A sense of wonder is maintained in an enjoyably pulpy adventure.
All in DC Comics
A sense of wonder is maintained in an enjoyably pulpy adventure.
Lois Lane #3 makes the superhero comics’ first couple feel somehow both iconic and real.
Fantastic art by four different superstar teams don’t help make Legion of Superheroes: Millennium #1 anything other than unnecessary.
Exactly what this title has been missing
Orlando and Rossmo hit a surprisingly deep issue.
The entire creative team does a good enough job of distracting from the tired, old central themes of the story to make it FEEL fresh,
Castellucci is putting together smart, interesting stuff that details Batgirl’s distinctive style of selflessness.
The House Of El battles Rogol Zaar in the ruins of Krypton.
Clark Kent meets the new owner of the Daily Planet.
While Batman/Superman may be essential reading for those following the metastory of the DC Universe, it has some work to do to justify its own existence.
Dial H for HERO remains one of the most consistently entertaining titles DC has on the stands today.
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen #2 is an ambitious comic, and its ambition pays off.
Overall, Superman Year One #2 is slightly less offensive than the first issue; instead, it commits the even greater sin of being simply boring.
Year of the Villain: Black Mask #1 is a one-and-done comic done well.
A clean and simple motion and emotion explore some of Catwoman’s deeper emotions.
This is the best this book has been in over a year!
The fully-painted art of Alex Maleev is the real star of Event Leviathan #3.
Fuses interpersonal drama with lighthearted fourth wall shattering multi-genre spoofery.
It seems difficult to believe that Rucka, Perkins, et al can continue this momentum for ten more issues, but the first two indicate that Lois Lane will be an instant classic.
Seven issues complete, and yet nothing has been accomplished.