The Spinners community has been decimated by the Xenomorphs. There's only a handful of survivors left. Will they make it to sanctuary? And what new terrifying type of Xenomorph awaits them?
Phillip Kennedy Johnson earned a Master of Music degree from the University of North Texas, where he served as Teaching Fellow for the Department of Jazz Studies, and a Bachelor of Music degree from Eastern Kentucky University. SFC Johnson has performed with the Lexington Philharmonic, Dallas Opera, Washington Symphonic Brass, and the Moscow Ballet, and was a member of the Glenn Miller Orchestra from 2004 to 2005. SFC Johnson remains active as a composer, arranger, teacher, and clinician, and also enjoys a second career as a writer of comics and graphic novels. His work has been published by DC Comics, Marvel Comics, BOOM! Studios, and more.
Some of these comics have started off a bit slow but these last ones have started to pick up. This new issue certainly is much better than its predecessor. It.adds a new cycle to the alien life cycle that rings true to what Ash elegantly told Ripley, Parker, and Lambert: The perfect.organism. Its capability to adapt is matched only by its hostility. The scenes of body horror are reminiscent of the deleted cocoon scene from the first film and Cronenberg's iconic films.
Not always a fan when they try to put in a new version of classics, but the new alien here I quite like, reminds me of tremors to tremors 2 a little! The art work is so-so, sometimes one issue looks really good sometimes a little basic like this, other than one or 2 panels.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.