Step By Bloody Step Collected
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Step By Bloody Step Collected

Writer: Si Spurrier Artist: Mateus Lopes Publisher: Image Comics Trade Paperback: August 24, 2022, $17.99 Issues: 4, Issue Reviews: 118
9.6Critic Rating
8.0User Rating

THERE IS A GIRL. She has no memory and no name. Nothing but a GUARDIAN. An armored giant who protects her from predators and pitfalls.

TOGETHER THEY WALK across an extraordinary fantasy world. If they leave the path the air itself comes alive, forcing them onwards. Why? The girl doesn't know, but there's worse than beasts and bandits ahead. CIVILISATION, with its temptations and treacheries, will test their bond beyond its limits.

STEP BY BLOODY STEP is a fantasy opus from the Eisner Award nominees behind CODA (sélection officielle Angoulême 2021): MATIAS BERGARA (HELLBLAZER, THE SCUMBAG) and SI SPURRIER (X-MEN LEGACY, H more

  • 7.0

    Step by Bloody Step (2022) by Simon Spurrier & Matias Bergara (Image)

    I was immediately sold on this project after hearing the premise. By all accounts, I absolutely should have loved this book...I am sad to say I did not connect with the executed product.
    A friend had shared the hype about this book after it first came out. I went to a couple of comic shops and couldn't find the first issue so I anxiously waited for the trade to come out. I saw that it was very well received and garnered a 4.0 on Goodreads, 4.8 on Amazon, and an 9.6 Critic Rating on Comic Book Roundup.

    As you can see from my other reviews, I am normally a sucker for repeat collaboration projects. I had not read CODA prior to reading Step by Bloody Step but I have since gone on to read it on Comixology. Similarly, CODA did not resonate with me either. Bergara's art is fantastically beautiful. He excels at alien and elaborate landscapes. However, I felt Spurrier pacing, Bergara's panel progression/transitions, and even Lopes' color palate made for a clunky experience and hindered my ability to become engrossed in the story. SPOILER: Sadly, while reading it through for the first time, I was unable to differentiate one of the key panels in the book and mistook an adult female for a male child. I went back and reread the series and it validated to me that it was a beautiful project but just not wonderfully executed, and as a result, it just seems gimmmicky.

    I am a fan of the silent comic gimmick. It can be hard to execute but if done well, it can really pack a punch. My first comic book as a kid was a 1987 silent issue by Larry Hama in GI Joe Yearbook #3 (a call-back/follow-up to his famous silent issue introduction of Storm Shadow in GI Joe #21 in 1984). After reading Step by Bloody Step, I wanted to do a deep-dive on the history of silent comics but found it had already been done. Vincent Pasquill with CBR did an excellent write-up back in 2018 on the history of silent comics entitled "A thousand Words: Silent Superhero Comics, From Steranko to Aja". In his article he covered many of the books I was familiar with and some that I picked up after reading his article. The pizza dog issue in Hawkeye #11 was pure genius and deservedly won Fraction & Aja both the Eisner and Harvey Awards in 2013 for "Best Single Issue". Similarly, the mourning issue by Tomasi & Gleason in Batman & Robin #18 is an excellent example of how use of silent story-telling can really enhance the experience for the reader.

    I would like to see more projects like this, but I think this story could have benefitted from some narrative exposition at the beginning of each issue.

  • 9.0
    ed1138 Oct 4, 2022

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