Talks about a unit of Rumanian soldiers, experts in night-fighting. This work is the diary of Hans Schmitt - a German soldier who was posted to the Eastern Front. Schmitt details the true nature of his 'comrades' - blood-sucking vampires! When the Rumanians change sides, Schmitt realises that his own unit have become the targets of these fiends!
WW2 German infantryman discovers Romanian allies are vampires. Oh no!
Nice, icy horror from Gerry Finley-Day with thrill-powered art by good old Carlos Ezquerra. I enjoyed this now, as an adult, and I can only imagine how this would have seemed, had I read it as a child. It's pretty bleak, so it is.
Concise, atmospheric, full of action and cliffhangers, and better than the whole '30 Days of Night' thing (which I realise is damning it with faint praise).
It's just a shame this volume also includes two modern stories, by Dan Abnett and David Bishop, which are decent enough but utterly disposable, not as good as the original, and kind of dilute its appeal a bit. Guess they needed to pad out the trade paperback, though? It is good value if you like those stories, that's true. Hmmmn.
Oh, is that Durham Red that appears in the Abnett story, or just some other anachronistically-dressed, out-of-place bit of pointless, patronising 'eye candy'?
One of the best and earliest ventures into horror by 2000AD. Vertigo missed a trick by not giving Gerry Finlay-Day his own series. This is adult horror at it's most intense. The lone private fighting against vampires with the end of WW2 happening all around them. Twists and turns abound.
I bought this book as I remember reading it in the 2000 AD comics in my youth, but I couldn't remember how the story ended. I still found it very enjoyable, and it was easy to read in one sitting. A very gripping tale with vampires and soldiers. I would class it as a mild horror, by today's standards, so would be suitable for most children of 12 years and older.
Not the kind of story that I’m normally interested in, but it works here, as a German Wehrmacht soldier slowly realizes that some of his Romanian Allies are Vampires…
Art is decent and it’s an interesting story well told
A mixed bag collection of WWII vampires, classic 80s on one hand, modern on the other, all good fun. Art by Carlos Ezquerra and Colin MacNeil, all excellent.
It's a comic retelling an unholy alliance between the most heinous monsters imaginable, unrepentant murderers, bloodthirsty fiends with an uncountable number of deaths in their hands... and a bunch of vampires.
Ah, I'm kidding. Hans is about as good of a person as you can be in his time and place: he fights for his country, does what he can to stay alive in some of the worst hellscapes in human history, and probably would not approve of what his motherland's been doing if he knew about it. He's got his hands full as it is, and the story he leaves behind is a good one - tense, full of suspense, with a monstrous yet strangely charismatic villain. Carlos Ezquerra's art, always a delight to see, helped to get the right impression through. I felt genuine chill at times.
2000AD has a lot more going for it than just Judge Dredd - it's stories like this what makes it probably my favourite comic publication of our time. Highly recommended.
This was a strange story to find in 2000AD which dealt with sci-fi or time travel stories, not WWII ones which tended to appear in Battle Action. I don't particular enjoy reading war comics but I enjoyed this vampire crossover. It has all the vampire cliches - silver bullets, garlic, crucifixes and stakes stabbed into the heart. What is unusual is that the hero of the story is a German soldier rather than an Allied one.
It's one of the 2000AD stories that lodged permanently in my memory when so many have faded away. Re-reading it 33 years later was a pleasurable refreshing of a childhood memory. Even though I always knew how it was going to end, I got caught up in the story all over again. A sign of a good yarn. I can recommend it if you're looking for a change from sci-fi or superheroes.
Saksalainen sotamies törmää operaatio Barbarossan alkaessa kummalliseen romanialaiseen joukko-osastoon, joiden tehokkaat mutta epätavalliset keinot tehdä selvää venäläisistä jäävät vaivaamaan mosurimme mieltä. Käy ilmi, että kapteeni Constantan johtamat sotilaat eivät olekaan tavallisia sotilaita... vaan vampyyreja.
Gerry Finley-Dayn käsikirjoittama ja Carlos Ezquerran kuvittama "Fiends of the Eastern Front" (Rebellion, 2007) julkaistiin alun perin brittiläisen 2000 AD -lehden numeroissa 152-161 vuonna 1980. Sarjakuvassa olisi perusideansa puolesta ollut aineksia vaikka mihin, mutta eipä lopputulos jää mieleen erityisen ihmeellisenä kauhutarinana.