Castellucci is putting together smart, interesting stuff that details Batgirl’s distinctive style of selflessness.
Castellucci is putting together smart, interesting stuff that details Batgirl’s distinctive style of selflessness.
The cherry on top
The X-Men attack the Orchis Initiative.
The House Of El battles Rogol Zaar in the ruins of Krypton.
Clark Kent meets the new owner of the Daily Planet.
Mila comes face to face with the realities of her new life.
While Batman/Superman may be essential reading for those following the metastory of the DC Universe, it has some work to do to justify its own existence.
Dial H for HERO remains one of the most consistently entertaining titles DC has on the stands today.
Angel #4 is competently made, but feels slight and perfunctory.
The perpetually depressing Spider-Man: Life Story finally comes to a dour end.
Keeping the action within the Spider-family gives Absolute Carnage #2 tight focus and clear stakes.
A supernatural adventure which tilts the traditional ghost story on its head somewhere between Hell and everything else.
This is where Vampirella's story starts to get wild. Writer Christopher Priest, artist and colorist Ergün Gündüz, and letterer Willie Schubert take Vampirella on an adventure that can only be described as bizarre and bloody. Very bloody. What more would you expect from an alien vampire?
“I feel eager.. Alive… it’s like I’m twenty again.”
The X-Men of the future tackle Nimrod.
A promising series with LGBTQIA characters of color at the center of their own story.
The newest Installment of Excellence is simply BLACK MAGIC!
This may be 20 pages of very kinetic action, but there’s very, very deep drama driving it throughout.
McGuire's writing is particularly sharp in this debut issue of the new series.
The final panels are very heavy-handed in their delivery, but they strike a powerful endnote.