Sif tells Thor to Stand Down
All in Fantasy
Sif tells Thor to Stand Down
The battle against Arthur continues!
Old friends return.
What could have been a messy collision with a huge supporting cast is actually fairly well-balanced.
Abel has done A LOT of growing-up in sixteen issues.
Hine and Haberlin still have yet to bring the series’ full potential.
It IS an entertaining sprint to the climax of the fifth issue.
Orlando allows Wonder Woman’s unique personality to save this particular treatment of a familiar adventure fantasy theme.
Castellucci does a pretty good job of making it feel fresh in an issue that has Batgirl confronting her own insecurities while facing a dragon.
Thor’s old friend Beta Ray Bill shows up to stop them
The emotional momentum of the series continues on the precipice of the turmoil.
Hine’s script lacks the proper framing for overwhelming events.
A solidly entertaining fusion of medical drama and magical fantasy.
There’s a refreshing newness about Aero that Liefen is casting in clean simplicity
Mother’s origin is revealed…. as is a new power.
The emotion is strong in a story with a plot just outside the realm of easy comprehension.
There IS a surprising amount of dramatic complexity rendered into the faces of the lead characters.
One of the more memorable iterations of Thor in the long, hallowed history of Marvel Comics.
A reasonably enjoyable story of Strange in the far future, as seen in shades of cyberpunk in a weird, little one-shot.