After a disastrous cave in, the expedition must descend into the alien environment. As they repel deeper, the team comes face to face with the massive scope of their plight. They're trapped. The way out may lie thousands of feet below. But can they work together long enough to survive the climb?
Hayden Sherman's art is still driving this book. His designs for the inside of this giant organism look biologically accurate, while still looking like an alien world. With the characters traveling down the esophagus with gnarly teeth, the body horror levels rise. When they encounter a weird deer like creature, they flee to the veins, where they swim right into the chest cavity. It's here that all of the horror environments are balanced by a beautiful scenic view of a giant pair of lungs. Sherman is blowing me away with these beautiful, eerie views of the internal human anatomy. Ms. Frizzle, eat your heart out. Read Full Review
Frankly, it's a good thing this is "Part One" because I'd read 100 issues of this book if I could. Into The Unbeing: Part One #3 is one of the most unique and terrifying horror comics of this century. Read Full Review
Not only do our protagonists in Into the Unbeing plumb further into the depths of the unknown, but so do we as readers, as we never quite know what each successive panel will deliver us. Read Full Review
Into the Unbeing #3 is an issue based on mood more than story. The tension and anticipation from the previous two issues remains but doesnt necessarily increase. The issue itself feels like a transition more than anything else as the characters within it move from whatever was up top to whatever is down below. Read Full Review
The art is great, but this issue didn't grab me like the first two. It didn't really give me much emotion..