Body Horror/Comic Books

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


  • In the X-Men comics, this is how the evil alien Brood reproduce. They were pretty obviously, ah, inspired by Alien.
    • Oddly enough, the Brood had a Hive Mind first.
    • The X-Men comics in general feature many cases of Body Horror. For every two mutants, one of the two is deformed in some shape or form due to their powers. Making things worse was the notion of when these deformities would manifest themselves; while some mutants are born deformed, others are born normal looking until they reach their teenage years, at which point their mutant powers kick in and they find their bodies warping, turning them from being handsome/beautiful to being hideously disfigured freaks. And even then, it's a crapshoot towards the extent of one's body horror: Angel and Wolverine, for instance, only suffered minor deformities, whereas mutants like Marrow (bones growing out of her body, which had to be broken off at regular intervals like one might cut one's hair), Husk (ability to develop and shed layers of skin of various biological compositions), or Mercury (body turning into a liquid metal substance) manifest far more grotesque variations. This led to Chris Claremont conceiving "The Morlocks": an underground community of homeless mutants, most of which were mutants that were too deformed to fit in with normal society.
    • How about Masque? A disfigured flesh-warping mutant who got his kicks warping the flesh of anyone who had the misfortune of coming into contact with him? When he took over the Morlocks, following the Mutant Massacre, Masque forced the surviving Morlocks to be his playthings, changing their faces and bodies into such horrific abominations, that the bulk of the community were driven irreversibly insane. Part of this motive was based upon the fact that Masque (originally) was immune to his own powers, which drove him mad due to the fact that he could alter anyone's face except his own disfigured face. Thought killed off in the early 1990s, Masque returned in Xtreme X-Men #36-39, where he was given upgraded powers: he could now use his powers on himself, which he used to render himself genderless as far as showing the ability to warp his own flesh to go from male to female. However, he was still insane in the head and then some: he used his powers to turn Callisto (ex-Morlock leader who Masque hated) into a tentacle-limbed freak and (with help from his fellow Morlocks) assaulted a subway train full of innocent people and used his powers to disfigure each and every person on said train as an act of mutant terrorism.
    • Chamber is another X-Man with quite a unique form of mutation; he has a psychic furnace where everything between his upper jaw and diaphragm would normally be. That's no lungs, ribcage, digestive system, etc. Granted, eventually he gets better, but when he loses his power to contain the energy, boom- everything south of his jaw is quite graphically vaporised. And even then, he still lives!
  • The alien symbiotes from Spider-Man.
  • And Spider-Man himself. All the mutations he's undergone, from gaining more arms, to transforming into a giant spider (with a description of his feelings in the process) and what happened to him when he was killed.
  • The Chester Brown underground comic Yummy Fur has such delights as the author eating his own snot (which he has admitted to doing), a man's hand spontaneously falling off, Ed the Happy Clown's penis growing a miniature talking, thinking Ronald Reagan head at its tip, a man who shits so much that he suffocates himself and many others, graphic scenes of penis surgery and so much more. Chester Brown himself, by all accounts has a very amiable, mild personality.
  • In the two-parter Ruins, Warren Ellis writes about a Marvel Universe where everything goes wrong. Gamma radiation turns Bruce Banner into a green pile of tumors, Peter Parker develops a deadly viral rash from his spider bite, and Johnny Storm incinerates himself.
    • You forgot to mention Wolverine's allergic reaction to adamantium.
  • In Grant Morrison's first story arc for Animal Man, the super-powered (and temporarily insane) Nature Hero B'wana Beast, in a series of failed attempts to rescue his kidnapped ape friend Djuba, uses his telekinetic helmet to fuse various animals together (including a homeless man and a rat). When Djuba dies from laboratory smallpox inoculation, B'wana Beast avenges her by fusing her body with that of Dr. Myers, the scientist responsible. The lab technicians, not recognizing their supervisor, prepare to do ape surgery without anesthesia while their fully sentient victim, attempting to stop them, can only grunt "Ma urrs! Ma urrs!"
