Goo's first outing with Moon is ridiculously fun.
All in Female Lead
Goo's first outing with Moon is ridiculously fun.
It’s a very tight fit for the creative team.
Zadie's story shows some potential.
Grace keeps the action moving swiftly.
Marco B. Bucci’s story has lost a bit of momentum.
V has a very stylish way through a very well-worn kind of mystery.
Pacheco does an outstanding job of balancing Jessica's life between two covers.
Delicate interpersonal drama is a nice contrast from the usual type of action.
Carol’s returned safely to her own time, and she saved many of her friends in the future. But after breaking up with Rhodey, she’s heartbroken.
March's art has a deeply detailed life about it.
Editors Brittany Holzherr and Jamie S. Rich have done a solidly respectable job of taking the title in a new direction
The contrast between aging mortal and ageless immortal hero is a clever one.
Bechko knows how much story can fit on the page.
There were a lot of threads to tie up at the end of this arc, and maybe there were too many. Because the emotional moments in Captain Marvel #26 felt rushed, and there wasn’t time for them to truly sink in.
The entire run of The Magnificent Ms. Marvel was a wonderful time filled with laughs, tears, and everything in between. It’s sad to see it end, but the creative team did a fantastic job of wrapping everything up in a way that felt natural and conclusive for this period of Kamala’s life.
MacKay and Villa work their own kind of magic.
Jacopo B. Camagni blends the fantastic with the realistic in a way that feels both beautiful and unnatural.
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.