Denny looks compellingly pummeled and disheveled as events rush around him.
Denny looks compellingly pummeled and disheveled as events rush around him.
Young provides just enough room in all the drama for Corona to give the world of Middlewest its unique visual fantasy.
it’s doing what it’s doing with so much sharp energy that it scarcely matters that it’s all heading in an obvious direction.
Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen remains DC’s funniest title with issue #7.
He-Man and the Masters of the Multiverse #3 fails to reach the pulpy heights of the first two issues.
Legion of Super-Heroes #3 has gorgeous art, but it’s so jam-packed with plot that it becomes hard to follow.
The Question: The Deaths of Vic Sage #2 is a hidden gem.
Hellmouth #4 just slouches along with weak writing.
Second Coming #6 leaves the story unsettlingly up in the air.
The series gains momentum in a satisfying second issue.
An infiltration of a dystopian government facility doesn't live up to the intensity it should have had.
Ewing and Aaron give the cosmic end of the Marvel Universe a strikingly emotional core.
DC editorial should have known better than to publish Gotham City Monsters #5.
Dying is Easy #2 is a successful gamble for IDW Comics.
Once again, Buffy the Vampire Slayer continues to be an MVP title for Boom! Studios.
Ewing and company aren’t showing any signs of slowing down.
If you were worried Marvel wouldn’t have anything up their sleeve after Aaron left his Mjolnir-sized mark on this book, you can breathe a sigh of relief.
The Flash and Glider must convince the other Rogues to turn against Cold.
Clean and kinetic without too many loose ends.
Houser and company find something appealing in another hero-vs-hero story.