Middlewest swings into a clever bit of momentum with this issue.
Middlewest swings into a clever bit of momentum with this issue.
The first arc of the smartest funny animal comedy around today makes an engagingly witty end in its sixth monthly installment.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man continues to be one of the most charming, most classically “superhero” books on the stands.
Meet the Skrulls #3 is one of the most visceral, pulse-pounding issues to come out of Marvel in quite a while, and makes a good break from big crossovers and their incessant tie-ins. Do not sleep on this sleeper hit.
Spider-Man: Life Story #2 is relentlessly grim.
Rob Liefeld crawls out of the 90s to bring a new character to Marvel’s Pantheon. Who is Major X?
Jeremy Whitley thoughtfully fuses genres in an endearingly unique chapter in the lives of the latest incarnation of The Wasp and her friends at Genius In action Research Labs.
A dialogue/caption-heavy issue that feels like it could have been framed better.
While the flashbacks do some work providing details about Apocalypse in the dystopian utopia of The Age of X-Man, they seem unnecessarily tacked-on to an issue that isn’t doing a whole heck of a lot else.
There are a few novel aspects to the issue that distinguish it as one of the better ones in the series thus far.
A sudden lurching together of an adventure that could have been much more sweeping and massive.
Overcomes a disjointed plot structure to maintain the intrigue.
Another thoroughly satisfying chapter in the life of hitman/A&R guy Martin Mills.
Wonder Twins continues to be a weird, misshapen highlight in DC’s current publishing line.
Logan ties up loose ends and prepares for the next stage of his journey.
Jon’s tale ends and gives Superman a new mission.