Beautiful, bold Lt. Ligachev was two months into her first command position
in the Siberian oil fields when her men were slaughtered by an invisible foe. Detective Schaefer has played the Predators' deadly games on the mean streets of New York. Now Ligachev and Schaefer are sent by their governments to winter-ravaged Siberia to eliminate the Predators - if they can keep the Americans and Russians from killing each other first.
Mark Verheiden is an American television, movie, and comic book writer. He was a co-executive producer for the television series Falling Skies for DreamWorks Television and the TNT Network.
Full of machismo and bad one-liners, this is a schlock action movie in comic form. Shaefer from Predator: Concrete Jungle gets sent to Siberia to once again take on the Predators. This book oozes 80's testosterone.
This sequel of Predator: Concrete Jungle could be described like Predator (1987) meets Danko (1988) in an action-packed gore-fest.
Again, dialogues and storyline are so bad like coming from some of the worst 80s b-movies that they make this volume too a must read if you are into that genre of flicks.
Reading these old Predator comic books is for me like eating some sort of junk food: it sucks but it is sooo tasty. Yum!
Cold War is anything but a cold war as Predators attack the Russians.
But a story simple enough, Predators in a ice cold area attacking Russians would be awesome but instead we get Dutch's good old brother back, this time with more quips than a average MCU movie character. Not too sure why we needed him here, but here he comes. As Macho as ever. But he doesn't do much. It's actually the new character introduced who's most interesting, a Russian Military woman having to deal with these damn Predators.
The Kills are excellent, some really brutal ones, but the plot is all over the place and I was wondering if Verheiden always starts off more grounded and then just goes insane last two issues. I'm seeing a trend now.
Good escapist fun. Not as gruesome as some readers here have suggested, but the book itself does have a label of "Suggested for Mature Readers." So if you are squeamish, maybe not for you. Overall, an entertaining little comic set during the Cold War era where an American detective and a Soviet soldier have to collaborate against some Predators. It is a quick read.
Hmmm. This book, like The Flood, which I have also reviewed, is, as franchise-based books usually are, easy and not too mind-squeezing to read. It was somewhat pleasant (well, maybe pleasant isn't the right word) to read while in a Predator sort of mood, and you don't really have to think much, which is good at times. I will warn you that, while it was action-packed like The Flood, and while The Flood is certainly violent, Cold War is much more bloody and graphic. But it was easy reading, as before mentioned, and anyone who has seen the Predators on film will know what to expect: entertaining violent action. No contemplation here.
In this series the predators crash land in Siberia Russia and cause havoc. The story is decent, the artwork is very good. And the gore is of course... great 😁
the illustrations weren't as cool as the first ones but I liked the story. too much militar terminology and too much preparation instead of more action throughout. it kinda felt like anti soviet propaganda because they straight up refused to team up with them against the killer aliens from space just because they were soviet?? anyways, laura palmer mentioned 😁
Overall, I enjoyed this second "volume" of the "Schaefer trilogy." I thought it was an interesting take - what would happen if the Predators landed in a frozen part of Earth? How would they cope, since they prefer the heat over the cold? It introduces an interesting (and smart and attractive) female Russian officer as a partial-counterpoint to Schaefer and his cynical attitude. The author/writer is hit-and-miss regarding character development; the Russian Lieutenant Ligachev has the most and best character development. I thought she was also the most interesting character in the story. The "returnees" from the first volume (General Phillips, former Detective Rasche, and Detective Schaefer) see very little development in (to) their characters. Rasche could be said to see some development, I suppose, but not really that much. The other characters are fairly forgettable, as they truly seem like cardboard stereotypes instead of true characters. The "action" was so-so; there was very little suspense to be honest. It was more "let's see how this turns out" as opposed to really being worried that Schaefer was ever truly in any kind of danger. I do realize it is meant to be "mindless fun" and does not necessarily require the "hero" to have any kind of "development" as a character, but sometimes it is still nice to have some level of "intelligence" behind how the characters function (as opposed to the general stereotype that "all soldiers are sub-human, non-intellectual morons and idiots" that Hollywood used to like to portray them as being around the time this was written).
Overall, I enjoyed the story. I thought it was an interesting premise that the writer failed to even adequately explore in a story format. That being the case, it does have some good artwork , some crazy moments, and a crazy ending. I would probably rate it 2.6 - 2.8 stars, rounded up to 3 stars.
[My reviews are generally for me/my memory and can therefore contain spoilers. They're typically not here to provide you with a reason to read or not read something.]
Note: I read this via the first massive omnibus (on Kindle). The plan is to review each trade/mini-series/whatever as I finish them, rather than the whole omnibus or every single issue.
This mini is a follow-up of sorts to the Concrete Jungle mini that started off all of the comics. There is also a reference to the events of Big Game ("There was already an incident down in New Mexico"), so we're building up the lore as we go. Rasche and Schaefer are dealing with their experiences in different ways, with Rasche suffering from some pretty intense PTSD, and Schaefer on a mission to find out more about his still-missing brother.
Overall, this is pretty standard testosterone-fueled 80s action and dick-measuring contest. A police officer answers Schaefer's office phone and complains that if he "wanted to play secretary, [he] would have shaved [his] legs this morning." Rolling my eyes out of my head. Rasche thinks of his wife as "a good kid" when he decides to run off to help Schaefer somehow. Weird. But he goes to some crazy lengths to come in clutch for Schaef.
Lt. Ligachev was likeable. Despite the above paragraph expressing my disdain for the more machismo side of things, the franchise doesn't do too bad a job of including some solid female characters. Alien is better about it, but still.
I got so tired of the back and forth between the Russians and Americans, and the one-liners. This took me a while to get through because I'd read like one page and do something else for a few minutes.
I'm really just working my way through to get all the lore, because I want to get to more Yautja-focused comics.
Another adventure with Dutch's bigger, meaner brother - this time in Siberia where a bunch of Predators have crashed. Not quite as fun as the first book, though Shaefer is a lot more sardonic in this one. Still pretty entertaining with the same art style as before. The novelisation is better, though.
Quite fun and entertaining. The book deals more with the characters than the first book did. But the threat of the Predators cannot be felt in the same extent as it actually should. In fact all the politics masks the main plot. I think this book could have been something much more.
Schwarzenegger's "Red Heat" gets a spiritual sequel, which is a spin-off to the Schwarzenegger's "Predator" and the main character is a brother of a guy, played by Schwarzenegger. What could possibly go wrong?
American written story about Predators in the Soviet Union made in 1991? Sign me up.
When I was a kid I read Concrete Jungle and really liked it. Now, almost 30 years later, here is the sequel. Its fine. The cynical military industrial complex subplot was nice.
Another trip down memory lane yields more fun memories of this book, I remember absolutely loving this even though I didn't understand half of what was written in it 😂
The follow up to the first Predator story. This continues the story of Dutch’s older brother and his journey to find him & get revenge on the predators.
This story is told from the perspective of 3 characters. I won’t say one of them, but you get a Soviet angle, & and an American angle of a situation. I think that’s pretty cool, and it’s also unique that this takes place in the winter snows of Siberia. We haven’t ever seen a Predator movie or hardly any comics with this setting.
Is it better than the first story? In some ways yes. But I would say it’s on par for the most part. I really like the characters in this story. It adds so much to some from the previous story.
How I read & best way to read this story? Get the first vol of Predator the original years omnibus by marvel comics. It’s so worth the money to have access to these great stories.