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Alan Ups The Ante In Avatar's Horror Anthology

Comics super scribe Alan Moore has once again emerged from the shadows to pull us towards their cold embrace. In this short piece published in the March PREVIEWS, Alan invites us to read Avatar Press' Cinema Purgatorio!

A new ongoing series, Cinema Purgatorio #1 (MAR161116) is in comic shops May 4.

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Article ImageIn a world of used ideas spun out of unending single-premise sagas and told in full cyber-enhanced Technicolor, unapologetically we offer up Cinema Purgatorio #1 (MAR161116), a black-and-white horror anthology which reaches for something both new and starling beyond the endlessly recycled characters and concepts of the 60s and the 70s.

An anthology to let its authors exercise the discipline and the invention that only short stories can provide — and out of which the vast majority of today’s memorable franchises were created — and black-and-white in order to impose that selfsame discipline upon its artists by removing the alluring camouflage of color and requiring the same values that the classic comic illustrators made their byword.

Why shouldn’t the 21st century enjoy the craft and quality that the E.C. and Warren luminaries managed, but with an originality and freshness born entirely of our anxious present and uncertain future? Why shouldn’t the world once more have horror stories which compel their audience to tremulously tell themselves “It’s just a movie; just a film”?

Cinema Purgatorio is an unholy resurrection of the backstreet bug-hatches and fleapits practicing their eerie silver mesmerism on our post-war predecessors, drenched in atmosphere and other less identifiable decoctions.

Article ImageThe threadbare arenas to a generation’s adolescent fumblings and upholstery-spaces where were bred the dreads and the desires of those Macmillan days; Eisenhower nights.

Varnished with blood and Brylcreem, in our razor-collared cutting-edge collection we restore the broken-bulb emporiums where, in the creaking backseats, modern terror and monstrosity were shamelessly conceived.

In our worn aisles and glossy pages the most individual  and inventive talents in contemporary comics are delivering a landmark midnight matinee in monochrome, intent on pushing both the genre and the medium beyond their stagnant formulas, and into shapes that suit the unique shadows and disquiets of our present moment.

Take your curling ticket from the withered and embittered woman in the booth, regard uneasily the lobby cards for movies recalled vaguely from a clammy dream, then, if you dare, follow the failing flashlight-puddle of the usherette on down into a different kind of dark.

~Alan Moore

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