Bettin’s art on “Azimuth” carries the series brilliantly.
All tagged David Hine
Bettin’s art on “Azimuth” carries the series brilliantly.
Abnett’s dialogue and narration are pure poetry.
It’s kind of fun
A weird action story that lurches around the page appealingly.
Poetic notes populate an issue that is somewhat sparse on the visuals.
Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlin celebrate the "silent comic" format.
The thick, ponderousness of the backstory finally breaks a bit in a drama between man, woman and god.
A more profound blending of art and story seems just out of reach.
The story plods its way to the final panels.
Hine and Haberlin still have yet to bring the series’ full potential.
It IS an entertaining sprint to the climax of the fifth issue.
Hine’s script lacks the proper framing for overwhelming events.
There IS a surprising amount of dramatic complexity rendered into the faces of the lead characters.
Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlin’s story increases in complexity.
A series that is starting to show signs of substantial originality.
Hine and Haberlin deliver the darker end of the villains in a very engaging second issue.
David Hine and Brian Haberlin continue a dive into pulpy adventure fantasy.
Marked shows a sly depth that fuses art, magic, fantasy, and reality.
The strange and sudden end to a journey from a great distance away feels a bit jarring.
The mixture of fantasy and pulp sci-fi is charming enough to keep the action going.