|
|
1872 #2 |
Aug 20, 2015
show
|
|
It's been awhile since Marvel had a good western book, but boy does this scratch that itch.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
4 Kids Walk Into A Bank #2 |
Jun 30, 2016
show
|
|
4 Kids Walk Into a Bank is an exciting new book, that feels like it has limitless potential going forward.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
4001 A.D. |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
4001 A.D. #1
May 5, 2016
|
|
The action here is breathtaking, and the closing pages are grand in their scope. There isn't anything particularly "special" about this first issue. It's simply fun, superhero event storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
4001 A.D. #2
June 2, 2016
|
|
It gives this whole issue a feel as hollow as its villain, focusing on the wonderful mech designs and explosions, while losing sight of the characters at the center of the conflict.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
A-Force #4 |
Sep 10, 2015
show
|
|
A-Force is hitting a roadblock that a lot of Secret Wars titles seem to be hitting in their home stretch " we've gotten enough time with the characters to care about them on a surface level, but not enough to fully invest, especially with a cast this big.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
A&A: The Adventures of Archer and Armstrong #5 |
Jul 21, 2016
show
|
|
A&A #5 is probably the sweetest, cutest book you'll read this week regardless of whether or not you've ever even read a Valiant comic before.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Action Comics (2011) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Action Comics #42
July 2, 2015
|
|
Action Comics #42 draws on recent confrontations between citizens and police for a standoff on behalf of the Man of Steel. But, it's a parallel that just doesn't work as used in this issue. The out of sequence storytelling of the Truth arc hasn't bothered me so far, but with this issue I finally feel like I'm missing part of the puzzle.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Action Comics #45
October 8, 2015
|
|
Greg Pak's Action Comics pre-identity reveal had been some of the best character work on a Superman title in years, but a feeling of repetitious storytelling post-reveal is starting to diminish a once great book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Action Comics #48
January 7, 2016
|
|
This issue contains plenty of the same problems that have been present over the last six months of this title, but it also manages to tell a simple battle story in a vibrant and sweeping style that is perfectly befitting of ideal Superman stories.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Action Comics (2016) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Action Comics #958
June 23, 2016
|
|
Action Comics #958 is an exercise in non-stop, superheroic storytelling. This issue doesn't give you a second to catch your breath, as all of the various mysteries and threads from the first issue converge in one giant thrill ride.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Action Comics #960
July 28, 2016
|
|
. Hopefully this arc can finish as well as it started, but this middle issue feels like it was thrown together just to stretch out the arc.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Age of Apocalypse (2015) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Age of Apocalypse #1
July 8, 2015
|
|
Age of Apocalypse lives up to its original namesake and has plenty new to say on the event. Fans of the '90s event will find this series true to the original while adding in plenty of twists and turns. Newbies should be pulled in by the web of intrigue surrounding such heavy hitters as Apocalypse, Sinister, and Magneto.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Age of Apocalypse #4
September 17, 2015
|
|
The plot reaches its climax here and despite the slight disappointment on art, the story is strong enough to make it through as another satisfying issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. #6
June 9, 2016
|
|
The Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. comic book has both failed to make its cast very interesting in their own rights, and to make that cast sound or act anything like the TV show it's based on. So, how do you fix a problem like a bland cast? Easy, fill it with guest stars.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
All-New All-Different Avengers |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
All-New Hawkeye #3 |
Jan 14, 2016
show
|
|
The flashbacks were some of the least compelling parts of the last volume of this series, and the flash-forwards now are proving to be even worse - both because you know they are essentially meaningless and will be wiped away in no time, and because Ramon Perez's style in those jumps lacks the wow-factor of his usual art.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
All-New X-Men #41 |
Jun 04, 2015
show
|
|
As any other issue of the series, it's good. As a finale, it's a bit unsatisfying.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
All-New X-Men (2015) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
All-New X-Men #3
January 14, 2016
|
|
Hopeless and Bagley have shown a strong sense of story, character, and purpose in their first two issues so hopefully this issue is just a growing pain.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All-New X-Men #4
February 11, 2016
|
|
If you can get on board with Laura's attitude, you'll find an interesting and fair portrayal of a possibly-doomed relationship. This is the kind of melodrama that, when done well (and it's done very well here), is the cornerstone of any good X-Men run.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All-New X-Men #5
February 25, 2016
|
|
Hopeless gets this team overall and has an enthralling take on these youngsters, there are just some unfortunate shortcuts still being taken.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
All-New X-Men #11
July 14, 2016
|
|
There's a sense of inevitability to all the events that occur in this finale, and it's not even a "tragic" or "beautiful" kind of inevitable but a more or less boring one.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Amazing Spider-Man (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Ant-Man (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Aquaman (2011) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Aquaman #42
July 23, 2015
|
|
There are more layers to Bunn's story than there initially appeared to be. That being said, the constant shifting between time periods gets to be a little hectic and the twists and turns are happening too fast.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Aquaman (2016) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Aquaman #2
July 7, 2016
|
|
The "new" that this story promises will largely have to wait for the future, but this is still a fun issue in itself and is promising for the series overall.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Aquaman #4
August 4, 2016
|
|
Dan Abnett's core idea for the book continues to be enough to propel this book, but it's starting to suffer from story slowdown and artistic problems.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Archie #9 |
Jun 23, 2016
show
|
|
This is still 100% an Archie book, even while feeling like something entirely new.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Armor Wars |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Armor Wars #2
June 18, 2015
|
|
Armor Wars #2 gives more of an emphasis to character, while still maintaining some of the more problematic aspects of the first issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Armor Wars #5
September 17, 2015
|
|
This has been the biggest problem with Armor Wars from its beginning, James Robinson's overuse of narration and exposition. None of the plot twists wind up being shocking, the biggest one being fairly obvious and disappointing, and the amount of time spent on the exposition makes for an uninteresting finale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Astonishing Ant-Man |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Astonishing Ant-Man #2
November 19, 2015
|
|
It's a bit too jokey at times, and the plot seems to slightly get away from the creators at times, but this is a fun issue that sets up some future fun and should be read by anyone wanting one last glimpse of that incarnation of the FF.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing Ant-Man #4
January 21, 2016
|
|
Marvel and DC have been doing a great job over the last several years of reinventing their comics in humorous and fun ways. That effort has been greatly appreciated and has led to some of the best stories in recent years. But there's also a point where that goes too far. Astonishing Ant-Man #4 is that point, an issue that just tries to be too cutesy, and then spirals out of control from there.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing Ant-Man #7
April 21, 2016
|
|
Nick Spencer and Ramon Rosanas' Ant-Man series was already great, but it has been getting even better in recent months by adding Cassie Lang as a main player in the story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astonishing Ant-Man #10
July 21, 2016
|
|
Remember all the fun you had reading last issue's goofy Ocean Eleven antics? Well, hopefully you don't, because that will make this issue much more refreshing as it is essentially that same issue over again but with some minor tweaks.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Astro City (2013) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Astro City #25
July 16, 2015
|
|
Merino's style is a subdued one that fits the down-to-earth story. It's always weird when Brent Anderson doesn't do an issue, but Merino nails the one-shot story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astro City #27
September 24, 2015
|
|
Astro City has been on a roll of strong, character-focused work as Kurt Busiek and his guest artists have been telling one-shot origins or spotlight issues for the various heroes of this universe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astro City #31
January 21, 2016
|
|
Astro City deserves so much credit for all the original ideas it brings to superhero comics, this just isn't one of them.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Astro City #32
February 18, 2016
|
|
Spend just five minutes in Astro City and Kurt Busiek will having you lamenting the constant reboots of current superheroes and pining for the days of old. Astro City is a world where history has been allowed to fully play out, heroes have been able to grow and age and change.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Axcend #1 |
Oct 08, 2015
show
|
|
Shane Davis is up there with some of the industry's biggest guns in terms of his art, as evidenced by the weight and grandiosity he lends to both simple character drama and over-the-top action.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Bat-Mite |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Bat-Mite #2
July 2, 2015
|
|
After successfully making Batman cool, Bat-Mite has made it his mission to improve the other heroes of the DC Universe. And if there's one hero who is in need of a major image overhaul, it's Hawkman. Dan Jurgens ably juggles poking fun at the past incarnations of the hero while also telling a fun, old-school brain swap tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Batgirl (2011) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Batgirl Annual #3
July 30, 2015
|
|
Bengal draws the main part of the story, an almost-reunion between Barbara and Dick. That story is fun and works well, but the issue starts to fall apart once Batgirl teams up with other Bat-characters in the other parts of the story. Instead of feeling like a consistent plot, it just starts to feel like an advertisement for DC's other Gotham books.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batgirl #41
June 24, 2015
|
|
Babs Tarr is getting better with every single issue. The whole Batgirl experience is awesome, but the art is the star by a mile. Now, can you please get Robot Batman out of my Batgirl comic?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batgirl #49
March 3, 2016
|
|
DC has had a problem in recent months of throwing too many artists at a book in order for that issue to make a deadline. Batgirl #49 uses no less than 6 artists to tell this regular-sized story, and yet, the series doesn't miss a beat for it. In fact, it's possibly better because of it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batgirl #52
May 26, 2016
|
|
We'll miss this run of Batgirl and hope the book will be able to keep up this artistic consistency post-Rebirth.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Batman / Superman (2013) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #21
June 11, 2015
|
|
Greg Pak continues his superb characterization of a depowered Superman in Batman/Superman #21. But what's marked Pak's run across this title and Action Comics as something special is how well he integrates all of Clark Kent's supporting cast into the titles.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #25
October 15, 2015
|
|
None of the Superman titles have done much to differentiate themselves in meaningful ways, other than artistically, and Cliff Richards's style is too cold and clinical to make this title noteworthy
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #26
November 12, 2015
|
|
This issue of Batman/Superman focuses entirely on the build up to a fight with Vandal Savage, as the heroes methodically plan every move. That may not sound interesting, but it is due to the quality of dialogue and smattering of character moments throughout.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #27
December 10, 2015
|
|
Ultimately, the story winds up as a bit of a jumbled and rushed mess paired with some muddy action art, but there's just enough there to remind you of what a strong voice Pak gave to this duo.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #28
January 14, 2016
|
|
Taylor doesn't take any real chances at his first swing on the characters, but in doing so he still manages to tell a solid and engaging team-up tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Batman / Superman #32
May 5, 2016
|
|
This story has such a frustratingly rigid structure that you can guess the entire outcome of the book by taking the story of the last four issues and then applying the characters on this issue's cover to that formula
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Batman And Robin Eternal #2 |
Oct 15, 2015
show
|
|
It's fun to see all of these various Bat-characters together, some of whom we haven't seen interact in years (or in some cases, ever). The focused in narrative is beneficial for that reason, though it could still use some more tightening " specifically the flashbacks, which so far play out no differently than any past encounter we've ever seen with the Scarecrow making them feel like a waste of pages.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Birthright #8 |
Jun 11, 2015
show
|
|
