Savage Dragon #267 Review: A Wild, Raunchy, and Risky Anniversary Issue

01/17/2024 10:15 am EST

This week's anniversary issue of Savage Dragon feels like a bit of a throwback. Maybe not to the early days of the series – although it certainly pays a bit of homage, given that this issue's 100-page size and numerous backup features are meant to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Savage Dragon #1 – but certainly to a much-discussed, and controversial period from just a few years back. In this very special issue, Angel Dragon and Frank Darling, Jr. get married. The wedding day is...pretty adult. Whether Angel looking for one last fling or the married couple's first time, Savage Dragon is making superhero comics sexy—or at least really horny—again.

Frank and Angel's romance has been simmering for longer than most comic books have even been running, and it's nice to see them have their moment, particularly since both Angel and Frank have been largely off-camera during Malcolm and Maxine's years in Toronto. As Larsen himself has admitted, as compelling as Angel is, when you go to pick up Savage Dragon, you expect there to be a green guy with a fin on his head at its center. that has pushed Angel to the fringes a bit, although this issue certainly sets some big things in motion for her, suggesting that she will have a major story play out sometime between now and Savage Dragon #300. Larsen has usually had one of these massive 100-page giants at 25-issue intervals, but it's hard to imagine doing another one as soon as #275, and it's equally hard to imagine anything he can do in the next few months topping this month's ending for shock value.

Because, yes – Savage Dragon #267, which accidentally released early on digital and has been available on ComiXology for a week, ends with a pretty shocking twist that sets up what is likely to be the next big storyline for the book going forward.

That "shock value" may be something that drives a lot of conversations in the weeks to come, and a handful of YouTube videos and the like will likely carry trigger warnings. Without spoiling it, all we can say is that the final couple of pages reveal that a classic Dragon villain has hatched their most despicable plan yet -- and it's one that involves some truly inexcusable behavior. It feels like whenever it gets resolved, it will likely be the last big story featuring this villain, because it's hard to imagine them bouncing back from this.

Before all that, the issue opens on a great montage that sets the emotional stakes for the wedding and what comes next, reminding fans of the long, sometimes complicated relationship between Angel and Frank. Larsen opens on a page with Dragon, flanked by his teenage kids, and as time folds forward and things get closer and closer to the wedding, the pace picks up, rocketing us into the main story with a sense of kinetic energy. Larsen also uses that opening sequence to give the book a fight scene -- something that's nice to have, but not strictly necessary, since all the backup stories have one.

As is Larsen's custom, the 100-page giant is a blend of a lead feature that's basically just a normal issue of Savage Dragon, followed by reprints, pinups, and new, original content (often set in the world of Savage Dragon but written, drawn, or both by other creators).

A quick rundown: 

Published by Image Comics

On January 17, 2024

Written by Erik Larsen

Art by Erik Larsen

Colors by Nikos Koutsis with Mike Toris

Letters by Jack Morelli

Cover by Erik Larsen

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