A dazzling work of horror, intercutting between the present-day narrative and the story of a lost horror film.
The writer and artist behind Batman: The Black Mirror reunite to shed light on a celluloid artifact once thought forever missing, perhaps with good reason…
The final installment of Scott Snyder and Francesco Francavilla's Night of the Ghoul arrives this week and while landing a horror comic can be a tricky thing, issue #6 manages to pull it off in a fashion that is just as heart-pounding as the previous chapters of this time shifting tale and that delivers on a twist that while perhaps not entirely unpredictable is surprising nonetheless. Read Full Review
'Night of the Ghoul' demonstrates how old-fashioned monster tales can still invoke terror in the modern day with some clever myth-making and genuine reckless abandon. It's the type of scary story-telling that slowly builds upon the myth and the legend without showing everything until all hell breaks loose and the monster reveals itself but by that time it's too late to look away in fright. Snyder and Francavilla conclude their masterpiece of horror with unrelenting passion and gleeful menace. Read Full Review
Francavilla delivers some beautifully detailed and scary art throughout this issue. The art perfectly captures the tension of each moment and takes the reader on an emotional journey. Read Full Review
‘Night of the Ghoul' #6 delivers a suitably terrifying and pacey conclusion to this macabre miniseries from Scott Snyder and Francesco Francavilla Read Full Review
What a twist!
I'm giving this raring to the series as a whole. I read it in the the three issue print version. I thought overall, it was good. I think the last 3rd of the story was a little cliche, but it didn't ruin the experience. I found it to be an enjoyable series. Especially the forst 2/3rds.