An overly cartoony FBI-agent aside, this is another solid issue. The chess pieces are coming together and once they do, the book should make the leap from "solid" back to "great" again.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Bitch Planet |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Bitch Planet #5
September 10, 2015
|
|
Bitch Planet is ruthless. Not just the jail or the characters who surround it, but the actual book itself. The art of Bitch Planet is ruthless - the action of the book is fast and furious and unrelenting, the sport of Megaton is rendered with both dynamic skill and cruel violence.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Bitch Planet #7
February 18, 2016
|
|
As always, Bitch Planet mixes your anger and heartbreak in provocative ways, but this issue also manages to have the sweetest and kindest moment yet for the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Canary (2015) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Black Canary #7
January 28, 2016
|
|
Wu should be commended for a great execution in this issue, but if a few pages had managed to convey sound even better, it may have been something more than "just" a great comic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Canary #11
April 28, 2016
|
|
Unlike some other DC books that are seemingly just spinning their wheels until Rebirth comes along, Brenden Fletcher is using these final months to catapult Black Canary through an epic story exploring the hero's past and a mystery involving her mother.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Canary #12
June 9, 2016
|
|
For a book so defined by fun and hope, this is one bleak and depressing issue. Fans of this series will find a very unsettling tone as this story goes on, as we see the entirety of Dinah Lance's life to come pass in a very soulless fashion.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Jack Ketchum #1 |
Dec 03, 2015
show
|
|
It's a rough series to judge as it feels like we've just barely scratched the surface of what it actually is, but it's certainly attention grabbing enough to bring you back for a second issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Magick |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Black Magick #4
January 28, 2016
|
|
Strip away everything about Black Magick that truly makes it unique - strip away the magic, strip away the brilliant color technique and flourishes - and what do you have left? Well, what you're left with is Greg Rucka and Nicola Scott doing what they do so well in the most compelling possible way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Black Magick #5
February 25, 2016
|
|
Black Magick's first arc comes to an end with this issue, and makes it pretty clear that this storyline has just been the tip of the iceberg. That's nice in some ways, maybe a slightly frustrating in others.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Science |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Black Science #16
July 9, 2015
|
|
Black Science #16 is the last issue of the book's third volume, but more than that, this extra-sized issue feels like a season finale " bringing all of the dangling threads and character drama to a head.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Black Widow #20 |
Jul 30, 2015
show
|
|
What Nathan Edmondson does with the Black Widow series finale is the exact opposite (but equally brilliant) to what he did with his Punisher finale last week. Where Punisher was all about going out with a bang, Black Widow shows how the gun was loaded.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Bucky Barnes: The Winter Soldier #10 |
Aug 06, 2015
show
|
|
The series has possibly reached its peak of abstractness and weirdness and the art is right there along with it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 10 |
11 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Captain America And The Mighty Avengers #9 |
Jun 11, 2015
show
|
|
Captain America and the Mighty Avengers #9 is beautiful, life-affirming, hopeful, and inspiring. In other words, it's everything a superhero comic should aspire to be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Captain America: Sam Wilson |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Captain America: Sam Wilson #1
October 15, 2015
|
|
The book also occasionally dips into stereotyping as a means of brevity in this packed issue. These problems are perhaps excusable at this point, especially when considering how good the issue as a whole is, but they are problems that have the potential to explode this promising book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Captain America: Sam Wilson #3
November 19, 2015
|
|
The tone Nick Spencer established in his first two issues of this series was of an inspirational, political hero with a sense of humor, but in this issue every little thing is simplified into just a gag or one-liner.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Captain America: Sam Wilson #8
April 21, 2016
|
|
This issue constantly shifts scenes, hardly managing to devote three pages as at a time to a situation. Yet, the book's pace still crawls with a snails pace because those scenes are all so overly wordy and ultimately don't accomplish much.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Captain America: Sam Wilson #9
May 5, 2016
|
|
Overall, this would be a fantastic issue if not for the art. Angel Unzueta's digital approach is simply too stiff, too rubbery - and the muddy colors don't do this lively script any favors either. But if you can look past the artistic flaws, this is a promising story direction for a book that's suddenly in a pivotal "do or die" scenario with Steve Rogers back.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Captain America: White #3 |
Oct 15, 2015
show
|
|
Where last issue slowed down the pace of the series, this issue rockets the plot forward to some interesting and surprising places.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Captain Britain and the Mighty Defenders #1 |
Jul 16, 2015
show
|
|
|
|
|
Captain Marvel #7 |
Jul 28, 2016
show
|
|
This issue spends too much time trying to explain something that no longer needs explaining.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Catwoman (2011) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Catwoman #43
August 13, 2015
|
|
Overall, most of the various plots felt a little bit cheated for space by all the other plots " but not enough of a good thing is a pretty good problem to have.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Catwoman #46
November 12, 2015
|
|
Catwoman #46 marks the end of Genevieve Valentine's run on Catwoman. The run has been one of the better ones on Catwoman in years so it's a shame to see it go, and even more of a shame that it ends on an underwhelming issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Catwoman #47
December 10, 2015
|
|
There's little good to be found in this issue that has nothing original to say, fair superhero art, and a general lack of forward momentum.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Chew (2009) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Chew #49
May 27, 2015
|
|
More probably could have been accomplished in the penultimate chapter of this story arc, but this timeout to focus on the sillier bits of Chew is welcome with such a big confrontation coming up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Chew #50
July 2, 2015
|
|
Chew has featured numerous battle scenes through its history, but perhaps none so traditionally like a superhero comic book as this one. This is, in every way, our hero coming face-to-face in one climatic battle with his arch nemesis.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Chew #51
October 29, 2015
|
|
The series is as silly as ever but you get the feeling that as the creators approach the end, they're getting a little sentimental.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Chew #55
February 25, 2016
|
|
Sure, some of this may be a bit indulgent, but it's actually earned, and it's very entertaining.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Citizen Jack |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Citizen Jack #4
February 18, 2016
|
|
The creators have made an enjoyable romp of a book, but it's also a book that's already beginning to grow stale and predictable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Civil War (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Civil War #1
July 8, 2015
|
|
Charles Soule and Leinil Yu tell an emotional and intriguing war story but only if you can suspend so much belief. Inconsistencies and vast jumps in logic hurt the story whether or not you care that it undermines the original comic series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Civil War #3
August 27, 2015
|
|
The events of Civil War #3 are just too dark and morbid. The deaths, the gruesome transformations, the coldhearted attitudes " it's relentless. It all just winds up being too much, and with unrecognizable and unappealing versions of some of Marvel's best characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Civil War II: Gods of War #1 |
Jun 09, 2016
show
|
|
This story is such a jumble, as it seems intent on bringing in new readers who didn't already read that previous Dan Abnett Hercules story but it also overly relies on your prior knowledge of the cast of that book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Civil War II: Kingpin #2 |
Aug 04, 2016
show
|
|
It's hard to argue that Civil War II: Kingpin amounts to much more than crime movie formula thrown into the world of superheroes. It's also hard to argue that that's a bad thing when it's done this well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Constantine: The Hellblazer |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
Constantine: The Hellblazer #5
October 15, 2015
|
|
For all that Constantine has done right before this, the first arc's conclusion can't help but feeling a little"off. Most of those defining characteristics are still present in this finale, there just isn't the sense of urgency or impact that this conclusion should have.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Constantine: The Hellblazer #9
February 11, 2016
|
|
This isn't the first time John Constantine has had to escape from Hell, nor is it nearly as memorable as that first time around, but it's fun to see a contemporary twist on something that was done a few decades ago.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Contest Of Champions #1 |
Oct 08, 2015
show
|
|
His characterization of the "British Punisher" being a prime example of how the talented writer can make most scenarios relatable. But the novelty of throwing characters from different series together has more than worn off at this point.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Convergence: Detective Comics #2 |
May 28, 2015
show
|
|
The first issue was really interesting, especially from the Red Son Superman perspective as we saw how he struggled to maintain order in his country without his superpowers. None of that is present in the final issue " it's a silly fight, with over-expository language, a hackneyed lesson learned, a predictable ending, and characters who even acknowledge to the reader how out-of-character they're acting.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Convergence: Justice Society Of America #2 |
May 28, 2015
show
|
|
A lot of that pathos is thrown out the window in this brawl issue as the JSA are offered one last chance at their youth. It's half an issue's worth of fist-pumps as the JSA are given an action-packed farewell.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Copperhead #9 |
Jul 30, 2015
show
|
|
It's a bit of a slower issue, but it showcases what the book can do with its two sides.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Cyborg |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Cyborg #3
October 8, 2015
|
|
After putting in the work to humanize Vic Stone over the last two issues, David Walker opts for a more action heavy issue this time around - it's fun, but it's also a quicker read than previous issues with less to chew on.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Cyborg #5
December 3, 2015
|
|
Cyborg has been a fun series so far with great potential in the future, but this issue feels like a wasted opportunity.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Cyborg #9
March 24, 2016
|
|
Cyborg #9 is all about the passing of proposed regulations and discussion of cybernetic theory, yet somehow, it's an issue that never feels bland.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Daredevil (2014) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Daredevil #17
July 30, 2015
|
|
It's another brilliant job of intricate, twisting plotting by Waid and dynamic, expressive action from Samnee. In other words, it's another issue of Waid and Samnee's Daredevil.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Daredevil (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Daredevil #3
January 28, 2016
|
|
In the first two issues, the creators put a big emphasis on making Daredevil feel new again. They introduced a new villain in Tenfingers, gave Matt a brand new job as a prosecutor, and even gave the book a fresh new visual look. It's only the third issue, but suddenly those changes aren't quite feeling new enough.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Daredevil #8
June 9, 2016
|
|
Charles Soule's premise of Matt being unable to read the cards, but rather his fellow players is really clever. Unfortunately, it makes for an underwhelming visual experience, and there's a struggle to pace out the story over the whole issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Deadly Class |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Deadly Class #20
April 14, 2016
|
|
It's cliche at this point to talk about how much of himself Remender seems to put in these plots, but it can't be avoided because of how brutally honest this all feels. This is maybe the most emotionally-complex issue yet, and that allows Craig to show off in more ways than usual.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Deadpool (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Deadpool #8
March 3, 2016
|
|
This issue has all of the over-the-top action you might want after experiencing the high of that movie, but just doesn't deliver on the comedy in the way that Gerry Duggan is capable of giving us.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Deathstroke (2014) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Deathstroke Annual #1
July 30, 2015
|
|
Deathstroke Annual #1 isn't the god-slaying confrontation you might have hoped it would be. In fact, Deathstroke doesn't even get a chance to face the evil he has unleashed. Instead, this is yet another dream-like issue that DC has done so many times in the past where our heroes have to face their greatest fears.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Deathstroke #7
June 25, 2015
|
|
With this current opportunity to start fresh on the book, it's a bummer to see that Tony Daniel and James Bonny fail to address any of the shortcomings of previous issues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Deathstroke #11
