Zdarsky isn’t working with anything that is terribly new.
Zdarsky isn’t working with anything that is terribly new.
Duggan is working on a tiny, little canvas that echoes through themes that go back to the dawn of storytelling.
Johns lays-out a very clear physical conflict between three men and a two-headed dog.
Casey opens the series on sort of a fun adventure.
Remender keeps the action rolling.
Bertram’s art builds a richly textured background.
Niles wraps-up the tale with a very brisk set of action-based pages.
Johnson and Englert do a brilliant job wit the art.
Johnson is working with a very large extended ensemble.
There really IS a kind of weighty reality that Priest is bringing to the page.
Some journeys don’t require words.
Higgins and Siegel lower in a hell of a lot of background.
This is a classic chase and hunt sort of a thing.
A fun skewing of some traditional superhero tropes.
McFarlane is working with a dozen different cliches.
Wijngaard’s work is brilliantly muted. Gillen’s script is cleverly concise.
Thompson has a sharp wit
Segovia has a lot of room to move around the action.
David Pepose takes a pulpy space action story and gives it the edge of more than a little bit of danger and menace.
Tynion is working with tropes that have been used pretty extensively before.