Vargas hits the page with a dreamy sketchiness
All in Drama
Vargas hits the page with a dreamy sketchiness
Loughridge is delivering a cleverly complicated exploration.
It all fuses together on the page.
Johnson completes an outline of the basic premise of the series with some degree of grace and precision.
Gillen is jumping around in history quite a bit over the course of the issue.
Pirzada’s script juggles quite a few characters.
Tynion cleverly plays with some of the more prominent bits of legend .
Watters finds a way around the cliches.
Schultz is working with various cyberpunk tropes.
McFarlane almost has the heart of a really good story.
Priest is managing, very tricky balance.
Johns rides a very fine line between laughable silliness and poetic, legendary heroic action.
Píriz’s artwork physically move the action across the page with great force.
Benitez and Chen manage a pretty tight chapter.
Wagner moves the story along quite steadily.
Van Poelgeest frames every scene in the issue like it's an inexplicably, beautiful, little narrative poem.
It's very well constructed chapter in a largely satisfying series.
Thompson’s brilliantly casual wit animates Scarlett’s narration.
A fun, little dramatic moment for the series.
Paposi has an ingenious way of simplifying complexity