Cain
- Lukaschik Gleb
- 13 hours ago
- 2 min read
I just recognized or, very perhaps, I was aware before but I didn’t attracted to that Walter Hill had a project after Dead for a Dollar, which was a graphic novel Cain, co-authored with unknown Mike Benson for me. It was released almost accurately two years ago.
Another killer with a heart by murdering only nefarious people but he is blind in Daredevil way. Sometimes he takes life as Good Samaritan. Cain doesn’t disclose his superhuman ability secret to people while no one notices that he is quite advanced for a man without eyes. A described as a “local prostitute”– in his circumstantial meeting her in Paris–is dressed and made-up elegantly and likes her job in which does for saving and investment. It wasn’t once when she pushed away a person who wanted her services. That’s against her goal, isn’t it? This meeting and followed night led her to show to this man who doesn’t see the world, as she knows, the other part of her work, which relates to BDSM. Cain uses his cover of a man with a cane in liquidating. Yet, for some reason, he uses it in visiting an art gallery. That would give him a piece of noticeability. However, it’s a fantastic world where all the French and Spanish people speak English – even they do it between each other. Only Chinese keeping to native, and their English is accurate Asian version.
I couldn’t look and read more. Cane’s first target was a Chinese girl with whose slaying wasn’t shown; therefore, as it’s happens in movies, that wasn’t actually. I listed and read a flabbergasting phrase in conversation, “I know you’re a handicapped person, but you got kinda crappy handwriting…” because Hill used to be a master of beautiful dialogs. He raised too high from the ground as that I see for the last years. An armed Cain and his one more target keep a several feet distance, yet an unarmed opposite hits a person with a gun, causing a fight between them.
Cain turns out into anthology of episodes having one structure: he arrives in a country, confronts and murders. It ends on that he meets another killer with a heart who is a man with a woman’s haircut. Possibly transgender, but I didn’t want to dig about that. She, in my consideration, doesn’t like bad people who hired her. It concluded on “to be continued” but nothing has followed. That doesn’t matter for me.
If doesn’t count Triggerman–because it’s script was written decades ago–a contemporary Walter Hill shifted to awkward things. The Assignment, Dead for a Dollar, and now Cain. Well, the last is better in a plot and commonsense than the other two, but a territory is same as I pointed.




