The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

In ‘Afterlife,’ Archie Comics veers into horror

- By MATT MOORE Associated Press

The vibrant, cheerful and safe town of Riverdale is getting a ghoulish makeover.

In “Afterlife With Archie,” a series debuting Wednesday, publisher Archie Comics is launching not just its first horror title, but also its first book carrying a rating for teens and older sold only in comic shops.

The series written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and illustrate­d by Francesco Francavill­a sees Archie, Betty, Jughead, Veronica and others, including Sabrina the Teenage Witch, enveloped in a panoply of incantatio­ns, elder gods, zombies and the undead.

“It’s a hardcore horror book,” said Aguirre-Sacasa, a Harvey Award-winning writer who melded his personal interests and horror obsessions into influences for the book. “This is why I was meant to do comics.”

Those are evidenced in descriptio­ns and images. In one panel, for example, Sabrina the Teenage Witch is clutching the fabled but dreaded “Necronomic­on.” In another, showing the gang at a party, Archie is dressed as Freddy Kreuger from the “Nightmare on Elm Street” films.

Francavill­a included his own nods to horror classics, too, like the “’Rocky Horror Picture Show’ and `Nosferatu’ posters on Jughead’s bedroom wall.”

But the book, despite its subject matter, he said, reflects the core characteri­stics of Archie and the other characters.

“Sabrina? She’s always messing up,” AguirreSac­asa said, though in this case, the mistake has grave consequenc­es for Jughead.

“He’s always hungry,” Aguirre-Sacasa said, a normal trait that portends doom by the end of the first issue, setting the stage for the second issue and beyond.

Publisher and co-CEO Jon Goldwater says the title is not your “traditiona­l Archie Comic” given the subject matter.

Instead, Goldwater called the series a fresh opportunit­y to place Archie’s characters in a setting where there is no easy, happy ending with everyone feeling just fine.

“I really view this as Archie’s `Walking Dead,”’ he said, referring to the Robert Kirkman-created series that has blossomed into a television show with a massive fan base.

The monthly series is drawn by Francavill­a with dark, ominous illustrati­ons boasting artistic nooks and crannies.

“We are taking a series of characters known to be light-hearted and young adult-oriented and doing a horror comic with them, so the mood, atmosphere, and setting are very important to make this a believable horror and not a comedy horror,” the Eisner awarding-winning artist said in an email.

“Fortunatel­y, I am really good at making things dark and ominous.”

 ??  ?? These images released by Archie Comics shows the character Jughead from”Afterlife With Archie,” a series debuting Wednesday, Oct. 9. The series written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and illustrate­d by Francesco Francavill­a sees Archie, Betty, Jughead,...
These images released by Archie Comics shows the character Jughead from”Afterlife With Archie,” a series debuting Wednesday, Oct. 9. The series written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and illustrate­d by Francesco Francavill­a sees Archie, Betty, Jughead,...

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