Amazing Spider-Man: Sins Rising Prelude #1

7.3

Critic Reviews

9 Reviews
8.0

User Reviews

26 Reviews
Writer Nick Spencer
Artist Guillermo Sanna
Cover Price $4.99

• Who is the Sin-Eater, and why is it so terrifying that he's back?
•  Nick Spencer pulls back the curtain on one of the most dangerous Spidey villains in history.
•  We will not only reveal more of Sin-Eater's secret history but put him on a collision course with Spider-Man that will have you quaking in your seat.
  Rated T

Reviews Rate / Write A Review

CRITIC REVIEWS

critic
user
  • 8.7

    Comic Watch - Jimmy Hayes

    Jul 26, 2020

    Excellent artist Guillermo Sanna draws this issuereally well. For the most part, this is a story of people without superpowers, but with many layers. The emotions he conveys through just his drawings of peoples faces is astonishing. Not to mention their body language, stance, and outright physicality. Everything he draws is gritty, sophisticated, and real. Like the writing, this is a very different method of storytelling than your usual issue of The Amazing Spider-Man. Read Full Review

  • 8.3

    Weird Science Marvel Comics - wolfcypher

    Jul 22, 2020

    A worthy addition to one of the best Spider-Man stories (1985's “The Death of Jean DeWolff”), and if you're following the bigger story that has already started in Nick Spencer's run of The Amazing Spider-Man, check this one out. Read Full Review

  • 8.2

    Sequential Planet - Geoffrey Luu

    Jul 27, 2020

    Sins Rising Prelude does an effective job story-wise at setting the stage for the Sin-Eater's return to Spider-Man's life, with Nick Spencer providing a great deal of backstory as a refresher on the serial killer's deadly actions while keeping the humanizing element of the character introduced by Peter David. Spencer's changes to the mythology flesh it out more, but may not appeal to everyone. The prelude's art suits the dark tone of the story, though the choice to use pages from a decades-old comic produces some distracting side-effects. Still, readers interested in Sin-Eater's connection to Kindred and in following the Sins Rising storyline will find a strong starting point here. Read Full Review

  • 8.0

    Monkeys Fighting Robots - David Weber

    Jul 22, 2020

    A wonderful issue that sets up the upcoming event. Read Full Review

  • 7.5

    Bleeding Cool - Theo Dwyer

    Jul 31, 2020

    The compelling prelude sets up the upcoming Nick Spencer event, Sins Rising. Read Full Review

  • 7.0

    Comics: The Gathering - Harlan Ivester

    Jul 22, 2020

    The Amazing Spider-Man: Sins Rising Prelude #1 is undoubtedly an improvement over previous attempts to get readers excited for the upcoming arc. It feels substantial, even if the substance isn’t always totally fulfilling. At the end of the day, the creative team did exactly what they set out to do: tell an unnerving origin story that sets up more to come. I wouldn’t quite say that it’s mandatory reading, but you certainly won’t regret picking this one up. Read Full Review

  • 6.0

    AIPT - David Brooke

    Jul 22, 2020

    This is a case where you can see there are good pieces put forth and a solid idea behind it all, but it doesn't come together in a believable or satisfying way. I want the Sin-Eater to be dark, complex, and unique, but from what is presented it's grasping at straws. Read Full Review

  • 6.0

    ComicBook.com - Connor Casey

    Jul 22, 2020

    For all the tortured religious upbringing and haunting imagery, Spencer doesn't quite stick the landing on bringing this Sin-Eater story back around to Spider-Man. Read Full Review

  • 6.0

    Comics Bulletin - Daniel Gehen

    Jul 28, 2020

    Sins Rising Prelude is a competently put together book, but its existence asks the question why? Why add a supernatural element to one of Spideys most grounded enemies? Why resurrect him at all, when there are plenty of living enemies that could serve a similar purpose? Why couldnt this have been part of the regular Amazing Spider-Man book and simply not decompress the narrative so much? Like most of Spencers run, this one-shot issue is just okay. Read Full Review

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