It’s provocative stuff.
All in Dynamite Comics
It’s provocative stuff.
Brisson isn’t going for anything too terribly complicated here.
It’s a kind of selflessness that rarely gets framed as cleverly as Pepose is managing here.
Brisson does a remarkable job of moving the action along.
Papose’s script concludes with a sense of urgency.
Conner and Palmiotti amp-up the intensity of a silliness.
Margaret’s emotional state is cleverly rendered for the page by Miracolo.
Overall, action is well-orchestrated on the page.
It may have been done before in the past, but it’s never been done like this.
More fun than it has any right to be.
Priest plays with a great deal of complexity.
Weisman moves the narrative along very quickly.
Shalvey renders a remarkably sharp distillation of the film franchise.
Brisson and Labosco make a case for an expansion whole franchise.
Sniegoski fuses a few different subgenres of horror together.
A pretty solid sword and sorcery mystery story.
And it’s not nearly as cool as it sounds.
it IS quite a bit of fun.
Strukan’s overall layout is quite good.
It’s trying to work on too many levels at once.