The debut paperback collection of Paul Cornell's Demon Knights practically cries out to have been a hardcover instead, with all the covers shunted to the back such to give the illusion of a graphic novel. Whereas collections like Grifter and Batgirl include a couple of the heroes' disparate adventures, Demon Knights: Seven Against the Dark is a single, tightly-coiled story about seven anti-heroes caught in the siege of a marauding army, immediate and unrelenting and meant to be read in full.
Demon Knights is wholly enjoyable, a book that creates and simultaneously proves the validity of a medieval fantasy title in DC Comics's New 52.
[Review contains spoilers]
In true Dungeons and Dragons fashion, Paul Cornell brings together the seven members of the Demon Knights in a tavern; they do not incite the battle with the Questing Queen's conquering horde, but they're soon embroiled in it. Over the book's seven issues, many of the Knights make personal sacrifices to try to save the town of Little Spring; by the end, however, with Little Spring mostly destroyed, their victory is dubious. The townspeople suggest surrendering to the Questing Queen a number of times, but the Knights keep fighting irrespective, and it is mostly the townspeople -- including a young girl, a young boy, and a priest -- who pay the price.
Cornell distinguishes here between the war and the warriors. The Knights fight because they've been attacked and because it's in their nature to do so, but not because of any loyalty to Little Spring in particular. They try at times to rouse the townspeople to fight with them, but ultimately the townspeople who show the most bravery -- including the boy and the girl -- are the ones who die. In a way Cornell's Demon Knights is a superhero story turned on its head; the heroes don't fight to save Metropolis, but ultimately they fight simply because an opportunity to fight presents itself, and their success in the end is hardly discernable from a failure.
The kind of morally-gray mayhem found in Seven Against the Dark may remind some readers of Gail Simone's Secret Six. The Knights don't all get along; the team includes two pseudo-villains in the form of Etrigan the Demon and Vandal Savage; and there's significant in-fighting (including some bloody injuries) among the group. Between Madame Xanadu's complicated romantic relationship with both Jason Blood and the Demon; the Shining Knight's gender ambiguity; and a bit of gore just a tick higher than the average DC title (though that's a fine line that gets finer all the time), Demon Knights emerges as a surprisingly mature fantasy title, something likely to appeal to the Game of Thrones crowd. It is also, lest this review suggest otherwise, at times pretty funny.
Already Cornell begins laying the groundwork for what must inevitably be a crossover between Demon Knights and the larger DC Universe. With Savage, Etrigan, and Xanadu, the wizard Mordru also appears -- whereas the former three have or are about to make appearances in other DC New 52 titles, Mordru is regularly mentioned in Legion of Super-Heroes, giving one out-of-time DC book a connection to another (hopefully the twain shall meet).
Readers know from Cornell's Stormwatch: The Dark Side that the Demon Knights are an early version of the Stormwatch team (one Knight is referred to as "the Engineer," but other antecedents aren't so obvious); as well, Seven picks up a homonym also found in Grifter, suggesting the "Demon Knights" may face the alien "Daemonites" sometime soon, too. All of this is a joy for those who like that sort of thing, that the Demon Knights may be time-displaced but certainly not separate from the DCU.
In total Demon Knights is a markedly better debut than Cornell's Stormwatch. The latter seemed to bow under the weight of its precedence -- too many established characters to reintroduce, too much going on at once, and too much effort made to seem smart and snappy, when instead Stormwatch just seemed clutter and confused. Demon Knights is airier, not in the least because the characters only face one threat in seven issues. This gives Cornell and artist Diogenes Neves room to spotlight each of the characters separately and in comparison to one another; the second issue alone has plenty of room for Etrigan, Xanadu, Vandal Savage, Shining Knight, the Horsewoman, and Mordru and the Questing Queen, neither feeling rushed nor too slow.
Again, Demon Knights: Seven Against the Dark has essentially the character of a well-plotted graphic novel; it stands out among the best of the DC New 52 debuts.
[Includes original covers; sketches, strangely enough, by Gary Frank]
Next up, the Collected Editions review of Batman and Robin: Born to Kill. Be there!
Review: Demon Knights Vol. 1: Seven Against the Dark trade paperback (DC Comics)
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