There’s a deep, dark poetry to Simone’s work.
All in Drama
There’s a deep, dark poetry to Simone’s work.
The weirdness of the series twists.
A gripping social satire set in the fading light of late-stage capitalism.
MacKay manages a breezy team-up between Clea and Moon Knight.
It’s fun action with just enough depth to keep the reader interested.
Gentle complexities play out in an alternate timeline U.S.
The gravity of the drama moves everything to a final confrontation.
A fun, little excursion with a fantasy hero into a dark mutation of traditional folklore.
An issue that balances one mystery against another.
Grønbekk delivers a truly beautiful fantas.
Conrad and Cloonan bring it all together in a way that makes it feel remarkably fluid.
A surprisingly deep and thematically complex origin
MacKay takes the opportunity to really explore Moon Knight and it works beautifully.
An appealing iteration of an old superhero trope.
Kaplan’s story has some real potential.
Young’s story gains a bit of inspired poetry.
Shaner is sharp.
The bright spot in an otherwise bleakly comic drama.
Appealingly slick and magical.
A funhouse head trip of a second issue.