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Moon Knight: City of the Dead #4: Belly of the Gator

10/10

Moon Knight: City of the Dead #4

Artist(s): Marcelo Ferreira, Jay Leisten

Colorist(s): Rachelle Rosenberg & Fer Sifuentes-Sujo

Letterer: VC's Cory Petit

Publisher: Marvel

Genre: Action, Superhero, Supernatural

Published Date: 10/11/2023

Recap

Nothing is more feared in the City of the Dead than the ancient crocodile goddess known as AMMUT THE DEVOURER. Unfortunately for Marc Spector, he is currently being digested inside Ammut's belly, memory by memory. Can Moon Knight survive the weight of his own horrific past, or will the JACKAL KNIGHT rule triumphant across the realms of both the living and the dead? All hope may be lost… That is unless the SCARLET SCARAB has anything to say about it!

 

Review

In Joseph Campbell’s seminal text, The Hero With a Thousand Faces, the author describes the hero’s journey, which follows the core narrative of the departing hero. The template, also referred to as a monomyth, tracks the progression of a hero through a series of events that lead to changes and beyond. A key point of the journey is the stage Belly of the Whale, which represents the separation of the hero from their ordinary world, and marks the first instance where a character shows the possibility of change. 

Moon Knight: City of the Dead #4 – written by David Pepose with pencils by Marcelo Ferreira, inks by Jay Leisten, coloring from Rachelle Rosenberg, and lettering from VC’s Cory Petit – resumes Marc Spector’s emotional journey in the land of the dead. The Fist of Khonshu has been swallowed whole, leaving Scarlet Scarab to finish the mission. Khalil, the young child and soon-to-be avatar of Osiris, is flatlining back with Hunter’s Moon. The other doctor-turned-avatar of the moon god can stabilize the boy but realizes his time is drawing nearer. 

Back in the afterlife, Marc is forced to live through some of the most traumatic experiences of his life, including his first kill as a marine, the judgment of his brothers-in-arms, and even the shame of not saving Dr. Alraune. Stepping through these painful experiences, Moon Knight is tested by Ammut, the crocodile trying to convince the vigilante to give up and submit. A touching conversation with Dr. Alraune does wonders to assuage Marc’s regrets, providing a bit of closure just as the Jackal Knight steals Khalil’s power back in Duat. 

Pepose’s script for the issue twists and turns in Marc’s grief, building on the hero’s guilt to craft a compelling story of redemption. The script takes the idea of the Belly of the Whale and makes it manifest, trading an aquatic mammal for a harsh reptilian alligator. This change aligns with the Egyptian mythology of the character but evokes that notion of the monomyth structure. The stage happens later in the larger arc of the story than most heroes’ journeys but creates an excellent threshold moment. The issue is a tense exploration of the guilt and trauma associated with the cost of taking a life and finds itself in the catharsis of reconciling the past. 

Thanks to the fluid nature of Duat, Marc can make peace with his past, and Pepose writes an excellent scene between Marc and Dr. Alraune. Executing the moment with a sense of restraint, Pepose shows how effective a small win can be in the run for a character. It’s a perfect example of how theme and plot can be a way into a character, and how the malleable concept of the monomyth can be in the modern superhero. Pepose continues to support and bolster the main title’s core ethos, enriching the larger arc of the hero in a post-Age of Khonshu world. 

Expressions and facial tics sell the emotion in this issue, as Ferreira’s pencils are a welcome return. The artwork details the anguish and pain on each character’s face, with Badar and Marc in particular. The horror of watching a child die in the land of the living, and trapped in the cycle of pain that springs from the city of the dead. Ferreira’s linework is clean and firm, lacking in interpretation but selling genuine emotion. This grounds the issue as a mystical city of the underworld bleeds into the page. 

Ferreira’s pencils are enhanced thanks to Leisten’s inking style, which adds a harshness to the images across the page. The inks add weight to both the action sequences and the emotional beats, selling the respective elements of fighting and talking. Those thick lines sell the concrete against the fantastical, as the breadth of forgiveness clashes with the giant reptile eating people and jackal-headed villains battling a winged hero. The split between these two elements shows the book’s internal willingness to accept change, just like Marc can, in the context of the issue.  

Alongside the inking and pencils, Rosenberg’s consistent coloring reinforces the emotional ideas of the issue. The more interpretive palette of Marc’s tormenting feels sickly and acidic, as the green and reds eat away at the hero’s resolve. In the shift to the catharsis with Dr. Alraune, the book embraces a golden hue that gives off a sense of dawn unfolding, warm light basking Marc (and the reader) in the light of a new day. In the short sequence of the living world, Rosenberg switches gears and infuses a more ethereal hue that aligns itself with the main Moon Knight title, selling the division between life and death. 

Final Thoughts

The Belly of the Whale reflects the notion of danger swallowing a hero as they prepare for a moment of change. That notion is evident all across Moon Knight: City of the Dead #4, as the titular hero is forced to fight his way through the suffocating weight of his guilt. Pepose enriches the sequence with flashes of raw emotion in the book’s dialogue that is bolstered by Ferreira and Leisten’s art. 

Alongside the thick, weighted linework, the book thrives in its fluid depiction of color, and how those palettes influence the emotion of the book. The previous issue may have stumbled, suffering a stumble when it crossed a threshold to quote Campbell. With this issue, the creative team has proved there is a chance for change and sets the stage for the next step in Moon Knight’s journey.  

Moon Knight: City of the Dead #4: Belly of the Gator
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