October 29, 2015
|
|
The biggest recurring problem with Deathstroke throughout the course of its series has been that the promising concepts get squandered in their execution
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Descender #5 |
Jul 09, 2015
show
|
|
Let's give Dustin Nguyen some more credit, because he deserves all that we can give him. The amount of world building that Lemire and Nguyen have been able to accomplish together in such a short time is amazing, but especially on Nguyen's side.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Detective Comics (2011) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Detective Comics #42
July 2, 2015
|
|
Too many characters have unclear motivations at this point in the series. It's meant to be compelling but just winds up being yet another frustration in this book that could be and should be better than it is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Detective Comics (2016) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Detective Comics #935
June 23, 2016
|
|
This run of Detective Comics is tapping into that Bat-Family feel of the '90s and early 2000s - the feeling that each individual Bat-character actually mattered.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Devolution |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Devolution #2
February 18, 2016
|
|
Remender is playing with some smart ideas here, but he is executing them better in the somewhat ideologically similar Tokyo Ghost.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Doctor Fate (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Doctor Fate #1
June 17, 2015
|
|
The comic has its share of familiar trappings, but the differences are big enough, and the story told well enough, that it's hardly a problem. One bit of advice though " the free 8-page digital Sneak Peek of this issue is a necessary prologue. With that in mind, this is a new book worth supporting.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Doctor Fate #4
September 17, 2015
|
|
Despite generally being a lithe and charming monthly read, Doctor Fate has struggled a bit with its archetypal storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Doctor Fate #6
November 19, 2015
|
|
This chapter's pacing is awkward at its best, and baffling at its worst. Worse, the uninteresting cliffhanger leaves little reason to come back for another month of this story that feels like it has already gone on too long.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Doctor Strange (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Doctor Strange #3
December 3, 2015
|
|
This run is proving to be a highly entertaining take on a character who is tough for most creators to grasp, but this particular issue just proved to be a bit too repetitive.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
E Is For Extinction (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
E Is For Extinction #2
July 23, 2015
|
|
As beautiful as the art is, and as much as I appreciate the nods to one of my favorite eras, this title doesn't offer much of anything new -- something that isn't helped by poorly flowing dialogue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
E Is For Extinction #3
August 27, 2015
|
|
This series probably won't work for you at all if you've never read the initial run, and even if you have it still won't work entirely, but it is an achievement of ambition and zaniness if nothing else.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
E Is For Extinction #4
October 1, 2015
|
|
Chris Burnham, Dennis Culver, and Ramon Villalobos's madcap homage to Grant Morrison's New X-Men comes to a conclusion with this issue, and one can't help but marvel at everything those creators were able to pack into four issues.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Extraordinary X-Men |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Extraordinary X-Men #3
December 3, 2015
|
|
Jeff Lemire is a nuanced, powerful writer so it's hard to be believe that this book will continue to flounder for long, but for now it's hard to grasp what this book's goal is.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Extraordinary X-Men #11
June 30, 2016
|
|
In many ways, this is yet another setup issue, putting all of the chess pieces in their place before the finale - but it's more or less satisfying in doing that.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Flash (2011) |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Flash #41
June 25, 2015
|
|
This slightly new direction of The Flash is a mixed bag. Brett Booth remains a great choice on art, his exaggerated style partnering so well with Andrew Dalhouse's bold and vibrant colors. The action is electric. On the other hand, the script feels like it's trying to emulate the CW television show, but only repeating the most tedious bits of it (do we really need another scene of Barry promising his father justice and freedom?) while leaving out the compelling side characters that make CW's The Flash so successful.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #44
September 24, 2015
|
|
Remember Spider-Totems from Amazing Spider-Man? If you liked those, you're going to love this storyline of The Flash! Ok, it's not that bad yet, but it's disappointing that just as this series was finally making a few minor strides forward, it takes one giant leap back with "the lightning chose us".
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #45
October 29, 2015
|
|
The only thing that makes The Flash comic book series more disappointing is comparing it to how great the television series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #48
February 11, 2016
|
|
This chapter doesn't mark any kind of substantial turnaround for the series, but it's a start in a nice direction.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #49
February 25, 2016
|
|
Pitting the police-supported Rogues against a wanted Flash has created the most fun and compelling writing this book has seen in a few years. Unfortunately, some misguided decisions mid-way through this issue might ruin that and make this book unreadable for some.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #51
May 5, 2016
|
|
Flash/Riddler should be an automatically interesting fight, as long as The Riddler's plot is clever enough. The problem with this story is that the execution isn't nearly as good as the concept, there's nothing clever about Riddler's plot here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Flash #52
May 26, 2016
|
|
The problem with this issue, just as with the last issue, is that Van Jensen simply doesn't write a clever or cunning enough plan for The Riddler.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Four Eyes: Hearts of Fire #1 |
Jan 07, 2016
show
|
|
This is a fantastic read, though to get the real weight of the book you probably need to start with the first series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Future Imperfect #1 |
Jun 04, 2015
show
|
|
Future Imperfect #1 offers a nice bit of alternative reading from the typical Secret Wars tie-in. Just like most of the other tie-ins, this issue focuses on a dystopic world, a cruel leader, and the rebellion. But in Future Imperfect's case, we at least get the other point-of-view.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Future Quest #2 |
Jul 07, 2016
show
|
|
Future Quest is Crisis on Infinite Earths for the Hanna Barbera Universe. This is a comic book that mashes together piles and piles of otherwise unrelated characters, revels in the chaos, and is not afraid to be exactly what it wants to be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Ghost Racers (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Ghost Racers #3
August 13, 2015
|
|
The Ghost Racers miniseries plays as a finale to the run Felipe Smith had with his new character and the cliffhanger promises a fitting end.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Giant Days |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Giant-Size Little Marvel AVX #2 |
Jul 02, 2015
show
|
|
It's worth the purchase for the art alone, but it feels like a cover's worth of humor has been stretched over 20 pages.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Gotham Academy (2014) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Gotham Academy #13
December 10, 2015
|
|
It's impressive when a newer series can tie in to an event without losing any sense of its own identity, and that's exactly what Brenden Fletcher is able to accomplish in this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Gotham Academy #16
March 10, 2016
|
|
This short burst, anthology storytelling almost works better for the book overall than the multi-issue arcs. Hopefully this is something they'll keep in mind heading into the book's next semester.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Gotham Academy #17
April 14, 2016
|
|
Gotham Academy was born to be an anthology title. Sure, the series had been great before this, but never as consistently enjoyable as it has been with this arc.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Gotham By Midnight |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Gotham By Midnight #6
June 25, 2015
|
|
The tone of Gotham by Midnight is perfect for anyone missing the days of Vertigo's prominence or mourning the recent cancellation of NBC's Constantine.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Gotham By Midnight #7
July 23, 2015
|
|
Juan Ferreyra is making himself into a star artist on Gotham by Midnight. The smooth, clean lines he uses to illustrate his characters and backgrounds are one thing, but his eerie, water color-like coloring is something else entirely.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Grayson |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Grayson #16
January 28, 2016
|
|
With Grayson #16, the comic jumps from being a funny superhero book to DC's answer to Archer. This is easily the goofiest issue of Grayson yet: the dialogue is quippier than ever, there are now 100% more cutaway gags, and there's even an extended Bond theme song inspired musical section.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Arrow (2011) |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Green Arrow Annual #1
October 8, 2015
|
|
Benjamin Percy has taken a really unique tone on his Green Arrow run. The socially conscious commentary is still there, along with some of the usual crime and superhero stuff, but most interestingly he's infused the whole thing with a horror vibe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #42
July 2, 2015
|
|
Green Arrow #42 is such a drastic swerve from last issue that it's hard to reconcile what works and what doesn't. The horror vibe from last month's issue is replaced by some Big Brother paranoia and UFO shaped crime-stopping robots.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #43
August 13, 2015
|
|
Benjamin Percy and Patrick Zircher created such a fascinating mood and atmosphere over this three issue arc that it almost feels like a waste to have it all end so quickly.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #44
September 3, 2015
|
|
It's an unusual story, and regardless of how jarring you may or may not find the transition, it's not a particularly well told story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #45
October 8, 2015
|
|
Green Arrow #45 is a bit of a mess, but even the messes in Benjamin Percy's run have been mesmerizing thanks to his enigmatic storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #48
January 7, 2016
|
|
So much of the story is silly (made even sillier without the context of October's Green Arrow Annual #1), but it almost works due to Percy's poetic narrative style and his sheer ambition and determination.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Arrow #49
February 4, 2016
|
|
Hopefully Percy has more up his sleeve for next month's big issue 50, because this chapter failed on all levels to live up to the recent standards of this book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Arrow #3 |
Jul 21, 2016
show
|
|
The story is moving along nicely, and Ferreyra is almost equally as breathtaking as Schmidt - but the editorial choice in artistic change draws too much attention to itself and makes the overall product weaker on both sides of the art change.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Lantern (2011) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Green Lantern #44
September 3, 2015
|
|
It's a fun issue, though the fight winds up ending a bit too quickly and easily. The more glaring problem with the issue comes from the split art duties.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Lantern #47
December 3, 2015
|
|
Robert Venditti has done some great cast work over the course of a really good Green Lantern run, but this whole issue just fell completely flat
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Green Lantern #49
February 4, 2016
|
|
Martin Coccolo's sleek art gives the book points for a solid fill-in artist, but otherwise this issue does more harm for the series than good.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Lantern Corps: Edge of Oblivion #4 |
Apr 14, 2016
show
|
|
It's of course disappointing that Ethan Van Sciver couldn't finish this series, but as gifted a talent as Van Sciver is, Ardian Syaf drawing over Aaron Kuder's layouts is an impressive sight to see. This issue is still strong, despite losing one of DC's best creators.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Green Lanterns |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Green Lanterns #1
June 16, 2016
|
|
It's refreshing seeing two rookies playing at being superhero, without all the usual baggage (Jessica basically shrugs off the Emotional Spectrum in the book's first page). Their dynamic is entertaining too, mirroring any antagonistic (but probably, eventually buddy) partner relationship you've seen in movies like Rush Hour.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Groot |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Groot #3
August 6, 2015
|
|
Once again, Jeff Loveness is able to write a chapter of Groot that is simultaneously humorous and fun, but also a little too light.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Groot #4
September 3, 2015
|
|
For all intents and purposes, Groot is a comedy. Jeff Loveness peppers the book with a steady stream of one-liners and silly situations while Brian Kesinger animates the book with a lively and light-hearted tone.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Guardians of the Galaxy #27 |
May 21, 2015
show
|
|
The story in this issue could have used more space to develop. This feels less like a typical one-in-done story and more like an arc that had to be condensed in time for Secret Wars.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Guardians of the Galaxy (2015) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Guardians of the Galaxy #4
January 14, 2016
|
|