  • In Marvel's District X, one mutant can't sit anywhere for too long because his feet grow roots that break through his shoes and lash him to the ground. After being cut away from the pavement in an early issue, he later grows into the wall of a sewer channel and essentially becomes an underground tree.
    • In Marvel's Mutopia X, Agent Popova (after a failed assassination attempt on Daniel Kaufman) was blackmailed into performing favors for Kaufman by having her surgically altered into what many might consider a hideous (or beautiful) mutant appearance.
  • Charles Burns' Black Hole. The entire graphic novel centers around teenagers who are tragically mutated and disfigured by a fictional sexually-transmitted disease.
  • Played for laughs in several Simpsons Treehouse of Horror comics. Most notable example is "Sideshow Blob", where criminal Sideshow Bob (who has a bad cold) is injected with the wrong vaccine by Dr Nick Rivera and turns into a rampaging blob monster.
  • If you think about it, Swarm the Nazi-Made-Of-Bees. He was a Nazi scientist studying bees who exposed them to radiation, only for them to mutate and devour him down to his bones. These bees apparently had a Hive Mind, which he became, and lived on as a man made of bees, sometimes wrapped around his human skeleton, sometimes not. This has never really been explored, perhaps because of the absurdity of a colony of telepathic bees with Nazi sympathies, but being devoured and becoming a colony of bees sounds like it would be pretty damn traumatic.
    • Venom eventually ate the skeleton, but because you can't keep a good Bee-Nazi down, Swarm can now create new bodies by possessing a queen bee and using her hive. He's gone from horrific to pure Paranoia Fuel, a rather impressive feat for a fairly lame villain.
  • Swamp Thing. Though later retconned into "a plant who thought it was Alec Holland" (surprisingly similar to the Nazi Bee Swarm thanks to a certain infamous memory experiment involving flatworms that wasn't debunked till much later) the original story was a man turning into a strange plant monster, incapable of even speech, and having to try and cope with it.
    • His Marvel (sort of) equivalent Man-Thing is potentially even worse.
      • Well, there is virtually nothing left of Ted Sallis's mind left in Man-Thing; Man-Thing doesn't need to cope, because most of the time, he's not even sapient. Of course the fact that all those who know fear are horrifically burned more than makes up for that in terms of Body Horror.
  • Stone Island. Harry's transformation into one of the creatures, which starts with him literally puking his guts out and doesn't stop until he's a seven-foot-tall monstrosity with no eyelids, a permanent grin in a distorted face, and hideously lengthened skull.
  • Global Frequency kicks off with a story about a man who has been engineered into a killing machine. Literally. His body is half gone. His cock has been connected with the parts of his brain that spark up when he kills things. He's still sentient... but just barely.
    • In a later story, a Frequency agent investigates a medical facility dealing in top-of-the-line stem cell research that's cut off all communications to the outside world. Turns out the doctors went insane from the gas leak and decided to build a temple to the wonder of the human body. Using all the patients as bricks, and the stem cell technology as mortar. And they're all still alive.
  • Plastic Man veers into this territory sometimes.
  • In DC Comics, one Superman issue saw him fly to the edge of Creation fighting Darkseid and, lo, they beheld... an infinitely vast wall of living, breathing, screaming flesh and faces that act as the "wall" between Creation and the nothingness beyond, the Source Wall. Its current form is apparently made of everyone who's ever tried and failed to pass through it and discover the secrets hidden on its other side.
  • Oftentimes characters who are effectively immortal or have "healing factors" will venture into this territory. The Ultimate X-Men version of Wolverine has been subjected to such horrors as regrowing his entire body after being decapitated and having the flesh stripped entirely off his bones but still being alive. Orson Scott Card's "Ultimate Iron Man" gives Tony Stark similar powers (for some reason) and has many creepy scenes of him regrowing his various severed limbs (which he loses so often, it basically becomes a running joke). In a particularly strange example, the Savage Dragon had the mood spoiled during sex when he and his girlfriend are horrified by the sight of his severed arm suddenly and unexpectedly regenerating in a gruesome fashion.
