Howard cleverly directs the flow of action.
All in DC Comics
Howard cleverly directs the flow of action.
The mercurial modulation of the art is particularly impressive.
Cloonan and Conrad have mastered the action sequence.
The DC Universe deals with the aftermath of the death of the Justice League.
New heroes have to step up for the Justice League as new threats wait in the wings.
Enchantingly horrifying on so many levels.
The story moves briskly.
As Superman and his rebellion make headway, Mongul prepares a counterstroke.
The overall premise for the series is interesting.
A story that casts the title character in a fresh perspective
A thoroughly engaging transitional issue.
A sparklingly fun dive into darkness and heroism.
Jon deals with Batman’s revelation and unfinished business that could destroy the Hall of Justice.
Nubia feels relatively well-paced and well-executed.
On Earth, Thao-La reacts to something from beyond as Superman battles OMAC on Warworld with the revolution’s fate at stake and in the back-up, Martian Manhunter has a final showdown with Vulture.
The Justice League fights its first battle against Pariah and the Great Darkness.
A conclusion that feels remarkably fluid from beginning to end.
Harley Quinn #14 is a mixed bag; the story is solid… However, the disconnect between the art and story, and the stop-and-start pacing drag down what could've been a standout issue.
Jones' layouts are gorgeous.
It almost approaches a kind of genius in moments