Taskmaster #5
| Writer | Jed MacKay |
| Artist | Alessandro Vitti |
| Cover Price | $3.99 |
LONG GOODBYE!
Taskmaster finds the Rubicon trigger, the doomsday device that Maria Hill died to protect! But someone has been playing him, and the game is about to be up.
Rated T+
CRITIC REVIEWS
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10
ComicBook.com - Tanner Dedmon
Mar 24, 2021Taskmaster #5 is the type of conclusion that'll make you want to read more about Taskmaster's past conquests and look forward to his next ones. Read Full Review
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9.0
COMICON - Scott Redmond
Mar 24, 2021Taskmaster comes to a satisfying conclusion as the series masterfully weaved all the clues and pieces to its overall puzzle throughout the previous four issues, just like any solid spy mystery story. Art that could have been ripped right from the screen of any favorite film fills the pages of this overall delightfully fun and darkly humorous series. Read Full Review
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8.9
Comic Watch - Ross Hutchinson
Mar 24, 2021Taskmaster #5 rounds off a superlative series from Jed MacKay, Vitti and the rest of the team that reminds us that Tony Masters is to be taken seriously and that if you need a bastard call Taskmaster! Read Full Review
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8.0
AIPT - Sam Rutzick
Mar 25, 2021MacKay and Vitti's conclusion to the Taskmaster series effectively tells a story that is better than the movie synergy it began as. Read Full Review
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8.0
Bleeding Cool - Hannibal Tabu
Mar 28, 2021You can call Taskmaster many things. Villain. Mercenary. Jerk. Even "coward" is fine. Find out the one thing he won't answer to. Read Full Review
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7.5
Weird Science Marvel Comics - Weird Science Jim
Mar 24, 2021Taskmaster #5 ends Jed Mackay's story, and while the ending is a bit abrupt and forced, it didn't ruin the mini-series for me. It also didn't elevate it, but I can still recommend it for the excellent art and the fun journey that would have spawned a Lethal Weapon-like team-up book in a perfect world. Read Full Review
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6.0
You Don't Read Comics - Russ Bickerstaff
Mar 24, 2021There's really no reason why the Taskmaster can't have an ongoing series. MacKay's only real problem is that the series has to come to a sudden and abrupt end. The series's overall premise could have run for a few years the way MacKay was managing it prior to this issue. The series would have had more of an appealing disappointment if it had been planned for a longer run. Given the right momentum, it could have taken MacKay years to work up to the level of disappointment at the end of this issue. Read Full Review