Skip to content
Vincent Morrow — first appearance cover
ImageMaleGod/Eternal

Vincent Morrow

First Appearance

Witch Doctor #1 (2011)

Powers & Abilities

AgilityStaminaIntellectMagicGadgetsTrackingSwordsmanship

Also Known As

Doctor

About Vincent Morrow

Vincent Morrow, known simply as "The Doctor," is one of Image Comics' most distinctive creations — a brilliant, sardonic physician who operates at the razor's edge where modern medicine meets ancient supernatural horror. Debuting in Witch Doctor #1 (2011), Morrow is essentially what you'd get if House M.D. diagnosed demonic possessions and eldritch parasites instead of mundane illness. His first appearance is a genuine sleeper hit in the indie comics market, introducing a character whose divine and eternal origins give him both an unsettling authority and a near-limitless well of arcane knowledge. Collectors who caught this debut issue early found something genuinely fresh — a supernatural procedural unlike anything else on the shelves at the time.

Morrow's power set is a fascinating hybrid of the cerebral and the combative. His staggering intellect forms the core of his identity — every monster, every curse, every infernal contagion is, to him, a medical problem to be diagnosed and treated. That cold clinical lens is wrapped around a man who wields magic, carries custom gadgets designed for supernatural containment, and is more than capable of drawing a blade when the situation demands it. His tracking instincts and near-supernatural stamina round out a character who never feels outmatched for long, even when facing creatures that have terrorized humanity for millennia.

The Witch Doctor series, written by Brandon Seifert with art by Lukas Ketner, built a devoted cult following across its run — including the follow-up limited series Witch Doctor: Mal Practice. Seifert's world treats supernatural lore with the same rigorous internal logic that a medical textbook applies to disease, and Morrow is the perfect vehicle for that concept. Story arcs involving infernal infections, magical malpractice, and the terrifying bureaucracy of the supernatural world gave the series a unique identity that collectors and critics responded to warmly.

For collectors, Witch Doctor #1 represents exactly the kind of low-print-run Image debut that rewards patient hunters. The series never reached blockbuster numbers, which means high-grade copies of the first issue and the full Mal Practice run have real scarcity on their side. As indie horror comics continue to gain traction with a new generation of readers and Image back-catalog deep dives become increasingly popular, Vincent Morrow's books are positioned as the kind of undervalued gems that savvy collectors snap up before the rest of the market catches on.