Guardians of the Galaxy is one series that so closely follows what came before it, that the emotional stakes are almost impenetrable for anyone who didn't read (or hasn't forgotten much of) the previous volume.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Guardians of the Galaxy #9
June 9, 2016
|
|
Obfuscation can be a compelling tool to use when telling a story, but after four straight pages of Drax just mindlessly yelling, "Where is she?" and punching things - the readers could really use some idea of the stakes of the mission.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Hail Hydra (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Hail Hydra #1
July 16, 2015
|
|
Overall though, it's a fun story that fits right in Remender's wheelhouse if you want to say goodbye to his Marvel work.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Hank Johnson, Agent of Hydra #1 |
Aug 27, 2015
show
|
|
|
|
|
Hercules (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Hercules #1
November 5, 2015
|
|
Hercules seems like a strange series to launch amidst so many Avengers and X-Men premiere issues. But don't let the hero's C-list status keep you away from this book in favor of those bigger hitters " Hercules is a fun and well written book that finds a few ways to stand out in the current tidal wave of "fun and light" comics.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Hercules #2
December 9, 2015
|
|
Despite its heart this book is in major need of a compelling antagonist, the fights against nameless creatures can only last so long.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Heroes: Vengeance #1 |
Oct 08, 2015
show
|
|
The current day action feels inconsequential as El Vengador's mind is stuck in the past, while the flashbacks do nothing to justify or inform his leap from fan to hero.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Horizon #1 |
Jul 14, 2016
show
|
|
Overall, Horizon #1 is a quiet and ponderous start to a series that is more promising in setup than execution.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
House Of M (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
House Of M #2
September 3, 2015
|
|
It's an unexpected and welcome breath of fresh air, perfectly complemented by Marco Failla's own energetic drawings.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
House Of M #3
September 17, 2015
|
|
The various power struggles, coups, and plots all make for some fun royal backstabbing adventure. Unfortunately, these clever moments are offset by some silly moments.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Howard The Duck (2016) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Howard The Duck #1
November 5, 2015
|
|
Much like Spider-Gwen or Unbeatable Squirrel-Girl, think of this Howard the Duck as season 2. They've had one season to do the comic they wanted to do, figured out what worked and what didn't, and fix those things going forward.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Howling Commandos Of S.H.I.E.L.D #1 |
Oct 29, 2015
show
|
|
So what is this book? Where's the hook to keep us coming back for more? So far, there isn't one.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Huck |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Huck #2
December 17, 2015
|
|
The story is small - quaint by Mark Millar standards - but it's that focus that's making this such an enjoyable ride.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Huck #6
April 21, 2016
|
|
Rafael Albuquerque is the main draw (as he's been all series) and this issue is even more beautifully and dynamically illustrated than the last five, but there are some key stumbles in the script that fundamentally undermine what the story is trying to accomplish.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
I Hate Fairyland |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
I Hate Fairyland #2
November 19, 2015
|
|
The obvious appeal of this book first and foremost is Young's wild imagination and the humor that comes from that, this series is an unquestionable success under those two criteria. The problem is in the longevity of the story " how long can we follow around a goalless character?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
I Hate Fairyland #5
February 18, 2016
|
|
The way Skottie Young has transformed this book from a series of hilarious, but ultimately similar, jokes into an actual storyline is pretty amazing. Suddenly this book has some real forward momentum to go with that incredibly beautiful art of his. There's no telling what this book can accomplish next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
I Hate Fairyland #6
June 16, 2016
|
|
The end of that arc promised progress, as Gertrude was forced to become Queen of Fairyland. But, all that progress is wiped away in a single issue designed to make being Queen the most boring duty Gertrude could possibly have. Skottie Young explains his intentions in the back pages, and they're all reasonable, but it makes for a very deflating return issue
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Illuminati (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Illuminati #2
December 17, 2015
|
|
Illuminati cribs enough successful material from other similar books to make it entertaining, but doesn't do anything to make itself stand out.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Illuminati #5
March 24, 2016
|
|
Walker is phenomenal talent that is perfect for a book with this mix of humor and action. Unfortunately, that's not enough when the characters and story continue to fail to leave an impression.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Inferno (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Inferno #1
May 28, 2015
|
|
The original X-Men Inferno event was so beloved, and the concept at the heart of this modern Inferno #1 (Colossus venturing back into Hell on Earth to save his little sister) is so immediately captivating, that it's a real shame and surprise that this issue doesn't pack more of a punch than it does.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Inferno #5
September 30, 2015
|
|
From the beginning, the story of Inferno has been really fun, but also just a bit too cluttered and chaotic for its own good. But where the story suffers from too many divergent ideas and scenarios, the art flourishes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Infinity Gauntlet (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Infinity Gauntlet #1
May 27, 2015
|
|
Don't believe that cover. This isn't the story of the Nova Corps and Star-Lord taking on Thanos in cosmic battle. At least, it isn't yet. What it is now is the story of a broken family, desperately trying to survive the destruction of their world. You might not even know this is a Marvel Universe story if not for the periodic references to the Nova Corps and that last page reveal. And that works tremendously to this book's credit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Infinity Gauntlet #2
June 25, 2015
|
|
Much like the debut issue, issue #2 is more exciting family drama than anything else, the newly enlisted Bakian's forced to learn the Nova Corps ropes on the fly. This structure serves to increase the overall urgency of the piece, even if some of the character interactions feel a bit rushed as a result.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Infinity Gauntlet #4
September 17, 2015
|
|
What started out as such a promising family survival tale has since been repeatedly dragged down by the need to make things too "superhero-y".
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Inhumans: Attilan Rising (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Inhumans: Attilan Rising #3
July 16, 2015
|
|
The first one had all the charm of early 20th century gangster tales, the second one kept the charm but also threw in some compelling spy vs spy espionage. Inhumans: Attilan Rising #3 loses all the charm and just devolves into a generic all-out battle
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Injection |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Injection #4
August 13, 2015
|
|
This is very much an info dump issue. Declan Shalvey's character work is tremendous, the emotive facial features tell the story in a compelling way that Ellis just isn't able to live up to in this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Injection #5
September 10, 2015
|
|
Warren Ellis's abstract ideas are finally starting to solidify enough for readers to grab onto in this first arc's final issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Injection #6
January 14, 2016
|
|
Injection #6 leaves behind our main cast to focus on Headland, a Holmesian rich detective who is particular about his sandwiches. This strange swerve in the narrative further muddies an already unclear view of what this book is, but if you can put that aside, this is a gleefully fun issue of Ellis doing what he does so well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Injection #7
February 11, 2016
|
|
This issue passes the new Injection review scoring equation of Vivek-Injection=Review Score, but it's unclear much longer this series will be interested in achieving those marks.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Injection #8
March 17, 2016
|
|
This was both one of the the most entertaining issues of Injection yet, and maybe a breaking point for some. Warren Ellis loves to play coy with his stories, and that's been the case for the entire run of Injection. In many cases, Injection included, style can be higher on Ellis' priority list than substance.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
International Iron Man |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
International Iron Man #4
June 16, 2016
|
|
Unfortunately, it feels like a lot of space in the first half of the book was wasted with recap in order to get to the second half. Ultimately this issue is half filler and half compelling drama.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Invincible #125 |
Nov 19, 2015
show
|
|
This is one of those issues of Invincible (they are pretty much a regular occurrence at this point) where the story just flies by, and the ending comes too soon.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Invincible Iron Man (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Invincible Iron Man #9
May 5, 2016
|
|
It's unclear how exactly this issue is part of "The Road to Civil War II", but regardless, it's a pretty good jumping-on point. Invincible Iron Man #9 is a series of vignettes of most of this book's major characters reacting to Tony Stark's disappearance. It reminds you that Brian Bendis has a lot of different, and interesting, balls in the air in this series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Invincible Iron Man #10
June 2, 2016
|
|
Invincible Iron Man is a series that has been frustratingly decompressed at times over its short, 10-issue life, but that's something that works surprisingly well in the book's favor this time around.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Invisible Republic #6 |
Sep 24, 2015
show
|
|
Gabriel Hardman and Corinna Bechko often talk about their love for old movies, and it's that love that comes across in Invisible Republic's painstakingly-realized human characters and intricately-plotted world.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Jughead #7 |
Jun 16, 2016
show
|
|
This is another funny and clever issue of Jughead, but the real star of this book is artist Derek Charm. Charm draws maybe the cleanest line of any of the Jughead artists so far, this is a beautiful cartoon of a book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Jupiter's Circle #4 |
Jul 02, 2015
show
|
|
The second mini-arc of Jupiter's Circle comes to a close in just as problematic a way as its first arc did.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Justice League United |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Justice League United #13
September 10, 2015
|
|
The idea of Justice League United is so much fun " throw together a disparate group of heroes and villains from every corner of the DC Universe and see how they react. That idea is beautifully executed on in this issue with so many interesting character interactions and silly twists, but it's everything around that idea that falls flat here.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Justice League: Darkseid War: Special #1 |
Apr 07, 2016
show
|
|
|
|
|
Justice League: Rebirth #1 |
Jul 07, 2016
show
|
|
This issue is just a real head-scratcher, what's the point of this bleak rehash in a world that's supposed to be bright and innovative?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Kaptara (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Kaptara #2
May 21, 2015
|
|
Kaptara #1 was a bit of a surprise in how well it balanced the outlandish and goofy elements with characters you couldn't help but fall for. Kaptara #2 veers a bit more into the goofy, outlandish concepts as Keith is content to let his crewmates fend for themselves while he indulges in his wacky new life.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Kaptara #4
August 6, 2015
|
|
The emphasis of this series is on the humor, but when emotional stakes and basic storytelling are trampled over to get to the jokes sooner, those jokes better be worth it. Unfortunately in this issue, they just aren't.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Klaus #4 |
Mar 24, 2016
show
|
|
Klaus has been a fun and somewhat slight series so far, but #4 has some moments of peak-Morrison.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Korvac Saga (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Korvac Saga #1
June 25, 2015
|
|
It's said that the worst reaction you can have to piece of art is none it all. Sorry, Korvac Saga, but that's the reaction I had to you. You are not good, and you are not bad. You are just fine.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Korvac Saga #4
September 10, 2015
|
|
Korvac Saga had its problems in the beginning, most notably a slow build that didn't seem to be going anywhere particularly interesting. Some of those early issue problems still remain, but in retrospect, that slow build was worth the brilliant conclusion offered in this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Last Sons of America |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Last Sons of America #1
November 12, 2015
|
|
Years ago, a mysterious attack made the entire United States population infertile. The beauty of this series is that it doesn't focus on those attacks, who made them, why they happened, or anything like that. It just takes that premise " one of the world's richest countries has lost their future, making children the world's most valuable commodity " and tells a story of people dealing with it.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Last Sons of America #3
February 11, 2016
|
|
There's still a lot about the fascinating world of this series to enjoy, but shifting the focus from the intimate, morally gray storytelling of its premiere issue to this over-the-top genre adventure takes away from what was once truly special.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Lazarus (2013) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Lazarus #20
