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Synopsis:
21-year-old Diego de la Muerte is a hip,
young Latino-American living in East Los Angeles. In anticipation
of an upcoming Day of the Dead celebration, Diego dresses
up as a zombie mariachi – black suit with an Aztec skull
on the back, kohl-lined eyes, and facial markings that give
him a ghoulish look. It’s all in fun. But an Aztec death
symbol that Diego has unwittingly tattooed on his arm has
marked him for a dark destiny beyond his wildest imaginings.
On his way to the party, the black forces of the ancient Aztec
netherworld cause his car to crash and Diego’s life
is taken from him.
Diego awakes to an afterlife in the dark Aztec land of the
dead, Mictlan. Here, Diego is sacrificed to the god of death,
Mictlantecuhtli, in a Aztec ritual in which is heart is ripped
from his chest and sealed in a clay pot, giving Mictlantecuhtli
possession of his soul.
Diego returns to the land of the living. But he is now trapped
in the body of the living dead. His ghoulish appearance, originally
donned for celebration and fun, has become permanent, and
his eyes are black, empty shells. Unable to contact his friends
and family who long ago mourned and buried him, he is fated
to walk amongst the shadows of his former life, trying to
protect those he loves without revealing himself to them.
Armed with the power to take life or restore it, he must struggle
against the powerful god of death who created him, in order
to ensure that the rest of us do not meet the very same fate.
Based on the comic book series from Javier Hernandez, “El
Muerto” fuses imagery from the brutal past of ancient
Mexico with the U.S. Latin-infused culture of today. One of
the most talked about new Mexican-American comics at this
year’s Comicon Convention, “El Muerto” introduces
a unique hero who takes us on a new journey into costumed
adventure and contemporary horror.
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