A very earthbound sense of life-or-death survival.
A very earthbound sense of life-or-death survival.
The furtive “plap” of a severed head.
Beacham could slide off into a direction of intolerable cliche.
Seems to actually kind of reach for something deeper than the silliness.
There's a lot of blasting and tumbling,
There’s a definite power to all of the talk of death and renewal.
There’s a primal, sweeping sense of action.
Burnett knows how to frame a heroic adventure.
Deibert makes the tour of the museum the entire substance of the story.
Just over half of the issue is an interrogation in Purgatory.
Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
Avallone has more than a few genuinely funny moments here and there.
Brown isn't quite pacing things right.
Bendis’s dialogue isn’t poetically brutal so much as it is...terse.
The title character serves as more of a sidekick
It’s a fun opening to a fast-paced action drama.
Something a lot darker than your standard Disney movie.
The action smears itself across the page like a thick mucus.
Simonson deftly captures the rhythm and style of late 1960s’ Kirby and Lee.
Marz’s 1990s Marvel Universe continues to feel exceedingly comfortable.