Williams delves a bit deeper into the inner psychology of romance in a world where love is outlawed in a well-constructed emotional narrative.
All in Drama
Williams delves a bit deeper into the inner psychology of romance in a world where love is outlawed in a well-constructed emotional narrative.
Dr. Strange contrasts against Galactus and Dormammu in a fun interaction that doesn’t quite live up to its potential.
The series take on a refreshingly fairytale storytelling quality as the origins of the mysterious world of Azoth are revealed.
A somewhat intriguing look into the nature of history in a world of lies.
A major early turning point in the series feels every bit as ominous as it should be.
Bendis, Walker and Campbell deliver the story with enough impact to make it feel reasonably compelling.
Middlewest swings into a clever bit of momentum with this issue.
The first arc of the smartest funny animal comedy around today makes an engagingly witty end in its sixth monthly installment.
Jeremy Whitley thoughtfully fuses genres in an endearingly unique chapter in the lives of the latest incarnation of The Wasp and her friends at Genius In action Research Labs.
A dialogue/caption-heavy issue that feels like it could have been framed better.
While the flashbacks do some work providing details about Apocalypse in the dystopian utopia of The Age of X-Man, they seem unnecessarily tacked-on to an issue that isn’t doing a whole heck of a lot else.
Overcomes a disjointed plot structure to maintain the intrigue.
Another thoroughly satisfying chapter in the life of hitman/A&R guy Martin Mills.
Mystery continues to bleed and pulse around the edges of aggression in a prison for super-humans.
Groom plays with expectations in a twist on certain cyberpunk sci-fi conventions.
Complexity looks good on Vindication as detective and suspected murderer come face-to-face.
Continues to make the unique web-slinging corner of the Marvel Universe feel fresh in spite of the fact that it’s been around for over half a century.
For a sustained six pages, the book doesn’t even FEEL like a mainstream superhero comic.
The Soskas have a very sophisticated grasp of what makes Black Widow such an interesting character.