A slightly haunting moody drama, the likes of which don’t often make it to the comics page.
All in Drama
A slightly haunting moody drama, the likes of which don’t often make it to the comics page.
Pummeled battle scars feel suitably graceful in the second half of a well-executed story.
The Last Ninja Turtle is going to kill the Shredder. How he gets there is half the fun.
Empathy is dead. That's not a metaphor or anything.
Doran brings a fun, witty energy to the page.
An interesting dynamic for a chapter in the heroic story of a legendary sci-fi soldier.
Tynion’s working with the overlapping mysteries are dizzyingly provocative.
A comfortable kind of supernatural drama.
Remender eases Ernie into a deeper, more philosophical issue.
The first two issues of Sensational Wonder Woman show promise in a standalone story.
The old cliche of a hero reluctantly teaming-up with a villain finds new life in the hands of Pacheco and Pérez.
Fun enough to make one wish for a long-running Jinny Hex series.
Department of Truth continues to be one of the sharpest new series in a very tumultuous year.
Panosian and Ignazzi make Wilma seem like a truly fascinating character in her own right.
The conflict between Emma and Diana never quite lives up to the potential for a truly satisfying climax of Tamaki's run.
The characters remain interesting.
Tamaki carves a lot of poetry into the plot.
Writer Bryan Hill develops a script that’s as smart as it is witty.
The coming-of-age/frontline combat story continues to find a potent pulse in the series’ third issue.
The specifics may feel weak, but the drama has enough gravity to hold together the story.