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The Living Deadpool #1

Night of the Living Deadpool

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Deadpool awakes from a food coma to find...the zombie apocalypse has occurred! Now, can the Merc with a mouth avoid becoming the Merc in their mouths?! Thrill to the sight of a hideous, rotting-fleshed monster shambling about the landscape...and don't forget all the zombies that he's fighting! (Get it? That first one referred to Deadpool. Who says zombie horror comics can't have a little humor?) Cullen Bunn, writer of the fan-favorite Deadpool Killogy, brings us one of Deadpool's darkest tales ever...and we're not just saying that because it's in black and white (and red)! So ring the dinner bell and nail shut the door, as Deadpool takes on the undead! COLLECTING: Night of the Living Deadpool 1-4

96 pages, Paperback

First published May 20, 2014

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About the author

Cullen Bunn

2,043 books1,001 followers
Cullen grew up in rural North Carolina, but now lives in the St. Louis area with his wife Cindy and his son Jackson. His noir/horror comic (and first collaboration with Brian Hurtt), The Damned, was published in 2007 by Oni Press. The follow-up, The Damned: Prodigal Sons, was released in 2008. In addition to The Sixth Gun, his current projects include Crooked Hills, a middle reader horror prose series from Evileye Books; The Tooth, an original graphic novel from Oni Press; and various work for Marvel and DC. Somewhere along the way, Cullen founded Undaunted Press and edited the critically acclaimed small press horror magazine, Whispers from the Shattered Forum.

All writers must pay their dues, and Cullen has worked various odd jobs, including Alien Autopsy Specialist, Rodeo Clown, Professional Wrestler Manager, and Sasquatch Wrangler.

And, yes, he has fought for his life against mountain lions and he did perform on stage as the World's Youngest Hypnotist. Buy him a drink sometime, and he'll tell you all about it.

Visit his website at www.cullenbunn.com.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 300 reviews
Profile Image for Anne.
4,488 reviews70.4k followers
January 11, 2018
Is this a slice of awesome?
Eh. I don't know about that, but it is exactly what it's advertised to be.
Deadpool vs Zombies!

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And for what it is, it isn't bad.

Now, if you (like me) are a tad burned out on the zombie genre, this isn't going to reignite your love of The Walking Dead. The good news is that it's also not the worst thing you'll read about them, either. It's basically just a tongue-in-cheek tale about the zombie apocalypse featuring everyone's favorite psychotic Canadian.

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Like most Deadpool stories, the plot is thin on...plot. BUT. Also like most Deadpool stories, the plot really doesn't matter that much anyway. Deadpool comics are a lot like porn in that way - you're there to see titties and weiners, not Oscar-worthy storylines.

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So, if you're a huge fan of the Merc with a Mouth, or maybe you're just looking for something to scratch that George Romero itch, you may want to check this one out.
Profile Image for Kelly (and the Book Boar).
2,729 reviews9,242 followers
October 21, 2015
Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/

“The world will end . . . not with a bang but with a whimper. The painful truth of the matter is a little different, though, ain’t it? Because the fact of the matter is that the world keeps on keeping on. We just ain’t in charge any more.”

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Yep, that definitely seems to be the case for the old Merc with the Mouth when he wakes up from one seriously wicked food coma . . .

Chicago commercial photographers

Turns out while he was sleeping it off, the entire world was overran by the undead. Sure, there might have been a few warning signs of what was to come, but Deadpool had his priorities straight – like flipping the channel during the boring news and catching a marathon of the best television show ever created on T.V. Land instead . . .

Chicago commercial photographers

Now Deadpool is the only superhero alive, and it’s up to him to save humankind . . . with fart jokes. I keeeeed – well, sorta. Along the way Deadpool will cross paths with various people and deal with . . .

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Yes, Rick. And stuff too. We’ll also FINALLY learn how the zombie apocalypse came about in the first place . . .

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And watch as the action builds to a crescendo . . . .

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(That was supposed to be a “Blaze of Glory” gif – but it turns out I like this song better so if you don’t like it SUCK IT!)

