Grant Morrison and Giuseppe Camuncoli work together and deliver an excellent detour
All in DC Comics
Grant Morrison and Giuseppe Camuncoli work together and deliver an excellent detour
Batman: Last Knight on Earth #2 is a great issue of comics, and is the crown jewel of DC’s meager offerings on this fifth week at the end of July. Highly recommended
Castellucci and DiGiandomenico handle the transition from the previous creative team quite deftly.
Jurgens keeps the action going in an issue the narrowly avoids living-up to the potential of the story.
The messy grittiness of a police assault on a rural human trafficking outpost feels weird and stringy.
Dial H for HERO continues to be a hidden gem of DC Comics’ current lineup, and possibly the most heartfelt of the uniformly fun Wonder Comics line. Highly recommended.
Lex Luthor makes some offers and the mystery of Leviathan deepens.
No one can say this isn’t a fun story
The first issue of Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen is a comedic masterpiece, and promises great things to come.
A compelling vision of Gotham in a world where Bruce Wayne has been broken.
Pure, unadulterated fun.
An absolute joy to read, which will excite readers in anticipation for where the series will progress.
A celebration of Young Justice past, present, and future.
Amethyst relays tales of palace intrigue, as Superboy and Impulse escape Dark Opal’s goons.
A fast-paced issue with cleverly-executed action.
Capably mixes adventure, mystery and a sense of wonder in its final issue.
A few different odd ends meeting together between two covers on the way out to a meeting with Lex Luthor.
Event Leviathan #2 is an exciting part of Bendis and Maleev’s wild ride.
Wonder Twins #6 asks “If your good doesn’t matter, what does it matter if you’re good?”
Jor-El tells his a story about the destruction of Krypton.