by beastovjudgement » Thu Oct 24, 2013 11:58 pm
First, great topic idea. The events which come to mind are:
Jean DeWolff's murder in Spectacular Spider-Man. The "Death of Jean DeWolff" story title was not listed until the final page, and I for one did not see the killing of a major supporting character, one with unresolved subplots, coming. Because she was written as having so much potential as a major permanent character, Captain DeWolff's murder was especially jarring. It seemingly came out of nowhere (with Sin-Eater's reasoning being "because I felt like it"), and was a precursor to some of the sudden deaths in books like The Walking Dead. Speaking of which...
The events between the Governor and Michonne in The Walking Dead. This remains one of the most brutal and hard to read sequences in all of mainstream comics. Few things can make the reader cheer on what Michonne did in retaliation, but the Governor really had it coming. TV series Governor actually seems like he's not that bad a guy in comparison to the source material.
The execution of John Walker's parents by the Watchdogs in Captain America, and Walker's subsequent murderous rampage (while acting as Captain America, no less). This event set up the long-running story of the future US Agent's instability. His extremely violent revenge on his former partners, who publicized Walker's identity and led directly to the Watchdogs' capture of his parents, was also something of a shock.
Tulip O'Hare being shot in the head in Preacher. This one had some gaping plot holes - if God could block the Genesis power, why didn't he do it all along? - but still hit very hard and unexpected. Her later resurrection by God to prove a point, unlike most gratuitous comic book resurrections, actually furthered the story. God biting out Jesse Custer's eyeball also warrants mention, if for nothing else than being a scene of God biting out a guy's eyeball. I don't like to describe myself with the word "fan", but I am a fan of Garth Ennis's writing.
"The bestial screams, a life devoted - to the occult.
The flickering lights, my dream came true.
And now I'm dead.
Find me, take me. To the void, to the crooked nest, to Nekrohaven."
Satyricon, "Nekrohaven"