I hate to admit when someone like Jeff is right, but since it’s only happened once so far in our friendship I’ll go ahead and give him credit. Deadpool is the bomb dot com and gets all the stars. Dear Deapool . . .

Chicago commercial photographers
Profile Image for Jeff .
912 reviews781 followers
September 19, 2014
“When a 9mm rings, an angel gets his wings.”

Show of hands. Who can’t wait for zombiemania to bite the dust? That’s what I thought. In the meantime, let’s bring out Mr. Meta Humor himself, the Merc with a Mouth, Deadpool and run him through his paces during a zombie apocalypse.

Credit Cullen Bunn and Ramon Rosanas for making this work as well as it does. Deadpool has woken up from a food coma after binging on Mexican food and finds that he’s the only hero (work with me here) left. Bunn musters just enough of an original take on zombies, ample dollops of humor and pathos (you read that right) to make this a recommended read.

Note: I would pay top dollar to see him and the Deadpool Scouts eliminate Rick and re-set the Walking Dead.
Profile Image for Scott.
2,061 reviews242 followers
June 14, 2021
"Solemnly, our hero surveys the unspeakable carnage . . . for he is the last 'super-bro' on Earth. His heart, swelling with a sense of proud duty, beats out a clear, urgent message. And it says . . . @#$% THIS! TOO MANY ZOMBIES!" -- Deadpool's clamorous narration

Gleefully making reference to and/or ripping off the countless zombie-involved flicks from the last fifty or more years (including director George Romero's Dead trilogy, 28 Days Later, Zombieland, and writer Richard Matheson's story that spawned the movies Last Man on Earth, Omega Man, and I Am Legend), Night of the Living Deadpool has our titular antihero awakening from an all-you-can-eat buffet-induced overeating coma to realize that his world is being overrun by the quickly-multiplying animated undead. You know - those slack-jawed, pale-faced, and blank-eyed decomposing corpses who aimlessly shuffle around while hungrily desiring the flesh, blood and brains! of the dwindling number of survivors. Lots of splatterific action scenes (courtesy of decapitation by swordplay, since ammunition becomes a rare commodity) and the expected darkly humorous and bizarre quips in the first half, which then segues into an investigation of the root cause in the latter chapters. Stylishly illustrated in a black / white / red palette, it wasn't especially memorable or wildly original with hopping on the zombie bandwagon, but it functions as some quick and adequate light reading.
Profile Image for Carlos De Eguiluz.
226 reviews193 followers
April 9, 2017
Decidí volver a leer sobre Deadpool porque, vamos, es Deadpool; y esta vez no solo superó mis expectativas, sino que lo hizo y con creces. Deadpool es un personaje brillante, gracioso y muy bien desarrollado, cualidad que me parece perfecta cuando hablamos de calidad en lo que respecta a su área.

En esta ocasión, nuestro querido Wade Wilson despierta de un coma inducido por una chimichanga para descubrir que el mundo ha cambiado radicalmente, y bueno, que todo se fue al demonio. Rodeado de zombies cuasi-pensantes y el clásico humor que lo caracteriza, Deadpool deberá acatar su destino como el "último superhéroe con vida" y salvar a la raza humana... o bueno, algo así.

Básicamente lo que debes saber antes de leer esta historia es que Deadpool no cambiará tu vida de ninguna forma, pero vaya que te sacará muchas carcajadas.

Lo mejor, a mi parecer:

1.- Las constantes referencias a The Walking Dead y Zombieland.
2.- La cabeza de Clarence de paseo —léanlo y entenderán, jaja—.

"Crumbling econmy... natural disasters... weapons of massive destruction... televised baking competitions... Surley, these are the end of times."

"I' not sure how this mess started, but the undead pretty much came out of nowhere, and they spread like wildfire, like carbs, or One Direction fandom."

