and screen. His films include Hellraiser, Hellbound, Nightbreed and Candyman. His comic book work includes creating the Razorline imprint at Marvel Comics and the 3-D comic book Seduth with IDW Publishing.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. The Fly: Outbreak, by Seifert and menton3 By C. Dennis Moore As far back as 1986, one of my favorite movies ever has been the David Cronenberg version of THE FLY. So when the sequel came out three years later, I was all over that. Afterward, however, meh. The sequel had some excellent moments, of course, and I like Eric Stoltz, but let’s be honest: no one but Jeff Goldblum is Jeff Goldblum and he leaves some pretty big shoes to fill.However, being as underwhelmed with the sequel as I was, I didn’t hesitate when I saw IDW was publishing a sequel to the sequel called THE FLY: Outbreak.Hell. Yes.How does the sequel to the sequel stand up? Not bad. It’s still no match for Cronenberg’s vision, but what’re you gonna do? Brandon Seifert--of several other comics I’ve enjoyed, like Hellraiser: The Road Below--has written an excellent take on the mythology, following up THE FLY II wonderfully.In this story, it’s a few years later. Martin and Beth are still together, living on Beth’s house boat, while Martin searches for a cure to Anton Bartok’s mutated condition. Remember the pile of crawling mashed potatoes at the end of the movie? Bartok is still a worthless pile of goo, which Martin is trying to use his genius to reverse without harm to another person. What he didn’t count on is the insect DNA in Bartok mutating. The Bartok creature gets out and infects several of the staff of scientists before being killed. But since no one knows what the effects might be, if indeed Bartok managed to infect anyone at all, the entire building is put under quarantine--Martin included, since he was at ground zero when Bartok was killed--while he tries to work out a cure for everyone.Given the subtitle of this book is “Outbreak”, I’m sure it’s not hard to figure out what happens next.Seifert’s script is pretty tight, hitting all the right notes to tie us back to the previous two movies while injecting plenty of newness into this story to make it relevant today and able to stand on its own. The story alone, apart from either of the movies that came before, is a horror story, and Seifert excels in this genre.The characters feel a little distant, but that’s sort of to be expected from someone like Martin Brundle. But, to me, it felt like all of the characters had that detached from everything around them feel. Martin and Beth feel like they have history, but they also feel like a couple who have simply been going through the motions for too long. And since that’s exactly what they are, Seifert pulled it off nicely. I was confused by the S&M side of Beth which I don’t believe had even been hinted at in the movie, and, to be honest, that felt tacked on and pointless in the overall scheme. If the point of that scene was to show that, even after all these years, Martin insists on using a condom with Beth for fear of infecting her with whatever insect DNA he might still be carrying, there were much more subtle ways to do it.I was very impressed with the idea for this story and read the first few issues with great interest. Around issue 4, however, the story takes on a rushed feel, as if Seifert had a whole lot more developed story he wanted to tell, but tried to cram it into two more issues. It sort of causes the book to fall apart near the end and it doesn’t finish nearly as strong as it started, especially when it begins to fail in character development at some crucial points in the story.One thing that remains consistent throughout, however, is the art by menton3, who has done lots of work on IDW’s X-Files Season 11 series.What I loved most about the art was that Martin and Beth are dead ringers for Eric Stoltz and Daphne Zuniga. What I came to grow tired of, though, is that after a while it looked like he was working from the same dozen or so still shots and recycling them throughout the book. Still, to read a Martin Brundle who looks just like Martin Brundle, that was fun. Also, he’s tossed in a cameo by what looks like Lucy Lui as Martin’s assistant Noelani.The clarity begins to break down the closer we get to the end, once all the tense action scenes start, but I have to attribute a bit of that to the story being rushed to a conclusion it wasn’t ready for. Overall, though, this was a very good story with beautiful art and I’m glad I can add it to my comic collection.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Pretty decent art, but I didn't care much for the characters or the relatively slow paces story By Wayne A McCoy 'The Fly: Outbreak' by Brandon Seifert with art by Menton3 looks really cool, but left me feeling a bit detached from the characters.I'm supposing the story starts after the second Fly movie from the 1980s. Martin Brindle has been returned to human form and he wants to find a cure for Bartok, who was turned into a fly at the end of The Fly II. Martin has got a pretty detached marriage, and doesn't seem to even connect much to the people in the lab around him. That somewhat changes when there is an outbreak (if it's part of the title, is it a spoiler). He ends up in quarantine and things go from bad to worse. Can he find the cure before things get out of hand?The artwork is dark and pretty cool, but I just didn't care much for the characters. Especially the main character. There are some horror moments, but they just felt a bit detached. So, when it was all said and done, I found that I'd have a hard time recommending it unless someone was a die hard fan of the movies from the 1980s.I received a review copy of this graphic novel from Diamond Book Distributors, IDW Publishing, and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you for allowing me to review this graphic novel.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. The Third Movie We Never Got, and Never Realized We Wanted By Michael Hawkins Imagine my surprise when I came across this trade paperback. I loved the 80's Cronenberg remake of the Fly, and am quite fond of it's sequel. So to see that someone's actually made a (seemingly) concluding chapter to this sad saga of the Brundle Legacy. While the previous installment (Fly II) ended on a more uplifting note, it quickly becomes clear that while things may have turned out well for Martin Brundle at first... they're far from perfect. There's friction with his wife, he's having a hard time adjusting to a normal life-cycle and despite the fact that the man who raised him, Anton Bartok, manipulated, took advantage of, and then tried to kill him... Martin still feels guilty for what happened to the man in the end. Thus he's working on a way to save Bartok from the.... "thing" he has become.As you can imagine, things soon spiral out of control when Anton escapes...This is actually a pretty neat story, though it DOES kinda peter out near the end. But it's still pretty awesome I think.
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