Download The Killer Series by Matz and Jacamon (.CBR)

The Killer Series by Matz and Luc Jacamon
Requirements: CBR Reader, 274 MB.
Overview: The Killer (Le Tueur) is a French comic book by writer Matz and artist Luc Jacamon which follows the life of an unnamed assassin. The series was published in six albums by Casterman. It was translated into English and published by Archaia Studios Press, who turned each album into two comic books.

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    The Killer / Le Tueur

      Story by Matz
      Arts, Colourist(s), Letterer(s) by Luc Jacamon
      Creator(s): Matz, Luc Jacamon
      Publisher : Casterman, Archaia Studios Press

      The Volume One collected edition won "Best Indy Book" in IGN’s Best of 2007. The edition also won "Best Comic You Didn’t Read This Year" from Newsarama and was nominated for "Best U.S. Edition of International Material" in the 2008 Eisner Awards.

      The series is being made into a film by Paramount Pictures which will be directed by David Fincher

      The series was published in six albums by Casterman. It was translated into English and published by Archaia Studios Press, who turned each album into two comic books.

        Volume One (collects The Killer 1-4: "Long Fire" and "Vicious Cycle", hardcover, 128 pages, September 2007
        Volume Two (collects The Killer 5-10: "The Debt", "Blood Ties", and "The Killer Instinct", hardcover, 176 pages, March 2010.

        From brokenfrontier.com:

          Translated and reformatted from the acclaimed French hardboiled noir series Le Tueur, The Killer puts readers inside the head of a professional assassin.

          What type of man is capable of taking a human life? On the surface, that sounds like an easy question to answer – a disturbed man, an angry man or a bad man. But like many things in life, the easy answer isn’t always the correct one. If a person out of their mind killing is terrifying, how much more disturbing is it to consider a man that would take lives by his own choice? That’s who "The Killer" is. He doesn’t kill because he’s angry, hateful or insane. To him it’s a job. A means to an end. All he wants is enough money to withdraw from the world and to be left alone.

          I wish I could remember exactly where I read it, so I could give proper credit, but someone wrote that the problem with the independent comic scene today isn’t in diversity. It’s in quality. There are a million and one choices on the comic racks these days, but only a handful of books really stand out as exceptional and unique. Matz and Jacamon’s The Killer is one of those select few. From the title and back cover notes, it would be very easy to assume this comic is another "mature reader" books that relishes in violence, sex, blood and immorality. The Killer actually has very little blood and violence, and far from relishing in it, the entire world presented here is actually very sterile and calm. And that makes it incredibly scary. By presenting the entire issue from within The Killer’s perspective, readers see how a young man withdrew from the world. Bit by bit, Matz shows how The Killer disconnects from humanity and why it makes perfect sense. Considering the entire comic deals with a man sitting alone in a hotel room, this is an amazingly rich (albeit uncomfortable) story.

          Artist Luc Jacamon, who also provides the translation for the comic, is as much the storyteller here. Matz’s script has a dramatic motion picture quality to it, and Jacamon imbues each panel with a cinematic feel. Over the course of the issue, he presents lush and exotic panels, and then quickly withdraws back into tight frames that compliment The Killer’s worldview.

          The Killer is a perfect example of good comic book storytelling. Mature, introspective and engaging, Matz and Jacamon’s work offers a strong alternative to more traditional comic book fare.

Download Instructions:
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