"That's how the old saying goes, right? If you can't beat 'em, let them eat you alive."
Profile Image for Sam Quixote.
4,705 reviews13.3k followers
March 10, 2014
Deadpool wakes up from a chimichanga-induced food coma to discover the zombie apocalypse has happened – and he’s the only surviving superhero! Where will Deadpool get his junk food and beer from now? Oh and of course how will he save humanity etc. …

Deadpool in a zombie movie is pretty much all you need to know about this book – it gives you everything you’d expect from the premise. There’s plenty of Deadpool cutting down zombies while making jokes. But Cullen Bunn does throw in some neat details, like the zombies aren’t the boring “braaaaaains” kind, but are actually aware of and horrified by their current state, so they stumble about saying things like “I had a good life…”, “Why is this happening to me?!” and “Don’t forget to kill me!” etc.

Ramon Rosana’s art is really good like in the flashback scenes when Deadpool’s trying to remember if he saw the zombie apocalypse coming or not. People biting one another, blood pools in the street, and the shuffling dead all pass Deadpool by as he’s too wrapped up in his own bubble of Golden Girls marathons and food. Rosana’s placement of the details in the background to Deadpool play really well to the comedic angle.

The comic is also drawn almost entirely in black and white with Deadpool often being the only colour on the page. It works to the zombie movie idea but also allows them to put tons of blood on the page and still get it published for a wider audience as the gore’s coloured black, not red.

Bunn riffs on other popular zombie stories like The Walking Dead and Night of the Living Dead in certain scenes and there are some completely batty moments like when a group of old women show up to cleanse one of the survivors’ outposts in the name of god! And while most of the book is par for the course in terms of what you’d expect from a zombie story, the ending is unique, ties in brilliantly to the character, and is completely inspired.

Night of the Living Deadpool isn’t going to change anyone’s life but it’s a really entertaining Deadpool comic with some clever moments to make it its own one-of-a-kind zombie story. It also totally delivers on the premise, so if you’re after a zombie/Deadpool comic, this one is it!
Profile Image for Jokoloyo.
453 reviews297 followers
October 19, 2018
I don't like horror stories because they are basically protagonists run away from the antagonists. Protagonists are the vulnerable weak side. This comic is not a horror story because I am sure until the end of comic book, Deadpool survives (as usual).

The nagging part is only I have to patiently reading the parts where the story revealing the cause of zombie plague, and the solution, if there is any.

Oh, by the way, the art style, illustrating Deadpool in colours and other persons in black and white, is brilliant.
Profile Image for Sandee is Reading.
692 reviews1,262 followers
August 6, 2015
THIS WAS A WEIRD READ but I really enjoyed it.

I know who Deadpool is and the reputation he has. But I've never read anything from him. I picked this one up because it sounded weird and it was Deadpool so... Why the fuck not right?

The title itself sounded a lot like a tribute to all the zombie stuff we've all been eating up recently. And true enough, this is what this was.

WHAT I LIKED:

✔ The illustrations looked really cool. The black and white and reds worked really well with the story.

✔ I really liked Deadpool's humor. Like I said, I haven't really read anything of him yet except for this one. But I liked him here so I'd definitely check out other Deadpool title.

✔ I liked the references to the other zombie flicks. It was so good.

✔ The ending was surprisingly disturbing. Haha. It was hilarious but in the same time it was unsettling.

WHAT I DIDN'T LIKE:

✘ I usually like weird. And this definitely was one of the weirdest things I've ever read. But... But... the story just wasn't for me. I just didn't care to much what happened to Deadpool or any of the characters introduced to this story.

FINAL WORDS

I enjoyed reading this book but it wasn't all that great for me. I was expecting more. I think my issue is just with the story, but other than that this was a pretty good read.
Profile Image for Dimitris.
120 reviews59 followers
October 14, 2015
What could possibly go wrong when you combine deadpool and zombies?Well...everything!
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Profile Image for Gavin.
1,237 reviews89 followers
February 23, 2015
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At first, I thought this was about the walk of whore-ers...so I wondered why we had a whole theme of reading about Lono's Wednesday afternoons...then I realized it meant SCARY Stuff (Then again, I've seen some of those Whores...yikes! and Lono's balls? it's like Emperor Palpatine's neck in Jedi!). But I digress...

