Afterlife with Archie

Afterlife with Archie

Cover of Afterlife with Archie No. 1. Art by Francesco Francavilla.
Publication information
Publisher Archie Comics
Schedule Monthly
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date October 2013 – present
Number of issues 8
Creative team
Writer(s) Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
Artist(s) Francesco Francavilla
Inker(s) Francesco Francavilla
Letterer(s) Jack Morelli
Colorist(s) Francesco Francavilla
Creator(s) Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
Francesco Francavilla

Afterlife with Archie is a comic book published by Archie Comics beginning in 2013, depicting a zombie apocalypse which begins in the town of Riverdale in an alternative reality. It is written by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa,[1] with art by Francesco Francavilla,[2] and is inspired by a zombie-themed variant cover which Francavilla did for an issue of Life with Archie.[3]

The comic is Archie Comics' first title to be sold only on the direct market (that is, in comic shops), as opposed to on newsstands;[4] it is also the company's first title not to be aimed at children and is rated "TEEN+",[5] as it includes content and subject matter never explored in any other title they published before, including extensive realistic violence, some gore, necrotic themes, disturbing scenes, and moderate language. The comic was conceived not long after Archie Comics officially dropped the Comics Code Authority standard from their entire line-up in 2011.

Issue #8 was the first to feature the company's Archie Horror logo. The Archie Horror imprint also publishes a companion series titled Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. The two titles share several characters, but they are not directly related to each other.

Story Arcs

Volume 1: Escape From Riverdale (Issues 1 - 5)

After a car driven by Reggie kills Hot Dog, Jughead asks Sabrina to bring his beloved pet back to life. She does, but with terrible consequences: Hot Dog becomes a zombie, and kills Jughead, who himself rises as a zombie and spreads the contagion.

Volume 2: Betty: R.I.P. (Issues 6 - )

Weeks after Archie and his friends left Riverdale, they are now following along the deserted highways of America trying to stay one step ahead of the growing horde of zombies that were once their friends and family.

List of Characters

Some of the characters who are either deceased or part of the zombie horde include Hot Dog, Jughead Jones (classified as Patient Zero), Principal Weatherbee, Ms. Grundy, Ethel Muggs, Terry “Pop” Tate, Coach Kleates, Fred Andrews, Archie's dog Vegas, Mayor Martinez, Forsythe and Gladys Jones, Moose Mason, Midge Klump and Jason Blossom. In issue #8 it was revealed that the souls of the dead citizens of Riverdale still roam the Earth as ghosts while their bodies are zombified.

Some other characters who have died before the events of the series include Hermione Lodge, Jellybean Jones, Cheryl's dog Sugar, and General Keller.

Josie and the Pussycats have also made a cameo appearance in the series in issue #7.

Reception

The first eight issues sold out.[6] Fangoria compared Afterlife with Archie to "the kind of horror found in a vintage EC comic",[1] stating that it was one of the "best horror comics (...) in a very long time,"[1] while the Plain Dealer described it as "brilliant", and "fascinating and wonderful",[7] NPR called it "terrific", "a masterpiece", and "actually scary",[5] and Salon said that on "a list of the best comics of (2013)", Afterlife with Archie would probably be "at the top".[8]

Archie Comics CEO Jon Goldwater has said that his father, the late John L. Goldwater, would have been "shocked by Afterlife (...) but shocked in a great way".[9]

Collected editions

The series has so far been assembled into the following collection:

Trade paperbacks

Title ISBN Release Date Collected Material Issues Published
Afterlife with Archie: Escape From Riverdale 978-1619889088 June 10, 2014 Afterlife with Archie #1–5 October 2013 – May 2014

References

  1. 1 2 3 ‘Afterlife With Archie’: The Walking Jughead? The art of bringing zombies to Riverdale High, by David Betancourt, at the Washington Post; published January 7, 2014; retrieved April 5, 2014
  2. AFTERLIFE WITH ARCHIE #3 (Comic Review), by Chris Anderson, at Fangoria; published January 13, 2014; retrieved April 5, 2014
  3. ‘Afterlife With Archie’: Francesco Francavilla cover, movie details, by Gina McIntyre, at the Los Angeles Times; published June 10, 2013; retrieved April 5, 2014
  4. Why Comic-Book Kid Archie Needs To Get Bloody, by Brian Steinberg, at Variety; published November 19, 2013; retrieved April 5, 2014
  5. 1 2 World War R: New Comic Pits Archie And Friends Against The Undead, by Jody Arlington, at NPR; published October 18, 2013; retrieved April 5, 2014
  6. How Archie Became the Most Enlightened Publisher in Comics, by Graeme McMillan, at WIRED; published March 6, 2014; retrieved April 5, 2014
  7. Afterlife With Archie is scary good: Journey Into Comics, by Michael Sangiacomo, at the Plain Dealer; published March 4, 2014; retrieved April 5, 2014
  8. The 10 best superhero comics of 2013, by Mark Peters, at Salon; published December 28, 2013; retrieved April 5, 2014
  9. How the Archie Comics CEO rescued ol’ Riverdale High from being ‘old school', by David Betancourt, at the Washington Post; published April 2, 2014; retrieved April 5, 2014
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