Sorrentino has a gift for bringing breathtakingly real visages,
Sorrentino has a gift for bringing breathtakingly real visages,
Burnett has a beautiful grasp of kinetic motion in action.
Zornow makes the visuals look cute without being overly cuddly.
Brown runs an encounter between Dejah Thoris and the Goolians.
Adams and company take a well-balanced approach to Hal and his life.
Kudrański is taking his time with the story.
Another well-rendered, well-modulated issue.
Barnes manages a very heartfelt iteration of the premise.
Wagner and Dabbs conjure a brilliantly expressive first issue.
Niimura’s graceful scribbles amplify the action beautifully.
Cady weaves the opening to the series with a tight, little ensemble of characters.
Writer Todd McFarlane does his...McFarlane thing…
it gets pretty weak a couple of pages after the opening.
Madureira picks up the series more or less where he left it 22 years ago.
Moreci cleverly mixes modern language and culture into a sword-and-sorcery fantasy adventure.
It’s a nice progression from the first to the fifth issues.
A political and intellectually rendered anti-hero.
It’s fun, though.
Some of the heaviest stuff on the comics rack today.
A great deal of time world-building with this issue.