Anyhow, this is a short, fun, funny, and only conceptually scary book. It's about zombies, so I know it counts. Also, it's a tribute to the Romero films and enjoyable. I LOVE the colour palette, black, white, read, and other shades but those 3 are the best. The Covers are art. Pure art. I'd hang some on my walls, but then I'd have to take down the Dukes of Hazzard and Kathy Ireland posters...

This is one of the better Deadpool's I've read; Cullen Bunn has a good handle on him now, and there's not too much smartass 4th wall stuff, but just enough funny bits to make you chuckle in a good way.
"This is a Civil War Graveyard"
"We talkin' Cap versus Iron Man or Patrick Swayze versus James Read?" ZING!

Superhero cribs smell more like testosterone and B.O. less like mold and fertilizer...

Singing Rush songs? "Working Man"...hilarious!

Making a Jack-o-Lantern out of a severed zombie head and a flashlight? So he can have his sword/gun hand free!

Complaining that killing zombies is actually kinda sad: "But I've played video games!"

Clarence, the AIM scientist zombie head companion, then the joke about every time a 9MM Rings...an Angel gets his wings!

Going out in a blaze of glory..."Young Guns Style"! Yes.

The plot itself is pretty decent too, Wade wakes from a food coma (all you can eat Chimichangas) to find that there's a zombie apocalypse, and all the heroes are dead...except him, and some ragtag peeps in an El Camino all jacked up. There's the usual stereotypes left in the party, and what happens is what we expect.
(of course the 8 week search for a perfect hideout until they find a terrible one is pretty funny)

Then the usual sliver of hope, and whatever happens from there, Deadpool puts himself into his work...and a different, yet nifty ending.
I'd love to see it continue in some way, but who knows. (We also get to see Bunn's notes on what he might have done with the series in the back).

So pretty fun, some good laughs that hit my pop culture target, and we have a whore-if-eye-ing good time!

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Profile Image for Mike.
1,543 reviews143 followers
March 3, 2015
This ain't yer annoying Duggan/Poehsn Deadpool. Still quippy, but not like you want to stab him in the throat until the only jokes he's making are blood bubbles.

Almost no reference to forgettable pop culture - in fact, the only "pop" culture I saw was Betty & Veronica, and I was pleased.

A quickie take, fun and not bad, and forgotten nearly a quickly as cotton candy.
Profile Image for Sesana.
5,861 reviews333 followers
January 6, 2015
Deadpool meets zombies. Inevitable, considering Deadpool's current status as Marvel's trendy, gimmicky character of the moment. I'm not saying that he isn't fun, but Deadpool is quickly becoming the new Wolverine, everywhere that Marvel can vaguely justify putting him. It's only because Bunn takes the concept seriously (as much as you can take any Deadpool concept seriously) that this book is actually worth reading. If it had been almost any other writer, I might have skipped this book, but Bunn earned a certain amount of goodwill from me by taking the equally gimmicky, equally senselessly violent Deadpool Kills the Marvel Universe seriously as well.

What does it mean to take a "Quick! Cash in on the trend before it isn't trendy anymore!" concept like Deadpool versus zombies seriously? It means that Bunn fills the book with sometimes thoughtful, sometimes funny references to genre tropes. That there's a larger story somewhere in the background, one that Deadpool entirely misses but the reader can guess at. That the ending is bleak and unsettling. And that Bunn has actually put a new spin on zombies. These zombies retain a tiny sliver of consciousness. Not enough to stop them from trying to eat anyone they come across, which is actually worse. Imagine being attacked by a horde of somethings that are begging for forgiveness, telling you to run, expressing horror at themselves, asking for death... Now imagine being one of those things. For me, the scariest part of the zombie concept was always the idea that a small part of you might know what you'd become, without being able to do anything about it. See also Marvel Zombies for a slightly different take on the same concept.

But this is still Deadpool. Which means lots and lots and lots of violence, and then some more violence. And also lots of wisecracks with varying levels of funniness. I admit that my eyes sometimes glazed over during the hacking and slashing and shooting sections of the book. I mean, I've basically seen all that before. I'm not sure what Bunn could have done differently there to make it a more exciting experience, and obviously a zombie book has to have actual zombie combat, so I can't really complain much.

