There’s a serene silence about the art.
All in Comedy
There’s a serene silence about the art.
Avallone playfully pushes Elvira through a couple of scenes.
Walker’s wit takes advantage of a very resourceful sense of humor.
Young takes a while to get the story moving.
Zornow makes the visuals look cute without being overly cuddly.
The right mixture of action and comedy for a decent Harley story.
Russell lets the situations in the situational comedy.
Waid solidly establishes what’s going on.
Adams tackles a real challenge with an issue that is largely populated by kids.
Franchini keeps the action moving.
Rosenberg’s series has harnessed some of the stronger madness of the psychotic clown.
Skroce jumps right into the action.
Howard really strings things through a weird funhouse.
Todd and Maggie hatch a new plan, but it’s out of the frying pan and into the fire.
Todd meets a familiar face in ancient Japan and hilarity ensues.
the inescapable gravity of the format crushes anything meaningful.
It’s a simple date between a couple of heroes.
A breezy, adorable mood bounces from panel to panel.
Todd Parker finds himself getting a front-row seat for Japanese history.
Finally, Goten and Trunks share the spotlight for the first time since 1994!