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The killer #9-10

Concorrência Desleal / A Mão na Massa

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9. Concorrência Desleal

Após as suas aventuras na Venezuela, o Assassino retira-se para o México, onde reencontra o seu antigo cúmplice, Mariano, o homem dos cartéis colombianos. No entanto, mantém-se o contacto com os cubanos, por intermédio da sedutora Katia. Estes, sempre ansiosos por explorar os seus recursos petrolíferos recém-descobertos, irão recorrer ao Assassino, para influenciar as decisões dos Estados Unidos e dos seus aliados no grande jogo geopolítico mundial em torno do «ouro negro». Um contrato para assassinar três pessoas no Texas. Mas esta é apenas a faceta visível do confronto silencioso que se iniciou. Nos bastidores, surgem outros rumos, tão perigosos quanto surpreendentes. E muito, muito estreitamente relacionados com o Assassino.


10. A Mão na Massa

O seguimento da intriga lançada no volume 9, que retoma, de modo muito inesperado, as aventuras do Assassino.
Lado a lado com os seus dois comparsas, Mariano e Haywood, e contra todas as expectativas, iniciou uma reconversão radical: tornar-se, na sombra, um dos patrões de uma empresa petrolífera, a Petroleo Futuro Internacional, encarregue pelo Estado cubano de valorizar as jazidas recém-descobertas nas águas territoriais da ilha. Um testa-de-ferro mexicano, Aureliano Guzman, foi contratado para servir de fachada «apresentável» à empresa. Tudo deveria correr pelo melhor, mas mantêm-se alguns pormenores… incómodos. Primeiro, Mariano, que fala em dedicar-se à política. Depois, a segurança das plataformas de extracção, ameaçadas pelos exilados cubanos na Florida, encorajados discretamente pelas autoridades americanas. É preciso que alguém vá a Miami, fazer uma «limpeza». Obviamente, um trabalho para o Assassino…

112 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 2002

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64 people want to read

About the author

Matz

175 books47 followers
"Matz" is the pseudonym for French writer Alexis Nolent. He has written scripts for video games, a novel, and as Matz, a number of comics including Triggerman by Walter Hill. His graphic novel, Du plombe dan la tete a.k.a. Headshot, was adapted into the 2012 film, Bullet To The Head.


See http://www.dargaud.com/bd/Auteurs/Matz for a bio in French.

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5 stars
33 (22%)
4 stars
63 (42%)
3 stars
42 (28%)
2 stars
12 (8%)
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0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Urbon Adamsson.
2,052 reviews108 followers
January 16, 2024
Probably my least favorite so far.

I don't particularly like this new phase of the series. It's not longer about the hitman way of life but more about a gangster/businessman way of life.

Some parts felt extremely boring, to the point that I paused the reading and picked something else to read.

I honestly considered a 3-star review for this double volume but the fact is that, regardless of the less good things this phase has, it still has outstanding narrative moments, and the series as a whole it's still pretty good.

It's still a series I recommend and a read that I could see myself re-reading it in the future, so it can't be that bad, right?
Profile Image for iamjacsmusings.
405 reviews1 follower
October 31, 2023
After a soft reset and realignment in Vol.3, Matz's Killer gets back to doing what he does best in Vol.4: killing targets and philosophising lyrical. 

Meanwhile, Jacamon's art goes from astonishing to confounding in its beautiful complexity. His ability to render near photorealistic landscapes. His technical accuracy at capturing shadow and light. His atmospheric use of colour. His kinetic depiction of sex and violence. 

He kills it. Everytime. He never misses.
Profile Image for Kern.
139 reviews4 followers
October 27, 2023
Basically a continuation of Volume 3, with my same criticisms/reservations carrying over: as it grows more overtly political, it becomes less interesting. There's less flat out lecturing in this volume, but it hammers home the same ideas and criticisms of Western politics ad nauseam. Desperately needs a gear shift at this point.
Profile Image for Wayne McCoy.
4,305 reviews32 followers
September 1, 2013
The killer teams up with Mariano again in Volume 4, Unfair Competition. There are two stories that make up this volume, but they are tied together.

In the first story, the killer is sent to America to take out some corrupt people in the oil industry. He meets up with Freeman, an ex-CIA agent. In the second story, Mariano, Freeman and the killer find themselves in the oil business in Cuba. In order to cut through regulatory agencies, the killer's special talents are called on.

Along the way, there is plenty of commentary on the corrupt rich, or the complacent middle. It's another fine story in the series, and although I used the word a couple days ago in my review of The Killer Omnibus, it's very cinematic. The story by Matz is good and the art by Luc Jacamon is excellent with backgrounds teeming with details. I like this series.
Profile Image for Mikael Kuoppala.
936 reviews36 followers
July 9, 2012
The noir adventures of Asesino continue in a world filled with shady underworld politics, paranoia and ambiguous ethics. I really love the tone of this series, but the storytelling could definitely be bit more meaty.
Profile Image for Mason.
120 reviews
Read
July 11, 2023
Good, things picked up in the end. I think this should be a pure character study, more so than it is, but maybe the last few issues will have that. Liked the ending :D

Ranking of the volumes so far:
1
2
4
3
finished april 14
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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