I'm very happy with the art, especially with the decision to leave everything black and white but Deadpool. It's kind of an odd choice, but it makes the book look more properly grim and horrific, while allowing Deadpool to pop. After awhile, the black and white starts to seem normal, and it allows for one of the great surprises of the book. Of course, the art is good enough on its own that it doesn't need a gimmick.

Night of the Living Deadpool does have a little more depth than I'd expected. Not much more, of course, but enough to make it worth reading.
Profile Image for Mariℓina.
624 reviews203 followers
March 22, 2018
Four installments, for an ambitious story that starts relatively slow but later on becomes an avalanche of broken limbs and severed heads and takes you with it. In true Deadpool fashion, the mix between His Royally Screwed Up Self and zombies turns easily into sear madness, in the best way possible.



MISCHELENIOUS THOUGHTS AND HIGHLIGHTS ✎

♛ The artwork is awesome.
♛ The Return of the Living Deadpool is also great.
Profile Image for Tara.
540 reviews31 followers
August 24, 2022
Deadpool vs. zombies, what’s not to love? Bonus points for the hilarious Evil Dead reference. The Spice Girls reference too. So adorable <3
Profile Image for Katelynn Isbel.
106 reviews6 followers
March 1, 2016
I really liked this. It was intriguing and hilarious. I also really enjoyed that the art was all in black, white and red. I picked this up per my brothers recommendation. He reads A LOT of Deadpool and said that this was one of his favorites. I didn't love it as much as he did, but it's still Deadpool and is therefore awesome.
Profile Image for Selin Saracoglu Bayraklı.
31 reviews108 followers
August 6, 2016
Sevgili Deadpool,

Bu seferkini hiç sevemedim. Sorun sende değil; ama bende de değil. Hikâye çok zayıf, Türkçe çevirisiyse hikâyeden de zayıf.

Hiç olmamış bu.
Profile Image for Bhavik (Semi Hiatus).
206 reviews98 followers
January 11, 2018
BR with : Anne

An apocalyptic take on Deadpool where Deadpool was busy eating all you can eat chimichangas and dozed off only to wake few days later to find himself surrounded by zombies.
just another weird take on zombie with really nice illustrations and usual gory stuff and trash-mouth of his with nice action scenes.

Profile Image for Teresa.
Author 4 books88 followers
January 31, 2019
I only give this a 4 instead of a 3 because of it's classic Deadpool humor.

Otherwise, it was a bit bland and very similar to most zombie stories. The end was funny though!
Profile Image for Jonathan Maas.
Author 28 books333 followers
August 31, 2017
Note - review of series as a whole

My intro into the world of Deadpool - and wow - it was a fun one:)
Profile Image for Macarena Yannelli.
Author 1 book973 followers
July 21, 2017
Fue divertido, un cómic corto y entretenido. Soy fan del trabajo de Cullen Bunn y el editor Jordan White, voy a leer la segunda parte pero no creo que lea otro zombie au porque no es lo que más me gusta.
Profile Image for Brenn ❋.
127 reviews45 followers
May 6, 2019
Ese guiño a The walking Dead, ese cameo (¿o mención?, no se como se dice en un comic) a Michael Jackson en Thriller, me causaron mucha gracia.
Siempre me río con Deadpool y sus chistes. Primer comic que leo y me gusto la historia. Voy por su segunda parte, y claramente leeré más historias sobre este antihéroe.
Profile Image for Angela Blount.
Author 4 books695 followers
January 11, 2015

Deadpool is here to prove that nothing is sacred...not even your zombie lore.

In a mock 28 Days Later opening, Deadpool awakens from a food-induced coma to a New York that's seemingly been abandoned and a note left by the restaurant’s owner—who evidently cared enough about his loyal patron to lock him inside before fleeing. It takes Deadpool several panels of reflection (and an obligatory I Am Legend reference) before he starts putting together a string of glaringly obvious missed signs in the days leading up to his coma.

