Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
All in Dynamite Comics
Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
Avallone has more than a few genuinely funny moments here and there.
Brown isn't quite pacing things right.
Weisman cleanly opens a primal and well-defined conflict of simple elements.
Jurgens has constructed a solid ending.
Andolfo and Blengino move the action around with a deft hand.
Weisman keeps the action moving.
Cox puts Kong firmly in the background.
A sharply clever job of articulating bewildering complexity.
Deibert actually manages to articulate every character.
There’s just enough tone and mood to the visuals to keep the pages turning.
Avallone playfully pushes Elvira through a couple of scenes.
Johnson works fluidly with the standard trappings of a Bond story.
Sutter has a great deal of world to establish in the first few pages of the new series.
A sharply balanced political drama.
Zornow makes the visuals look cute without being overly cuddly.
Brown runs an encounter between Dejah Thoris and the Goolians.
Andolfo establishes a cozy adventure for Bettie.
Sniegoski fuses action with the supernatural and a traditional street-level crime.
The leap into action in the first issue is fun.