Tieri’s script almost seems to be trying to march the fun onto the page at gunpoint.
All in Comedy
Tieri’s script almost seems to be trying to march the fun onto the page at gunpoint.
Cereno has a very sharp sense of the dramatic.
Given enough time this could be a lot of fun.
The whole thing feels more than a little bit strange.
If Popeye had been allowed to be a little bit more himself, it might be a little bit more interesting.
Conner and Palmiotti amp-up the intensity of a silliness.
Ganuchaeu has a very thoughtfully put-together the team up.
Kalan launches Harley into a whole new adventure.
Once again, Young finds something novel in old cliché.
King manages some really clever bits of characterization.
It doesn’t really feel like it fits-in to the rhythm.
Umm...yeah. Scott isn’t doing anything here that hasn’t been one a million times.
Laufman is doing such a good job of bringing the cartoons of the violence to the page.
Juni Ba’s satire has a particularly frenzied approach in the final issue.
Flynn juggles a big cast of characters with an impressive efficiency.
Aye crafts a script that works on a few different levels.
Straczynski and Noto do a brilliant job of making it feel new./
It’s a fun premise.
Young knows exactly how much space he needs to tell this particular joke.
Thompson has a solidly interesting story to tell.