"I just figured...hey...the world's messed up, right? Crumbling economy...natural disasters...weapons of mass destruction...televised baking competitions. Surely, these are the end times."

But this is still Deadpool we're talking about here...and only when the undead start coming out in droves does his situation finally (and amusingly) register.



As it turns out, these zombies aren't quite like the moaning undead masses he's come to expect—they're still semi-sentient, capable of speech and memory but devoid of free will. And they seemingly WANT someone to finish them off. Not the kind of guilt-free wholesale monster carnage the merc-with-a-mouth would have preferred. Worse still, he's forced to consider where his next reload is going to come from. Which quickly results in this gallant battle-cry:

"Too many zombies! Fall back to a safe distance and make snarky comments to disguise cowardice."

After being rescued by a rag-tag crew of survivors, Deadpool takes charge and does the noblest thing he's capable of...he leads them aimlessly around the countryside in search of a suitable place to wait out the apocalypse. And in the process, he discovers that he may be the only “superhero” the world has left.



I have to give the writer props for capturing Deadpool's character, putting out some worthwhile one-liners, and satirizing the zombie craze across the board. (In addition to some of the previously mentioned zombie formats, this reader recognized Zombieland, The Walking Dead, Lollipop Chainsaw, Shawn of The Dead...but I'm sure there were more.) The end seemed a bit rushed and the “twist” was a little unsatisfying, but overall I really enjoyed this one.

The art style was skilled and fitting—much of the comic being done in black and white while Deadpool himself remained colored. There was plenty of excessive blood depicted—as you'd expect from anything zombie-related. But the gore aspect was muted a bit by the colorization choice. More morbid satire than true horror, but not something I'd ever recommend for children or young teens.

Recommended: For people who love zombies. And...people who hate zombies. (Seriously, if you're zombie-ambivalent, this one probably isn't for you.)

Favorite quote:
"I'm supposed to...CONSERVE...ammunition? THAT will take some getting used to."

Profile Image for Michael.
838 reviews634 followers
November 27, 2014
Deadpool is a Marvel Comics mutant anti-hero best known for his dark humour (he is sometimes referred to as “Merc with a mouth”) and breaking the fourth wall in his comic. He is a mentally unstable mercenary, weapons expert and has regenerative healing abilities. The perfect hero to put into a zombie apocalypse and in Night of the Living Deadpool this is what happens.

The series begins with a nod to The Walking Dead, which is a homage to that classic opening scene in The Day of the Triffids. Deadpool wakes up from a food coma a few days later and finds that he has awoken to the zombie apocalypse. This four issue series goes on to make multiple references to the genre.

Writer of Deadpool Killogy, Cullen Bunn joins forces with a relative new artist, Ramon Rosanas. The series is a stylised black, white, and red (for Deadpool) with a very warped sense of humour. What stuck with me through this series was not just the references to classic zombie movies or macabre nature but the short, straight to the point approach to the genre. Comic book series can often go for a long time and while that is good, it was nice to start and end a series in one sitting.

I loved the art within this book; I liked how Ramon Rosanas avoided using colours within the comics. It highlights Deadpool as a character not like all the others, while leaving the focus on the drawings rather than the colours. This style is different to what is seen in Sin City but it works; flashbacks are in full colour so really it portrays the apocalypse as a dark time for humanity.

Because this series was only four issues, I find it hard to talk about this comic book. Everything happened so fast and then it was over. I enjoyed the short and sweet experience as stated before but the lasting effects are very small. I was left with memories of the references and art but nothing much more. I think this means that it will be a good series to revisit again; it is just a weird experience.

This review originally appeared on my blog: http://literary-exploration.com/2014/...
Profile Image for Brendan.
1,219 reviews53 followers
December 17, 2024
🅡🅔🅥🅘🅔🅦

Night of the Living Deadpool
2014
Graphic Novel
Rating: 4.5/5

Night of the Living Deadpool is a thrilling and darkly comedic entry in the Deadpool universe, expertly blending horror, humour, and heart. Written by Cullen Bunn and illustrated by the Ramon Rosanas, this limited series takes Deadpool out of his usual comfort zone and into the world of the undead.

