Wijngaard slams some very, very powerful moments into the page with some pretty overwhelming power.
Wijngaard slams some very, very powerful moments into the page with some pretty overwhelming power.
Strikingly well-rendered both conceptually and visually.
Jordan’s concept continues to hold a great deal of potential.
It's both silly and absurd, while also being very appealing as an action horror concept.
It’s quite engaging.
There is a considerable amount of poetry in the fantasy that Barbiere is binding to the page.
Remender he is working with an old war thriller cliché.
Edgar Rice Burroughs meets Rob Liefled meet on the comics page under the influence of a 1990s 1-on-1 fighting game.
Smith does a strikingly good job of framing a fantasy story.
The plot is appealingly irreverent.
Tynion and Bellaire keep the plot, moving in a couple of really tightly written scenes.
There isn’t a whole lot going on here, but that doesn’t mean that it isn’t fun.
Silvestri puts together a few scenes that are solidly entertaining.
Young’s script for the issue in question actually feels remarkably reserved.
A more or less perfect adaptation of the traditional Muppet script style.
A premise like this should have overstayed its welcome after … the first couple of pages.
It’s the type of thing that can be quite effective if used sparingly in the course of a long-running series.
Harns firmly establishes a basic mood and tone for the series in the first issue.
Sniegoski constructs a story that features some very clever and interesting supernatural, and theological aspects.
Wilson’s writing style glitters brilliant in a lightly comic adventure.