Trash Mutant
  • HOME
  • ARTICLES
    • BY CATEGORY >
      • COMICS
      • MOVIES AND TV
      • MUSIC
      • VIDEO GAMES
      • BOOKS
      • ART
      • SCIENCE
      • COLLECTIBLES & MERCH
    • BY COLUMNIST >
      • SEÑOR EDITOR
      • NINJA ROSS
      • STEVE GARCIA
      • KAZEKUN
      • LEO STABLEFORD
      • CHEROKEE
      • REUBEN DEBORD
      • JACURUTU99
      • TRASH MUTANT REPORTS
      • CONTRIBUTORS
  • FEATURES
    • REVIEWS
    • TM INTERVIEWS (TMI)
    • TM MOVIE NEWS
    • BACK ISSUES
    • FORGOTTEN GAME GREATS
    • TENTACLE-FREE ANIME
    • RECOMMENDED
    • AUDIOMUTANT
    • OL' MUTANT THEATRE
    • TRASH TALK
    • BIZARRE TOY BOX
    • SLIME FICTION
    • TM ROULETTE
    • SCIENTIFIC SCIENCE NEWS
  • ARCHIVE
  • ABOUT
    • TRASH MUTANTS
  • CONTACT
  • WRITE4US
  • SEARCH

Jumping-On: "Nailbiter" (Williamson & Henderson)

- by Señor Editor, 6 June 2014

As you may have gathered from my “Axeman’s Jazz” review from last week, I’m as into serial killers as a sane man can be. Joshua Williamson’s and Mike Henderson’s “Nailbiter”, from Image Comics, operates on a simple, but intriguing premise: more serial killers have been born in Buckaroo, Oregon than in any other city in the world. When a policeman researching it disappears, it’s up to his friend to find him and uncover the mystery of the “Buckaroo Butchers”.

Obraz
#1 cover. All images are © Image Comics.
So I’m a little late in talking about this comic – I’ve read the first issue when it dropped, but waited until #2 share my thoughts. Written by Joshua Williamson and drawn by Mike Henderson, “Nailbiter” is off to an interesting start, and as a brand new ongoing series, it has a chance be something great.

The first issue opens with a flashback, showing the arrest of the 16th in the long line of killers from Buckaroo, Edward Charles Warren AKA, nicknamed “Nailbiter” due to targeting people who were biting their nails. He would then chew off his victims’ fingernails (and then fingers, until he reached bone) before killing them.

Fast forward three years… In a crappy apartment in San Antonio, Texas, we disgraced officer Nicholas Finch, who’s about to shoot himself in the head. His suicide attempt is interrupted by an old friend, Eliot Carroll, a police officer who went to Buckaroo to find out why the small town brought this many serial killers into the world in the last 50 years. 

He tells Finch that he solved it, and knows the secret of the Buckaroo Butchers, but he needs Finch to come to Buckaroo and help him, as he’s the only man he trusts.

When Finch arrives in the town, he finds out two things: 1) Buckaroo is a pretty damn weird place, and 2) his friend has gone missing and nobody knows what happened to him.

Obraz
The man himself, the Nailbiter. Click to enlarge.

That sounds pretty cool, right? It sounds like the kind of series I’m gonna be following closely, and honestly, the first two issues are executed (no pun intended) pretty damn well. From the comics and the interviews I’ve read online, it really seems Williamson did his homework and draws from a number of good sources for inspiration for the various Buckaroo killers. The town itself has also been given extra care. The town residents are a specific bunch. Some of them watch themselves and avoid doing any of the things that have caught the serial killers’ attention in the past (like biting their fingernails and all…). Some of them try to profit from the eerie fame the town has, the serial killer fans tourism and all – there’s a guy with a creepy souvenir shop selling all kinds of gruesome memorabilia related to the Buckaroo Butchers.

Obraz
Finch meets one of the locals.

Finch is helped by a local sheriff, Shannon Crane, and through the two we learn more about the various murderers that grew up in the town. The titular killer, the Nailbiter, is also present in Buckaroo. Due to the lack any strong evidence that could pin any serious charges on him, he’s been released from prison some time back, and now lives in his own home, with a patrol car parked outside, keeping tabs on him.

Mike Henderson’s art isn’t really my favorite thing about the book, but somehow his style is a good fit to the creepy atmosphere. I wasn’t sure if I like it when I read #1, but by the time #2 came out, I was on board with it. The colors, by Adam Guzowski, also add a lot, giving the town and the gruesome scenes a proper grim vibe.

Obraz
Killer deals at the Murder Store!

“Nailbiter” is a crime and mystery book, with some horror beats thrown in for good measure. I was relieved when I found out this will be an ongoing series, because there’s plenty of potential here, and a mini probably wouldn’t offer enough space to really make good use of the premise. Williamson and Henderson have something very good on their hands, and I’m glad that Image gave an original series like that the green light. Check it out!


Are you reading "Nailbiter"? Planning to? What are your thoughts on Image's new killer series? Sound off in the comments!

Tagged: comics, Reviews.


Picture
blog comments powered by Disqus

Follow @TrashMutant
Picture
Picture

Social Trash Mutant

Trash Mutant on Facebook
Trash Mutant on Twitter 
Trash Mutant on Instagram
Join the Newsletter
Write for us!
​

Picture

Friendly & associated sites

IndieComiX
AvP Central

Essential Webcomics
Put It In Your Eye (TM Associate)

© 2012-2018 TRASH MUTANT. All rights reserved. Some materials used are © their respective copyright owners.
Proudly powered by Weebly