Uncanny Avengers, Deadly Class, and The Sacrificers writer Rick Remender is back with a new creator-owned comic at Image. The Seasons, co-created with artist Paul Azaceta, is being billed by the publisher as “an elevated tale of whimsical horror unlike anything ever experienced in comics,” which is a pretty bold claim. The Walking Dead and Void Rivals creator Robert Kirkman, meanwhile, has called it “a comic that will make you remember why you fell in love with comics in the first place.”Â
We’ve read the first issue and while we’re not able to go into spoilers just yet (the first issue isn’t published until January), we can say that it’s definitely an intriguing and eccentric new comic, a funny book, but also an eerie one.
Image’s blurb for The Seasons #1 reveals that the title refers to four sisters (Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter, naturally), who are “the daughters of the world-renowned Seasons Detectives.” A decade ago those same detectives mysteriously vanished. The sisters have raised themselves, but when a strange new (or perhaps old) threat emerges, it’s down to Spring to save her family.
The first issue, interestingly, doesn’t dwell too much on that aspect of the story. Instead, it opens with a newspaper report from 1924, which we learn was written by Autumn. The city of Neocairo has fallen silent, we’re told, the captions from her story overlaid by images of devastation – and a hint at the culprit…
We’re honestly a little uncertain how much we can say about that – though the main cover does give away that the issue features a menacing clown. Azaceta’s art in these pages is shadowy and desolate, the sepia tinge from colorist Mat Lopes lending an air of despair that’s in stark contrast to the colorful caper that follows.
We quickly meet Spring Seasons, racing through the fictional and ambiguously French city of New Gaulia. She chases after a very important letter and gets into a squabble with a cat. It’s not immediately clear how this links to the issue’s more unsettling prologue, but a connection is eventually revealed. Suffice to say, on the basis of the first issue The Seasons feels a little bit like Ray Bradbury’s classic horror novel Something Wicked This Way Comes if it was directed by Wes Anderson, or an infernal riff on Tintin, perhaps.
Remender has acknowledged the latter’s influence on the book, as well as citing Miyazaki and Little Nemo creator Windsor McKay as touchstones. It’s an intriguing start, then, equal parts amusing and bone-chilling. It’s also a really beautiful looking book, with Azaceta commanding two very different moods across the issue.Â
We’re looking forward to seeing more from this one, so keep an eye out for The Seasons #1 when it lands in comic shops on January 15.
Here are our picks for the best horror comics of all time.