The comedy inherent in the Weekend at Vader’s situation is lightly hinted at.
The comedy inherent in the Weekend at Vader’s situation is lightly hinted at.
Jung looks at a city from many different angles.
Burnett and Dini still manage to find new inspiration for fresh stories after all these years.
The Unicorn Legacy is nothing if not cute.
Christopher Chaos makes a firm impact in his first appearance.
The aggression doesn’t come across nearly as badass as it should.
Starer’s humor works on a whole bunch of different levels.
Modern Christian paladins fighting demonic activity in a dark and brutal fantasy world.
There’s a serene silence about the art.
Maskerade is a more satisfying emotional journey than most superhuman medical horror manages.
Mignola and Roberson handle the story in a straight-ahead fashion.
“Azimuth” alone is well worth picking up this week’s issue.
Tynion falls into the traditional pitfalls of presenting a story of alien abduction.
Tynion has a way of twisting cliche until it confesses some kind of strange truth.
Cates and Stegman have reached the climax of this particular story arc.
Claretti’s manga-inspired art has a bouncy, rubbery energy.
Craig is laying out a hell of a lot.
Segovia shows some talent for pushing around the demonic muscle.
It lacks the kind of nuance that would elevate it.
Pires and White have a clear and definite idea of where they’re going with the story,