The premise is simple but effective, Deadpool, alongside a small group of survivors, are fighting for survival in a zombie apocalypse. What sets this series apart is how Deadpool’s unique personality intersecting with the high-stakes horror setting. His irreverent humour, insane antics, and over-the-top action make for a fun ride, but the series also explores some surprisingly quieter moments, showcasing the character’s vulnerability and humanity in the face of a world gone mad.

One of the standout elements of Night of the Living Deadpool is the way it balances humour with horror. While the series delivers plenty of laughs, it never loses sight of the true stakes, making the zombie outbreak feel genuinely dangerous. Deadpool’s antics are hilarious, but there’s also real emotional depth as he grapples with the consequences of his actions.

The series is a fantastic read for fans of Deadpool, horror comics, or anyone who enjoys a twisted mix of humour and horror. The writing by Bunn provides Deadpool with a lot of funny one-liners, particularly the one where a man announces he’s been bitten, to which Deadpool answers “kinky”. It delivers everything you’d expect from a Deadpool comic, irreverence, blood, and humour, but with an added layer of zombie-filled chaos that makes it a memorable and fun ride. This is one of the few comics I’ve enjoyed of the character.

#nightofthelivingdeadpool#2014#comics#comicbooks#comicbookcommunity#comicbooklover#booklover#bookworm#comicbookreview#comicbookcollection#comicbookcollector#comicbookcollecting#dupreewenttothemovies#books#bookrecommendations#readingtime#readingaddict#readingcommunity#readinglist#readingbooks#readingisfun#alwaysreading#ilovereading#lovereading#readreadread#readersgonnaread#cullenbunn#book#marvel#graphicnovel
Profile Image for Kayıp Rıhtım.
370 reviews286 followers
Read
February 5, 2016
Deadpool Yaşayan Ölülerin Gecesi bugüne dek çıkmış tüm zombi külliyatının ortak yönlerini tek bir potada eriten, hepsine şapka çıkaran ama üstüne bol miktarda Deadpool sosu döken bir çizgi-roman.

Her şey geveze paralı askerimizin “Yiyebildiğin kadar Chimichanga” gününde ipin ucunu kaçırması ve mide fesadı geçirerek komalık olmasıyla başlıyor. Birkaç gün sonra (!) kendisine geldiğinde tüm şehri terk edilmiş olarak buluyor.

Tam bu noktada zombilerden birkaçıyla karşılaşıyor ve çekiyor kılıçları. Ama o da ne? Zombiler o bizim bildiğimiz, beyinsiz yaratıklar olmaktan çok uzaklar. Hareketlerini kontrol edemiyor olsalar da yaptıkları şeyin tamamen farkındalar. O nedenle “Lütfen öldür beni!” “Bunu yapmak istemiyorum, ah tanrım,” ve “Çok üzgünüm,” gibi şeyler söylüyorlar. Zombilerin bu hâlinin çok daha korkunç olduğunu söylemem gerek.

Geveze paralı askerimiz bu noktadan sonra hayatta kalan bazı gruplarla karşılaşıyor, güvenli bir yer bulabilmek için oradan oraya dolaşıyor ve çeşitli maceralara atılıyor. Çizgi romanın en etkileyici olduğu kısımlardan biri Deadpool’un kırmızı kostümü haricindeki her şeyin siyah-beyaz çizilmiş olması, ki bu da maceraya çok özel bir görsel tat katıyor. Bununla birlikte geveze paralı askerimizin her zamankine nazaran kahramanlığa biraz daha fazla soyunması, olayları kendisinden beklenmedik bir şekilde ciddiye alması ve dördüncü boyutu hiç kırmaması işin tadını biraz kaçırıyor.

Uzun lafın kısası iyi bir çizgi roman Yaşayan Ölülerin Gecesi, ama şimdiye dek okuduğumuz en iyi Deadpool cildi de değil.

- M. İhsan TATARİ

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