November 5, 2015
|
|
It's a testament to this book's world building and character development that even though the main character only appears in a handful of panels, this issue is just as intriguing and thrilling as any other.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Lazarus #22
June 16, 2016
|
|
Reviewing Lazarus #22 is a very weird experience because it's like reviewing the first four pages of the next chapter in a book. Lazarus is as good and intriguing as always, but similar to only reading several pages of a chapter, reading a single issue of Lazarus is sometimes unfulfilling in and of itself.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Lazarus #23
July 21, 2016
|
|
The up and down pace may not always please everyone, but Lazarus is going places, and we can't wait to see where it ends up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Limbo #1 |
Nov 12, 2015
show
|
|
Limbo takes place in a world between ours, a sin city filled with ghosts and monsters. Despite that intriguing premise, Limbo fails to ultimately leave any kind of impression.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Lobo (2014) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Lobo #8
July 2, 2015
|
|
This is a fun, bounty hunter brawl set in space and featuring some compelling races of aliens with unique power sets. In those ways, it feels like a Star Wars expanded universe tale.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Loki: Agent of Asgard #17 |
Aug 20, 2015
show
|
|
|
|
|
Low (2014) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Low #11
February 11, 2016
|
|
It seems like Low may have been lost in the shuffle of Rick Remender and Image's works lately, but it is every bit as worthy of being on your pull list as anything else from that writer, and even the rest of the publisher.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Lucifer (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Lucifer #2
January 21, 2016
|
|
Holly Black and Lee Garbett are taking a really interesting approach with their Lucifer series - they're continuing the story right where Mike Carey and Peter Gross left off, but they're also telling something brand new and all their own.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Lucifer #3
February 18, 2016
|
|
Lucifer #3 succeeds in both the stories it's telling, but fails to bring them together in a satisfying way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Lucifer #4
March 17, 2016
|
|
Lucifer is a series that can be heartfelt, relatable, cruel, and fun. Unfortunately, it seems like it can only be those things when Lucifer isn't on the page.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Lucifer #5
April 21, 2016
|
|
Lucifer #5 is the issue where all of the book's mysteries are revealed, the issue that should finally sell you on the book and give you an idea of the series' shape to come. Unfortunately, all of the issue's reveals fall flat, and everything surrounding the revelations are a complete mess.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Magneto (2014) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Magneto #19
June 18, 2015
|
|
But even when an issue of Magneto fails on theme, it always succeeds with characterization. Bunn was born to write Magneto.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Magneto #20
July 23, 2015
|
|
There have been many wonderful stories that have been written about Magneto's past -- how and why he has become what he has become. But Cullen Bunn's Magneto series is one of the rare books in current years to examine who Magneto is now and why he keeps doing what he's doing.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Manifest Destiny #19 |
May 19, 2016
show
|
|
Manifest Destiny #19 is a great jumping-on point for this fascinatingly weird comic book
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter (2015) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #3
August 20, 2015
|
|
This Martian Manhunter series is quickly turning into a fresh twist on the Invasion of the Body Snatchers story, with that last page cliffhanger promising something completely new to the genre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #4
September 17, 2015
|
|
Martian Manhunter is a book that thrives off of its mystery and mystique, and Rob Williams is at his best when he's leaving you guessing and wanting more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #5
October 22, 2015
|
|
Martian Manhunter is becoming an even more interesting and twisting series with every issue. Rob Williams has done such a intricate job of mapping out J'onn's personality into all of these different forms, and the way that they interact is proving to be even more enjoyable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #8
January 21, 2016
|
|
Volume 2 of Martian Manhunter doesn't appear to be off to quite the same propulsive start; instead of picking up where the momentum of volume 1 left off, they seem to be starting from scratch and building up a whole tempo.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #10
March 17, 2016
|
|
Martian Manhunter #10 is a brilliant series of revelation after revelation, twist after further twist. This issue is the distillation of everything that has made this series so enjoyable over the last year into a single issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Martian Manhunter #11
April 21, 2016
|
|
Martian Manhunter #11 is another dramatic high note in this series, but Ben Oliver just isn't able to convey the emotional depth that Barrows brought to this wonderful series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Marvel Zombies (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Marvel Zombies #1
June 10, 2015
|
|
The latest incarnation of Marvel Zombies is as humorous and grotesque as fans of the past series could ask for. Even better, there is finally a truly great character at the center of the story this time around. Ultimately though, it doesn't feel like the journey quite begins in this first issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Marvel Zombies #2
July 23, 2015
|
|
Marvel Zombies is not only one of the best books of Secret Wars, but also one of the best books ever to feature the "Marvel Zombies" title.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Marvel Zombies #4
October 15, 2015
|
|
We've already had a peak at All-New All-Different Marvel and how some aspects of Secret Wars will seep over into their new continuity. If they're smart, they'll have a book by Si Spurrier and Kev Walker starring Elsa Bloodstone, because this series was absolutely incredible.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Material |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Material #1
May 28, 2015
|
|
The direction that the story is going in remains a complete mystery, but it's so masterfully told that it's hardly a problem.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Material #3
July 30, 2015
|
|
The experience of reading Material is like being a voyeur -- the scenarios all feel so real that they often border on mundane. But if you've ever people-watched at a local grocery store or parking lot, you know that there can also be something hypnotic about the mundanity.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Mirror |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Mirror #1
February 4, 2016
|
|
The story's dream logic movement will frustrate some, and confuse almost everyone on an initial read, but there's so much emotion and intrigue in the opening chapter that it'll be nearly impossible not to come back to learn more.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Mirror #2
March 24, 2016
|
|
Mirror #2 isn't even remotely a bad book (though it advances its storyline too quickly, these large events deserved more buildup), but it's just not nearly as special and exciting as that first issue was.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Mockingbird #4 |
Jun 30, 2016
show
|
|
Mockingbird is very much the Network Television comic of the Marvel Universe - little of the flash or substance that makes an HBO epic, but there's nothing wrong with a well crafted, popcorn ABC drama.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Mockingbird: S.H.I.E.L.D. 50th Anniversary #1 |
Sep 03, 2015
show
|
|
It's so fun to watch people who are great at what they do, doing that. That credit goes not only to first-time comic book writer (and bestselling thriller author) Chelsea Cain, but also to Joelle Jones who reflects Bobbi's confidence perfectly in his clean, assured, and sprightly line work. Now, Marvel, please make this an ongoing series, because this was outstanding.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Monstress (2015) |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Monstress #1
November 5, 2015
|
|
The story is complex, nuanced, and never once holds your hand. Issue 1 is a complete, satisfying, moving story in itself, maybe one of the year's best, and the fact that we have more to come only makes it that much more exciting.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Monstress #4
March 17, 2016
|
|
With the art as beautiful as ever, and the story continuing to unfold in exciting new ways, this remains one of the best new series around.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Monstress #5
April 14, 2016
|
|
As fascinating as this world is, it often feels like you need an encyclopedia handy to really enjoy it. The great stuff is so spectacularly great that it's worth the effort, but more can be done in the future to humanize the rest of Monstress' enormous world.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Monstress #6
May 26, 2016
|
|
The revelations and character turnarounds are satisfying and perfectly timed. Even better, the art continues to be top-notch. Sana Takeda has an approach and style that's almost entirely unique in Western comic books, it's so easy to get entranced by the winding, grand scale design choices.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Moon Knight #17 |
Jul 16, 2015
show
|
|
The execution of the story, as has been the case in most chapters of this volume, is almost entirely on the shoulders of the art team. Ron Ackins delivers some impactful action scenes in this book, and the continuing motif of the smiles works well. Unfortunately, the colors just haven't been the same since Jordie Bellaire left and this is perhaps the least distinctive use of color since she left.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Moon Knight (2016) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Moon Knight #2
May 5, 2016
|
|
The art is great, and the ideas presented in this second issue are even more interesting and exciting than what came in an already good first issue. Color us intrigued.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Moon Knight #5
August 4, 2016
|
|
Moon Knight #5 makes it clear how this volume is going to be definitively different than any other Moon Knight series - it's never coming back down for its dizzying heights.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Deadpool and the Howling Commandos #1 |
Jun 11, 2015
show
|
|
Gerry Duggan has maybe done the best and most consistent work on Deadpool since Joe Kelly's legendary run in the late 90s. Unfortunately, this issue has none of the character or charm of his ongoing series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Ms. Marvel (2015) |
7 issues
show
|
|
|
Ms. Marvel #2
December 17, 2015
|
|
Ms. Marvel is avoiding any kind of sophomore slump by further pushing what made the book so great in the first place.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ms. Marvel #7
May 26, 2016
|
|
It's great seeing Alphona back on this book. The other artists have been great, but Alphona draws the happiest looking sharks in comics, and isn't that what this is all about?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nailbiter #19 |
Jan 07, 2016
show
|
|
Neither this book overall or this lone issue are bad, the aforementioned art and Joshua Williamson's crackling dialogue ensure that can't be the case, but its problems are starting to pile up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nameless #5 |
Sep 24, 2015
show
|
|
As always, it's Chris Burnham's disturbing and gruesome images that really make this chaotic, hard-to-grasp book work so well.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
New Avengers (2015) |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
New Avengers #3
November 19, 2015
|
|
It's still not a great book - much of this issue's interests are too divided to make any of the other characters impactful yet, plus Gerardo Sandoval doesn't excel with these character moments like he does with action -but it's a start in a good direction.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Avengers #6
February 11, 2016
|
|
New Avengers has turned into a perfect book for anyone who still misses Young Avengers and wants more of the great Wiccan/Hulkling relationship.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Avengers #7
February 25, 2016
|
|
New Avengers #7 is the type of character-first, smart storytelling that made Al Ewing's two Mighty Avengers runs so beloved.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Avengers #8
March 24, 2016
|
|
There are enough of the bad tendencies of crossovers here (relatively meaningless guest appearances, flimsy action) to somewhat hold this issue back, but Al Ewing is so great at character advancement and dialogue that those problems are small comparatively.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Avengers #11
May 5, 2016
|
|
Despite all these problems, it remains a series with a great cast, innovative ideas, and promising directions. The creators just haven't been able to live up to the promise yet
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
New Romancer |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
New Romancer #1
December 10, 2015
|
|
This first issue rushes too quickly through its concept, not allowing any time for the readers or characters plausible time to adjust and making for an awkwardly paced and unsatisfying debut.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
New Romancer #4
March 10, 2016
|
|
New Romancer #4 moves with a gleeful energy, with Peter Milligan cheesing up the dialogue in the most delightful of ways as Lord Byron and history's other great Romantics prove themselves to be less than what you were led to believe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nighthawk #3 |
Jul 21, 2016
show
|
|
This issue did excitement well, but the series has been best when commenting on today's issues and would be best served getting back to that.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nightwing #2 |
Aug 04, 2016
show
|
|
Just because the book changed title from "Grayson" to "Nightwing" doesn't mean that the content within has changed. Nightwing is every bit the continuation you would want as a fan of Grayson, with some slight spy vs. superhero cosmetic changes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Nova #1 |