  • There was an 80s (90s?) issue of Captain America (comics) vs Batroc, where the U.S. Agent side-story in the latter part featured a guy who appeared to be undergoing extreme steroid enhancement(to the point that he was paralyzed due to his muscles expanding too much to allow movement).
  • Explored in "What If The Fantastic Four All Had The Power Of The Thing?"
    • Speaking of the Fantastic Four, Reed Richards' stretching can cause mild body horror sometimes. Especially if you think about what stretching like that would feel like.
  • A particularly chilling example from Captain Britain: a fellow named Sid managed to survive an encounter with the omnicidal Attack Animal known as the Fury, getting away with only a scratch. Unfortunately, the Fury's scratch was infectious, and the results were not pretty. Not by a long shot.
  • Widespread in the nuclear war wastelands of Judge Dredd (known as the "cursed Earth") with rampant radiation-induced deformities.
  • It is common in Judge Dredd's Mega City-One where people willingly inflict body horrors on themselves such as...
    • The League of Fatties, whose sporting events include extreme eating and fat contests (the fattest person wins 50,000 creds and tons of endorsement deals).
    • Also explored in Judge Dredd (reprinted in Complete Case Files volume 4), were the presence of "ugliness products" (i.e. skin mold cream, tooth decay gel, dead skunk aftershave etc.) that were popular in a society in which any nonmutated human could achieve beauty.
  • There is Deadpool, whose skin appears to be horrifically burned or surgically removed. At least he has a holographic projector to alter his appearance.
    • That's cancer. All of it. He had a healing factor installed in an attempt to cure his cancer, only to have the cancer basically become his healing factor. Dude is a walking tumor. Definitely this trope.
  • The Warhol virus from Wildstorm: World's End is named so because it keeps the victim alive for about 15 minutes while the victim is turned into a hulking, disfigured maniac.
  • In Warren Ellis' writing of Stormwatch, the Island of Gamora launched a watered-down superhuman mutagen upon an English town. Most victims were rendered as horiffically mutated corpses. The unfortunate surivors were fused into a giant mass of flesh whose hands were fused together in a shape similar to that tubular seaform known as a lamprey.
  • Ultimate Universe Red Skull; not liking the fact that he looked like his father (Captain America), the Red Skull removed his entire face and scalp.
  • Cla$$War: " Uh ... it appears my left leg has just eaten your dog "
  • We learn something like this happened to Johnny Storm while he was held captive by Annihilus. He is repeatedly killed, only to be brought back to life, often times stitched back by worms... it's not very lovely.
  • Collapsing New Empires has Luke's prosthetic right hand get infected by an "art virus" that makes it progressively get larger and more ungainly until it's a mass as large as his torso and he cuts it off.
  • One of the most inept villain teams in Marvel are the Headsmen, four Mad Scientist types who each have this due to some failed experiment or accident. The current roster is:
    • Arthur Nagan, their leader, who once performed cruel vivisection experiments on gorillas in Africa, intending to find a way to use gorilla organs in humans. He was thwarted when the gorillas took revenge, transplanting his head on a gorilla's body. At least that's how he tells it, leaving out important details like how the gorillas gained the smarts to do such a thing.
    • Dr. Jerold Morgan (AKA Shrunken Bones) a scientist who accidentally shank his skeleton (but not the rest of himself) while doing crude experiments with shrinking gas. ( Hank Pym would perfect this idea a few months later.) As a result, the once-handsome Morgan's skin hangs loosely from his bones.
    • Thursday Rubinstein, aka Ruby Thursday. The only member with somewhat useful powers, she somehow managed to replace her own head with a mass of "organic circuitry," a red spherical orb that can mimic all the functions of a human's head and grans her several powers, like energy projection and malleable appendages. Still looks pretty ridiculous.
    • Chondu the Mystic, the fourth member, initially had no deformity, but the team loused up their first scheme so badly, he became the worst example of this trope among them. His body - except his head - was destroyed, and Nagan's attempts to build him a new one gave him a monstrous hybrid body with bat wings, clawed feet and eight lampreys for arms; while his head was intact, it now had a forked tongue and a unicorn's horn. Most of the Headmen's schemes from then on centered on obtaining a better body for him, never with any real success.