Another issue that doesn’t quite live up to its potential
All in Action
Another issue that doesn’t quite live up to its potential
Allor gives Dr. Mindbender just enough depth.
Tamaki and company orchestrate some surprisingly thoughtful allegory in a very satisfying issue.
It lacks a bit of a sense of wonder.
MacKay's characteristic humor serves this series well.
A provocative 21st-century update on the Joker concept.
Kubert’s playful sense of amplification makes Inkblot unmistakably feline.
Kelly Thompson continues a tale of a misplaced amnesiac Marvel super-spy.
Narrative coherence bleeds around the edges of the dark poetry in a satisfying eighth issue.
Bomb Queen has plenty of plenty of time to be gruesomely violent, abhorrently duplicitous, and beautifully clever.
An enjoyable 16-pager that weighs aggressive action against more nuanced interpersonal matters between two superheroes.
There may not be a whole lot of depth in the story.
Macchio puts together a briskly-moving single-serving story.
A surprisingly well-balanced final chapter written by Cecil Castellucci.
Tamaki’s pacing and plot structure are particularly good this time around.
Did anyone have “Eastman and Laird team up on a comic once more” on their 2020 bingo sheet?
Pérez slices the action across the page in long, narrow panels.
Artist Keng follows Liefen’s modulations with visuals that capture a variety of different moods.
The pacing of the story gets a bit lost in the poetry early on.
Ram V places various elements into the frame with an architect’s eye for detail.