Evely’s art seems perfectly matched with the pacing.
All in Drama
Evely’s art seems perfectly matched with the pacing.
Clarke and Bennett fuse a Silver-Age-style superhero origin with an indie comedy.
Ram V’s script has a simple, poetic quality.
Delicate, largely unspoken drama mixes with creepy horror.
Bellaire wields the sword as a symbol.
Cain’s satire sinks into a more profound horror.
The whimsical darkness feels a bit dull.
Breathtakingly nuanced.
A great balancing act between interpersonal drama, cloak-and-dagger mystery, and all-out action.
A witty, briskly-paced adventure.
Catwoman? Yeah: she’s not really in this one.
Tynion isn’t really giving the artist a whole lot to work with.
The bulk of the five-story issue features some awe-inspiring work
Watters’ 1990s slacker/horror/drama action fusion actually works.
Maurene Goo gets a bit thick with the backstory.
Bellaire’s story has a brisk freshness about it.
Any series that opens with a drunken Kryptonian on her 21st birthday is going in the right direction right away.
Andrade carves elegant visuals around the poetry of Ram V’s script.
Ram V’s best so far in the series.
The Amazon's adventure in Asgard concludes with satisfyingly deep drama.