With the Legion Of Doom, Leviathan, and the Invisible Mafia arrayed against him, Superman has his hands full.
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With the Legion Of Doom, Leviathan, and the Invisible Mafia arrayed against him, Superman has his hands full.
Basketful of Heads #2 is a great horror comic.
A very clever contrast between hero and villai makes for a very satisfying issue.
John Constantine: Hellblazer #1 is a good debut, and a return to Constantine’s horrific roots.
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen has Bat-mania with issue #5.
The first issue of The Question: The Deaths of Vic Sage smartly reintroduces the Question and his supporting cast.
Even a weak issue of Dial H for HERO is more inventive and more clever than quite a bit of what’s on the stands.
He-Man and the Masters of the Multiverse #1 isn’t a good comic by any means, but it’s still entertaining.
Batman/Superman #4 doesn’t offer much more than a well-rendered slugfest.
One of the better of the mandatory tie-ins for the Year of the Villain crossover.
It feels like little more than a pale echo of something that might have been deeper.
Far Sector #1 is a compelling first issue, and a great comics debut for fantasy superstar N.K. Jemison.
A glorious return to the style and form for Joelle Jones.
Gotham City Monsters #3 is full of overwrought dialogue and weird anatomy.
Gorgeous art doesn’t stop Event Leviathan #6 from being a disappointment.
The Dollhouse Family #1 looks exactly like a 1990s Vertigo comic, but it lacks the soul of that period in comics.
Superman makes a big decision.
Legion of Super-Heroes #1 is a promising start to DC’s newest rebooted version of the future super-team.
Lois Lane #5 is the comics equivalent of a prestige cable drama.
Wonder Twins #9 suffers from some sequences without an obvious connection to the main plot of the book.