My next foray into Western horror is Legion by Salvador Sanz. Legion is one shot comic set in Buenos Aires with a very unique take on the apocalypse. In the beginning we are introduced to three characters, one is an artist named Blue who has discovered a new color being called ultrabad. The second is a sculptress who has done a sculpture that closely resembles one of Blue's paintings. And the third is guitarist who has unknowingly spent 24 hours composing a song. Soon after these introductions, Buenos Aires is plagued by horrible phenomena. Blood starts raining from the sky, a face appears in the clouds, buildings appear overnight made from human body parts. An army called Legion is butchering people to make these structures and takes several characters captive where we learn that they were key in bringing this forth. "There's a melody that should never have been played, a color that should never have been seen, a shape that should never have been sculpted." The story ends with Blue being crowned queen of Legion, with a crown made from her arms, and the unnamed guitarist the prince. Though it's not the last line the real kicker and summation of the theme of the story was this. "Imagine a world, darker than our own where art is a destructive force. The motor of war and annihilation.
Based on what I've seen in movies, Western horror focuses a lot on action. While Legion has its action segments, the impact is not really in those scenes and none of the main characters' actions are very effective. They are given no power of these events or creatures. The shock lies in the creations of Legion; body parts pieced together to create beautiful intricate patterns that are at the same time revolting. Body horor is something that crops up Eastern horror more than Western horror. When gore is involved in Western horror, it is usually more messy and less constructed. This is an assumption I've drawn from what little I've read and what movies I've seen of course so it may not be true in all or in fact most cases. With a bit of surprise, I've noticed that these are artistically opposite in the way they are rendered in what I have read thus far. In Hideout, Drifting Classroom and Uzumaki, the gore has been rendered in a very splattered style. The way it it inked hides any of the detail. In The Walking Dead and Legion, gore is displayed in great detail where we can see ridges and tissues in the body very clearly.
The fact that Legion is not, in fact, an American comic but instead created in Argentina might have an effect on how this differs from what I have read so far. Since I have carried on in the same thread of supernatural stories, though not intentionally, I am going to continue that for my last couple of entries.
Obviously one entry per week was not feasible so my goal is to get at least two more comics in before I write my concluding statement. I may or may not continue this blog after the class is over.
Obviously one entry per week was not feasible so my goal is to get at least two more comics in before I write my concluding statement. I may or may not continue this blog after the class is over.