Nov 05, 2015
show
|
|
The debut of the Sam Alexander Nova era in 2013 had a really special feel to it - like you were reading the origin of one of the next important Marvel characters. Now, two years later the series is relaunching with a new number 1, but this one just doesn't feel special anymore. In fact, it falls flat.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
ODY-C #7 |
Sep 17, 2015
show
|
|
It's easy to get lost deciphering the story, but that's okay because you also get lost in the wonder of Ward's stunning, hypnotic images. The artistic storytelling here is some of the most captivating you will read in comic books today.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Oh, Killstrike #1 |
May 21, 2015
show
|
|
It's a solid premise, and there are glints of promise that the rest of the miniseries can recover, but this first issue is about as substantive as the comic books it's roasting.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Old Man Logan #5 |
Oct 08, 2015
show
|
|
The good ultimately outweighs the bad (even in the exposition scenes there are some terrific character interactions), but the emotional teeter-totter is frustrating.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Old Man Logan (2016) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Old Man Logan #7
June 2, 2016
|
|
It's almost shocking to see this level of violence and gore in a non-Max Marvel title. Old Man Logan's showdown with The Reavers (with the life of a young, parallel universe version of his wife at stake) gets to be absolutely gruesome.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Omega Men |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Omega Men #9
March 3, 2016
|
|
After nearly a year, and The Omega Men can still be truly shocking. Sure, you already know to a certain extent that this won't be as easy of an ending as Kyle Rayner hopes it will be. But, Tom King is able to subvert so many of your expectations in such interesting ways, while still delivering on the obvious and inevitable turns that have to happen.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Omega Men #12
May 26, 2016
|
|
DC deserves so many thanks for reconsidering cancelling this little-selling but beloved book. Tom King and Barnaby Bagenda got a chance to fully tell their story and, let me tell you, it's one incredible ending.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Outcast By Kirkman & Azaceta |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Outcast By Kirkman & Azaceta #11
August 6, 2015
|
|
Whether you think Kirkman fully appreciates the enormity of his metaphor will largely determine your enjoyment, but he (guided by Paul Azaceta's masterful character performances) has created a story here that will challenge you.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Outcast By Kirkman & Azaceta #15
January 28, 2016
|
|
It's not a "fun" book, it can be a tough read, but with Paul Azaceta's masterful character-acting it's worth reading until you know for sure whether Kirkman understands the gravity of his own story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Outcast By Kirkman & Azaceta #18
April 28, 2016
|
|
Outcast #18 is a perfect example of a weird quirk that occasionally hurts Kirkman's work - he can be simultaneously overly decompressed, but then very loose in skipping over important encounters or details.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Paper Girls #7 |
Jul 07, 2016
show
|
|
The purpose of Paper Girls is becoming clearer, and the series seems to be ramping back up.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Planet Hulk |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Planet Hulk #3
July 16, 2015
|
|
This book should be the summer blockbuster of Marvel comics. It should be the non-stop thrill ride of a Mad Max: Fury Road or Jurassic World. Instead it's becoming plodding, and with only the same variation of Bucky flashback each issue to keep us invested in the characters.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Power Man and Iron Fist (2016) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Power Man and Iron Fist #3
April 21, 2016
|
|
David Walker's story doesn't match up to his own humor or Greene's art yet (in fact Walker's portrayal of Jessica Jones is problematic here as she's not so much a character as an obstacle in the way of the men's fun), but if the story can catch up, this should become a runaway hit.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Power Man and Iron Fist #6
July 14, 2016
|
|
Power Man and Iron Fist #6 is a Civil War II tie-in, and it's probably one of the least important Civil War II tie-ins as it doesn't have any direct impact on that story. But, this almost completely unimportant Civil War II tie-in, is also one of the books that best sells the events of that story
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Punisher #20 |
Jul 23, 2015
show
|
|
Wow, what a showcase for Mitch Gerads. In this series finale, we get the story from the perspective of the Black Dawn Fighters as they are hunted down and slaughtered one by one. It's a technique that makes the issue feel somewhat akin to a horror movie, with The Punisher acting as a Michael Myers or Jason Voorhees.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Punisher #2 |
Jun 02, 2016
show
|
|
It's simple, emotional, and angry storytelling told elegantly in both the writing and art. But the question is, how simple do you want your storytelling? What it has in raw emotion, it lacks in much nuance.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rai #13 |
May 19, 2016
show
|
|
As this is the start of a brand new generation of Rai, it's a perfect place for new readers to try out this intriguing series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Red Thorn #1 |
Nov 19, 2015
show
|
|
Overall, this is an enjoyable story that's evocative of some of the elements and tones of 2000s Vertigo, but not yet at the same "must-buy" level as some of the other recent Vertigo launches.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Revival |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Revival #31
July 16, 2015
|
|
It's a return to form a bit for Revival, but it still hasn't gotten back to the great book it used to consistently be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Revival #33
October 1, 2015
|
|
It's been over three years since Revival debuted and Tim Seeley is somehow still able to both add interesting new characters to the already impressive roster, and add further insight to the book's core mysteries.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Revival #35
December 3, 2015
|
|
Revival is so character and cast-focused that you can sometimes forget just how action-packed and tense Tim Seeley and Mike Norton can make an issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Revival #37
March 3, 2016
|
|
The conclusion shows that this installment isn't as self-contained as it originally seemed, and that makes a good issue even better.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Robin: Son of Batman (2015) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Robin: Son of Batman #4
September 17, 2015
|
|
Robin: Son of Batman #4 suffers from some uncharacteristically poor storytelling by Patrick Gleason. Gleason's art is as gorgeously styled and kinetic as usual, but some of his panels wind up being too tightly packed or featuring some odd and incomprehensible camera angle choices.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Robin: Son of Batman #5
October 29, 2015
|
|
The moment to moment storytelling can have its high points, particularly when you're just getting lost in Patrick Gleason's vibrant art. But the overall story is a mess of ideas in need of some structure.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Rumble #8 |
Oct 29, 2015
show
|
|
This is a fun issue, but the series loses a little momentum when it's not barreling forward through its plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Runaways (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Runaways #3
August 20, 2015
|
|
The series started out so fun, and it still is, but it feels like there's now an unnecessary rush to get to the end.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
S.H.I.E.L.D. (2014) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
S.H.I.E.L.D. #11
October 22, 2015
|
|
It may be a bit too light and outside of the norm for some Marvel fans, the art won't be for everyone who doesn't already know and like Chaykin's style (his Phil Coulson is certainly a little off), but overall it's a breezy spy story for anyone needing that particular itch scratched.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Scarlet Witch #2 |
Jan 14, 2016
show
|
|
Wanda talks to a god, fights a minotaur, winds up where she started - it's mostly uninteresting, frankly. But this issue is so gorgeously drawn that it's at least worth a flip through just to appreciate Marco Rudy's talents.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Secret Wars: Battleworld #3 |
Jul 16, 2015
show
|
|
Your mileage with Secret Wars: Battleworld #3's humor may vary, but there is no denying the artistic talent held within these pages.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Sex Criminals |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Sex Criminals #12
September 17, 2015
|
|
This is easily the wackiest Sex Criminals has gone yet and Chip Zdarsky really gets a chance to visually impress with this issue. But, most impressively, it still manages to keep that emotional core by intercutting those silly scenes with a moving college lecture and some character-defining scenes with Robert Rainbow.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sex Criminals #13
October 15, 2015
|
|
Sex Criminals should just become a series of one-shots focusing on people's sexual experiences. That's what Matt Fraction and Chip Zdarsky do so well " they tell personal, honest stories about these scary subjects and they do it in simultaneously funny and tender ways. But it seems that they're also losing their grasp of the overall narrative.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Sex Criminals #15
April 28, 2016
|
|
Sex Criminals #15 ends the arc beautifully: wrapping up the individual arcs of all of our characters, giving our "villain" a truly sympathetic turn, and smoothly setting up future storylines.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Siege #3 |
Sep 10, 2015
show
|
|
|
|
|
Silk #7 |
Sep 03, 2015
show
|
|
Has there been a bad "Last Days" book yet from Secret Wars? Silk #7 doesn't quite reach the emotional highs of some of the other tie-ins, but it tells a compelling and heartfelt story of its own to keep the streak alive.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Silk (2015) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Silk #3
January 14, 2016
|
|
It's still baffling that they would start this relaunch with Stacey Lee on art for Silk #1 and then immediately transition to a new artist, but Tana Ford is an able replacement, if not quite the same caliber of cartoonist as Lee. Overall, Silk seems to be heading in a good direction
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Silk #5
February 25, 2016
|
|
The story is a bit light, but that plays into Veronica Fish's artistic strengths as Fish makes the most of her oversized panels. This was a wonderful, if brief, issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Silk #6
March 17, 2016
|
|
Silk #6 is a powerhouse issue of complex, morally gray superheroics. It's a really exciting and encouraging chapter to see from the young series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Silk #9
June 30, 2016
|
|
The writing keeps you on your toes and the art keeps you sympathizing with every character. If you're feeling some Marvel fatigue, look no further than Silk to reinvigorate you.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Silk #10
July 14, 2016
|
|
After nine straight issues of searing drama, Silk #10 comes as a bit of a disappointment. With so much backstabbing, uncertainty, and tension - this final issue wraps things up a bit too cleanly.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Silver Surfer #4 |
May 19, 2016
show
|
|
This is both a beautiful ending to what's come before, and an exciting new direction for the series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #5 |
Jun 11, 2015
show
|
|
Finally! After varying degrees of "ok" to "good" comic booking, we finally get an issue of Spider-Gwen that delivers on all the tremendous promise of the character's first appearance. This is an issue that embraces its destiny, absolutely oozing style in every single panel.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen (2015) |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #1
October 15, 2015
|
|
Latour seems to have a strong handle of the impressive supporting cast, and a new mystery that strikes at the heart of Gwen Stacy. Robbi Rodriguez's stylized, and exaggerated art continues to be the best part of the book, especially as paired with Rico Renzi's electric colors.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #2
November 12, 2015
|
|
Wow, this post-Secret Wars relaunch was just the thing that Spider-Gwen needed. While the last volume felt a bit wandering and lost at times, the creators have used this opportunity to tighten their story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #3
December 9, 2015
|
|
Possible suspension of belief-breaking technology aside, this issue also struggles in a couple of other respects. It just feels too early and unearned for Gwen to be back to the 616 Universe, give the character some time to establish her own world.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #4
January 7, 2016
|
|
It's almost concerning to see the pair burn through so much plot and development so quickly, but when it's this well done how can you complain?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #5
February 11, 2016
|
|
The day Rodriguez leaves this book for good will probably be the day that this series should be retired, but it's good to know another artist can make their impact felt in-between Rodriguez issues
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #7
April 14, 2016
|
|
There are a couple of great moments between Jessica and Gwen here, but the issue is mired in too many jokes to form into a complete story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Gwen #8
May 5, 2016
|
|
"Spider-Women" has quickly changed into "Silks" with all the emphasis on various Cindy Moons of different worlds. That's a great aspect of this event, as Silk is easily the least known of the Spider-Women trinity in this event, but could also be off-putting to some Spider-Gwen fans who rightly expect more of Gwen in her own title.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Man (2016) |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Man #2
March 3, 2016
|
|
Spider-Man #2 is a great, triumphant introduction to Miles Morales as a superhero. But, if you've already been with Miles on his journey as Spider-Man in the Ultimate Universe, why do you need another introduction?
