Anthony Ray Bench Comic Reviews

8.5
Reviewer For: FanboyNation
Reviews: 8
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4 Kids Walk Into a Bank #2 is a fantastic issue for what's lining up to be a brilliant series. The characters are enjoyable, the story is fun, intriguing, and suspenseful, and it has a very wonderful sense of nostalgia without feeling stale and played out. Check this book out, I doubt anyone would be disappointed.


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Ultimately, I will miss this series; it's even more frustrating that this final issue ends on a bit of a cliffhanger as to what's happening with the main character. I highly recommend this series to anyone with a passion for mythology and very old fairy tales, because the stories are interesting with a perfect blend of the foreign and the familiar, and the art is magnificent. Definitively give this series and read, and I hope we can see more in this genre from Jorge Corona.


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There's some great stuff here for young readers and parents of young kids, but not much for anybody else; still, Fwendly Fwuit Winter Wonders has a fantastic art style that's aesthetically pleasing and adorable. I'd recommend it as a gateway comic book for the kindergarten crowd, and I think it'd have great success if it took a more educational approach.


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Despite a few missteps, Geeks & Greeks is an absolutely entertaining book that gives readers a look into the MIT hacking culture. It's a devilishly smart book with hilarious pop culture references blended with interesting scientific terminology that explodes into one amazing book. Give it a read!


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Hockey Karma is a great book for hockey fans, but it certainly won't alienate people who aren't. Reading it definitely made me want to go back and check out the other books in the series, but people jumping into the last entry in Howard Shapiro's trilogy like I did might be lost on a few things. Andres Mossa nails the art and we're treated to some visually exciting hockey action. In my opinion, the love story needed a better pay off, but overall this book is one I'd definitely recommend.


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Sliced Quarterly #5 continues to bring its readers exemplary slices of life in comic book form. This one is a bit more enjoyable than its previous entry, and it offers a lot of unique art styles and voices that will surely entertain and enlighten. Definitely check it out, it's free, so there's really no reason not to. Sliced Quarterly continues to impress me, and I urge those reading this to give it a look!


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This issue had action and cool fight scenes, but it's mired by the "Rita Repulsa is in Tommy Oliver's head" stuff. We need to have a better reason for Tommy to be an outsider if that's where we're heading with this story, because the Rita thing isn't working, in my opinion. The art is wonderful, and the writing has improved quite a bit; I'm judging it less based on my fandom for the 90's show, I promise. I've accepted that it's meant to stand on its own, and I've accepted that. There's some vast potential in the series, you see so much of it in this issue, and hopefully in the next one we'll see more.


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As I stated in my review for Mighty Morphin Power Rangers #0, I'm a big fan of the various series but I wasn't very impressed with the book so far and unfortunately this issue didn't change my mind.


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Reviews for the Week of...

February

18 17 11 4

January

28 21 14