Roachmill

Roachmill is an American Comic book created by Rich Hedden and Tom McWeeney, published first by Blackthorne Publishing and then Dark Horse Comics.

Roachmill
Cover to Roachmill No. 1 (December 1986).
Publication information
PublisherBlackthorne Publishing
Dark Horse Comics
ScheduleBimonthly
FormatStandard
Publication dateDecember 1986 – December 1990
No. of issues16
Main character(s)Roachmill
Creative team
Written byRich Hedden, Tom McWeeney
Artist(s)Rich Hedden, Tom McWeeney

Publication history

Blackthorne Publishing put out the first six issues of Roachmill before creators Hedden and McWeeney were lured away by Dark Horse Comics. Dark Horse published an additional ten issues before the series was canceled. Dark Horse also published a special introductory Roachmill story in Dark Horse Presents No. 17 (April 1988), to announce the acquisition of the character.

Two trade paperback collections were issued. The first, Roachmill Book 1: Framed (1988), collects the first five issues. The second, Roachmill Book 2: The Greatest Roachmill Stories Ever Told (1989), features the final two Blackthorne stories, and the first Dark Horse story. Both books were published by Dark Horse.

Series overview

The comic is set in 30th-century New York where an influx of aliens to Earth has caused social problems. In response, the Extermination Act is enacted, a law that allows anyone who carries a gun to use lethal force in "alien-related" situation. Eventually, the law is extended to allow the killings of humans as well, allowing for the creation of licensed Exterminators. Roachmill – a tall Dirty Harry-era Clint Eastwood lookalike with two extra cockroach arms extending from his abdomen – is one such Exterminator, willing – for a price – to kill anyone or anything. The stories veered wildly between comedy, satire and serious sci-fi and the art between cartoony and realistic, sometimes in the same issue.

gollark: Is this person just doing hashes wrong?
gollark: I know what those words mean, but not *together*.
gollark: Oh no.
gollark: But there are something like 10 good ones.
gollark: Those don't actually need many crypto libraries. Why do people have 3000 of them?


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