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Man #19
August 11, 2017
|
|
With Spider-Man #19, the series continues to struggle to progress in meaningful ways but reaches one of its (admittedly low) highs by delivering on wonderful characterization in a handful of a great scenes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Man #20
September 6, 2017
|
|
Spider-Man #20 isn't substantially different from the rest of the series, but shows how drastically a change of scenery and a little narrative momentum can improve the formula. This is the most promising the series has felt since before Secret Wars.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Man #21
October 4, 2017
|
|
Spider-Man #21 wraps up Miles' identity quest with a heartwarming reminder that his family is what makes him special. It's a story that reestablishes Miles' past and has some unexpected hints at the future. Now bring on Marvel Legacy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Man / Deadpool #7 |
Jul 21, 2016
show
|
|
Gerry Duggan and Scott Koblish have done so many of these period piece Deadpool issues at this point, that you'd think Koblish's artistic range would start to lose its novelty at some point. But nope, seeing his pseudo-'60s style now is just as thrilling as any of the other decades he has emulated.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Men II |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Spider-Men II #2
August 16, 2017
|
|
Spider-Men II #2 fumbles a reveal five years in the making with a dull and contrived answer. Even brilliant artwork from Sara Pichelli can't save this issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Spider-Men II #3
September 20, 2017
|
|
Spider-Men II #3 is another failure to make the Other Miles Morales mystery meaningful. It's also an undoubtedly entertaining one-off crime story told by creators who excel in the genre.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Woman #7 |
May 19, 2016
show
|
|
The Spider-Women event hasn't been as emotionally satisfying, or as fun, as all three titles tend to be on their own. Spider-Woman #7 may be the most successful of the lot, but that's because it mostly just feels like a regular issue of this series, but with slightly more Gwen Stacy.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spider-Women Alpha #1 |
Apr 07, 2016
show
|
|
It's commendable how smoothly and naturally this Spider-Women crossover comes together. So often, these kind of crossovers can feel forced or uninspired. But, these three protagonists represent three of Marvel's current best titles and perhaps the most interesting corner of Marvel's current universe.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Spidey #4 |
Apr 14, 2016
show
|
|
Without that art, no supporting cast to speak of, and a textbook encounter of villain/hero this issue is just too plain.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Squadron Supreme (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Squadron Supreme #4
February 18, 2016
|
|
The first issues established a ruthless version of the Justice League, that's entirely missing from this issue, and loses the book's unique identity in the process.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Wars: Darth Vader #19 |
Apr 14, 2016
show
|
|
This second year of Vader hasn't been as exciting on a monthly basis as year one, but this continues to show that Gillen is capable of memorable moments.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Wars: Han Solo #1 |
Jun 16, 2016
show
|
|
If the first issue is any indication, Han Solo could prove to be the best Marvel Star Wars mini yet.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Wars: Kanan #10 |
Jan 28, 2016
show
|
|
It's unclear whether this story was compacted due to the series cancellation, but overstuffed nature of the issue makes it feel that way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star Wars: Obi-Wan & Anakin |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Star Wars: Poe Dameron #3 |
Jun 09, 2016
show
|
|
The fact that this book stars a beloved character from a beloved movie isn't enough, we need more characterization and even some razzle dazzle to make us fall in love with this cast and story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star-Lord #3 |
Jan 21, 2016
show
|
|
Javier Garron is an artist who excels at character work, and his characters here are always a draw. His human faces communicate emotion in over-the-top, but ultimately relatable ways - you can't help but smile anytime Peter Quill is on panel.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Star-Lord And Kitty Pryde #1 |
Jul 23, 2015
show
|
|
Star-Lord and Kitty Pryde is a Disney movie of a comic -- and that's not just because Peter Quill spends half the issue singing Little Mermaid songs.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Starbrand and Nightmask |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Superman (2011) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Superman #51
April 7, 2016
|
|
Overall, this is a fairly slight issue with too many mysterious cutaways, but the premise and Lana scenes alone are enough to make this a compelling issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Superman (2016) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Superman #2
July 7, 2016
|
|
On both a writing and art level, the creators are reminding us why we once loved Superman and Lois Lane so much, and making us fall equally in love with Jon.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Superman #4
August 4, 2016
|
|
The events of Superman #4 are so breathtakingly, dizzyingly hectic that taken on their own they might have represented one big mess of an issue. But, in the context of a series that's worn its heart on its sleeve and made you fall in love with this version of the Superman Family, it's a triumphant turning point of an issue
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Superman / Wonder Woman (2013) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Superman / Wonder Woman #22
October 22, 2015
|
|
The goal of this Superman mega-arc crossover is clearly an ambitious one, and while the conclusion will tell whether all this was worth it or not, in the meantime we are stuck with a Superman who is utterly unlikable.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Superman / Wonder Woman #29
May 19, 2016
|
|
For all the good we can say about Peter Tomasi's characterization of Superman and his allies during his "The Final Days of Superman" arc, there's almost just as much negative to say about the overall plot.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Superman: Lois and Clark #8 |
May 26, 2016
show
|
|
For the last eight issues, Dan Jurgens has been channeling a hope and fun into Superman tales that still feel modern. This issue is the kicker of them all, telling a story that is just unconditionally sweet and heartwarming from beginning to end.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Superzero #4 |
Mar 24, 2016
show
|
|
Rafael de Latorre's art is just left of "cartoony" and is the perfect fit this wacky, but ultimately grounded series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Survivors Club |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Survivors Club #1
October 8, 2015
|
|
There's still much that needs to be proven in the next few issues, and aside from a few nitpicks like the color being a bit too bright for a horror comic, this a promising start.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teen Titans (2014) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Teen Titans #16
January 28, 2016
|
|
Teen Titans #16 is the most blatant recent example of a writer having to put all of their toys back in the box, so that a new writer can come in and have their own fun.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Teen Titans #17
February 25, 2016
|
|
Pak writes some interesting inter-team dynamics between the characters, and that paired with Ian Churchill's solid superhero storytelling make this a pretty decent comic. But at the end of the issue, there's just not enough there to really propel you to find out what happens next.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Casey & April #1 |
Jun 18, 2015
show
|
|
Tamaki and Koh are a great pair but the series may not fully come together in the way I want until it can all be read at once.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Fade Out |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
The Fade Out #6
May 21, 2015
|
|
Ed Brubaker's narration is as always tense and foreboding. Sean Phillips is as deftly able to show the beauty of the aforementioned "good" with the grime of the "bad".
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Fade Out #8
August 13, 2015
|
|
This isn't to say that The Fade Out is suddenly a bad book " Ed Brubaker has maybe the best knack for dialogue in the business and Sean Phillips and Elizabeth Breitweiser are still delivering a beautiful, moody tone with each issue " but the book is in a bit of rut right now.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Fade Out #9
September 17, 2015
|
|
All of the character and plot developments are coming together in a way that's truly satisfying, even as we get more backstory on our two lead characters and their complicated past together.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Fade Out #10
October 22, 2015
|
|
In the back of a recent issue of The Fade Out, Ed Brubaker had compared what he and Sean Phillips were doing to a novel. He's right of course, and where some middle issues of the series felt slow, this last arc has proven that it's all been necessary.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Fade Out #12
January 7, 2016
|
|
Brubaker and Phillips have a lot of interesting things so say in this finale, and it's very well done, but some readers may feel let down by Charlie's role, and the air of familiarity to the ending.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Fix |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
The Fix #4
July 7, 2016
|
|
Guys, Steve Lieber is. So. Good! You really could "read" this book without ever even glancing at the word balloons. But that would be a disservice to Nick Spencer, who is writing some of the most compelling dialogue of his career in this book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Goddamned #4 |
Jun 02, 2016
show
|
|
While not as immediately intellectually or dramatically interesting as a Southern Bastards or Scalped, The Goddamned has proven to be a viscerally thrilling experience.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Hunt #1 |
Jul 21, 2016
show
|
|
Writer/artist Colin Lorimer's The Hunt is a modern take on some classic Irish mythology. Interestingly, it's the art rather the story that really is the most impressive part of Lorimer's efforts in this debut.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Manhattan Projects: The Sun Beyond the Stars |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
The Mighty Thor #3 |
Jan 14, 2016
show
|
|
It seems like Jason Aaron has had some fun writing and rewriting the stories of Thor in his four-plus years working on the character, but The Mighty Thor #3 is something a bit different, it's Aaron having fun not just with the character, but with the publishing history and future of the character.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Sheriff Of Babylon |
9 issues
show
|
|
|
The Sheriff Of Babylon #1
December 3, 2015
|
|
There's very little given about the overall plot until the final pages, so where it goes and how it maintains this pace is still to be seen, but this is an incredible, attention-grabbing bang of a first issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Sheriff Of Babylon #2
January 7, 2016
|
|
There's no telling where the story is going next, each scene is more unexpected than the last, that layer of surprise and being along for such a winding ride is perhaps the best part of this gorgeously illustrated book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Sheriff Of Babylon #6
May 5, 2016
|
|
Where last month whispered, this month roars. The tension in this story is incredibly nuanced, but also frenetically thrilling. Tom King is able to craft dialogue with a deft touch, implying so much sinister intent with such docile words.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Sheriff Of Babylon #8
July 7, 2016
|
|
This is by no means a bad issue, it's just that when you're delivering one of the most consistently great comic books, an issue that's merely good seems like a disappointment.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Totally Awesome Hulk |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
The Totally Awesome Hulk #6
May 26, 2016
|
|
Greg Pak has been doing a great job of setting up completely brand new kinds of Hulk stories. Namely, Hulk stories with a bit of brightness and fun. Unfortunately, Mike Choi isn't really the right artist for that tone.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Twilight Children |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
The Twilight Children #4
January 28, 2016
|
|
Gilbert Hernandez and Darwyn Cooke brought their various plot threads and relationship dramas to such satisfying climaxes with last issue, that this final issue can't help but feel a little slight in comparison.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl (2015) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
The Walking Dead |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
The Wicked + The Divine |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
The Wicked + The Divine #13
August 6, 2015
|
|
The way the creators wrap up the issue is absolutely brilliant. The Wicked + The Divine #13 is a devastating issue and should be required reading for anyone signing up for their first social media account.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
The Wicked + The Divine #21
July 14, 2016
|
|
The Wicked + The Divine #21 is the last thing I ever expected to see out of this series - nonstop action and chaos with no mind for character. That probably all sounds like an insult, but Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie have earned this moment through their steady buildup over the earlier parts of this arc.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
They're Not Like Us |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
They're Not Like Us #8
October 1, 2015
|
|
This chapter, The Voice's former disciples get the other end of human/"mutant" philosophy as we meet Heasley. His ideas are just as interesting and nuanced as you would expect at this point in the book, but as interesting as all this discussion is, the book needs to make the transition from debate to "action" soon to really test these dueling philosophies.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Thors #4 |
Nov 12, 2015
show
|
|
So while this issue may have ultimately been a dud as related to the story it was actually telling, it at least promises a fun future of Thor to come.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Thunderbolts #2 |
Jun 09, 2016
show
|
|
The art can be problematic at times (both in its exaggerated body types, and little attention to the background), and there's little of substance that seems to actually progress in the story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Titans #1 |
Jul 28, 2016
show
|
|
Titans #1 isn't a debut issue that's going to blow the doors off, but it's certainly a pleasant one.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Tokyo Ghost |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Ultimate End |
4 issues
show
|
|
|
Ultimate End #1
May 21, 2015
|
|
This issue sets up a lot that will be important later in the miniseries. Maybe the final issue will be Bendis' mic drop that he and the Ultimate Universe deserve. But the start of the end is more of the same of what we have come to expect from Ultimate stories for the last decade and a half.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimate End #4
August 6, 2015
|
|
It would be great to experience this series as an ongoing title, but as a miniseries the pacing problems, the constant clunky transitions between unrelated events, and lack of focus all become more glaring.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Ultimates (2015) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Ultimates #2
December 10, 2015
|
|
This is a big book with big questions, and it just might be the heir apparent to Hickman's Marvel storytelling.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimates #3
January 7, 2016
|
|
Ewing's boldness, perfectly paired with Kenneth Rocafort's knack for gorgeous cosmic scenery, makes this one of Marvel's quickest evolving and most exciting new books.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimates #5
March 24, 2016
|
|
The word "Avengers" may not be in the title, but The Ultimates is every bit worthy of being Marvel's flagship title.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimates #6
April 28, 2016
|
|
Christian Ward is an immensely talented artist, with an incredible sense of color, and some truly imaginative and wild interpretations of character and layout. In other words, he's the perfect guest artist for this one-shot issue of The Ultimates which focuses on Galactus and his attempt to free Eternity from its chains.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimates #7
May 12, 2016
|
|
This issue is the closest this book has felt to a "traditional superhero story", but even so - the big ideas are still there. Better yet, it gives Al Ewing and Kenneth Rocafort a chance to show off their knack for character.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Ultimates #8
June 23, 2016
|
|
There's so much to recap, that half of this issue feels like a "previously on"" segment. That said, Al Ewing and Kenneth Rocafort are so great on this book that they even manage to make recaps interesting, and the scattered bits of new material (mostly focusing on the side Ultimates characters) are phenomenal moments.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Uncanny Avengers (2015) |
6 issues
show
|
|
|
Uncanny Avengers #2
November 12, 2015
|
|
If you're interested in the roster or creative team of Uncanny Avengers, don't let the first issue of the series keep you away - this second issue is a big improvement in almost every way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny Avengers #9
May 19, 2016
|
|
Uncanny Avengers #9 features the return of Hank Pym, and the teeter-totter balance between dramatic and comedic actually really helps this issue. It creates a completely unsettling vibe as you're left questioning motivations and intentions at every turn.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Uncanny Inhumans |
5 issues
show
|
|
|
Uncanny Inhumans #3
December 17, 2015
|
|
Because so much of this issue of Uncanny Inhumans is just about setting up its cliffhanger, you may feel better or worse about it next month. As is, this issue is mostly just one long fight scene between the Inhumans and the newest incarnation of Kang.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Uncanny Inhumans #7
April 21, 2016
|
|
This issue is about the election of a C.E.O. and the race to retrieve the corporation's technology. It's an interesting idea that could further develop the growing Inhumans world, but isn't nearly as interesting in execution.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men #35 |
Jul 23, 2015
show
|
|
Overall, this issue shows a few of the problematic quirks of Bendis's storytelling, but ultimately does enough right to make the coming end that much more bittersweet.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Uncanny X-Men (2016) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
|
|
Unfollow |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Unfollow #8
June 2, 2016
|
|
The strength of this book is its ability to make you uncomfortably laugh in the face of its more serious moments.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Valhalla Mad #1 |
May 21, 2015
show
|
|
Paul Maybury is a wonder on art. He draws in a style that simultaneously evokes the epic grandeur of a Thor story, while also delivering on the hilarity and absurdity of a cartoon like Adventure Time. It's off to a bit of a slow start but once this bender truly gets under way there is no doubt that the book will succeed in large part due to Maybury's incredible talents. But for now, we're left waiting for #2 to see what this series can really become.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Velvet #12 |
Nov 05, 2015
show
|
|
This series is still good, it just needs a more stable shipping schedule and a little shot in the arm.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Vision (2015) |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Vision #4
February 4, 2016
|
|
Tom King and Gabriel Hernandez Walta's dark family drama hits a new high (or is that low?) with issue #4 as the tale turns from dark and foreboding to hopeless and melancholic.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Vision #5
March 10, 2016
|
|
The cold, calm, calculating way that Tom King can write the dialogue and narration in The Vision is maybe the most unnerving part of the whole series.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Vision #6
April 7, 2016
|
|
Vision is a clear contender for being the best book in the All-New, All-Different Marvel lineup, and this issue does nothing to reverse that trend.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
We Are Robin #8 |
Feb 04, 2016
show
|
|
There's much to appreciate about what Bermejo's attempting, but at the end of the day it just winds up feeling like misery porn.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Weirdworld |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Weirdworld #4
September 24, 2015
|
|
Lord Doom Almighty, this is one beautiful book. Visually beautiful, that is, thanks to Mike Del Mundo's expertly realized, surreal vision of Weirdworld. Story wise, it's anything but beautiful, it's a tragedy of one man's desperate, improbable quest to find home.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Weirdworld #1 |
Dec 17, 2015
show
|
|
This was a pleasant first chapter, but we need some crazy new ideas quick so this doesn't simply turn into a rehash.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Wolf |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Wolf #1
July 23, 2015
|
|
Kot's characters and world-building are as intriguing as ever, but the book is lacking a core character or concept to latch onto thanks to so much of this over-sized issue being devoted to setup. The cliffhanger does show some potential for the future, but right now this issue is a slippery first step.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wolf #3
September 24, 2015
|
|
Wolf's disparate parts, namely the supernatural elements and the California crime aspect, still aren't jelling together into a cohesive whole as well as they should be.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wolf #4
October 22, 2015
|
|
Where the story goes from here is anyone's guess but it feels like the series finally has some purpose and momentum with this installment.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Wonder Woman (2011) |
8 issues
show
|
|
|
Wonder Woman Annual #1
June 4, 2015
|
|
There are positives to take away from Wonder Woman Annual #1. The series finally has some forward momentum, it really feels like it's going somewhere. David Finch's splash pages are gorgeous (though conversely his smaller panels lose too much detail). And there is enough intriguing groundwork to build upon. But all the other problems of this annual negate almost all of its positives.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #41
June 18, 2015
|
|
Unfortunately, there are still some panels that are either corny or cringe worthy from both Finchs here, but it's unrealistic to expect everything to be fixed in an issue.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #43
August 20, 2015
|
|
An issue dedicated to Donna Troy is something that we've been hoping for since she was re-introduced in Wonder Woman. The character is so drastically different than her former-self that it demanded further examination. Unfortunately, this issue fails to shed much light on Donna or grow her character in any substantial way.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #44
September 17, 2015
|
|
The dual storylines of Wonder Woman and Donna Troy are proving to be an awkward fit for this current arc, and the handling of those two disparate narratives is unfortunately not the only thing awkward about this issue's story.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #48
January 21, 2016
|
|
In Wonder Woman #48, our hero takes on the growing threat of terrorism and....it's just about as awkward as you might think. Maybe even more so.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #51
April 21, 2016
|
|
Perhaps the most disappointing thing about this penultimate issue of Wonder Woman, is that the series has shown no signs of growth in the 25+ issues since Meredith and David Finch took over the title.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Wonder Woman (2016) |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Wonder Woman #2
July 14, 2016
|
|
Scott's renderings in this story are a special thing to behold. This is such an emotional issue, and as much credit should go to Greg Rucka's understated parallel storyline of Diana and Steve Trevor's origins, you get the feeling that the story wouldn't be nearly what it is without Scott's art.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Men '92 #3 |
Aug 27, 2015
show
|
|
Hopefully the creators get another crack at telling X-Men '92 stories after Secret Wars, because they're frustratingly close now, just not quite there.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
X-Tinction Agenda |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
X-Tinction Agenda #1
June 4, 2015
|
|
Overall, Marc Guggenheim conveys a well told and surprising take on the 1990 crossover, with enough winks and jokes to keep things from becoming too dour.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
X-Tinction Agenda #3
August 20, 2015
|
|
The initial premise of the series promised an allegory about a downtrodden nation taking the help they need by force from those unwilling to give it. Now the ridiculousness of the X-Men (plus Cameron Hodge's behind-the-scenes villainy) has turned this series into a mundane super-powered battle book.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Years of Future Past |
3 issues
show
|
|
|
Years of Future Past #3
July 16, 2015
|
|
Years of Future Past #3 is perhaps the best issue of the series yet. The book continues to be dragged down by an overabundance of unnecessary text and plot twists, but it finally manages to add a more complex emotional core to the series, giving the book something resembling stakes.
View Issue
Full Review
|
|
|
|
Zero |
2 issues
show
|
|
|
Zero #17
June 4, 2015
|
|
Zero has been a book all about violence. That violence has been on display in all of the vivid, brutal, unending fights that have taken place over the course of the series. This final arc of Zero has taken a step back from the "how" of the violence, to the "why".
View Issue
Full Review
|
|